Wednesday, November 5, 2008



WEDNESDAY, NOVEMEBER 5, 2008
"All the world 's a stage, and all the men and women merely players. They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts" ----William Shakespeare

Today, we begin working on the "10-minute play." Follow the outline below to get started:
A ten minute play takes place in ten minutes. One page of dialogue and stage direction is typically one minute of stage action.
  1. Introduce Your Characters: Even if they’re just “boy” and “girl” with no stated names, you need to introduce your characters quickly and without reserve. Exposition and back story need be brief.
  2. Build tension: Keep the tension taught. What mood or atmosphere would you wish to create at the beginning? At the end?
  3. Add Conflict: Plays are, by and large, drama and drama is conflict.
  4. Leave Audience Wanting More: Unlike most every other kind of art form, the ten minute play doesn’t always have an easy answer; it doesn’t always even have an answer at all! Ten minute plays are notorious for having endings which are glib, open ended, without resolution, left up to the audience to decide.

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