Aaron
Tuesday 2nd July 2013 12:28pm [Edited]
Royal Berkshire
69,949 posts
Quote: Frantically @ July 2 2013, 7:31 AM BST
Yes, that helped clear up my misunderstanding - cheers for that Aaron.
I was going to respond to your other point - but with lines like "...It's not a point it's a word..." and "...It's a collaboration if it is a 'collaboration' ... " maybe it's best I wait for the Aaron version.
Hell, it may turn out I agree with you
His other point, I think, is that although in some cases an actor/performer may have a heavy hand in crafting the comedy and/or its characters in the first place - as was the case with Hancock - the writers are the day-to-day creatives.
Actors bring the world to life, whilst it is (or was, traditionally) the job of the executives, producers, etc, to facilitate the idea in its transition from page to screen. The literal 'business' side of showbusiness, if you will.
Increasingly over the last 10-15 years, however, the lines have become very blurred. Whilst actors and writers still fulfill the same roles, for various reasons executives are now creeping into the creative process.
I'd equate it to the writer being a sculptor, and the executives museum curators. Their role should be to take the sculpture and find a way to exhibit it to its best advantage - not to begin remoulding it, hacking off a little bit on one side and an outward-stretched leg on the other, just to fit it through a narrower doorway.