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how to get NO feedback from Elise

...by NMI Artistic Director ELISE DEWSBERRY

notes from Elise

In this monthly video blog, I am going to be addressing a lot of topics that come up over and over again when I am giving feedback on drafts of new musicals. I’d like to think that if you keep these basics in mind while you are writing, you might be able to write a musical that would result in NO critical feedback from me! Let’s see if I can put myself out of a job…

Want to get involved, as a writer or producer?  See our page about developing musicals.

If you’re looking for classes, visit our sister organization, The Academy for New Musical Theatre.

avoiding feedback: CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT – FIFTH BUSINESS

This is post #28. Part 3 in a short series on Character Development - this one cautioning against creating a character who is only there to serve a plot purpose - also known as “FIFTH BUSINESS”.

Enjoy!

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This is another in my little mini-series on character. I want to talk today about something called Fifth Business. I first came across this term— it’s the title of a novel by the Canadian novelist, Robertson Davies, and I know how he defines it.

I have in the years since tried to find other places where it is defined in the same way, and I have not necessarily been able to find anything to back this up, but it’s still a term that I use because I think it’s very useful.

In Robertson Davies book, which was about a theatrical troupe, Fifth Business refers to a character whose sole function in a play is to deliver some kind of information that is necessary, but they have no other plot function, and therefore no character development.

This is the person who shows up in the penultimate scene to deliver the letter that brings the news of the inheritance that saves the day for your lead character. That character has no reason to exist in your play except to deliver that letter.

Now that’s a very overt example of Fifth Business, which I still would strongly encourage you NOT to put in your play. But there are less overt examples of Fifth Business where if you take a look at the job that a particular character has in the piece, you might realize that you only need them in the story so that they can help this other thing be accomplished, or another character.

There’s nothing wrong with the fact that you need them for that, but I would encourage you to challenge yourself to figure out: “Now that I know I need them to do that, how can I make them integral to the story in such a way that that’s not the ONLY reason they’re there?”

I would encourage you to look to see if you have characters who are operating as Fifth Business, and see if you can find a reason for them to exist in your world. Or, in a more crass sense, a reason for your producer to hire them and pay them a salary when your show is being produced. Other than just to facilitate the plot

So keep an eye out for Fifth Business and try to make sure that your characters are more than that.

 

avoiding feedback: CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT – EXPOSITION

This is post #27. Part 2 in a short series on Character Development - this time covering using characters for the delivery of expositon.

Enjoy!

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This is part of my little mini series looking at character. Last time I talked about character diction sort of generically - about how your characters speak. Now I want to talk a little bit more specifically about how your character deliver expositions.

This basically is a conversation about the difference between what I would call “Neighbor Exposition” and “Stranger Exposition”. There’s one way that you would talk to someone you know: a neighbor (and that doesn’t necessarily mean a ‘neighbor’: it could be a husband, a wife, a child, a friend, a colleague, a co-worker, someone that you know), versus a stranger - someone that you don’t know. There’s a very different way to deliver exposition.

Clearly it’s easier when it’s a stranger, because a stranger is going to need more explanation, and therefore you, as a playwright, get the opportunity to give a lot more information to your audience because you have a stranger. This is why sometimes it can be incredibly useful— just as a side note - to make sure that you have a stranger in your show that needs things explained to them. It can be incredibly useful to have that stranger, that first-timer, the person who’s new on the block, the person who just started work today, the new boyfriend or girlfriend who needs things explained to them, because that gives you an excuse to explain those things to the audience.

But when you have characters who know each other, you don’t have that excuse and that’s where your job as a book writer gets more difficult, more challenging, and hopefully - more fun! Because you have to figure out the kind of shorthand that characters use when the people are they’re speaking to someone they know. How can you get the information across that you want?

Now one of the keys to this is to remember that you don’t always have to get all of your information across at once, or as much detail as you think you need. So, you can allow your audience to play detective. Usually we like that, we like to be detectives. We like to take little nuggets of information and add them up and figure things out on our own. So, your job as a bookwriter then is to figure out, “okay in this scene, because these two people know each other, they wouldn’t have a natural reason to discuss how long they’ve been married, or how long it’s been since the neighbor next door moved in.”

Let’s just say, for instance, they’re talking about their dog. But they’re just going to say “Fluffy this” or “Fluffy that”. They’re not going to say “dog”, so how are we going to know they are talking about a dog? These are the things you need to think about.

How can you make sure that these characters aren’t saying things to each other that neighbors wouldn’t say to each other, and yet your audience is getting enough information to keep them picking up the breadcrumbs and putting together the bits and pieces of information that they need. It can take a whole scene, it can take longer than that for them to put together all the information that they need. So, you need to be planting those breadcrumbs along the way, so that you don’t wind up with awkward sounding dialogue where people are having conversations with each other that they simply wouldn’t have in that way, because of the fact that they have shared information.

One other quick aside in that arena is: sometimes people are more likely to get specific about things in a neighbor relationship, that they wouldn’t otherwise, if they’re angry. Exposition through anger is an incredibly useful thing. Something like “In the six years I’ve known you, you never once took out the trash without being told!” - is a fabulous way to let us know they’ve been together for six years, which is something that normally would not come up in conversation.

Stranger exposition is going to be easier for you. So put a stranger in there if you can, but again be really ruthless with yourself about the neighbor exposition, and make sure that the information you need to get across to me is getting across to me as an audience member in a way that that still seems natural to the way that people would speak to each other when they already know each other. Another tip towards character.

avoiding feedback: THINK LIKE A DIRECTOR

This is post #25. A reminder to think LIKE a director, but not FOR your director.

Enjoy!

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avoiding feedback: THE POWER OF SONG

This is post #23. You’re writing a musical, right? So take advantage of the POWER of songs and let them do most of the heavy lifting.
Enjoy!

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Time to talk about songwriting. Even if you’re the book writer, you are very heavily involved in how the songs function in the musical, and you need to take full advantage of that and take full responsibility for it.

In this vlog I want to talk a little bit about the power of the song. I mentioned this a little bit last time, about how if all of your emotional moments and all of the important things were happening in dialogue, and not in song, then you’re writing a play. If you’re writing a musical, you’re doing it because you want to rely on the power of music and the ability that music has to elevate a story, and to elevate the emotions of a moment. So if you’re doing that, then you need to trust that. You need to trust that that’s what your song is doing, and you need to make sure that you give that power over to the song.

What this means primarily is: the dialogue leading up to the song needs to set up the song and make the song inevitable, and build us to it, and earn the song. But it can’t tell us ahead of time what the song is going to be about. The song needs to accomplish the goal. So in other words, if someone needs to make a big decision, you want to be careful that you don’t write the book scene in which the person goes “Yes, god damn it, that’s what I’m gonna do” - and then they sing a song about how glad they are that they made the decision. Because then you are abdicating the power of the song. Put the decision in the song. Let the person be waffling and trying to figure out what they want to do, and then within the body of the song- the person makes the decision. So, they haven’t made the decision at the beginning, and they have by the end.

If they’re trying to convince someone of something - they shouldn’t have convinced the other before the song starts, and then sing a song about how happy they are that they’re on the same page. You’re not taking advantage of the power of the song. Let the song do the heavy lifting. Set your characters up for a discovery; a confrontation; a decision; something of major of emotional import and dramatic tension - and then let the song accomplish it. Let them start in one place, and let the song lead them to a new place.

Musical theatre works best when these moments are happening in song, as opposed to the moment happens, and then we sing about it afterwards. You will find examples of it in the literature, and you will find in particular - more in the realm of opera. Although the lines between musical theatre and opera are blurry and hard to really define, but I think that might be one of the difference: because opera tends to be much more about the beauty of the song and the beauty of the voice, than it is about character development or plot movement. So, the plot gets accomplished more in the dialogue or, in the case of an opera, the recitative, and then the character gets to dwell in a particular emotion, and live in a particular motion. Happiness, anger, whatever it happens to be - and they get to make it sound beautiful in a song.

But in musical theatre we really want the action to happen in the song. So don’t abdicate the power of the song.

A slight little caveat to that, is that what tends to mean is that you really want plot to happen in the song - but I think you need to be really careful to make sure that important and or really integral or complicated plot points don’t happen solely in lyric. Lyrics are fantastic and wonderful, when they’re well done we can learn a lot through a lyric, but there’s a limit to how much detail and complexity of plot a lyric can really deliver to us. So if you’re not careful, you’ll find that by the end of a song you’ll say “Yes well they decided to take this ship there, and do that, and do this, and do that, and you’ve got this whole complicated thing that has happened - but it happened only in lyric, or it was mentioned once in one lyric in passing and by the end of the song - your audience may not be as clear as you think they are on what has changed in the plot.

So yes - I think plot should happen in a song, but bookwriters should know that a very well-placed line or two or three of dialog within the body of a song can accomplish so much. So that you don’t have to put all of the workload on the lyric to accomplish all of the little details. The lyric can accomplish the larger details and the emotional content and it certainly can accomplish plot, but just be aware that a very well-placed line or two of dialogue here or there inside of a song can be your salvation in terms of accomplishing some plot points and making sure they’re really really clear.

So don’t abdicate the power of a song to the scene. Make sure that that these important moments are happening within and during a song, but also know that that doesn’t mean that they can’t be accomplished at least partially in dialogue. It doesn’t all have to fall on lyric in order for this plot movement and this character or character progression to happen within the body of a song.

Sometimes you will find that you are accomplishing a lot of work in the dialogue leading up to the song, and then maybe you’re accomplishing more afterwards and you’re worried that if you try to pack it into the song it won’t be clear. I don’t think you want to put in the book what’s going to happen in the song, and you certainly don’t want after the song is over for something to still be left to be done. You don’t want to have someone set them all up - they’ve got a big decision to make - so they sing this song about the pros and cons and “what should I do” and “I have to make this big decision” - and then the song ends and there’s a pause, and then they make a decision. That’s just as much abdicating the power of the song as having the decision happen beforehand. You really want it to happen IN the song. So by the time the song is over, it’s time to move on to a new beat- we’re done now. We’re done with whatever the song accomplished and we’re ready to move on to the next beat. So really look at your book and make sure that you aren’t just pre-empting the song at the beginning, and that you aren’t just being redundant about what the song has accomplished by the end of it.

Sometimes what that might mean, when you look at the dialogue that you’ve written, is that you might want to intercut the scene with the song a little bit. You don’t have to just have a scene, and then a song, and then we move on. That’s the wonderful thing about musical theatre: you have the potential for musical scenes. Which means that that you can have song and dialogue work in tandem to get you where you want to go. So that the song has started and therefore it is within the context of the song that the plot, or whatever big moment is happening, will happen in the in the context of that song. But that doesn’t mean that there can’t be just a line or two a dialogue. There could even be full-on scenes within the song. It tends to work best if you get through at least an AABA of your song first before you start breaking it up too much, but you could have a little mini-scene happen with underscoring, and then you have a contrasting C section to the music while they realize what they decided to do isn’t going to work, and then there can be another little scene, and then we can get ourselves back to the A section, or another repeat of the B. Take a look at the material and don’t decide it has to be either in the book or in the song. You can combine them by creating a musical scene.

But most importantly: make sure you use the power of the song - so that within the body of the music, whether it’s in lyric or dialogue or a combination of the two, that something is happening in that song. That the characters are in a different place at the end of the song than they were at the beginning of the song.