 In an earlier post I talked about the benefits of writing with a partner. Summary: you always have a ride when your car is in the shop.
In an earlier post I talked about the benefits of writing with a partner. Summary: you always have a ride when your car is in the shop.
But you have to find the RIGHT partner.   Some tips from someone who’s been in a successful partnership for 39 years:
Make  sure you both have similar sensibilities. If you love Patton Oswalt and  his all-time favorite comedian is Pauley Shore, keep lookin’. (If his  all-time favorite comedian is Pauley Shore keep looking even if your favorite funnyman is Dan Rather.)
There  have been a number of sibling teams that have worked out. The Charles  Brothers, the Coen Brothers. Make sure you and your sib really get along  and your last name begins with C.
He/she partnerships? If you complement each other then go for it.  Some of Hollywood’s most successful teams are this configuration.  Certainly one of my favorites – Anne Flett Giordano & Chuck Ranberg.
Do  you and your potential partner have similar work habits? If you like to  work in a quiet office during the day and she is only comfortable  writing at the Viper Club after hours, continue your search.
Have  similar aspirations. If your goal is to be a writer and his is just to  use this as a means to move into directing or to get chicks, pass. If he  wants to write Oscar winning movies in five years and you want to punch  up Bette Midler’s Vegas act, shake hands and run.
Figure out  just how you’re going to work. Head-to-head? Splitting the assignment up  and each taking individual scenes? One person writes the rough draft  and the other rewrites it? There’s a screenwriting team of women who sit  around the pool and get smashed. One mans the computer while the other  floats on a raft. That works for them. I could see it working for me.  What works for you?
The Odd Couple would not make a good writing  team. Felix would want to start the assignment right away and turn it in  early. Oscar would wait until legal action was threatened. Both of you  need to be one or the other.
Now the essential stuff:
You must trust and respect your partner. If you don’t think he’s the talented one of the two you haven’t found the right person. And  that’s not saying you always have to defer to your partner. I don’t know  a single writing team that doesn’t argue. But here’s the key:
Don’t make it personal.
Let me repeat in all-caps:
DON'T MAKE IT PERSONAL.
Think  of TV wrestlers. They kill each other on camera and after the show all  go out for beers. Argue over script issues but don’t let the  disagreement bleed into personal feelings. And along those lines…
Fight fair.
No  passive-aggressive bullshit, no mind games, no guilt trips. My partner  and I have a policy. First off, we both have to agree before a line goes  in. Secondly, if we can’t agree, and one can’t quickly convince the  other, we just throw the line out and come up with something else. Trust  me, it takes less time to craft a new joke than spend all afternoon  arguing and ultimately one person ends up unhappy.
I know this  sound like a lot of rules but the rewards if you find the right person  can be enormous. And don’t kid yourself. Your car will need servicing sometime.
Happy hunting.
Chủ Nhật, 5 tháng 8, 2012
The Comedy Writing Team MATCH GAME
06:00
  
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