Bup-pa-bup-pa-pa!
Feels like I'm on a bit of a marathon stretch right now - what with finishing The Bright Lights and going straight into my final MA project. Add to that rewriting my short Fairground plus working on a couple of pitches for some TV companies and the amount of work between now and August 12th when I hand in my 90 minute script (+ the treatment for the next episode) is looks pretty daunting - so it helps to break things up into smaller goals.
Today I completed my initial pass at the new script - I'm not even calling it a first draft yet, there are too many bits I know need fixed for me to call it that. However, I was determined to get to this stage by the end of May and I've made it - which feels good. I now have a week to polish it up to proper 1st draft standard as I've promised my tutor a copy of it within the first week of June.
The journey from treatment to nearly-first-draft has been really interesting. My treatment had been well received and I think it makes for an exciting read. However 2 x 90 minutes is not a length I've written to before - all my previous work has been an hour or under - and so transposing the treatment into a script threw up some interesting problems. What worked in prose was wrongly paced in the screenplay and overly expositional - with condensed bursts of action and then long sections where nothing happened bar info dumping. I could see these problems emerging as I wrote but - frustrating as they were - I made myself plow on to get the whole thing down on paper before I got into tinkering with the specifics.
Now I'm at that stage, I've had a chance to see the project as a whole and I think I can see a way ahead - to a first draft anyway. After that my plan is to take a few weeks off this script to allow time to get some feedback and perspective while giving some attention to the other projects jostling for attention:
Fairground now has a director - the very talented Eva Riely who I'm delighted to be working with. Eva is on the European Engage and DigiCult schemes so its safe to safe she is going places. The film is being produced by the wonderful Lynsey Stewart and is taking shape nicely as we work to hone the project towards its shoot. It's great to be working with such good people and I'm so looking forward to seeing the film become a reality.
Also - I am due to submit a proposal for a new TV show to a couple of Indies. I pitched them an idea last month and they are keen to know more so I have to put together a document which sells the idea and briefly details the characters and the style of the programme. I've done these sorts of pitches for my writing MA but this is my first crack in the real world - I'm nervous but thankfully the development execs at both companies are good people and want to work with me to nail the format.
And after that - back to the MA project..! OK - so my 'break' is quite a busman's holiday but a change is as good as a rest. I always knew trying to break into being a screenwriter would be hard work and taking on an MA while working a full time day job doubly so - so I can't complain. Just got to keep my head down, create more bite sized goals and manage my workload. I promise come the end of the MA to take a proper weeks holiday!
ps - check out the Q&A I did this month with Cameo Curio for their 'Month of Marks' event - a really inspiring collection of reflections on creativity from folks around Edinburgh.
Monday, 30 May 2011
Monday, 25 April 2011
The Dust Settles and New Work Beckons...
The script was finished on time and submitted. There is always room to grow and improve but I'm happy with it and have had some good preliminary feedback from my tutor - just awaiting the proper marks now. The show is called The Bright Lights and is a half hour drama pilot about an underground music scene. I've started firing it off to producers and agents and will do so some more once I get a few clear days.
The last week also saw me submit my final academic essay for the MA, which was enjoyable but hard going. It's been a massive relief to reach the end of the taught part of the course. It's been a great experience but two years of working 6 day weeks by studying alongside a full time job has taken it's toll and it'll be nice to live at a better pace for a while.
The course isn't done yet - just the classes section. I now have just over 3 months to write my final project: episode one of a two part 90 minute TV story. I'll also have to write a treatment for episode two. I've got 70% of the story worked out but have a lot of work in front of me and need to get cracking. I don't want to get into the specifics of the plot just yet but it's a tale I'm looking forward to telling. My last two projects were very domestic in scope and this is a lot more high-concept so it'll make a nice change and give me a chance to show off my range.
Before that however, I've had some interest from a producer about another TV idea so am taking the next two weeks to do some development work on that. It's an notion that's been ticking away at the back of my head for a few years now and in starting to write stuff down I'm realising I know my story better than I thought - which is exciting.
So as we move from Spring towards the Summer I'm facing a solid block of just writing away on my own, sorting ideas out and getting scripts done - which feels like bliss. I'll still be working my day job full time but I won't have the pressure of uni hand-ins. Trying to break into screenwriting is hard work and you have to really love it in order to maintain the amount of energy and enthusiasm needed. It's tough going but there really isn't anything I'd rather be doing :)
The last week also saw me submit my final academic essay for the MA, which was enjoyable but hard going. It's been a massive relief to reach the end of the taught part of the course. It's been a great experience but two years of working 6 day weeks by studying alongside a full time job has taken it's toll and it'll be nice to live at a better pace for a while.
The course isn't done yet - just the classes section. I now have just over 3 months to write my final project: episode one of a two part 90 minute TV story. I'll also have to write a treatment for episode two. I've got 70% of the story worked out but have a lot of work in front of me and need to get cracking. I don't want to get into the specifics of the plot just yet but it's a tale I'm looking forward to telling. My last two projects were very domestic in scope and this is a lot more high-concept so it'll make a nice change and give me a chance to show off my range.
Before that however, I've had some interest from a producer about another TV idea so am taking the next two weeks to do some development work on that. It's an notion that's been ticking away at the back of my head for a few years now and in starting to write stuff down I'm realising I know my story better than I thought - which is exciting.
So as we move from Spring towards the Summer I'm facing a solid block of just writing away on my own, sorting ideas out and getting scripts done - which feels like bliss. I'll still be working my day job full time but I won't have the pressure of uni hand-ins. Trying to break into screenwriting is hard work and you have to really love it in order to maintain the amount of energy and enthusiasm needed. It's tough going but there really isn't anything I'd rather be doing :)
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
Re: Writing
Hey - sorry for the radio silence. Have had a crazy 7 weeks without much space to blog. Multiple script drafts, two development trips to London, a large essay and the possibility of redundancy from my day-job have kept me plenty busy!
Last time I wrote I was plowing through the first draft of my latest project - a half hour TV pilot being written as part of my screenwriting MA. Since then I've completed three full drafts. As predicted, the process has been one of constantly stripping things back and refocusing to bring the story in on length and in the best shape possible.
My initial 'vomit draft' (where I just bash things out without censoring myself) came in at 42 pages. A rough rule of thumb is that a correctly formatted screenplay should equal about one page per minute. Though the rule isn't air-tight, my script was well over and I needed to cut at least 10 pages - almost a quarter of the script - which was pretty daunting.
On completing a draft its hard to see beyond the elation of having finished something - so making any cuts or changes can seem like impossible demands. But after a few days working on other projects, I was able to come back to it with fresh eyes. With some distance it was obvious numerous sections were too long, overly complex or just not needed and I was able to cut 7 pages without losing anything essential, and in one case I substantially re-wrote a subplot that was initially dull into something much more satisfying.
This became my official first draft which I sent out to my fellow MA screenwriters and our tutor to get their feedback. Asking people to read your work, especially when it is in a raw state, and then to give you honest feedback is not easy but is something every writer needs to get used to. We get too close to our own 'babies' and unable to see where things don't make sense or could be clearer. Sometimes the bits we think are the most interesting are the dullest and vice versa. My group were great with me - very encouraging about what was working and offering lots of helpful suggestions to make it better.
I then had 9 days to complete my second draft based on their notes and my own reflections. I finished that yesterday and am currently really happy with it. I've got it to a healthy length (30.5 pages) and the whole thing has a lot more energy and drive - something that was missing from the last version.
I've now got a few days to wait to get some more feedback (during which time I need to read and make notes on my fellow writers' projects). Depending on how well my changes are received, I will then move on to a 'polish draft' - brushing up every stage direction, line and moment to make them the best they can be before my deadline on the 1st of April.
From pitch to final draft I will have had less than 3 months to complete this script but this is a realistic timescale - often TV drama requires even shorter turn-arounds so this has been good training and I've enjoyed it immensely.
I know a lot of people who never complete a project because they get frightened by it not being "perfect" straight away. I think what this process shows is the importance of drafting; accepting that earlier versions will be flawed but seeing them through in order to have a good starting point from which to build the next version, then the next, then the next until its a good as you can make it.
Anyway, I have four scripts to read so best get on!
Last time I wrote I was plowing through the first draft of my latest project - a half hour TV pilot being written as part of my screenwriting MA. Since then I've completed three full drafts. As predicted, the process has been one of constantly stripping things back and refocusing to bring the story in on length and in the best shape possible.
My initial 'vomit draft' (where I just bash things out without censoring myself) came in at 42 pages. A rough rule of thumb is that a correctly formatted screenplay should equal about one page per minute. Though the rule isn't air-tight, my script was well over and I needed to cut at least 10 pages - almost a quarter of the script - which was pretty daunting.
On completing a draft its hard to see beyond the elation of having finished something - so making any cuts or changes can seem like impossible demands. But after a few days working on other projects, I was able to come back to it with fresh eyes. With some distance it was obvious numerous sections were too long, overly complex or just not needed and I was able to cut 7 pages without losing anything essential, and in one case I substantially re-wrote a subplot that was initially dull into something much more satisfying.
This became my official first draft which I sent out to my fellow MA screenwriters and our tutor to get their feedback. Asking people to read your work, especially when it is in a raw state, and then to give you honest feedback is not easy but is something every writer needs to get used to. We get too close to our own 'babies' and unable to see where things don't make sense or could be clearer. Sometimes the bits we think are the most interesting are the dullest and vice versa. My group were great with me - very encouraging about what was working and offering lots of helpful suggestions to make it better.
I then had 9 days to complete my second draft based on their notes and my own reflections. I finished that yesterday and am currently really happy with it. I've got it to a healthy length (30.5 pages) and the whole thing has a lot more energy and drive - something that was missing from the last version.
I've now got a few days to wait to get some more feedback (during which time I need to read and make notes on my fellow writers' projects). Depending on how well my changes are received, I will then move on to a 'polish draft' - brushing up every stage direction, line and moment to make them the best they can be before my deadline on the 1st of April.
From pitch to final draft I will have had less than 3 months to complete this script but this is a realistic timescale - often TV drama requires even shorter turn-arounds so this has been good training and I've enjoyed it immensely.
I know a lot of people who never complete a project because they get frightened by it not being "perfect" straight away. I think what this process shows is the importance of drafting; accepting that earlier versions will be flawed but seeing them through in order to have a good starting point from which to build the next version, then the next, then the next until its a good as you can make it.
Anyway, I have four scripts to read so best get on!
Tuesday, 8 February 2011
First Draft Blues
I'm deep in the middle of scripting just now.
2010 was spent chasing opportunities, doing a lot of pitches / treatments and performing rewrites on pre-existing scripts but, apart from a few shorts, I haven't written a first draft of anything since late 2009 so it feels good (and a little scary) to be here again. After writing a good treatment through January I am now 2/3 of the way through a 30 minute drama script for my MA that I am hoping will be a good calling card to help me break into TV drama.
But first drafts are funny things; in order to get through them you have to accept that they will not match up to your expectations; that they'll be too 'on the nose', overly complicated, lacking in subtext or just plain dull. The refinement that makes a script good comes later - in honing your scrappy draft into something beautiful - but in order to do that you need to just bash out, an often very ugly, first go at things which you can rework and rework and rework until it sings (at least, that's how I do things - maybe you have a different way of working? If so would love to hear about it.)
Problem is that when I come to do a first draft I've usually just come off the back of a seventeenth draft of something else and my brain rebels at having to write bald functional dialogue and clunky scenes that move people about like chess pieces yet this stuff is essential in working out what the story is about and the best way to tell it. Treatments are great for sorting out the plot but, for me, the flow of the story only comes when these elements are tested out in an actual script. Once I get that stuff down I can see what to cut and then begin the fun of emphasising subtext and subtlety. As well as wanting to help other writers, I'm writing this blog as much to remind myself that after the tough slog of the first draft will come the creativity and fun of the second and third - where the script begins to fulfill the potential that made me want to write it in the first place.
I'm hoping to finish the first draft this week - it'll be about 10 pages too long and have too many characters and scenes but that's not the point - a version will exist from which I can make something good. After that I will have to park it for a few weeks to focus on the more academic aspects of my MA, after which I should be able to return to it with fresh eyes to discover that all this 'first draft angst' will have been worth it!
2010 was spent chasing opportunities, doing a lot of pitches / treatments and performing rewrites on pre-existing scripts but, apart from a few shorts, I haven't written a first draft of anything since late 2009 so it feels good (and a little scary) to be here again. After writing a good treatment through January I am now 2/3 of the way through a 30 minute drama script for my MA that I am hoping will be a good calling card to help me break into TV drama.
But first drafts are funny things; in order to get through them you have to accept that they will not match up to your expectations; that they'll be too 'on the nose', overly complicated, lacking in subtext or just plain dull. The refinement that makes a script good comes later - in honing your scrappy draft into something beautiful - but in order to do that you need to just bash out, an often very ugly, first go at things which you can rework and rework and rework until it sings (at least, that's how I do things - maybe you have a different way of working? If so would love to hear about it.)
Problem is that when I come to do a first draft I've usually just come off the back of a seventeenth draft of something else and my brain rebels at having to write bald functional dialogue and clunky scenes that move people about like chess pieces yet this stuff is essential in working out what the story is about and the best way to tell it. Treatments are great for sorting out the plot but, for me, the flow of the story only comes when these elements are tested out in an actual script. Once I get that stuff down I can see what to cut and then begin the fun of emphasising subtext and subtlety. As well as wanting to help other writers, I'm writing this blog as much to remind myself that after the tough slog of the first draft will come the creativity and fun of the second and third - where the script begins to fulfill the potential that made me want to write it in the first place.
I'm hoping to finish the first draft this week - it'll be about 10 pages too long and have too many characters and scenes but that's not the point - a version will exist from which I can make something good. After that I will have to park it for a few weeks to focus on the more academic aspects of my MA, after which I should be able to return to it with fresh eyes to discover that all this 'first draft angst' will have been worth it!
Monday, 3 January 2011
2010 in retrospect / 2011 anticipation
Like most creative folks who don't yet make their living from their art I can get very down on myself - constantly thinking 'I'm not working hard enough, must do more, must do more'. The end of one year and the start of another is a good time to take stock and look back over the achievements of the past while. Having had a chance to draw breath I realised I'd been a lot more productive in 2010 than I thought. In the last 12 months I have:
* Written a 20 minute short horror film.
* Written a 15 minute sitcom pilot (co-written with the brilliant Ross Howie).
* Done two redrafts of a 10 minute short film, which is due to be shot later this year.
* Developed and plotted a well received interactive project.
* Produced and edited a short film that will be doing the festival circuit in 2011 (covered by The Guardian).
* Written three redrafts of a 60 minute pilot (which was a runner up in the 2010 Red Planet Prize).
* Undertaken two weeks of work experience with the TV drama department of BBC Scotland.
* Developed 5 radio drama ideas for the BBC.
* Developed another 5 radio drama ideas for the BBC (!)
* Worked up two synopsis of a 45 minute play for a radio Producer.
* Written 3 comedy sketches for a competition.
* Plotted my 90 minute final project for my screenwriting MA.
* Written a 10 minute screen adaptation of a short story by Ian Rankin (for www.slippyfilms.com)
All of this while working a full time job, volunteering at a community project and undertaking an MA (with all the academic essays and hand-ins that incurs) - phew!
If I've learnt anything from all this taking stock it's a) I should go easier on myself and b) I'm doing as much as I possibly can to move my writing from being something I do in my spare time to being my career. I want to keep up this workload in 2011, while at the same time making sure I don't burn out - I want to be in this for the long haul.
At this point 2011 has some really exciting things in it:
* Mentoring sessions with Red Planet and Kudos.
* Writing a 30 minute drama as part of my MA.
* Writing a 90 minute drama as part of my MA.
* Lots of essays and networking.
Those things alone will see me busy until August but I am hoping to find space to keep knocking on the doors of the radio drama world and begin to look at finding an agent. 2010 has been a year of moving closer to the goal of becoming a working writer, I'm hoping 2011 sees that plan becoming ever more concrete.
Best get on with it! Back to the writing...
* Written a 20 minute short horror film.
* Written a 15 minute sitcom pilot (co-written with the brilliant Ross Howie).
* Done two redrafts of a 10 minute short film, which is due to be shot later this year.
* Developed and plotted a well received interactive project.
* Produced and edited a short film that will be doing the festival circuit in 2011 (covered by The Guardian).
* Written three redrafts of a 60 minute pilot (which was a runner up in the 2010 Red Planet Prize).
* Undertaken two weeks of work experience with the TV drama department of BBC Scotland.
* Developed 5 radio drama ideas for the BBC.
* Developed another 5 radio drama ideas for the BBC (!)
* Worked up two synopsis of a 45 minute play for a radio Producer.
* Written 3 comedy sketches for a competition.
* Plotted my 90 minute final project for my screenwriting MA.
* Written a 10 minute screen adaptation of a short story by Ian Rankin (for www.slippyfilms.com)
All of this while working a full time job, volunteering at a community project and undertaking an MA (with all the academic essays and hand-ins that incurs) - phew!
If I've learnt anything from all this taking stock it's a) I should go easier on myself and b) I'm doing as much as I possibly can to move my writing from being something I do in my spare time to being my career. I want to keep up this workload in 2011, while at the same time making sure I don't burn out - I want to be in this for the long haul.
At this point 2011 has some really exciting things in it:
* Mentoring sessions with Red Planet and Kudos.
* Writing a 30 minute drama as part of my MA.
* Writing a 90 minute drama as part of my MA.
* Lots of essays and networking.
Those things alone will see me busy until August but I am hoping to find space to keep knocking on the doors of the radio drama world and begin to look at finding an agent. 2010 has been a year of moving closer to the goal of becoming a working writer, I'm hoping 2011 sees that plan becoming ever more concrete.
Best get on with it! Back to the writing...
Sunday, 19 December 2010
Red Planet Runner Up!
Got some great news this weekend;
My script Starfall has been chosen as a runner up in the 2010 Red Planet Prize. The scheme, run by TV legend Tony Jordan and screenwriter Danny Stack aims to encourage new writers and is among the best competitions in the country.
Over 1500 people entered so I am hugely honoured to have been selected and am really looking forward to joining the winner and the other runners up at the workshop next year - where we will be mentored by executives from Red Planet and Kudos, two of the UK's top TV companies.
It means a lot to me for Starfall to have been so well received. I had the original idea back in 1999 (while I was still in high school!) and it's been ticking away at the back of my mind over the years. It's quite a complex piece and so it wasn't until 2007 that I really felt ready to develop it into a script. I've done about 15 drafts in that time so I've certainly worked hard at it! It's mad to think my classroom daydreaming 11 years ago is now opening doors for me into the professional TV world.
The Red Planet Prize is an amazing opportunity - and allows finalists to learn from and pitch to some of the best TV talent in the country. Now it's up to me to make the most of the chance I've been given and keep putting in the hard work. I've still got a way to go until I can make my living from my writing but that dream is looking just that little bit closer...
My script Starfall has been chosen as a runner up in the 2010 Red Planet Prize. The scheme, run by TV legend Tony Jordan and screenwriter Danny Stack aims to encourage new writers and is among the best competitions in the country.
Over 1500 people entered so I am hugely honoured to have been selected and am really looking forward to joining the winner and the other runners up at the workshop next year - where we will be mentored by executives from Red Planet and Kudos, two of the UK's top TV companies.
It means a lot to me for Starfall to have been so well received. I had the original idea back in 1999 (while I was still in high school!) and it's been ticking away at the back of my mind over the years. It's quite a complex piece and so it wasn't until 2007 that I really felt ready to develop it into a script. I've done about 15 drafts in that time so I've certainly worked hard at it! It's mad to think my classroom daydreaming 11 years ago is now opening doors for me into the professional TV world.
The Red Planet Prize is an amazing opportunity - and allows finalists to learn from and pitch to some of the best TV talent in the country. Now it's up to me to make the most of the chance I've been given and keep putting in the hard work. I've still got a way to go until I can make my living from my writing but that dream is looking just that little bit closer...
Wednesday, 17 November 2010
Progress Report
October has flown by but my current projects are progressing well.
The first half of the month was spent doing a lot of plotting work, while the second has been given over to two essays for the Business module on my MA. A couple more days on those and then I'm free to give the rest of November and December over purely to scripting work. Can't wait!
My initial outline for my major MA project was well received. Story world, plot and characters seem in good shape, just needing defined now. Biggest suggested change by my tutor was about reshaping the structure. Instead of the pilot episode of a 6 x 60 min serial, I am now writing episode 1 of a 2 x 90 min drama. This shape fits my story better and has ironed out a few kinks in the plot. Now have to deliver a treatment by 13th of Dec - should be doable!
Also - my radio drama is proceeding. Got some very helpful feedback from the producer who is developing it with me. My initial pitch was a little too sprawling so am currently honing the story to better focus on the core relationships. I need to deliver a new synopsis but the 30th of Nov so will be cracking on with that as soon as these essays are done.
All very busy but enjoying producing new work - best get back to it!
The first half of the month was spent doing a lot of plotting work, while the second has been given over to two essays for the Business module on my MA. A couple more days on those and then I'm free to give the rest of November and December over purely to scripting work. Can't wait!
My initial outline for my major MA project was well received. Story world, plot and characters seem in good shape, just needing defined now. Biggest suggested change by my tutor was about reshaping the structure. Instead of the pilot episode of a 6 x 60 min serial, I am now writing episode 1 of a 2 x 90 min drama. This shape fits my story better and has ironed out a few kinks in the plot. Now have to deliver a treatment by 13th of Dec - should be doable!
Also - my radio drama is proceeding. Got some very helpful feedback from the producer who is developing it with me. My initial pitch was a little too sprawling so am currently honing the story to better focus on the core relationships. I need to deliver a new synopsis but the 30th of Nov so will be cracking on with that as soon as these essays are done.
All very busy but enjoying producing new work - best get back to it!
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