麻豆约拍 Writers Feed Keep up to date with events and opportunities at 麻豆约拍 Writers. Get behind-the-scenes insights from writers and producers of 麻豆约拍 TV and radio programmes. Get top tips on script-writing and follow the journeys of writers who have come through 麻豆约拍 Writers聽schemes and opportunities. 聽 2024-03-25T11:09:37+00:00 Zend_Feed_Writer /blogs/writersroom <![CDATA[The Verb Dramas 2024]]> 2024-03-25T11:09:37+00:00 2024-03-25T11:09:37+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/a73e1b70-a906-44bd-8047-020ed5b3f9cb 麻豆约拍 Writers <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0byb41g.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p0byb41g.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p0byb41g.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0byb41g.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p0byb41g.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p0byb41g.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p0byb41g.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p0byb41g.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p0byb41g.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>The 麻豆约拍 Writers in collaboration with Audio Drama North and 麻豆约拍 Radio 3's The Verb, offered writers in our development groups the opportunity to gain a short audio drama commission. Listen to the four resulting dramas and find out more from the writers.</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">The Verb</a> is a weekly "Cabaret of the Word", featuring the best poetry, new writing and performance, presented by Ian McMillan. The Verb is a longstanding collaborator with 麻豆约拍 Writers, offering the chance for writers from our development groups (including Scripted,聽Writers' Access Group, and Voices) to garner a short audio drama commission - and also the opportunity to appear on the show.聽</p> <p>Once selected, our alumni writers underwent an intense development process with a 麻豆约拍 Audio Drama North Producer. Below, you can listen to their final audio drama productions, as well as read their experiences of the process.聽</p> <p>The 麻豆约拍 Writers alumni selected for the most recent Verb audio dramas are Amy Arnold, Alan Flanagan, Matthew Smith, and Karen Featherstone.聽</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-0" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Kissing with Tongues, written by Amy Arnold.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"I was so happy to have my radio play selected for The Verb 鈥 KISSING WITH TONGUES was the first thing I鈥檇 ever written for radio, and I really wasn鈥檛 sure how my writing would translate given that I have mostly worked on television scripts before now. Once I got started, I found the loose brief 鈥 to simply 鈥榗elebrate language鈥 鈥 and also the tight 7-8 minute timing really focused my brain, getting me to think hard about the purpose of every word (I can sometimes tend towards verbose when left to my own devices!)</p> <p>"My script editor Pippa Day was brilliant in helping me hone the finer story details, and I loved the day I spent in the studio with her and Lorna Newman, who directed the play with so much energy and enthusiasm. Hearing the actors performing my words was really special 鈥 for me it was the first time I鈥檝e experienced that, and it gave me a renewed excitement for radio as a storytelling medium. Listening to the final edit felt so intimate and romantic - the perfect way to dive into the inner thoughts of my two characters as they mull over their feelings for one another. I鈥檓 so grateful I got the opportunity to create this piece through being part of Writersroom, and look forward to writing more for radio in the future!"</p> <p><strong>- Amy Arnold</strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/programmes/m001vdr4">Listen to the full episode of The Verb</a> including Amy's introduction to Kissing With Tongues (at 44 minutes)</strong></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-1" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Something Borrowed, written by Alan Flanagan.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"Anyone who's spent more than five minutes in an Ann Summers knows that it's the fate of humanity to eventually fall in love with machines, so I decided to pitch 'Something Borrowed' -- about a dead relationship resurrected by some ungodly combination of AI and wishful thinking. I love writing for radio because there's this inherent weirdness to it, the audience with an ear cocked to their wireless (slash bluetooth headset) will pretty much sign up for anything, so it feels like a great space to explore genre stories. After getting the initial pitch accepted, I faced the agonising uphill battle of bringing an idea to life -- only kidding (I don't work down a mine), it was all smooth sailing with the wonderful producer Vicky Moseley guiding me through several drafts.</p> <p>"The main challenge was getting so much story into about 8 minutes while still keeping the characters intact and interesting, but Vicky was the perfect collaborator the whole way through. Recording radio is always so much fun, and (after getting over being star-struck by meeting a former Corrie star) I was bowled over by the performances of Jenny Platt and Andonis Anthony. Andonis found the slowly growing humanity in this artificial-intelligence-turned-spurned-boyfriend, while Jenny achieved the impossible by doing an Irish accent that I, a curmudgeonly Irish person, found flawless. I can't thank Vicky, Jenny, Andonis (and Lorna Newman, and others who worked on the project) enough for allowing me to have so much fun bringing this story of literal "it's PC gone mad" to the nation's earholes."</p> <p><strong>- Alan Flanagan</strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/sounds/play/m001vlqz">Listen to the full episode of The Verb</a> including Alan's introduction to Something Borrowed (at 32 minutes, 40 seconds)</strong></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-2" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to No Smoking in the Ground, written by Matthew Smith.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"Radio is a visual medium. Well, no. But hold on...</p> <p>"When I think about audible storytelling - like a podcast, radio advert or interview - the bits that stick with me are the moments where I can visualise the scene. So this was my mission throughout the writing process: write visually. Sure, write well, but for the love of God write visually.</p> <p>"I committed to an idea which is specific and absurd. On the very first page of my script, a Huddersfield Town fan transforms into a donor kebab. This set the tempo. The rest of the story must evolve from this foolish imagery to keep the listener guessing and, ideally, bewildered.</p> <p>"My commitment to ensuring the story was populated with lush yet unfamiliar imagery led me to expecting higher standards from my writing. It's all well and good to imagine bizarre illustrations, but none of this imagery is worth spit unless it actually means something. Therefore I interrogated the story's characters, themes, language and structure much more than I usually do; ensuring the ambitious visuals are complimented by ambitious storytelling.</p> <p>"What I'm trying to say is, more radio dramas should open with a kebab mutation in the John Smith's stadium."</p> <p><strong>- Matthew Smith</strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/sounds/play/m001v24s">Listen to the full episode of The Verb</a> including Matthew's introduction to No Smoking in the Ground (at 13 minutes)</strong></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-3" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Ghost in the Machine, written by Karen Featherstone</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"My play GHOST IN THE MACHINE was my third attempt to have my work included as part of The Verb, so I was thrilled when it got selected. In a way, having being rejected before helped, I think, as I stopped second guessing what I thought the team would like.</p> <p>"I just wrote about something which had been bothering me (my increasing claustrophobia in MRI machines; I鈥檓 a disabled writer and have had a lot of MRI scans). It was a happy coincidence that the weird noises an MRI machine makes meant they were going to contribute to a rich soundscape. I鈥檓 told the sound designers got quite excited at the challenge.</p> <p>"Developing the piece with the wonderful Pippa Day, and then being invited to the recording were huge factors in me feeling that this piece was going to turn out very close to how it had played in my head. There was a slight delay when we had to find the correct pronunciation of the word 鈥榩arapharyngeal鈥, but the patience and dedication of Pippa, the actors and tech team paid off. It was really one of the best experiences I鈥檝e had of my writing being produced."</p> <p><strong>- Karen Featherstone</strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/programmes/m001x414">Listen to the full episode of The Verb</a> including Karen's introduction to Ghost in the Machine (at 22 minutes, 30 seconds)</strong></p> </div> <![CDATA[The Verb Dramas]]> 2023-02-28T09:50:00+00:00 2023-02-28T09:50:00+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/3342c0f3-0b6d-4576-9341-3b49bffbfd4d 麻豆约拍 Writers <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0byb41g.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p0byb41g.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p0byb41g.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0byb41g.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p0byb41g.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p0byb41g.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p0byb41g.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p0byb41g.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p0byb41g.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""></div> <div class="component prose"> <p><em>The 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 programme <a href="/programmes/b006tnsf" target="_self">The Verb</a> is a weekly "Cabaret of the Word", featuring the best poetry, new writing and performance, presented by Ian McMillan. The programme has regularly collaborated with us at the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom, offering the opportunity for writers from our <a href="/writersroom/our-groups/drama-room/" target="_self">Drama Room</a> development group to gain a short audio drama commission and the chance to appear as a guest.</em></p> <p><em>Having been selected, the writers underwent a swift but thorough development process with a 麻豆约拍 Audio Drama North Producer.聽 Below you can read their experiences of the process and listen to their produced audio dramas.</em></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-4" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Adulting written by Georgia Affonso and performed by Chlo毛 Sommer, Jenny McIntyre and Jason Done.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"When ADULTING was picked for The Verb it was a real sense of achievement for me. I鈥檇 pitched an idea a few years ago that hadn鈥檛 gone through, this was totally fair enough (I reread it recently and it was dull as dishwater) but you don鈥檛 feel super hopeful at the time. This was a moment for me to say to myself, look 鈥 you鈥檝e got better!</p> <p>We were limited to less than 10 minutes, and I am someone who can ramble. This is where working with a fabulous producer like Lorna Newman, who directed and produced my piece, is invaluable. Lorna focussed my ideas; we talked a lot about weight and food and culture and trips to the doctors and she made sure she knew what I was trying to get across 鈥 a pro!</p> <p>Getting to sit in the recording was a dream. One of the best bits of script-writing is when you get to hear brilliant actors like Chlo毛 Sommer, Jenny McIntyre and Jason Done bring your piece to life.</p> <p>I鈥檓 looking forward to pitching more ideas to Audio Drama in the future."</p> <p><strong>聽- Georgia Affonso</strong></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-5" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Cramond Island written by Tim Barrow and performed by Jason Done and Emma Laidlaw.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"I loved writing for radio. I haven鈥檛 before. My eyes and ears were opened to the possibility by an opportunity presented as part of the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom Drama Room 2022 cohort. I was dead chuffed to have my pitch chosen.</p> <p>If a radio audience can be transported anywhere I wanted to take them to a windswept island in the Firth of Forth and back in time, deep into nostalgia and old dreams. 10 minutes seemed too brief a stay, but actually allowed plenty to space to explore these characters and tell their tales. Producer Jess Mitic was brilliant 鈥 she got the story, the tone, the world and all its swirling undercurrents, and saw in the script possibilities I hadn鈥檛 explored. I love and admire the respect she has for radio audiences. Her notes were easy and exciting to address and always helped enrich the story or heighten the drama. She also noted stuff she liked!</p> <p>Most of my work is in theatre and I was delighted to find how beautifully the worlds of theatre and radio correlate. I like working with silence and physical action 鈥 storytelling without dialogue 鈥 and happily learned that these are entirely possible in radio. I learned that actors can invest hugely in radio dramas, and am so pleased and proud of these performances. And I learnt that the audio FX team are truly wonderful 鈥 they created an astonishing soundscape, which truly captures the world of Cramond Island."</p> <p><strong>- Tim Barrow</strong></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-6" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Floater written by Alex Riddle and performed by Jonathan Keeble and Emily Pithon.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>"The miracle of radio drama is that you can do just about anything with it: go back in time, into outer space, bring untold stories into people鈥檚 headphones. So I wasn鈥檛 entirely certain how my low-key romance set in your local Specsavers would be received. Getting the email to say that the piece had been commissioned was one of the highlights of my year.</p> <p>Over a couple of Zoom sessions, I worked with my brilliant producer Vicky Moseley to add clarity to some of the more obscure references, punch up the jokes, and make sure the piece didn鈥檛 fall foul of the 麻豆约拍鈥檚 editorial standards鈥 I was more than happy to make a few required tweaks, but retaining the phrase 鈥榙*ck pics鈥 was apparently the hill I was willing to die on. I punched the air when the email came through saying that it had been cleared for broadcast.</p> <p>Heading up to Manchester for the recording, I was full of excitement and the unique terror of a writer wondering what their lines will sound like in the mouths of others (鈥溾ut will they empathise the half rhyme of the penultimate monologue. The whole piece will fall apart otherwise鈥.鈥). But, sat down with a cup a tea at the read through, any lingering nerves melted away as I listened to Emily Pithon and Jonathan Keeble, these two wonderful actors, work their magic and watched as Vicky and the team brought Floater to life. Just a lovely day."</p> <p><strong>- Alex Riddle</strong></p> </div> <div class="component prose"> <h3><strong><a title="The Verb" href="/programmes/m001j4nj" target="_self">Listen to the writers' interviews on The Verb with Ian McMillan on 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 and 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a></strong></h3> <h3><strong><a href="/blogs/writersroom/entries/729f93c5-3903-400c-bba4-c10aaa073059" target="_self">Georgia Affonso shares her round up of the Drama Room 2021/22 group's sessions</a></strong></h3> </div> <![CDATA[Three writers commissioned for 麻豆约拍 Radio 3's The Verb - Listen to their short dramas]]> 2021-07-14T12:00:00+00:00 2021-07-14T12:00:00+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/efc612e6-fb88-4787-92e2-bb665260186c 麻豆约拍 Writersroom North <div class="component prose"> <p>Our ongoing and close partnership with <a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">麻豆约拍 Radio 3's "cabaret of the word" The Verb</a>聽has resulted in several series of short audio dramas, commissioned from writers from our development groups, many of which have gone on to be nominated and shortlisted for 麻豆约拍 Audio Drama Awards. In many cases this offers those writers their first broadcast credit.</p> <p>For the most recent series we put a call out to writers we were working with (including those from all our development groups) for short audio drama scripts based on the theme of "Experiments in Living". Over 50 scripts were received, which were read by the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom team, with a longlist of 18 going through to be read by the 麻豆约拍 Audio Drama North team. As always it proved extremely difficult to whittle them down, as the standard and range of ideas was so high, but ultimately three were chosen to be developed and produced.</p> <p>The three dramas were broadcast in the The Verb episodes on聽<a href="/programmes/m000x7x0">25th June</a>,聽<a href="/programmes/m000xg6v">2nd</a>聽and聽<a href="/programmes/m000xn53">9th July</a>聽with their writers (Emilie Robson, Paolo Chianta and Miles Sloman) appearing as guests on the show.</p> <p><em>"These Verb dramas really explored and celebrated the possibilities of radio, the always abundant theatre of the mind. The writers created images that stayed in my memory long after the pieces had ended, hanging around in my ear like stories that felt timeless and modern at the same time." </em>(Ian McMillan, presenter of The Verb)</p> <p>鈥<em>I love the way the Verb dramas this year experimented with perspective, sometimes in surreal and surprising ways - whether we were listening to the thoughts of a philosopher cat, the words of a parrot 鈥 or the voices of ghosts, or near ghosts. 鈥極ther than human鈥 presences were at the heart of this series, and somehow this made the language feel especially luminous.</em>鈥 Faith Lawrence (The Verb Producer)</p> <p>Listen to all three below and find out more from their writers.聽</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-7" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Sebastian (et moi) by Emilie Robson</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>Sebastian (et moi) explores the fraught relationship between cat and owner in the midst of the lockdown, strained furthermore by the peculiar intellectual prowess of the four legged former. At a time when we were all experimenting in living differently, Sebastian the cat takes it to the extreme, bending language and quoting Sartre, while locked in the bathroom with his long suffering owner Elle.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-8" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Brighter Later by Paolo Chianta</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>1973. Troubled troubadour Nick Drake is a man of few words. Hazel is a woman of a few too many words. Johansson is a parrot of exactly nine words and he鈥檚 damned if he鈥檚 letting them clip his nails.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-9" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>The Fisherman's Elegy by Miles Sloman</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>鈥淣othing stays the same鈥. George has his father鈥檚 words ringing in his ears as he leaves the safety of the harbour and ventures out into Mount鈥檚 Bay at the southern tip of Cornwall - down where the weather-beaten moorland tumbles into the sea. He鈥檚 the last of a long line of fishermen who have weathered storms, industrial overhaul and the gentrification of the village that he calls home.</p> <p>Fisherman鈥檚 Elegy explores the duality of living in a place of contrasts; often at odds with those that inhabit it and which seems to change with each turn of the tide. George must navigate the choppy waters of the Atlantic, his personal grief and wrestle with the legacy placed upon him - facing up to the burden of expectation and the responsibility of tradition.</p> </div> <div class="component prose"> <p><strong><a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">Listen to 麻豆约拍 Radio 3's The Verb, Fridays at 10pm and on 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a></strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/writersroom/our-groups">Find out more about 麻豆约拍 Writersroom's writer development groups</a></strong></p> <p>Listen to previous series of The Verb Short Dramas:</p> <p><strong><a href="/blogs/writersroom/entries/96e3c4c0-20cd-497f-a16c-2beedfe130da">2019 series on the theme "Space"</a></strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/blogs/writersroom/entries/72239f57-98f6-4429-b162-a64075b5602e">2020 series on the theme "Renewal"</a></strong></p> </div> <![CDATA[The Verb - Listen to 4 new short dramas]]> 2021-03-01T17:15:46+00:00 2021-03-01T17:15:46+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/72239f57-98f6-4429-b162-a64075b5602e 麻豆约拍 Writersroom North <div class="component prose"> <p>The 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 programme <a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">The Verb</a> is a weekly "Cabaret of the Word", featuring the best poetry, new writing and performance, presented by Ian McMillan. The programme has regularly collaborated with us at 麻豆约拍 Writersroom, offering the opportunity for four writers from our development groups to gain a 5 minute audio drama commission and the chance to appear as a guest.</p> <p>The most recent opportunity challenged writers to be experimental with language and to create a short piece of work based around the theme of 鈥淩enewal鈥 and any meanings this evoked or inspired.</p> <p>As with every opportunity we run, we were overwhelmed by the high standard and breadth of ideas that were submitted. Ultimately we selected the four ideas that felt the most original and bold while reflecting and embracing the theme, together with meeting the requirements of the audio medium to grab the listener and give them a new experience.</p> <p>Having been selected, it was all go for the four writers as they underwent a swift but thorough development process with their 麻豆约拍 Radio Drama North Producer. They ended up being some of the first audio dramas to be recorded remotely when we first went into lockdown as a country this time last year.</p> <p>Despite the initial set-back and the missed opportunity to all be in the same studio for the recording, we're delighted with how each of the dramas has turned out and how they demonstrate each writer's individual talents and voice. Listen to them below.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p05jnq0g.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p05jnq0g.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Ian McMillan presents The Verb on 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 and 麻豆约拍 Sounds</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p><em>鈥淚 like the way the rhythms of ordinary speech are put under pressure by the needs of the compressed narrative. The sound world, like the writing, seals you into these dramas in a way that never lets you go.鈥</em> - Ian McMillan (Presenter of The Verb)</p> <p><em>鈥淭hese short dramas can make you feel like you鈥檙e caught in someone else鈥檚 train of thought 鈥 you discover how strange language really is 鈥 and that鈥檚 something I really value in these scripts" </em>Faith Lawrence (Producer of The Verb)</p> <p><em>鈥淭hey鈥檝e been like little vibrant jewels of sound. - the scripts, have had a precious jewel quality 鈥 small moments that stay with you, I like how they鈥檝e taken little everyday moments, a haircut, or an attempt to follow a recipe and show how important they really are鈥</em> - Jessica Treen (Assistant Producer of The Verb)<br /><br /><br /></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-10" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Please, No Shouting in the Reception Area by Jacob Welby</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>Please, No Shouting in the Reception Area is about a woman who attempts the simple task of getting her passport renewed but is faced with a bureaucracy so convoluted that it tears down the fabric of her own reality.</p> <p>Please, No Shouting in the Reception Area聽was broadcast on The Verb on 17th April 2020 - <a href="/programmes/m000h92n">Listen to the whole programme</a></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-11" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Avocado Fried Rice by Alissa Anne Jeun Yi</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>Avocado Fried Rice is all about a strained mother-daughter relationship, living with dementia and reconnecting with your cultural roots through cooking. 鈥楻enewal鈥 in Avocado Fried Rice is the renewal of the mother-daughter relationship - Through learning to cook the recipe her mother has long forgotten, the daughter also gets the opportunity to 鈥榬enew鈥 and deepen her connection with her heritage - and also to 鈥榬enew鈥 and reinterpret an traditional, family recipe in her unique, more Westernised way - merging the culture her mum is from and her own; and creating something new and different that celebrates both worlds.</p> <p>Avocado Fried Rice was broadcast on The Verb on 1st May 2020 - <a href="/programmes/m000hpxv">Listen to the whole programme</a></p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-12" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Ghosts by Lucy Burke</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>Ghosts is an exploration of grief, specifically looking at how Freya - a young woman in her twenties - comes to terms with her life continuing when the person she intended on living it out with is taken away unexpectedly. It explores Freya's emerging feelings of guilt and the challenges she faces trying to move forward, of renewing her life plans but in a different way.</p> <p>Ghosts was broadcast on The Verb on 26th June 2020.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-13" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Reflection by Lettie Precious</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p>We all have insecurities; most of them are fuelled by our own beliefs and experiences through the world we live in. Our insecurities dictate how we see the world and how we think the world sees us. What truths or lies does RED鈥檚 reflection tell them? Maybe Peckham High Street has the answer.</p> <p>Reflection was broadcast on The Verb on 26th February 2021 - <a href="/programmes/m000skl0">Listen to the whole programme</a></p> </div> <div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">Find out more about The Verb and listen to programmes now on 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a></p> <p><a href="/blogs/writersroom/entries/96e3c4c0-20cd-497f-a16c-2beedfe130da">Listen to last year's The Verb short dramas</a></p> </div> <![CDATA[4 New Short Audio Dramas Commissioned]]> 2019-06-27T16:25:23+00:00 2019-06-27T16:25:23+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/96e3c4c0-20cd-497f-a16c-2beedfe130da 麻豆约拍 Writersroom North <div class="component prose"> <p>麻豆约拍 Writersroom recently worked once again in collaboration with 麻豆约拍 Radio Drama North and the 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 programme <a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">The Verb</a>聽(Radio 3's cabaret of the word, featuring the best poetry, new writing and performance, presented by Ian McMillan). Writers had the opportunity to be commissioned to write a 5 minute audio drama script and appear as a guest on one of the programmes. This time around, they were challenged to create a piece based on the theme of "Space" and each one of the successful writers gave it a unique translation.</p> <p>Faith Lawrence, Producer of The Verb, shared her thoughts on this year's scheme:</p> <p><em>"The writers of the 2019 Verb dramas brought us short dramas that played with tone and language, in unpredictable and intriguing ways. The writers dived deep into the names of characters (in 鈥楬ag Stones鈥), explored the resonance of particle physics for relationships (鈥楢 Quark In My Cosmos鈥), entered the vocabulary of desire (鈥楶ersonal Space鈥) and exposed the language of power and control (鈥楤orders鈥). Each one allowed us to see how we are writing our lives 鈥 like an x-ray of the present moment in sound. They all enlivened and enriched the programmes that featured them."</em></p> <p>The writers were relatively new to audio drama and made discoveries during the process, not just about the medium, but also about their own writing.</p> <p>Please enjoy listening to their Verb Dramas and find out more about their experiences below.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-14" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Personal Space written by Matthew Ingram and performed by James Quinn and David Judge.</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><strong>'Personal Space' by Matthew Ingram</strong></p> <p>One of the things that particularly struck me about the process of taking 'Personal Space' from script to broadcast was how different the experiences were when drafting production scripts rather than spec' scripts. I wasn't going to be at the piece's recording, and I knew that the record was going to be quick (only two hours to record the whole thing, in fact). With this in mind, I had to think as much as possible about clarity in my production scripts, considering whether I'd expressed everything I wanted to as clearly as I possibly could before handing the script over to producer/director Lorna Newman and her team to create the final piece.</p> <p>All those things I'd heard or read about scripts becoming roadmaps, blueprints, templates or 'a series of provocations', as <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Stephens">Simon Stephens</a> calls them, became true then. Which isn't to say that the artistic processes involved in writing an initial spec script are invalid - all the questions around what you're saying and how you're saying it are totally necessary and are ultimately what drive the piece - but writing Personal Space made me realise that at the point of writing for production, I had to think much more pragmatically about the script - because just writing the thing wasn't the end goal anymore, the end goal was making the thing, and the script was the only place that I could influence the decisions being made.</p> <p>That's a more concrete learning, I guess, but a more abstract learning from the process was learning that I could write for radio. I remember chatting with <a href="/writersroom/about/who-we-are">Head of 麻豆约拍 Writersroom</a> Anne Edyvean and Script Editor, Marigold Joy, about a year ago and being asked about what radio drama I enjoyed. I told them that, while I'd read and enjoyed copies of verse plays or poetry collections that had originally been written for radio, such as Pink Mist or Black Roses, I didn't think that radio drama was 'for me'. I didn't listen to Radio 4 or Radio 3, where most radio drama is commissioned, so in my head at the time, that obviously meant that I wouldn't be particularly interested in writing radio drama.</p> <p>Writing Personal Space taught me that there is a space for me in radio drama, and has inspired me to challenge myself to write in media or genres that I don't think are 'for me'; to deal with curve balls such as unexpected opportunities to write in unfamiliar media in my own way, and to trust my sense of voice to carry me through that.*</p> <p>*And you can bet I listen to a lot more Radio 4 and Radio 3 now!</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-15" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Hag Stones, written by Allison Davies and performed by Sacha Parkinson, James Quinn and Angela Lonsdale</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><strong>'Hag Stones' by Allison Davies</strong></p> <p>I love audio drama, so I was thrilled when I had the opportunity to pitch for <a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">The Verb</a> Dramas on 麻豆约拍 Radio 3. There鈥檚 a beautiful intimacy about radio. You can take your audience anywhere you want to go. Anyone for a trip into the event horizon? Well, maybe I鈥檒l keep that in my back pocket for next time.</p> <p>The idea for Hag Stones, came from a small beach in Northumberland, a 鈥榯hin place鈥 where you can imagine stepping into other worlds. Sometimes we don鈥檛 realise our own worth and I wanted to explore that, and write something that was ultimately hopeful, which is where my character Ellie came in.</p> <p>I was lucky enough to work with Producer/Director Sally Richardson who did a brilliant job, helping me knock the final draft into shape and looking after the recording, and I was proud and delighted when I heard the finished piece go out. The process did wonders for my confidence too. It was inclusive from start to finish and made me even more passionate about writing longer pieces for radio.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-16" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Borders, written by Willow Mirza, performed by James Quinn, David Judge and Sacha Parkinson</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><strong>'Borders' by Willow Mirza</strong></p> <p>Verbs the Word鈥</p> <p>When I was asked to write something for 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 I jumped at the chance and immediately sat down to write a symphony that would smash old Wolfgang out of the water. I was then politely informed it was a Radio Drama they were after鈥 probably for the best, I haven鈥檛 touched a piano since I was 8 and that was on one of those keyboards with the light up keys.</p> <p>Coming up through the <a href="/writersroom/about/comedy-room">麻豆约拍 Comedy Writers Room</a>, The Verb was my first REAL job so I was bright eyed and full of wonder about what the script to production journey would involve. After submitting my script 鈥楤orders鈥 I was put in touch with Emily Demol the producer I鈥檇 be working with to get my drama from paper to airwaves. With Emily鈥檚 guidance I spent a week or so on re writes (this sounds terrifying, but mostly we just chatted about our favourite TV shows, and agreed to change a few words here and there to tighten up the script).</p> <p>Any new writers out there wondering how to even start in this over-saturated market, I urge you to give radio a go it鈥檚 a great medium (and if you make it on to The Verb the amount of cake they give you is unbelievable).</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-17" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to A Quark in my Cosmos, written by Jesse Schwenk, performed by James Quinn and Angela Lonsdale</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><strong>'A Quark in my Cosmos" by Jesse Schwenk</strong></p> <p>This is the first time I鈥檝e written for radio. But I really love <a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">The Verb</a> programme and its celebratory atmosphere, so that was very inspirational.</p> <p>I think I learnt two things:</p> <p>Firstly, 5 minutes is very short, practically a micro-drama, so the events of your story already have to be at quite a high level of pressure: the stakes have to be high and events coming to a head. Don鈥檛 wait for anything, plunge straight in, at the near-apex of the crisis. Trust that the audience will pick it up.</p> <p>BUT at the same time the audience needs the situation set up quickly and clearly, so they can orientate themselves. For example, in Quark, Brenda started life as a vague-ish character, probably Ian鈥檚 sympathetic work colleague; in later drafts she became the cleaner, because it established her role for the audience more quickly and definitely, and also explained how she might be all over the building and know a bit about everyone鈥檚 business.</p> <p>The second thing I learnt is that radio as a dramatic medium is much more fluid than I thought; it鈥檚 alright to let the atmospheres dominate. For instance, you can be in a perfectly ordinary scene 鈥 say two friends discussing something in the aisle of a supermarket 鈥 and then one of the friends starts thinking about something that bothering them 鈥 and radio will just happily move off to this much more internalised place and follow that character鈥檚 inner voice and thoughts, or even go to something more abstract, like the narrator鈥檚 voice, or discussing a topic that鈥檚 poetic but relevant (e.g. in Quark鈥檚 case it was the life of subatomic particles).</p> <p>So in Quark, my excellent director Andrew Smith encouraged me to experiment and play about. In the opening scene, what started in the first draft as a dialogue (between Brenda and Ian) followed by a monologue (from Ian) became much more 鈥榣ayered鈥: in the final draft, as Brenda drones on, Ian wafts off into another world, of thinking about Richard and the delicious world of quarks and quantum particles 鈥 until he鈥檚 brought back down to earth by Brenda.</p> <p>I learnt that radio is a very poetic medium, and as long as you have a strong line on the emotional journey of the characters, radio can wander through different layers 鈥 e.g. realistic dialogue, narration, inner thoughts, music 鈥 without the thread of the story being lost.</p> <p>I鈥檝e got the radio bug now. Luckily, I鈥檝e got another commission for an episode of an upcoming <a href="/sounds">麻豆约拍 Sounds</a> podcast series, and the writers are really being encouraged to push the boundaries and mix things up, which is great.</p> <p>I鈥檇 encourage everyone to think about writing for radio. Really, it鈥檚 an amazing medium, prosaic and poetic all at the same time; you can set anything anywhere 鈥 the possibilities are endless. There鈥檚 no medium quite like it.</p> <p><strong><a href="/programmes/b006tnsf">Listen to The Verb on 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 and 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a></strong></p> <p><strong><a href="/blogs/writersroom/entries/b6cbb1ff-7146-4298-9461-bbe933f7917f">Listen to our recent Music Monologues from new writers for 麻豆约拍 Radio 3</a>聽- each inspired by a different piece of music</strong></p> </div> <![CDATA[5 Writers Commissioned for 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 Music Monologues]]> 2019-06-10T15:06:07+00:00 2019-06-10T15:06:07+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/b6cbb1ff-7146-4298-9461-bbe933f7917f Amira El-Nemr <div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/writersroom/">麻豆约拍 Writersroom</a> is always on the lookout for new writing opportunities, so when <a href="/radio3">麻豆约拍 Radio Three</a> Commissioning Editor, Matthew Dodd suggested five monologues to feature nightly during Emerging Artists Week, beginning on 10th June, we jumped at the chance to collaborate.</p> <p>This opportunity came off the back of the success of 2017鈥檚 <a href="/writersroom/successes/music-day-monologues">Music Day monologues</a> on Radio 3. Those monologues were five minutes long but now Matthew wanted them to fill <a href="/programmes/m0005sgt">The Essay slot</a>, which is up to fifteen minutes long. Embracing this challenge, Anne Edyvean (Head of 麻豆约拍 Writersroom) and I met with Matthew and Producer Abigail Le Fleming to discuss the brief. Matthew made it clear that he wanted to the music to work as inspiration for the stories, to reflect the emotions that the music elicited. He also armed us with ten wonderful pieces of classical music from which the writers would need to choose.</p> <p>After sending out the brief and music to all of our writing groups, we received nearly seventy pitches, which we whittled down to eight. It was incredibly hard making the selection because the standard was so high. With the help of Script Editor Ros Ward, (a former 麻豆约拍 Writersroom Development Producer), we worked closely with the writers developing their scripts. The writers were brilliant in responding to notes, especially given the extremely tight turnaround. We were then faced with the almost impossible task of choosing five of the eight scripts. Together with Matthew, we tried to balance tone, music and types of stories when it came to making the final selection.</p> <p>Many thanks to our writers; Greer Ellison, Annalisa Dinnella, Athena Stevens, Steven Lawrence and Nic么le Lecky for all their hard work.</p> <p><a href="/programmes/m0005sgt">Listen from Monday 10th to Friday 14th June nightly on 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 at 10.45pm or on 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a>.</p> <p>Meet the five writers as they introduce their pieces below. We hope you enjoy listening.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p07cryss.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p07cryss.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p07cryss.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p07cryss.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p07cryss.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p07cryss.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p07cryss.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p07cryss.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p07cryss.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Music Monologues - the 5 writers (l-r top row: Annalisa Dinnella, Nic么le Lecky, Athena Stevens l-r bottom row Greer Ellison, Steve Lawrence</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p><strong><a href="/programmes/m0005sgs">Dodo - by Greer Ellison</a>聽</strong></p> <p>Back in September last year, through the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom, I had the opportunity to <a href="/blogs/writersroom/entries/c1c92b9c-ee81-43ff-9b8c-1ef77cef31c2">meet and talk with some fantastic radio directors and producers</a>, listen to some amazing radio dramas and visit the recording studios where the writing is brought to life.<br />So when I heard about the opportunity to write a pitch for 麻豆约拍 Radio 3, I was over the moon. Everything in radio happens much faster than other areas of the industry and not being constrained by the budget size of TV and Film allows your imagination to run wild. The freedom is liberating鈥</p> <p>We were provided with five pieces of music and the idea was to choose a piece that resonated with you, and create a story around the music. I connected instantly with '<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIwwjy4slI8">Says</a>' by <a href="https://www.nilsfrahm.com/">Nils Frahm</a>, it has a fantastically ethereal quality, that shifts dramatically three quarters of the way through, into an intense cascade of tension and drama that provided the perfect melting pot for my protagonist - whilst hurtling towards her death in a small propeller plane, at over one hundred miles per hour - to ponder the more philosophical elements of her life and her experiences.</p> <p>The idea for the character - Edna Taylor, a quirky ninety-eight-year-old Irish woman who has a fear of heights so extreme that she has never been more than 3 feet off the ground, was inspired by spending New Year鈥檚 Eve in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramelton">Ramelton</a> - a small Irish town in Donegal - and getting to know the elderly lady who ran the B&B. She herself was in her nineties, had never left that town and had never been in love. She was timid and introverted, but had an eccentricity that was electric and a unique view on life. I am thrilled to have had the opportunity to bring a character based on her, to life.</p> <p>On the day of the recording itself, I was invited along to the studio, where I met the director and cast, I was included in the creative process right to the very end and left with a sense of pride, accomplishment and hunger to write more and get it on the air.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-18" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Dodo by Greer Ellison</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/m0005sj6"><strong>The Dead Dad Show - by Annalisa Dinnella</strong></a></p> <p>Of the tracks I listened to, Steve Reich鈥檚 <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaYvMwQd3cs">Six Marimbas</a> most captured my imagination. In its relentless repetition, I heard the chugging and rattling of a train. I was also reminded of that cyclical 鈥榮piral-of-doom鈥 my brain sometimes goes into at about 4 o'clock in the morning when I can鈥檛 sleep. Using these two images, I decided that the obvious place to start was with an insomniac on a sleeper train. And, because I automatically associate sleeper trains with the Edinburgh Festival (long story) I decided my insomniac character should also be a comedian. The rest of the monologue took shape from there.</p> <p>While I was very clear on my character鈥檚 internal journey (he uses comedy as a way of deflecting grief) I played around with various versions of what he was actually doing on the train. I set up a mystery and thought I had solved it but was intrigued to discover that my Script Editor and Producers all had different interpretations of events. This led me to experiment and veer off course and ultimately we ended up somewhere that surprised me as much as it did my character. When we got to the studio, actor <a href="https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7409427/">Joseph Ayre</a> and director, Marc Beeby, created some electric moments that, again, I hadn鈥檛 seen coming. All in all, it was exciting and loads of fun to be part of the team that brought this character screaming to life 鈥 a great experience.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-19" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to The Dead Dad Show - by Annalisa Dinnella</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/m0005skr"><strong>Reluctant Spirit - by Athena Stevens</strong></a></p> <p>So often when I write I start with a clear idea of what I want a piece to be, and then it ends up looking nothing like the original plan. Very often it means another draft is in order, or that the idea isn鈥檛 ready to come into the world. But sometimes I find a story takes me by utter surprise and goes in a very unexpected direction. This piece was the latter. As much I wanted to tell one story, the first few drafts weren鈥檛 fitting together at all. Writing, in many ways, is only done out of stubbornness. Very often I know there is a story there, even when all signs count to the contrary.</p> <p>The team at the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom did an amazing job on refusing to keep me stagnant. Fearless about making suggestions we went back and forth cutting events and even completely changing the point of view of the piece. It kept us all engaged, and myself as a writer very challenged. Around the second draft I came up with the idea of a child who didn鈥檛 want to grow鈥 not grow UP like Peter Pan, but actually wanted to stop getting bigger. It鈥檚 such an unnatural idea in a lot of ways, children need to grow, and yet I can remember being very sad when my favourite shoes didn鈥檛 fit anymore. If a child鈥檚 deepest desire was to stay small, what would she see and how would her world reflect that desire? The music is聽F眉r Alina by聽Arvo P盲rt.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-20" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Reluctant Spirit - by Athena Stevens</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/m0005sk0"><strong>Every Night - by Steve Lawrence</strong></a></p> <p>When I got the chance to pitch for this opportunity my first thought was that it was a little outside my wheelhouse. Whilst I鈥檝e written for radio before it鈥檚 all been jokes and sketches and out of the list of songs provided as inspiration I hadn鈥檛 heard any of them. Yet, if there鈥檚 one thing I鈥檝e learnt from the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom it鈥檚 that it鈥檚 always worth having a go.</p> <p>The first thing I did was listen to all of the music provided by the producers to see which track might spark an idea. As I went through the list I filled my notebook with a few snatches of character but it was only when listening to Morten Lauridsen鈥檚 beautiful, sweeping, epic 鈥極 Magnum Mysterium鈥 that what felt like a fully fleshed out person (or former person) began to take shape in my head. I found myself lost in the voices of the choir and as I listened memories of my guilt ridden Catholic school upbringing began to coalesce with my interest in horror - soon I was transcribing the story of a modern vampire trapped in an endless cycle of terrible nightclubs wracked with snatched memories of a dark past.</p> <p>I was happy with the pitch but I have to admit I was surprised it was selected for development considering how odd elements of it were. One of the joys of radio is the ability to go to places that TV might find restrictive due to budget or content and I鈥檓 delighted that those involved in the decision making process wanted to take some risks and tell some stories you might not have heard before.</p> <p>Of course once selected I had to write the actual monologue and flesh out my central character. I consider myself a comedy writer and my first instinct was to go toward the jokes - the juxtaposition of an immortal being searching for prey in a sticky floored club (shout out to the Carleton in Morecambe for the inspiration) but in doing so I managed to swerve away from the emotion of the original piece of music. Thankfully script editor extraordinaire Ros Ward was on board and she was instrumental in helping me get to the heart of who my main character was beyond the fangs and throat ripping and why his story was worth telling. Over the course of a couple of sleepless transatlantic flights (I鈥檓 method) it went from something comedic to something dramatic and romantic even (with a few laughs) and whilst I鈥檓 a little nervous to be entering the world of drama I鈥檓 really excited for the world to hear our blood addicted creature of the night tell his story.</p> <p>At the very least I hope you don鈥檛 think it sucks...</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-21" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Every Night - by Steve Lawrence</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><strong><a href="/programmes/m0005sm7">Le Festival de Men - by Nic么le Lecky</a></strong></p> <p>After being sent the brief and going through the list of songs, I sat there dutifully listening and waiting to be inspired. When I heard 鈥楥uban Overture鈥 by George Gershwin, the funny thing is that I actually was. I was incredibly inspired. I pictured a festival, I became aware of the music's changeable moods and I came up with my piece 鈥楲e Festival de Men鈥. Looking at the world of online dating and what that might look like in the future. I wanted to explore my character Candice鈥檚 excitement, after being presented with a wonderful opportunity. Similar to Charlie in 鈥楥harlie and the Chocolate Factory鈥andice pins everything on this day, only to be disheartened by a cruel twist of events.</p> <p>I throughly enjoyed working with my script editor, and 麻豆约拍 Writersroom. I didn鈥檛 stop going on about IT BEING MY FIRST TIME WRITING FOR RADIO and they were supportive and eased me into the process. First focusing on the story, and then helping me to improve each draft to bring it closer to a script ready to be performed and recorded. On hearing it I was so pleased that the world I鈥檇 pictured had been brought to life in such a fun, and thrilling way. Now I鈥檝e ripped the imaginary bandaid off, I鈥檓 looking forward to writing more Radio in future.聽</p> </div> <div class="component"> <div id="smp-22" class="smp"> <div class="smp__overlay"> <div class="smp__message js-loading-message delta"> <noscript>You must enable javascript to play content</noscript> </div> </div> </div><p> <em>Listen to Le Festival de Men - by by Nic么le Lecky</em> </p></div><div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/m0005sgt/episodes/guide"><strong>Listen to all 5 Music Monologues on 麻豆约拍 Radio 3 and 麻豆约拍 Sounds</strong></a></p> </div> <![CDATA[Writing Radio Drama]]> 2019-03-18T16:12:27+00:00 2019-03-18T16:12:27+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/7a950b76-3850-44d8-98a8-6d0494d6ac5b Dan Rebellato <div class="component prose"> <p><a href="/programmes/m000356c">Lorenzaccio</a>, which was broadcast on Radio 3 on Sunday 10 March and is <a href="/sounds/play/m000356c">available to listen to now on 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a>, is my 21st script for 麻豆约拍 Radio. Lorenzaccio is an adaptation of a French play by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_de_Musset">Alfred de Musset</a> from the 1830s that I fell in love with as a student and have wanted to find some way of bringing to wider attention ever since. It is set in the Florence of the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici">Medicis</a> in the 1530s, a place of corruption and wealth, cruelty and revenge. It鈥檚 a play from the Romantic movement, which, in French playwriting, meant drawing on the sprawling model of Shakespeare rather than the austere purity of the Greeks. Lorenzo, the anti-hero of Lorenzaccio, is a turbulent, troubled soul who has infiltrated the corrupt Medici court with the secret aim of getting close enough to the Duke to assassinate him; but as he gets close to achieving his goal he realises he has lost any sense of his real self and his exposure to the brutal side of humanity has threatened to tarnish his hopes in liberation. It鈥檚 an epic play with a whole city as its landscape, and it鈥檚 often referred to as the French Hamlet.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0729ldh.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p0729ldh.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p0729ldh.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0729ldh.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p0729ldh.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p0729ldh.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p0729ldh.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p0729ldh.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p0729ldh.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Lorenzaccio, adapted by Dan Rebellato for 麻豆约拍 Radio 3. Listen now on 麻豆约拍 Sounds.</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>When my producer, Polly Thomas, and I first started thinking about pitching <a href="/programmes/m000356c">Lorenzaccio</a> as a project to <a href="/radio3">Radio 3</a>, we had to make several decisions. For one thing, the play is enormously long, probably pushing five hours. We had to find a way of bringing it down to fit the ninety-minute slot without wholly sacrificing the epic scale that is so distinctive and thrilling about the play. Second, when we pitch a project, we always ask ourselves, why <em>this</em> play and why <em>now</em>? Third, and most important, why is this a play for <em>radio</em>? What will the specific form and dynamics of sound drama add to this play?</p> <p>The form we eventually arrived at was, in a way, an answer to all three questions. Lorenzaccio is a nineteenth-century play set in the sixteenth century but it is very contemporary. We live in a turbulent political period and many of us have asked, what can good people do in bad times? Lorenzaccio is asking the very same question and, indeed, Musset wrote this historical play in part as a way of reflecting on the thwarting hopes, the compromises, the contradictions of his own era. We thought we wanted to let Musset speak to our times too. We considered entirely relocating the play to the present, to set the play, for example, in something like the Trump White House, but we decided against it; for one thing, there are many aspects of the plot 鈥 like the machinations of a Papal envoy to secure a position of authority in the Court 鈥 that fit perfectly well in the logic of sixteenth-century Florence but would strain credulity in the twenty-first-century US. But also, my initial impulse was that I wanted people to get to know Lorenzaccio by Musset, not a new play vaguely inspired by it.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p073xdm2.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p073xdm2.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p073xdm2.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p073xdm2.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p073xdm2.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p073xdm2.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p073xdm2.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p073xdm2.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p073xdm2.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Dan Rebellato with Producer Polly Thomas</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>We decided to do something that is extremely common in the theatre, but something we鈥檇 rarely heard done on the radio; that is, a modern-dress production. I was very struck by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Hytner">Nick Hytner</a>鈥檚 production of Othello at the <a href="https://www.nationaltheatre.org.uk/">National Theatre</a> in 2013. The language was more or less unchanged, but the action was transferred to the contemporary world, in military bases, neon-lit offices, and so on. The transposition was so perfect that the play was clear and utterly thrilling; I remember my wife saying to me as we went out at the interval "I can鈥檛 wait to see the next episode!" It had that box-set feeling to it. Of course, modern dress is scarcely the point in radio, but our version was to retain the play鈥檚 sixteenth century setting and language (Cardinal, Duke, Marchesa, Your Highness, Sire, etc.) but create a wholly twenty-first-century sound world; that is, they would still speak of sending letters and fighting with swords but we would hear Skype and gunfire. This in turn answered how this play would gain a particular radio life, as the work of the listener would be to coordinate in their minds the fiction and the world, enjoying, we hoped, the reframing of the action in modern forms.</p> <p>Of course, as I was translating the play from French as well as adapting it, there is, in literal terms, none of Musset鈥檚 actual language, and the choices you make as translator are never neutral. I tried to replicate Musset鈥檚 mixture of modern French and a quasi-Shakespearean reach into metaphor and image 鈥 I had to find a language in which the characters could both say (as the character Philippa does) "each murder begets murder and soon hatred takes root, sons are buried in the coffins of their fathers, and each new generation springs from the ground with a sword in his hand" and (as the Duke says of Lorenzo鈥檚 sister) "I like a girl who talks dirty"; this seemed also a way of conveying Musset鈥檚 shimmering ambiguity between the contemporary and historical. And sometimes I smoothed somewhat the clash between the Digital Age and the Renaissance by slightly opening out the language to permit both centuries, so that the characters usually speak of 鈥榳eapons鈥 rather than, say, 鈥榙aggers鈥. The effect, I hope, is of a certain collage, the language clashing and shifting between high and low, old and new, alien and familiar, which is, I think, what Musset is doing too.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p05z4nxk.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p05z4nxk.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>麻豆约拍 Radio 4's The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams - early inspiration for writer Dan Rebellato.</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>Every project is different of course and the more I鈥檝e worked in radio, the more interesting the form seems to be. With hindsight, I suppose I listened to quite a lot of audio drama when I was growing up (<a href="/programmes/b03v379k">The Hitchhikers鈥 Guide to the Galaxy</a> was a particular favourite), but when I started writing for radio drama in the late 1990s, I was slightly daunted by what seemed a strange and unfamiliar medium. Is it a wholly verbal form of drama or do you want to create an entire physical landscape for your play? What does action sound like? Do you need a narrator to populate and describe the world? I puzzled over these things until I got a great piece of advice from Polly, my producer: <strong>write it like a screenplay</strong>.</p> <p>In other words, radio is a visual medium: it鈥檚 just that the images play out in the mind. Famously, when radio drama was being developed at the 麻豆约拍 in the mid-1920s, they struggled to figure out how to make sense of a storytelling medium that was entirely sound and so set the first play down a coal mine during a blackout (<a href="/programmes/articles/2D0KClp9vJMt2dN2SS7ZWng/radio-drama-at-90">A Comedy of Danger by Richard Hughes</a>), thus providing a rationale for the lack of visuals. And no doubt, some very interesting plays can be created in that way, but it鈥檚 not necessary and it鈥檚 as thrilling for the radio listener to suddenly experience something visually extraordinary happening. <a href="/programmes/b007jw23">One of my first plays</a> had one of the architects of the Houses of Parliament blow up the building the night before it was due to be opened by Queen Victoria: he describes watching St Stephens鈥 Tower rising up out of the explosion like a rocket and soaring into the air. Equally, and perhaps just as perversely, radio drama loves silence: the moment where, if you鈥檝e hooked the audience in right, they are leaning in, totally absorbed in that invisible soundless space, because the characters have stopped talking and something has happened and we want to know what. Visuals, silence and not knowing what鈥檚 happening; against all the odds, these seem immensely valuable tools for radio drama.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p01gd9qt.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p01gd9qt.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Erskine May by Dan Rebellato, an historical fantasy, based on the legendarily fractious partnership between the two architects of the Houses of Parliament</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>Radio drama is a wonderful medium for a writer. In almost all cases, the script is fundamental to the experience, so you really get to hear how your writing ideas have worked out. There鈥檚 very little time in the recording to make substantial changes, so it is very exposing for a writer; the play stands and falls on the writing, which can be thrilling and can be mortifying, but you will learn about your writing by writing for radio in a very intense way. You also get to work with the most extraordinary actors: I鈥檝e had Alex Jennings, Michael Palin, Glenda Jackson, Sam West, Anna Maxwell Martin, Bill Nighy, Sarah Parish, David Harewood and too many more to mention individually in my plays. Not all actors enjoy radio, but those who do can find wonderful things in your writing that you didn鈥檛 even know were there.</p> <p>It鈥檚 also wonderful for a writer because you have an audience. Something around a million people listen to the <a href="/programmes/b04xxp0g">麻豆约拍 Radio 4 Afternoon Drama</a> (just after <a href="/programmes/b006qpgr">The Archers</a> on a weekday afternoon); in fact I was once told that, because of The Archers, the Afternoon Drama usually starts with around two million listeners and loses half its audience by the end. I鈥檝e always had that image in my mind; the listener finishing their dose of Ambridge life, their hand reaching for the off-switch. How do you keep them? How do you quickly immerse them in a new world, a new story, a new experience, and keep them there? If you can, of course, it鈥檚 a staggering thing to imagine a million or more people listening to your work: to put that in perspective, it took the musical <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_Mis%C3%A9rables_(musical)">Les Mis茅rables</a> around two years to play to its millionth audience member. And you often get lovely messages from people, and now because of social media, you get live commentary, which is... mostly enjoyable.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p01h20h1.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p01h20h1.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p01h20h1.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p01h20h1.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p01h20h1.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p01h20h1.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p01h20h1.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p01h20h1.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p01h20h1.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>My Life Is a Series of People Saying Goodbye - by Dan Rebellato</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>Finally, radio is a valuable writer鈥檚 medium because, more than most TV, more than most theatre, it is a space to experiment. Sure, there are some conventional radio plays, and many of them are great, but there are 250 Radio 4 <a href="/programmes/b04xxp0g">Afternoon Dramas</a> a year, 250 episodes of the <a href="/programmes/b006qy2s">15-Minute Drama</a> during Woman鈥檚 Hour, 50 episodes of the <a href="/programmes/b006qfz6">Classic Serial</a>, 50 <a href="/programmes/b006qgxs">Saturday Dramas</a>; that鈥檚 a lot of space to fill and a very loyal audience, who don鈥檛 want the same thing every day. My experience of the 麻豆约拍 Radio Drama audience is that they are hungry for new things, new ideas, new experiences. I wrote a play, <a href="/programmes/b009jv73">Cavalry</a>, a few years ago which purports to be the recordings 鈥 glitches and all 鈥 of a 麻豆约拍 reporter interviewing the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse at the End of the World. I wrote another, <a href="/programmes/b00zzy2g">My Life is a Series of People Saying Goodbye</a>, which was a collage made up of scenes of people saying goodbye to someone else (a wife divorces a husband; a schoolgirl says goodbye to a favourite teacher; a constituency party deselects its MP, etc.), but we blurred the boundaries between the stories, so that the character sometimes changed before the actor, or the setting changed before the dialogue. It created a tapestry of loss and longing and I still find the production and those wonderful actors very moving as the various stories start to knit together and the emotions build on each other. Radio drama is a very flexible form with a very flexible audience.</p> <p>But to say, as some do, that radio drama is a writer鈥檚 medium is only part of the truth. It鈥檚 also important for me to acknowledge that my work in radio has all been a collaboration with my producer, Polly Thomas. Every idea goes through a long process of discussion and thinking, with Polly advising, adding ideas, giving feedback. It is the producer who will turn all the various ideas you come up with together into what you hope is a commissioner-friendly pitch. If the play is then commissioned, the producer will comment on drafts and discuss casting, music, the sound 鈥榝eel鈥 of a project. They direct it on recording days and have the final word on the edit. So, while it鈥檚 absolutely the case that I do all of the actual writing, the final drama is inextricably a creative collaboration.</p> <p>A third figure that I must mention is the sound designer (though might sometimes be credited as co-producer or editor or something else), who is the figure responsible technically for recording the actors and is a key figure in bringing everything together in the final edit. In the last few projects I鈥檝e been very lucky to work with Eloise Whitmore, who is a sound designer of genius. She has an extraordinary ear and is able to put sounds together, change a few settings, and suddenly you鈥檙e in a Renaissance cathedral or in the middle of a nineteenth-century battle or on the moon.</p> <p>Any radio playwright needs a Polly and an Eloise, by which I mean, you need brilliant people with whom you collaborate as equals, because when you work with great people (producers, sound designers, actors) it inspires you to try more and more complex things, to challenge yourself and your audience, to push at the edges of the form.</p> <p>The 麻豆约拍 is one of the most prolific producers of radio drama in the world. It鈥檚 a really valuable space for writers at all levels to develop their craft before a large, demanding and engaged audience. When I started, I think there was, in some quarters, a vague idea that radio drama was a rather old-fashioned form. Now, in the world of podcasting 鈥 where you can gather a few friends, some pretty basic equipment, and a couple of bits of free software and send that out literally across the world 鈥 radio drama is at the leading edge of the culture. There is an expansive intimacy about radio drama, a form that is collectively experienced individually, that seems to speak to our world of tribes, bubbles, walls and borders, yet reaches out across those dividing lines to encourage us to understand and experience a thousand possible and impossible worlds.</p> <p><strong><a href="/sounds/play/m000356c">Listen to Lorenzaccio now on 麻豆约拍 Sounds</a></strong></p> <p><strong><a href="http://www.danrebellato.co.uk/">Find out more about Dan Rebellato on his website</a></strong></p> </div> <![CDATA[How 麻豆约拍 Writersroom 10 led to my first piece for Radio]]> 2015-10-23T13:31:42+00:00 2015-10-23T13:31:42+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/657ac2cd-c9a4-4592-8b0d-ed06a3cff0e3 Joe White <div class="component prose"> <p>It started with the image of a man sitting on a check-out counter, dousing himself in coke. An image which (perhaps worryingly) arrived in my head one night without any explanation or obvious source. I had no idea who he was, or what he was doing there, but as <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Pinter">Pinter</a> said 鈥<a href="http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/2005/pinter-lecture-e.html">our beginnings never know our ends</a>鈥, and I always find plenty of time to fret about 'the whys' later.</p> <p>The man soon became Jim, a wannabe Buddhist聽<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sin-eater">Sin Eater</a>聽in a Midlands mini-mart, trying his best to atone. But things aren't ever that easy. So Jim had to be confronted by his polar opposite: a form-ticking, protocol-preaching assistant manager, called Sam, who never apologises for anything and feels physically ill when stock gets damaged. This end-less beginning developed into a short play called <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06dd0tm">Temples</a>, which was performed at the <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/successes/writersroom-10-the-parade#heading-the-201415-writers">麻豆约拍 Writersroom 10</a> showcase at the <a href="http://www.birmingham-rep.co.uk/">Birmingham Rep</a>, and it was fun, and silly, and visually interesting, and I pretty much thought that was that. And then, out of the blue, it was commissioned by <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3">麻豆约拍 Radio 3</a> to be adapted for <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnsf">The Verb</a>. And I was ecstatic and terrified in equal measure, because I'd never written an audio-drama before, and didn't quite know how to approach adapting a very visual play, which started life as an image with no story. Now was the time to fret about 'the whys', and 'the hows'.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0360v5q.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p0360v5q.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p0360v5q.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p0360v5q.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p0360v5q.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p0360v5q.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p0360v5q.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p0360v5q.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p0360v5q.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Joe White</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>A few weeks later, I was sat, staring blankly at a blank word document, when I remembered my first brush with audio-drama: I was five years old, staring blankly at a blank wall in my attic bedroom, which was so high-up and hot, it induced nightly nosebleeds and delirious visions of monsters made out of flannels. I鈥檇 barely slept for a year, and my parents were probably near breaking point, when some kindly corner-cutting mother recommended some audiobooks for lulling children into night-terror-free sleep, and they gave it a go... It didn鈥檛 work 鈥 I still didn鈥檛 sleep at all - but that didn鈥檛 matter because the stories were melting the blank walls of my hot, high, Pringles-tube of a room, and letting in a secret world of creatures, and treasures and faraway woods. And I remember seeing everything for real, and being completely agog, and not ever thinking about how those images had gotten into my head.</p> <p>Of course, you can鈥檛 solve everything with stories, and the nosebleeds continued, but at least this slightly traumatic memory helped me twenty-two years later, whilst staring blankly at that blank word document. I remembered that my favourite tapes had always been the most visual 鈥 or rather, the most provocative of imagery (whether through sound or language). Those ones 鈥 the stories I really saw - were full of action, and dynamism, and movement, and used sound as a means to convey a world, with depth and life and scale. Those stories embraced the black-hole between story-teller and listener, and never underestimated the audiences鈥 ability to fill the gap with their own imaginations. And I stopped worrying about describing how someone might pour coke over their head, and thought instead about their mental state whilst doing so, and where they were in their head at that moment. Using that internal voice meant I could move anywhere without actually leaving the shop, and the world was suddenly open - those blank walls melted away like the ones in my bedroom twenty-two years ago.</p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p01y3mys.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p01y3mys.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p01y3mys.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p01y3mys.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p01y3mys.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p01y3mys.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p01y3mys.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p01y3mys.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p01y3mys.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>The 麻豆约拍 Writersroom 10 2014/15</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>I had a lot of fun hinting at worlds, like trying to conveying what sort of shop it is from the buzz of neon, and the sound of the electric bell above the door, or even what sort of temple Jim imagines from the sound of wind-chimes and goat鈥檚 bleating in the distance. I found I didn鈥檛 have to write a huge sound-scape, but that actually even a couple of distinct noises or phrases were enough to set up a mood or a place or a person for the listener to spar with. I thought of the whole thing as images described through the language of sound, and loved how satisfying it was to convey something without explanation, like the difference between describing your favourite place to someone, and actually taking them there 鈥 which, of course, with radio, is very do-able. If I covered as many story beats as I could with sound, and not description, I could reserve language for salty, driven dialogue, and I found that the story gaps which needed filling by spoken exposition were fun to play with once I鈥檇 accepted the knowingness of those lines (e.g. finding funny foods for Sam to get irate about, or Jim over-describing the coke as 鈥榦wn brand鈥). It may be the years of nosebleeds and night-terrors talking, and it may be contradictive, or obvious, or boring to say, but imagining the visual was key to me thinking about writing the audible, and went some way in solving something which has long been a bit of a mystery to me. And now I can鈥檛 wait to see the next inexplicable, inaudible image, and then spend ages working out a way to help others see it in the dark, through sound.</p> <p><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06dd0tm">Listen to Temples by Joe White</a> (at 26'16" into the programme, 9 more days to listen)</p> <p><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/successes/writersroom-10-the-parade">Find out more about the 麻豆约拍 Writersroom 10</a>, a development scheme in partnership with theatres across the UK</p> <p><a href="http://www.pentabus.co.uk/joe-white">Joe White is 2015 Writer in Residence at Pentabus Theatre</a></p> <p>There will be three more short dramas by Writersroom 10 writers broadcast on Radio 3's 'The Verb' over the next few weeks.</p> </div> <![CDATA[The Writer's Prize Finalists]]> 2013-02-22T11:45:45+00:00 2013-02-22T11:45:45+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/e26048c4-c3f8-3daa-b5fe-90445ebeb2df Kate Rowland <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p00yvfw9.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>Image for the The Writer's Prize for radio.</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>1200 scripts: when you see them all together stripped bare of their envelopes, it's daunting, a room full of ideas, new worlds, exposition, un-thought through ideas and thank goodness strokes of genius that make you read on and laugh out loud.<br>So from all these the submissions in different shapes and sizes our readers started their work聽 in December to find the most compelling drama and comedy scripts. This takes time, and聽 after weeks of reading and much debate a shortlist was created for both sets of judges. Ten dramas for writer,聽 Roy Williams and R4 Drama Commissioner聽 Jeremy Howe and eight comedies for Caroline Raphael, Commissioner R4 Comedy聽 and Miles Jupp, Comedy Writer and performer, with me reading all of them.聽 </p><p>I'm always asked how can you tell whether it's any good, what do you mean by the writers voice, when you say my play lacks ambition what's really wrong with it. Of course it's got a story say you and I say actually no nothing happens, no one is changed, the stakes aren't high enough, I just don't care what happens to those characters. And with comedy we're looking for original ideas with a strong premise, real characters not cliches, that have the potential to surprise and聽 engage an audience week after week.聽 It's not easy,聽 and we were looking for work to develop and commission so its real time and money at stake. But then something inexplicable, compelling, extraordinary grabs you and makes you turn the page.聽 </p><p></p> </div> <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p015fqjv.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p015fqjv.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p015fqjv.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p015fqjv.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p015fqjv.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p015fqjv.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p015fqjv.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p015fqjv.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p015fqjv.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>The Writer's Prize Judges: Roy Williams, Miles Jupp, Caroline Raphael and Jeremy Howe</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>Yes it's all subjective but when the judges met on Wednesday February 6th, all of us with a vast experience of聽 reading scripts, to consider the聽 final short list for the Writer's Prize one thing was certain, we did not feel that our time had been wasted. Roy Williams, Jeremy Howe and I were genuinely impressed by the range and calibre of the Drama scripts we were asked to consider. From cycling grannies in space to noir thrillers and pharmacies, boy eating polar bears and the ethical dilemma of which parent do you kill when the food runs out. We were confronted by complex storytelling, boldness and an emotional engagement that comes from writers passionate about their subject.聽 We were unanimous about the strength of the two dramas we selected for commission-聽 Rock me Amadeus by Simon Topping and Bang Up by Sarah Hehir.聽 Jeremy Howe said that "Rock me Amadeus by Simon Topping is a delightful sharp romantic comedy with a difference. Charlie is 16, and has a twin sister. Although he is a boy, he knows he should really be a girl. He has a crush on the German exchange who comes to stay with them, and so does his sister, only he can鈥檛 admit it 鈥 because he is a boy and he is not gay. It is clever, beguiling and handles a tough subject with a lightness of tone and a freshness of voice that makes it an utterly engaging read. Bang Up by Sarah Hehir is a drama about a woman trying to teach a young offender in a detention centre. Her life is imploding, while his has hope, but through the course of the play she finds her way as he utterly loses his,聽 it is beautifully written, moving and insightful." Perhaps we were more disappointed by the range of ideas for comedy, the lack of and maybe too many familiar set ups but the selected script聽 for Comedy development was The Joy of Adult Education by Mark Wallington in which a beginner鈥檚 woodwork course and a small earthquake help an everyday couple save their exotic ravioli business. Miles Jupp said " The characters are beautifully and lovingly drawn too, giving a real warmth to this understated joy of a script."</p><p>Here鈥檚 what the writers had to say: </p><p><strong>Simon Topping</strong></p><p><em>鈥淚'm absolutely thrilled, honoured, flabbergasted, flattered, gobsmacked and very grateful that my play has been selected. Thank you bbc writersroom and judges! Wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, as Kate Bush might have said (the last two wows in a deep voice).鈥</em></p><p><strong>Sarah Hehir</strong> </p><p><em>"Being selected for the聽 Writer's Prize feels like a life changing moment. I'm so excited about the future!"</em></p><em></em><p><br><strong>Mark Wallington</strong></p><p><em>"Delighted to be working in radio again. I've always thought radio is about as much fun as a writer can have".</em></p><p>Anyway we will keep you in the loop with developments. But don't forget be bold, don't try and second guess what you think the networks are looking for - what do you want to hear?聽 Write that as best as you possibly can and keep writing. (Oh my god that sounds like Brucie!) </p><p><strong><em>The Writer's Prize was a joined partnership between 麻豆约拍 writersroom and Audio & Music for radio drama and comedy writers.聽 The prize聽was the聽opportunity for a Radio 3 or Radio 4 Drama commission, or a pilot commission for a Radio 4 Comedy. </em></strong></p> </div> <![CDATA[The Writer's Prize: Why write for radio?]]> 2012-10-31T16:13:27+00:00 2012-10-31T16:13:27+00:00 /blogs/writersroom/entries/e5476f21-6afc-3274-9ac8-43e2910d74f8 Paul Ashton <div class="component"> <img class="image" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p00yvfw9.jpg" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/80xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 80w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/160xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 160w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/320xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/480xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 640w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/768xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 768w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/896xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 896w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1008xn/p00yvfw9.jpg 1008w" sizes="(min-width: 63em) 613px, (min-width: 48.125em) 66.666666666667vw, 100vw" alt=""><p><em>The Writer's Prize for radio.</em></p></div> <div class="component prose"> <p>You鈥檝e probably noticed by now that <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/opportunities/the-writers-prize">The Writer鈥檚 Prize</a> has opened its doors to original drama and comedy scripts. Which made us think: are there writers out there who don鈥檛 know what a brilliant opportunity radio is? </p><p>So here鈥檚 a round-up of some of the very good reasons why any writer should want to write for radio:</p> <ul> <li>麻豆约拍 radio is by far the biggest single commissioner of original drama and comedy in the world 鈥 full stop</li> <li>The vast majority of opportunities for drama writers on radio are highly individual single, authored pieces (even if you somehow managed to get your movie script made, you鈥檇 still struggle to get into the cinema the number of people who would hear it on radio)</li> <li>Many hugely popular and brilliantly original TV comedy shows started their life on the radio 鈥 Little Britain, Knowing Me Knowing You, Goodness Gracious Me, Miranda, The League of Gentlemen, The Mighty Boosh, Dead Ringers, That Mitchell and Webb Look, Hancock鈥檚 Half Hour, Hitchhiker鈥檚 Guide to the Galaxy, The Day Today </li> <li>A vast array of brilliant writers have worked in radio 鈥 from Tyrone Guthrie and Dylan Thomas, to Douglas Adams, Spike Milligan and Marty Feldman, to Tom Stoppard, Caryl Churchill, Anthony Minghella and Lee Hall, to Mike Bartlett, Roy Williams and Katie Hims</li> <li>You can get amazingly successful and celebrated actors to be in your radio play 鈥 and they don鈥檛 even need to shave/do make up/commit to weeks of filming</li> <li>Radio is the cinema of the airwaves 鈥 it鈥檚 all about the visual world conjured up in the listener鈥檚 head, and the ambition and scope the writer brings to it</li> <li>You can take your story, characters and listeners anywhere in the known (or unknown) universe without the budgetary constrictions you鈥檇 get with a film or TV shoot</li> <li>In radio, writers work very closely with producers and are intimately involved with the development and production</li> </ul><ul><li>In radio, writers can have an extremely intimate relationship with the listener 鈥 and therefore can tell stories in ways that just wouldn鈥檛 work in any other medium<br><br><br><strong><em><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/opportunities/the-writers-prize">The Writer's Prize</a> is a brand new opportunity for radio drama and comedy writers to write for 麻豆约拍 Radio.聽 We are looking for original, multi-character narrative scripts.The prize is the opportunity for a Radio 3 or Radio 4 Drama commission, or a pilot commission for a Radio 4 Comedy.聽 <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/opportunities/the-writers-prize">Find out more.</a></em></strong><br><br><em><strong>Join us on Wednesday 7th November from 11.30pm - 12.30pm for a special Twitter Q&A on The Writer's Prize. Tweet your questions to <a href="http://twitter.com/bbcwritersroom">@bbcwritersroom</a> using the hashtag #WritersPrize.</strong></em><br><br> </li></ul><p>聽</p> </div>