Monday, November 12, 2012

Writing a Novel and Acting



One of the things I've learned about writing fiction is that I can save myself difficult work if I break off for the day before finishing the scene I'm working on.  This lets me get back into the story's  imagined world more quickly the next time I sit down at the computer.  When the process is working well, I set the characters in action and write down what they say.  The scene almost always needs reworking, but the essence of the interaction of the characters is there.

Earlier this year I decided to take an acting class.  I had several motives for doing this.  One was curiosity about how acting is taught.  Another is that I've suffered from a lifelong compulsion to undertake just those activities for which I have the least aptitude.  A third motive was to see if I could acquire some of the poise and presence I've admired in the actors I've encountered.

The experience of acting in my classes has brought both humiliation and great pleasure.  But it has also brought an unexpected bonus for me as an author.  The core theme of the classes I've taken at the Freehold Theater in Seattle is "living authentically in imaginary circumstances."  And isn't that what you need to do as a writer of fiction?

I discovered that my most basic assumption about acting was wrong.  I thought that the script was the play, and that actors voiced the lines with interpretive guidance from the director.  I learned that the script is only the starting point.  The interaction between the actors is the essence of the play.  One set of actors can create a drama from a script that is completely different from what another set of actors will produce from the same script.

So writing fiction and acting have more similarity than I thought.  I create imaginary circumstances, and then through some process of both pushing and listening I set my characters in motion and write down what happens.

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