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With over sixty plays written and premièred at the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough before going on to play in the West End or the Royal National Theatre, London, or Broadway, Alan Ayckbourn's expertise in writing and directing plays is unsurpassed.
For the first time, here in The Crafty Art of Playmaking, he shares all his tricks of the trade. From helpful hints on writing (Where do you start? How do you continue? What is comedy and how do you write it? What is tragedy and how does it work?), to tips on directing (working with actors and technicians, when to listen to the other experts, how to cope with rehearsals), the book provides a complete primer for the tyro and a refresher for the more experienced. Written in an accessible and highly entertaining style, with anecdotes galore to illustrate the how, when, where and why, it's worth the cover price for the jokes alone.
'A marvellously useful and enjoyably good-humoured book' Daily Telegraph
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I found the examples of dialogue-taken from his own plays to illustrate the various points of writing-extremely helpful.
I will refer to this book again in my own writing endeavors.
Highly recommended.
Spare a thought for Alan Ayckbourn. Author of over sixty plays and director of over two hundred, he too has been breaking new ground in British theatre for more than forty years. The difference is one of accessibility. His plays are all mainstream; commercial. They are almost all – say it quietly, people might not notice - comedies. A veteran of the workshop-and-lecture scene, he even built a special viewing-room in his theatre in Scarborough so that people could watch his rehearsals. Yet he’s never really got the critical recognition he deserves.
The Crafty Art Of Playmaking is a step-by-step account of how Ayckbourn works, from his initial concept as writer through to press night as director. Within this personal narrative, Ayckbourn peppers the prose with 101 “Obvious Rules” to consider when one comes oneself to writing or directing. The Rules are the best bit about the book – if the University Drama Society up here in Oxford were to publish them on a leaflet and distribute them to every student director in town, endless laborious evenings would be immeasurably alleviated. They range from the purely artistic considerations of No.28, concerning character-development (“People in general are reluctant to reveal themselves”), to the matter-of-fact wisdom dolled out in No. 51 – “Beware the manic-depressive costume designer”.
This combination of memoir and guide-book makes for one of the most readable, unpretentious and entertaining books about theatre there ever there was. But the parallel functions also work against each other. All of the examples Ayckbourn uses are from his own plays – perfect to demonstrate how he writes, fascinating for devotees - but counter-productive to the inexperienced playwright who has simply come for advice, and might not know Ayckbourn’s vast canon of work. Surely examples from, say, Shakespeare or Wilde would be better suited to the purpose? Similarly, fans wanting to hear detailed stories of how he arrived at his unique style of tragi-comedy in the Round will be disappointed by the regular deviation into general dictum.
That said, this book is refreshingly practical, especially for those seeking advice on directing a play (Ayckbourn dismisses the Method as “a terrible way of working”, claiming that “a sure-fire test of good acting is how well you can fake it”). It displays its author’s incredible awareness of every creative, technical and budgetary element of good theatre, from page to stage. We are left to conclude, along with the nice chap quoted in the blurb on the back, that: “What he has given to theatre is immeasurable.”
Who said that? Harold Pinter? Oh, he’s very good, isn’t he?
Not to mention the humour! The book has real comedy value. The anecdotes about meeting actors or lighting technicians are really witty, and made me feel less scared and daunted by the whole process of play production. It's so good to read something which makes the theatre a real, normal environment, instead of the ego factory it sometimes seems to be! And that's coming from me, an aspiring dramatist who wants to join the ego factory!
I'm really grateful to Ayckbourn for being so generous in sharing his experiences and expertise. It's not good to be stubborn that your way is the only way in writing or directing, so I recommend that anyone wanting to join the theatre in some way reads this and absorbs his advice into your career and attitude. We luvvies could all do with a bit of Ayckbourn's down-to-earth approach. Look where it got him...!
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