Dear Mum,
I’m feeling rather smug, which, rather like the conclusion to
last week’s blog, is probably a bad omen.
I’ve spent the last week studying The Writer’s Room website,
absorbing as many tips and nuggets of wisdom as my post-student and so slightly
out of practice memory will allow me.
I now know radio and TV scripts differ hugely. Consequently,
I’ve fiddled with Microsoft Word on my computer to make structuring my script
easier (which, combined with the absence of an L key now makes typing up any
other document mission impossible).
I have read scripts, listened to radio plays and worked my
way through a disgustingly large quantity of cream eggs.
Listening to Pippa talk about writing her dissertation made
me nostalgic for this time a year ago. Immersed literally in Oxford World Classics,
online journals and photocopied essays, and metaphorically in the industrial
worlds of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins, I was pretty miserable. I loved
my topic but, holy Dickens, writing about it was wretched.
It was the constant questions that cavorted about my mind. ‘Am
I structuring this properly?’, ‘Is this
reading really what Collins intended?’, ‘Will my lecturer dislike that particular
quotation?’
The most challenging question, however, was ‘how do I start
this?’, a question Pippa is currently asking.
“The best thing to do, Pips,” I said with patronising
hindsight, the graduate lecturing the student with empty insight, “is just make
a start. Write something, anything, down
and you’ve got something to work with, even if it means you re-write the whole
thing later.”
Utter hypocrite. I hadn’t written a sodding word of my own.
I’m made endless notes but nada in the concrete scripted dialogue department.
Realising this, I set to.
It was of comfort to know that, tomorrow, you and I are driving
to Plymouth. Looking after your own mum after her hip operation, we will be
house-bound and without any internet or Sky Plus to distract.
Rather like Mortmain in ‘I Capture the Castle’, when Cassandra
and Thomas trick him into the medieval tower, I will be isolated in an undisturbed
sanctuary, which I’m hopeful will offer nothing but the opportunity to write.
Inspired by this, I took Cassandra's advice and typed ‘the cat
sat on the mat.’ Next thing I know... Ta-daaaaa!! I’ve got six pages of script.
I’ve at least another twenty-six pages to write and, to
be honest, the six written pages are pretty rudimentary.
I’ve got one month to go. *Gulp*. If you could imprison me in a tower, Mum, with nothing but writing
equipment I’d massively appreciate it.
Oh, and don’t forget the supply of cream eggs.
I might not send pounds, but i will send cream eggs!
ReplyDeleteIf you send cream eggs, i'll put on pounds! If only these turned into cash pounds...
ReplyDeleteNice try :)
ReplyDelete