How Fast Do You Write?
I was reading a chapter in William Goldman’s Adventures in the Screentrade (which, by the way, is a great book on screenwriting by one of the all-time great screenwriters… also the man I heard was secretly responsible for Good Will Hunting, but you can draw your own conclusions on that) about the speed of writing and it prompted me to do this post.
I was reading a chapter in William Goldman’s Adventures in the Screentrade (which, by the way, is a great book on screenwriting by one of the all-time great screenwriters… also the man I heard was secretly responsible for Good Will Hunting, but you can draw your own conclusions on that) about the speed of writing and it prompted me to do this post.
Every writer
seems to have his or her own thoughts about how quickly writing should happen.
Some sit every day and force the words while other wait for inspiration to hit
and, when it does, write for hours or even days straight. Personally, I’ve
tried approaching writing every which way, but have found that if I break with
a project I’m writing – that is, if I wind up having to take more than a day or
two away from it for whatever reason – it most likely goes off the rails. Once
I’m onto a book or a screenplay, I have to basically commit to working on it
each and every day until it’s finished. For short stories and short scripts, I
have to do them in one sitting.
Goldman says
in his book that there’s a certain energy to starting and then getting through
the work as quickly as possible and that the energy translates into the finished
product. I would agree with that, especially when it comes to screenwriting.
I’ve always
done a good amount of preparation before starting a new screenplay. I’ll have
character bios and a decent outline ready to go.
Now, I’m in
the outlining module of the ProSeries, and we are on our 6th draft
of our outlines. I’ll repeat, 6th draft! It makes what I used to do
to ‘prepare’ look as professional as a gorilla in a tie. For each pass, we’ve
focused specifically on one element of our screenplays, until we’ve been as
thorough as possible.
There is
something to be said for the ‘just start with a loose idea and inspiration will
come approach’… but what I’m finding is that inspiration will strike even in
the outlining phase, and in the outlining phase, it’s easy to revise. Things
can be moved around, reworked, or flat-out changed at little cost to your time.
This doesn’t mean that you might not be struck by some new idea to add in
later, when you’re writing, but it does mean that the overall foundation of
your story is going to be solid enough that A) You’ll have a better chance of
finishing and B) It’s going to have a sound storyline that won’t take years of
revision to fix.
I think the
real benefit of all the outlining, though, is that by the time I get to the
writing phase, I’m going to be able to get through all the writing quickly,
with a completed screenplay in a matter of weeks. And I agree with Goldman in
that there’s an energy, once you start writing, that you don’t want to lose.
Stepping away for days or weeks at a time pretty much guarantees that you will
lose that energy. The more prepared you are before beginning, the less likely
that is to happen, because you always know what’s coming next in your story,
how you want to handle it, and how you want the audience to feel.
***Now for a
few quick, exciting updates! This past week I had two great pieces of news.
First, my short story ‘Not There’ was accepted for publication in the January
2013 edition of All Things Girl, an
online literary magazine and print anthology series (www.allthingsgirl.com). Second, my
short film, Chance, is an official
selection of the Williamsburg International Film Festival, which is taking place
in Brooklyn from Sept. 20-23!
I’ll keep
you all posted on both the scheduled show-times and the release of the short
story!
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