| By
Claire Ingham
1. Write about what makes you passionate,
enthusiastic and excited. Don’t just try
to copy the latest ‘craze or format’.
Producers/Development Executives want to know
about your ‘voice.’
2. If you like something you
see on television ask yourself why you like it.
Is it the dialogue? The story? How many characters
are there? How is the story structured? Become
aware of what attracts you to good writing.
3. Watch TV often – and
try to catch the first episodes of any new drama
programmes. It’s a great way to see what
is being commissioned – and what audiences
like.
4. Is there something that feels
as if it’s missing from TV? What kind of
stories are absent? Are there enough stories about
your age-group, location, culture? Is there something
in your experience that deserves to be shared
with other people?
5. Learn how to format a script
properly, so that you’re writing to an accepted
industry format.
The BBC has some script software you can download
at www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom
There are also examples of Hollywood scripts at
www.dailyscript.com
6. Think about the kind of audience
you are writing for and make sure your language
and subject matter are appropriate – eg.
don’t use bad language or too much violence
if you are writing for children or a family audience.
7. Think about what makes your
idea a TV script, rather than a radio or theatre
script. What makes it perfect for the small screen?
Do you have visual action as well as dialogue?
8. Listen to how people talk
– in the street, on the bus, at school and
at work. Keep a notebook handy for ‘magpie
quotes’ and snippets of fantastic dialogue.
Try to incorporate the words, slang and rhythms
of everyday speech into your work so that your
dialogue sounds natural.
9. Don’t finish your script
and send it out to a broadcaster straight away.
Ask people who will give you genuine, constructive
criticism to read your work – and then try
and improve it. You only get one chance to make
a good first impression!
10. Keep writing. Writing for
TV Drama is competitive, but the rewards can be
very good. Don’t wait to see what the reaction
is to a script before you carry on. Write something
else!
Good luck!
Claire Ingham runs Midlands Production
Company Red Room Films. She is a producer, writer
and development consultant for a number of film
and television companies including Impossible
Pictures, Swish, Leopardrama and Sly Fox Films.
She leads workshops/development initiatives for
the regional screen agencies in the East and the
West Midlands - trains production companies in
drama development through PACT and the IPTF and
is a visiting lecturer and mentor to De Montford
University's MA Television Scriptwriting Programme.
Claire's
film, 'Hearing Things', won the 'Spirit of Moondance
Award' for best narrative short film by a female
filmmaker at the Moondance Festival in Hollywood
in 2006.
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