Who'd of thought that my first post for 2013 would be Easter Sunday...
Since my last posts were regarding Granite, an update would be worthwhile: the internet staged reading and subsequent publication are still forthcoming, after a couple of setbacks in that process on the administrative end. I do hope that good news is on the way on that front.
I have a couple of projects that I've agreed to and are in various stages of progress, and I will be updating information about those as time wears on - some of them are yet to be announced officially, some are more exploratory, so we'll leave those for now.
Here's what's coming up in the next few weeks.
Two staged readings during the Belhaven Theatre Festival next week:
Granite will be read on Tuesday, April 9 at 7:15pm along with a script by John Maxwell called Mary and Martha. John and I will be a part of discussion afterward about writing plays that deal with faith.
The Long Surrender will be read on Thursday, April 11 at 7:30pm.
In the meantime, the next major project that I'm taking on is the 30-Day Writing Challenge for the month of April. This is an inaugural event in honor of the late Jack Gilbert, who previously ran ScriptFrenzy, a one month screenwriting challenge. This is a group of Frenzy-ists doing this in honor of Jack.
So, the plan is to write every day during April. Which means this starts tomorrow.
I have decided that I didn't want to do too much pre-work, so I haven't been mapping the plot out, or anything like that. But I do think that I'm going to write based on an idea I had last summer during the Glen East playwriting workshop with Arlene Hutton. I have long since lost all of my notes on that idea, so I'm largely starting over, but the base of the story is a rocky return home for a small-town Mississippi girl who'd ran away to Chicago.
So, you're likely to see some updates on here - maybe not daily, but I'm going to try to journal through the process, post when I reach markers (act break, finished draft). Who knows - if I finish a draft of one play, I may start another one...
Showing posts with label Long Surrender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Long Surrender. Show all posts
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Monday, June 11, 2012
The Glen
So, I'm attending a playwriting workshop this week at The Glen - East, hosted by Image Journal. Arlene Hutton is our instructor. Instead of our session being to get feedback on completed or in-process works (which most Glen sessions seem to be about), we are planning to focus on creating and developing new ideas for plays. I'm looking forward to seeing how this all works - I've never done a week long workshop like this.
We are at Mount Holyoke College in western Massachusetts - a beautiful campus with lots of New England charm. Meeting a lot of new people, and have already had some very interesting and compelling late-into-the-evening-hours conversations.
Not sure how much time I'll have to scratch out thoughts for a blog this week, but maybe some insights or even some writing might get posted.
I did get a chance while traveling to read through the first draft of Long Surrender - some things turned out better than I'd remembered, and some need work. Hopefully sometime soon I can get back to working on that.
We are at Mount Holyoke College in western Massachusetts - a beautiful campus with lots of New England charm. Meeting a lot of new people, and have already had some very interesting and compelling late-into-the-evening-hours conversations.
Not sure how much time I'll have to scratch out thoughts for a blog this week, but maybe some insights or even some writing might get posted.
I did get a chance while traveling to read through the first draft of Long Surrender - some things turned out better than I'd remembered, and some need work. Hopefully sometime soon I can get back to working on that.
Monday, June 4, 2012
The first draft of Long Surrender is done!
The Long Surrender has a complete 14 play first draft.
The first play was written the morning of May 20, the last one complete around 1 am on June 4. 15 days, 94 pages. 14 stories. All written at my dining room table.
The longest play is 9 pages, the shortest has 6. Yes, they are 'just scenes' in terms of length, but I'd be hard pressed to think that there's more to the story to be told in any of them. All but one of them have just 2 characters on stage (a couple of voices that could be recorded) - the final play has 9 speaking characters, but it's a fable, and could well be done with 3 actors. Simple sets - relatively low tech (even the most high-tech one has a low-tech alternative). I even had restraint enough to keep from writing moments where someone overturns a table full of marbles* (or anything like that).
I'm feeling quite relieved - the final play did not turn out to be as difficult as I feared. I worried that the idea of culminating the whole project with a final play would get in my head and block me up, but deciding (while listening to the song, Favorite Time of Light - in fact, a bonus track when you buy the album online) that it could be like a children's fable, purposely different from everything else, then it was easy to just take this play as its own thing, and not bother with the pressure of having to wrap it all together with a little bow. Surrendering. My own little lesson from this project.
I can't say I know exactly what to do with all of this now - certainly, I have to go back and read the whole thing all together, and see what it is I've actually done. We'll see how I feel about it at that point. But even if it all comes to nothing - I think I've gained a lot from the attempt. And that makes me satisfied.
* mental note: write someone overturning a table full of marbles into the next play...
The first play was written the morning of May 20, the last one complete around 1 am on June 4. 15 days, 94 pages. 14 stories. All written at my dining room table.
The longest play is 9 pages, the shortest has 6. Yes, they are 'just scenes' in terms of length, but I'd be hard pressed to think that there's more to the story to be told in any of them. All but one of them have just 2 characters on stage (a couple of voices that could be recorded) - the final play has 9 speaking characters, but it's a fable, and could well be done with 3 actors. Simple sets - relatively low tech (even the most high-tech one has a low-tech alternative). I even had restraint enough to keep from writing moments where someone overturns a table full of marbles* (or anything like that).

I can't say I know exactly what to do with all of this now - certainly, I have to go back and read the whole thing all together, and see what it is I've actually done. We'll see how I feel about it at that point. But even if it all comes to nothing - I think I've gained a lot from the attempt. And that makes me satisfied.
* mental note: write someone overturning a table full of marbles into the next play...
Saturday, June 2, 2012
3 more done
I've now completed plays #8, #9 and #10, which means that there are only 4 more plays to write to finish the first draft of The Long Surrender cycle. I won't be surprised if these three plays turn out to be my favorites when all is said and done. Two of them are fairly realistic, the other has some style to it (it'll be a challenge). But when I finished them, each one of them, I felt pretty satisfied that I'd captured what had come to mind (though there may be some adjustments to be made).
I'm realizing now that I'm blogging through the process of writing, but I'm not really saying much about each individual play. I might do that when I go through a second pass - I'm wanting to avoid influencing the plays that are yet to come by over-describing the ones I've written. I'm afraid of too closely identifying the pattern I'm setting down, then getting stuck trying to continue the pattern. I've had that problem before.
Hoping to write another play later today, then I'll be on track to finish on Wednesday...
I'm realizing now that I'm blogging through the process of writing, but I'm not really saying much about each individual play. I might do that when I go through a second pass - I'm wanting to avoid influencing the plays that are yet to come by over-describing the ones I've written. I'm afraid of too closely identifying the pattern I'm setting down, then getting stuck trying to continue the pattern. I've had that problem before.
Hoping to write another play later today, then I'll be on track to finish on Wednesday...
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
The Halfway Point of the Long Surrender
I have completed 7 of the 14 plays I have intended to write.
The Long Surrender is proving to be somewhat of a journey for myself - more than I intended it to be. While the individual 'plays' are coming out quite quickly (most are taking about an hour and a half to write), it feels like the concept has weighed heavily over the past couple of weeks - this past two weeks particularly - so the "Long" part feels like it's living up to its name. [though, really, I know this whole thing is going very fast, indeed]
And the process of writing a short scene every couple of days (though I've done 3 in the past 2 days) has become, out of necessity, a Surrender - where I can't linger on each play too long, I have to let one be done and move on (I'm not rewriting until I finish all 14). So, even if I don't feel completely satisfied with a play, I surrender it. And that's not so easy to do.
Just thinking back over the 7 plays I've written, there are already trends (I wouldn't necessarily call them repetitions). I would like to see something different come out during the other 7 plays, but I don't want to force something - all of a sudden one of these is a slapstick comedy or something. But a whole evening of somber scenes might be tough to make it through. But I still rely on the fact that there's a continuity to what I'm writing because there is a continuity in an album of music - not that the plays are exactly matching the songs point by point; but inspiration is inspiration.
Given the plan of how the evening of theatre is to work out, nothing is yet sticking out as an Opener or Closer - but hopefully that will become clearer after I have the set done.
The goal: finish 7 more plays/scenes by a week from today. A play a day. It may go faster, but it can't go slower. Why? I'm leaving for a family vacation - and during that time, a conference. The change of scenery/ venue has the chance to really change the tone of what I'm doing, and I don't want to let that happen.
The Long Surrender is proving to be somewhat of a journey for myself - more than I intended it to be. While the individual 'plays' are coming out quite quickly (most are taking about an hour and a half to write), it feels like the concept has weighed heavily over the past couple of weeks - this past two weeks particularly - so the "Long" part feels like it's living up to its name. [though, really, I know this whole thing is going very fast, indeed]
And the process of writing a short scene every couple of days (though I've done 3 in the past 2 days) has become, out of necessity, a Surrender - where I can't linger on each play too long, I have to let one be done and move on (I'm not rewriting until I finish all 14). So, even if I don't feel completely satisfied with a play, I surrender it. And that's not so easy to do.
Just thinking back over the 7 plays I've written, there are already trends (I wouldn't necessarily call them repetitions). I would like to see something different come out during the other 7 plays, but I don't want to force something - all of a sudden one of these is a slapstick comedy or something. But a whole evening of somber scenes might be tough to make it through. But I still rely on the fact that there's a continuity to what I'm writing because there is a continuity in an album of music - not that the plays are exactly matching the songs point by point; but inspiration is inspiration.
Given the plan of how the evening of theatre is to work out, nothing is yet sticking out as an Opener or Closer - but hopefully that will become clearer after I have the set done.
The goal: finish 7 more plays/scenes by a week from today. A play a day. It may go faster, but it can't go slower. Why? I'm leaving for a family vacation - and during that time, a conference. The change of scenery/ venue has the chance to really change the tone of what I'm doing, and I don't want to let that happen.
Labels:
cycle,
Long Surrender,
play,
process,
writing
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Four on the floor.
Hopefully, I'm not going to just post every time I finish another Long Surrender play. But that's what I'm doing right now.
"Soon..." is done. A strange little piece - no movement, just separation and longing. I'm liking the first draft, but thinking that there may be more to this one on another pass - more than I've felt about the other ones so far. Only concern there is that this one is 8 pages already; don't want it to be too long for the format. But without any movement, the words may go by quite quickly.
Speaking of the format, I did hit on the idea the other day that the cycle could work with one opening play, break out into the small groups for a set of 6 plays in rotation, an intermission, then another 6 rotation, then back together as one audience for a final play. 14 plays. That would make this an over 2 hour endeavor, and really only be capable of having 36 audience members per show. it would also mean that we need at least 18 people on cast and crew - 2 actors and 1SM/tech for each piece. That may still be too much...
Thursday, May 24, 2012
And then there were three
I now have three plays for the cycle "The Long Surrender." Wrote the first pass at a short play for the song "Rave On" by Over the Rhine, which was tricky because I've written a play from that song once already, and it was tough not to write another version of that story. But it's a really great song - it probably will yield more for me in the future (it's my favorite on the album, I think).
Three plays, three fairly different styles. Can't wait to get through the whole set so I can start looking at how this can all work together.
Three plays, three fairly different styles. Can't wait to get through the whole set so I can start looking at how this can all work together.
Monday, May 21, 2012
Two down...
I've tackled a first draft of a piece for the second song in the cycle, called 'Sharpest Blade.' This one was a little tougher to write, and is a lot more stylized than the last play - but I do want them to be different from one another (mission accomplished).
If I can keep up this pace and actually get through one play at day, I'll be done at the end of next week...
If I can keep up this pace and actually get through one play at day, I'll be done at the end of next week...
First of the cycle
So, I've written the first draft of the first short play of the Long Surrender cycle - one piece for each song on the album by Over the Rhine. Play one is from track one, called The Laugh of Recognition.
The plays do not follow the same story told by the song, but are instead inspired by the tune, the mood, and sometimes snatches of lyrics.
As a special bonus for me, this first draft received a workshop staging today by my friends Stephanie Bishop, Grace Varland and Ginny Holladay, and in my opinion worked very well. It gave me hope that this project will come together. And now, all I have to do is write 13 more plays...
As a special bonus for me, this first draft received a workshop staging today by my friends Stephanie Bishop, Grace Varland and Ginny Holladay, and in my opinion worked very well. It gave me hope that this project will come together. And now, all I have to do is write 13 more plays...
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