Making A Scene

28th October 2009
Blog
3 min read
Edited
17th December 2020
Derek Neale

A guest post from Derek Neale, Lecturer in Creative Writing at The Open University:

This is the first in a short series of blogs I’ll be writing about how drama can improve your fiction, each containing an activity for you to try at home.

‘Dramatise! Dramatise!’ was Henry James’ famous maxim to himself and to would-be novelists – and it remains true today. Your storytelling can gain momentum and finesse from looking at how dramatists do things.

More often than not a character’s emotional state is better revealed by being shown in action, rather than the narrator saying ‘he was sad’ or ‘she was angry’. The reader is happier interpreting what characters do, rather than forever being told what is happening.

Drama can inject the vital ingredient that will bring a story alive. I know this from my own writing and from the work of my students. And in most cases dramatising doesn’t mean adding fast-action sequences or melodramatic set-pieces – the key is to tighten the dramatic scenes that are already in the story.

The way scenes move the narrative along in fiction is very similar to the way in which scenes work in the dramatic media. The action of a story takes place in a particular place at a particular time – say, in a restaurant on a Tuesday evening. When place or time change, the scene changes. So when we next encounter our main character, talking on the phone in her kitchen on Wednesday morning, we have moved to a new scene.

Try imagining film versions of the scenes in your story. The restaurant scene, for instance, might start with the dessert and end before the bill is paid. The camera would only stay in the restaurant long enough to convey the important story information.

The tendency with fiction is for scenes to dawdle (yes, let’s be honest, in our first drafts especially). With this in mind, I set myself and my students a checklist about scenes:

  • Are time and place clearly established?
  • What are the key elements of the story the reader needs from this scene?
  • Does the scene start in the right place, or is there too much of a preamble, with characters arriving in dribs and drabs?
  • Does the scene end in the right place, or is the narrator waiting for all the teacups or wine glasses to be drained before moving on?
  • What is the momentum I want from the way this scene ends?

By thinking of the way scenes operate in film, on stage – and even in radio drama – you are more likely to intrigue your reader and make them want to read on.

About Derek: Derek Neale is a fiction writer and dramatist, and is editor and co-author of A Creative Writing Handbook: developing dramatic technique, individual style and voice (A&C Black, 2009). He is Lecturer in Creative Writing at The OU. Some of his conversations with novelists, playwrights and screenwriters are available at OU podcasts.

Unfortunately Derek cannot answer individual questions, but he'll be posting further writing exercises in upcoming months.

Writing stage

Comments

Good post - thanks for this, Derek.

As well as not starting a scene too soon, and not letting it dribble on too long, I'd add that it's worth learning to convey bits of the scene which the reader needs to have, for their sense of the shape and pace of the scene, but which don't need fleshing out in detail. It's about learning to "tell" effectively and vividly, keeping the "showing" in real time for the important moments of changes and conflict. In film, it's often done with a montage of scraps, for example, to move the scene on before the dialogue comes back in. In fiction we might do something like this:

'How long can you stay?' he asked.

She slung her jacket over the back of a chair. 'My bus doesn't go till six.'

'Good. I'll put the kettle on.'

They sorted out the business of coffee - when had she gone decaff-only? - and he waited until the kettle had boiled and the dog been let out into the garden before he said, 'Did you get my letter?'

We need the dog to be let out now, so it can scratch to get back in at some thoroughly awkward moment later. And we need a sense that he takes ages to nerve himself to start the important topic. But we really don't need the full, real-time business of "would you like some coffee" and "I'll just let Rover out": it can all be summarised.

On the other hand, in the middle of this not-important stuff is the fact that she wants decaff, which IS significant - has her new man turned her into a health freak? So that's dropped in, as a thought of his.

Profile picture for user emmadarw_24543
Emma
Darwin
270 points
Developing your craft
Film, Music, Theatre, TV and Radio
Poetry
Short stories
Fiction
Emma Darwin
29/12/2012

I agree with your views. The more descriptive your narrative is, and the more clearly a reader can form mental pictures from it, the greater will be the retentivity of the scene, and your book, in the reader's mind.

Profile picture for user sarah.az_4081
Sarah-Grace
Jenyings
270 points
Developing your craft
Sarah-Grace Jenyings
07/01/2010

Glad you've been enjoying putting this exercise into practice (consciously and otherwise!). Just wanted to let you know that Derek will be back soon with a new creative writing post on 'Finding a Voice'.

Profile picture for user foggclai_218
Claire
Fogg
270 points
Developing your craft
Claire Fogg
12/11/2009