Challenge 18 – Due 19/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
So what’s with all these emojis and gifs? They’re all the rage, apparently.
Personally I don’t have a scooby how any of that works and the odd gif I happen to notice just gives me headaches (and makes people forget to attach their plays. ahem!) . I just about mastered smily faces. 🙂 <= see?!
However, apparently, yuvs (yoot?) today have created an entire language out of them. There’s a fascinating sub-culture going on with these things.
And they’ve taken over fruits and vegetables… you can’t ask for an aubergine or a peach or… well, you get my drift.
I wonder, then… can they be used for the greater good? or at the very least for theatre?
So your challenge for today – write a play using emojis, gifs, and any other non verbal imagery that is now used as forms of communication.
Perhaps the entire play is in emojis, perhaps only the stage directions, perhaps use them sporadically in the dialogue.
Either way, use them!
USE THEM, I say!
But here’s the thing. Make sure the play still makes sense. Remember, it’s a play. Someone is meant to read it and know how to stage it. so make it work, baby, make it work!
And in terms of content, seeing as we’re all teched up – why not write about that? The joys or perils of technology?
*thumbs up emoji* (am I using this right?)
2018
Intervention
Challenge 17 – Due 18/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
Let’s be super duper strict. Below are the rules for your play:
- You must have 4 characters in the play – and the gender for 3 of them must be undefined! You can add two more – but only if they are not human.
- One of the characters plays the banjo – really badly, and one character only speaks in rhyming couplets (can be the same if you like).
- There must be a minimum of 3 pauses in the play, one of them must be a super long pause (think Pinter to the power of Pinter).
- One of the characters has had relations with everybody else in the play (as well as characters that are mentioned but not seen).
- Every line of dialogue must have one of the following: either 7 words, 12 words, 22 words, 29 words, 56 words or 99 words (you can punctuate as you like).
- The play will contain three acts/scenes, but you can add one more if it’s a dream.
- At some point, everybody on stage falls down to the ground.
- Each scene/act must contain one person being told off for shouting (even though they didn’t shout), and another person revealing a big secret (even though it may not be true).
- Each scene/act must have at least 10 lines of dialogue and 10 lines of actions.
- Oh – and you must pick one letter of the alphabet (not Q, X or Z) for each character (each one can have a different one or the same) that they are not allowed to use in their dialogue at all.
If you aren’t sure you understand any of the rules – go with what you think they mean.
And again, with this being a weekend task – your only bonus is to be happy with the result.
Riverfront
Challenge 16 – Due 17/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
Choose your favourite venue in the whole wide world – it can be a theatre you love, or another space, or somewhere (real or imaginary) that you would love your next play to be staged at.
Now write a play for that space.
Make sure it fits the stage size.
Make sure it fits the artistic remit of the venue.
Make sure it suits the audience that goes there…
in fact, write a play that you could then submit to them. Maybe almost do a pastiche of their seminal production.
For bonus points, seeing as yesterday was all snappy, let’s linger today. Take your time to express things. Long thoughts… Perhaps start sentences that take a lot longer than expected to end and that have, I wouldn’t be surprised, lots of clauses, and sub-clauses, and, sub-sub-clauses, and other things, a little bit like Victor Hugo or Kant or Kleist, and let sentences go and drift away and perhaps even end them in places that are not really connected to where they started, because people who are so deep in thought, and talk as if… well, as if they are moving in one breath from one thought to a different thought and being distracted by the trees which are growing outside and are really lovely this time of year, because it’s just before spring and somehow there is a comfortable atmosphere in the air, not too dissimilar to the ones I had when I was away in the Himalayas in a… a dream I once had which was odd, because I never dream and it wasn’t a full moon or anything and I didn’t eat any cheese, which I don’t like so much, except for Brie, because it’s French and it goes really well with wine, which I simply adore, not as much as Whiskey, mind, particularly nice 15 year old single malts from Scotland, and… uhm… sorry. I’ll stop!
And I leave you with this quote from Grayson Perry:
“If you want to be successful in the art world you’ve got to look to the art world; you don’t make it for the bloke next door and then hope the art world is going to look at it. That’s one of the big mistakes people make.”
Now, whether you agree with it or not (spoiler alert: I don’t) let ‘er rip!
Reginae Consilium
Challenge 15 – Due 16/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
We’ve been focusing so much on small, personal and individual stories – so it’s time to go wild!
Let’s write a saga…
Massive, huge stories that span over years and years.
Many characters,
several generations.
The bigger – the better.
Oh, and whoever has the most characters (all speaking and all well-rounded) wins a Brucie Bonus! (although nobody is going to check or verify… or indeed hand it out)
Let’s be kind with bonus points though – go for short, snappy dialogue – get your story across in as few words as possible.
What the Heart Wants
Challenge 14 – Due 15/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
There are 206 bones in the human body.
There are 640 skeletal muscles (Although some say they go up to 850).
There are 360 joints.
There are over 900 sinews, tendons, ligaments, and cartilages.
There are 12 systems,
5 vital organs,
32 teeth.
There’s a total of about 7,500 recognised individual body parts.
Each of them with a name
Each of them with a story to tell…
So there you have it!
Body parts – meet writers, writers – meet body parts.
Hope you have a hoot!
Bonus points? Make the play the most moving, gut wrenching piece of drama ever written, maybe even make yourself weep as you write… but don’t write about illness, decay or death.
Yeah… totally didn’t come out as a drama. Damn. That slipped my mind after I started writing.
For a lot of these, the prompt inspires the location and the characters, and I just let them have at it, not knowing what’s going to come out of it. This is one of those times where it went somewhere TOTALLY unexpected. I figured that the main character would have significantly more lines than they did… huh.
Swirlies
Challenge 13 – Due 14/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
Hello!
Please write a play to be performed to 14-18 year olds.
Use your phone to record as many people as possible talking about an incident in their lives, after which things were changed.
OR Ask them to talk about their own experiences in the light of a subject that you are interested in.
EG: Mental Health
First Love
Gender
Bullying
Drugs
Knife crime etc
It’s important that people talk about real lived experiences rather than give opinions and that they only disclose what they feel safe disclosing.
Listen to the recordings.
Write a monologue play attributing as many as possible of those memories to one person.
You can use Alan Bennett’s Talking Heads as a template if you like.
I was crashing pretty hard after my very first therapy session since that horrible break-up in college, so I didn’t have the opportunity to get out and find kids to talk to. I tried checking vlogs on YouTube, but that quickly got SUPER depressing, so I just re-hashed one of my own childhood bullying experiences and tried to view it as I would have in High School. Surprisingly, I learned a bit about myself in the process.
5 Minutes
Challenge 12 – Due 13/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
Let’s do a time restriction exercise
Decide how much time you want to write today (it could be five minutes or 6 hours, 17 minutes and 32 seconds).
Get your timer out and programme into it half of the time you set for today (I mean, dividing by two?! So easy… you’re all maths pros now!)
Start writing about anything. Maybe ask yourself the question “how am I feeling today?”, or write about time restrictions.
It might come out as a monologue, or a dialogue, or maybe you have more voices in your head…
Once the timer beeps – stop writing.
Take a short break
and then set your timer again for the second half, in which you are to edit the play, make sure it has an extraordinary ending, get the formatting right, etc.
If you want to complicate things slightly (you don’t have to), you can be more time restrictive – (for example, half the second half and use one half for the ending and one half for the editing and formatting, or half that final half and use one half for the editing and one half for the formatting or half that second half and use the first half for the formatting and the second half for a proofreading or half that… I’ve inadvertently found myself in Zeno’s Paradox… I am never getting out of this! You just continue on your way… leave me here! …half that second half and use it for con…)
For bonus points, maybe use a new font that you’ve never used before…
This is another one where the prompt was more inspirational than literal… although I think I actually did write it in about five minutes.
Pi
Challenge 11 – Due 12/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
Numbers are so friggin’ awesome, and you can do so much with them – from basic arithmetic to some intense hardcore calculus.
‘But how does that lend itself to a play?’, I hear you ask (I really must do something about all your voices in my head!)
‘Well,’ I respond back to the negative numbers.
What about a dialogue that is structured as a Fibonacci sequence (1 word, 1 word, 2 words, 3 words, 5 words, 8 words, etc…)?
What about a play about someone who can only talk in even lettered words?
What about a couple arguing about the golden ratio?
What about the Life of Galileo? (oh wait a minute… someone already did that)
Alan Turing!
hmmm…
How about a fully symmetrical palindrome of a play? (I double-dare you!)
Or if you want to go more abstract – just have number 7 and number 11 arguing on who is more in their prime!
What would a logarithm of a play look like?
Where do numbers even exist?
I can go on infinitely…
Anyway, go mathematical-crazy! Mathematicalazy!
Counting you out…
in 3…
2…
1…
Challenge: See if you can figure out what I did.
Mr. Taxi and the Wolf
Challenge 10 – Due 11/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
So…
in the first year we did plays with original songs,
then in the second year we did rhymes,
last year took us to spoken word…
and this year – let’s go easy and write a Jukebox musical!
“Hold it, right there, buster!” (the voices in my head shout at me in fleeting images of you) “that is like so behind the times…wasn’t that a thing like 20 years ago? And also, why are you writing in prose? This is a playwriting competition!”
Yeah… it is…was!
And yes, you’re right. I shouldn’t!
I: So let’s make it more interesting! Use only K-Pop! There, now I’m down with the kids!
IMAGES: Hold your metaphorical horses, there, Mr.
I: Well, I prefer Dr, if you don’t mind.
IMAGES: We don’t care what you prefer, surely you know that we don’t speak Korean! (most of us anyway).
I: I do! I do indeed… but… well… you know, it’s called a challenge for a reason! Find a way around that.
IMAGES: Ahhh… now we understand. Super duper!
I: I can’t tell if you’re being sarcastic.
IMAGES: We can’t tell if you’re being a @#%@.
I: I don’t mean to… no.
IMAGES: Well, we’re not being sarcastic.
I: Shouldn’t you write a musical instead of talking to me?
IMAGES: We aren’t actually taking part in the competition…
I: Oh… right… yeah. Anyway, I have a lot of work on… so… can we chat another time?
IMAGES: Sure!
Now bring on the JuK(e)-Pop-Box MusiK-Pop-als!
P.S. Here’s a playlist if you need one:
So, I had a LOT more fun with this one than I expected. Reached out to a bunch of friends on Facebook for suggestions of songs. That’s why the prompt is included on the title page, because some of them wanted to see the final product. It’s crazy. It’s LONG. And I hope I honored the K-Pop fandom decently.
Beached
Challenge 9 – Due 10/02 at 09:59:59am GMT
Today we’re going dark. But I leave it to you to decide what sort of darkness is right for you.
You can either go into the dark deep blue sea for a bit of animal research, in which case – follow this link:
Or you can go into the dark side of humanity. Trigger warning – note that the link below contains material of suicide – do not go in here if you’re not ready for the mental darkness.
(I would also encourage you, if you’re up for this challenge, to search more information about the actual content of this game)
Bonus points for combining the two seamlessly – the pastoral with the existential…
Take a deep breath, and dive in!
This is another one where the prompt more inspired me, than I responded directly to the prompt. I also decided to bring back the characters from Challenge 1, because I kinda wanted to know more about them.