“Write what makes you happy.”
Archive for August, 2010
William Shakespeare
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 30
As an unperfect actor on the stage
Who with his fear is put besides his part,
Or some fierce thing replete with too much rage,
Whose strength’s abundance weakens his own heart.
So I, for fear of trust, forget to say
The perfect ceremony of love’s rite,
And in mine own love’s strength seem to decay,
O’ercharged with burden of mine own love’s might.
O, let my books be then the eloquence
And dumb presagers of my speaking breast,
Who plead for love and look for recompense
More than that tongue that more hath more express’d.
O, learn to read what silent love hath writ:
To hear with eyes belongs to love’s fine wit.
(Sonnet 23)
Peter Brook
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 29
“The one thing that distinguishes the theatre from all the other arts is that it has no permanence.”
Harold Clurman
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 28
“There is an element of hazard (beyond the monetary) in all theatrical production and it is part of the theatre’s challenge that it should exist. it is a serious fault to be overfearful of failure. Many an artist has been crippled by it.”
David Mamet
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 27
“When you sit down to write, tell the truth from one moment to the next and see where it takes you.”
Caesar Augustus’s last words
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 26
“Acta est fabula, plaudite!” (The play is over, applaud!).
William Faulkner
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 24
“The artists who want to be writers, read the reviews; the artists who want to write, don’t.”
Moliere
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 22
“Writing is like prostitution. First you do it for the love of it, then you do it for a few friends, and finally you do it for the money.”
Shakespeare’s Globe
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 22
“Totus mundus agit histrionem” (All the world plays the actor).
Jose Rivera
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 21
“Only listen to those people who have a vested interest in your future.”
Arthur Laurents
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 20
“…never make a transition on the dialogue; transitions should always come out of emotion.”
Marsha Norman
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 19
“If you know a story about a brave human being in big trouble, write that. Write how the trouble started, what the person did, and how it turned out. Little troubles, for example, troubles that will solve themselves just by the person growing up, you don’t need to waste your time on those. Write about greed, revenge, rage, betrayal, guilt, adultery, and murder. When writing about softer troubles such as injustice, loss, humiliation, incapacity, aging, sadness and being misunderstood, just be sure to attach them to one of the more active troubles. Attach betrayal to loss and you have a play. Attach adultery to aging and you have a play. And let fear drive the whole thing.”
Tina Howe
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 18
“…when you write a kitchen-sink drama, people tend to behave in a kitchen-sink kind of way. But take those characters out of the kitchen and … they’ll act differently. … After all, where your characters are determines what they do.”
Alfred Uhry
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 17
“A playwright needs a good ear.”
Eric Bogosian
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 16
“…Q&As are so popular in the regional theaters. Because everyone wants to know what the play is ‘about.’ It’s a great way of avoiding what a play is. Do we really need a Q&A about George and Martha in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?“
John Guare
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 15
“You can write the sharpest, most glittery, wisest, poetic, hilariously dazzling dialogue, but if that dialogue doesn’t do its true work and open the dramatic world underneath, it’s dead on arrival.”
William Butler Yeats
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 14
“Our words must seem to be inevitable.”
Arthur Miller
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 13
“For myself, it has never been possible to generate the energy to write and complete a play if I know in advance everything it signifies and all it will contain. The very impulse to write, I think, springs from an inner chaos crying for order, for meaning, and that meaning must be discovered in the process of writing or the work lies dead as it is finished.”
Edward Albee
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 10
“It is a tough racket. It can be pretty heartbreaking, and you really have to, deep down, have a toughness to yourself, or you’re not going to be able to survive in the theater.”
Moss Hart
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 8
“One begins with two people on a stage, and one of them had better say something pretty damn quick.”
Anton Chekhov
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 7
“The artist observes, selects, guesses, and arranges; every one of these operations presupposes a question at its outset. If he has not asked himself a question at the start, he has nothing to guess and nothing to select.”
Theresa Rebeck
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 6
“You know, this is going to ruin your life, to be a playwright. So, make it worth it.”
Richard Easton
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 5
“One always has to remember that the playwright is the artist in the theatre, and the actor is a craftsman.”
Alan Ayckbourne
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 4
“If a play can be too simple, it can also be too complicated. If one element is particularly complicated, keep the rest of it simple.”
Jack London
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 3
“You can’t wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.”
Tennessee Williams
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 2
“The best thing you can do about critics is never say a word. In the end you have the last say, and they know it.”
David Mamet
Author: playwright Kelly YoungerAug 1
“Be prepared, be early, never complain, help your fellows, figure it out – your capacity for work is vastly greater than you suppose.”