Showing posts with label TAPS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TAPS. Show all posts

TAPS Film Ghost Writer Online

My TAPS film, Ghost Writer, is now online at their site here, along with the organisation's other three new films for 2010.  The 24-minute Ghost Writer was shot in four-and-a-half hours last December on the Emmerdale sets.  The logistical stipulations included: a maximum of 20 scenes, a maximum of three locations and a maximum of six characters.  Great practice for the practical realities of television writing.

Infuriatingly, that's pretty much all I have time to tell you, as I'm racing towards several deadlines.  Guess the film should speak for itself.  I'm very proud of it.  The cast, director Guy Slater, the crew and all of the TAPS folk were great.  Thanks also go, once again, to the various wonderful people whose input helped move the script along last year.

I will return to blog about the shoot.  Will also host the film on my own website using a service like Vimeo which will allow crazy full-screen action - and include cast info, plus the shooting script.

Before I go, though, I must echo David Bishop's feelings about this week's announcement that, as of June 30, TAPS will be forced into closure by lack of funding.  This is immensely sad.  The countless scriptwriters, directors, actors and  folks of all disciplines within the TV industry who have benefited from this friendly organisation's hard work will feel this loss especially keenly.  Again: more when I have more time!

2009, 2010 & The Bare Bones Approach

Hello, you delightful shooting star. 2009, you say? I'd best jot down some thoughts on how it was for me, before it becomes all too tiny in the ol' rear-view mirror. I'll also throw in the most valuable writing lesson I learnt last year...

One of the best things about 2009 was sitting in a room, listening to Tony Jordan telling me I can write. As a writer you ideally have to be able to exist in a vacuum, tough as old hobnail boots, with no need for validation. But Christ Almighty, there's no harm in a bit if someone like Tony's offering. I was sitting in Red Planet Pictures' HQ, as part of a workshop laid on for Red Planet Prize finalists. My relationship with the company - and with a handful of finalists - remains ongoing, as ideas continue to fly. That's a good feeling.

Last year also gave me a nice sense of completion, when it came to my main new TV spec script. On January 1, 2009, I started work on a 30-minute one-off called Letters From Betsy. Truth be told, I poured a great deal of emotion into that script and almost certainly more of me than I'd devoted to a script before - probably with Tony Jordan's words ringing in my ears from the previous Screenwriters' Festival, about writing until your keyboard's covered in tears and snot. Nice.

Letters From Betsy underwent various drafts as the year went on, with untold changes made to direction, emphasis, character... you name it, although the core concept was always there. Indeed, Letters From Betsy's journey would only end when I'd clarified/reminded myself exactly what the core concept was, realising that the rest was mere surplus and should be dispensed with. That's one of the things I really learnt in 2009: bare bones are stronger. Dress 'em up with extra problems for your protagonist and all manner of extraneous tat, and the whole somehow manages to become less than the sum of its parts.

Anyway. Letters From Betsy eventually morphed into Ghost Writer, impressing a few noted industry folk as it did so. It was then chosen by TAPS as one of the four TV dramas which they produce each year. It was filmed in December on Leeds' Emmerdale sets (will write my account of the actual filming ASAP) - and hopefully this month I'll get to see the first edit and give input. But to all intents and purposes, I ended 2009 with a produced film which I started on the year's very first day.


So what else happened in 2009? I had my first commission from a TV production company, Eye Film And TV, to work on four 50-minute episodes of new web series Tempting Fates. That was a really valuable experience, which saw me co-storylining for the first time, thinking in terms of series arcs and generally working as part of a team. Fun fun fun.

At the start of the year, sketches for the show Splendid bubbled away in our collective cauldron. A ticklesome pilot was shot around Spring, with a tremendous June screening, which led to us honing that pilot some more, filming an additional batch of sketchery-pokery. Then another lesson was learnt: creating the pilot is the relatively easy part, compared to persuading industry-folk to watch it. Splendid currently awaits perusal on certain desks, but I remain confident that its irresistible foolishness can't help but charm whichever lucky soul gives it a spin first.

At the beginning of the year, I had some material broadcast on Radio 4's Recorded For Training Purposes, which led to me having material broadcast on that same station's Laurence & Gus: Hearts & Minds, a few months later. I then became a commissioned writer on the Recorded For Training Purposes team, which continues to be huge fun, as the show's next series is pieced together.

What else? I wrote a trial script for the fine BBC One series Waterloo Road, impressing Shed enough to gain a seat on their reserves bench. I associate produced Danny Stack's short film Origin. I became a script-reader for regional agency Screen East and a speaker at the Cheltenham Screenwriters' Festival, chairing two Doctor Who sessions with some excellent show luminaries. At the latter event, I started thinking for the first time about finding the right agent and had a few meetings which gave me some good contacts and possible representation in 2010.

Throughout 2009, I continued to shift the balance between screenwriting and the journalism with which I started out in writing. I'm in the really nice position of being able to pick journalistic jobs which I enjoy - and this has never been truer than when I interviewed former Doctor Who Tom Baker for Doctor Who Magazine. As this had been a longheld career ambition, it can only be described as one of the highlights of my life, let alone 2009. This Christmas, the afterglow became all the warmer, when Tom published the two-part interview on his website: you can read them both here.

So, yeah, 2009 was pretty busy and fruitful. There were of course a few projects that I worked up, only for them to creatively fizzle out, or hit dead ends. I wrote half a horror feature, then was forced to shift priorities to something else, and still need to climb back on that saddle. I also spent the entire year tinkering with my previously Hollywood-optioned horror feature Panik, only to realise over the last couple of months that it needs to be stripped right down, then built back up. Sometimes when a project is rooted in work carried out by Less Experienced You, those roots need pulling up altogether and replanting.

2010 will again be about hard work, only more so. I'm going to capitalise on all the opportunities which Ghost Writer's filming - and its planned BAFTA screening for industry types, this April - will bring, aiming to secure my first TV commission by year's end. Various projects will move forward and new ones will be willed into corporeal existence.

My key word for 2010 is 'focus'. It's all too tempting to diversify in terms of the genres you write, but this year I'm going to push for my priority: TV drama. As much as I enjoy sketchery-pokery and straight-up comedy, there'll be less of that from me this year. Focus, focus, focus. I'll still be writing feature scripts as well as TV scripts, but genre-wise, drama will provide my main sandpit - and as we all know, drama is broad enough church in itself.

Talking of focus, here's the most valuable writing lesson I learnt last year. It's the kind of thing we all think we know, but as Adrian Mead is fond of saying, sometimes knowing isn't doing. During TAPS' Continuing Drama weekend in October, we spent a lot of time with Emmerdale's chief writer Bill Lyons. A brutally honest, yet clearly lovely guy, he passed judgement on various scenes which the class had been tasked with writing in 60 minutes, then were acted by a couple of thespians. You could often feel that dialogue had been overwritten, the moment that actors became a tad stilted. The effort they were devoting to saying all those words, rendered them unable to actually act. As Bill said, "If you put too many words in an actor's mouth, you're actually stopping them from doing their job". That's a fine sentence to remember this year when you're writing dialogue - and especially when redrafting it.

2010, then: the year of focus, bare bones, letting actors do their jobs and - lest we forget - having a right old hoot. Bring. It. On.

Handy 2009 Links

Michelle Lipton on Ten Things She Learnt Last Year. If you didn't much care for The Thing That I Learned, this article will make up for it

Piers Beckley on setting controllable goals

Evernote - a handy application which syncs web, portable device and computer, allowing you to easily store ideas, research materials or indeed Bars You Would Like To Visit

Carbonite - the best back-up service I discovered last year. It simply hoovers your files up into the internet, ridding you of all worries. Even if your house burns down, your stuff is safe

My Twitter page
: I discovered this social networking site in 2009, and love it to bits. Give it a go, if you haven't already, and follow me if it pleases you

TAPS: Rehearsal Day

Sitting in my hotel bar with a pint, reflecting on a day which has both frazzled and exhilarated me. I've been babbling about this weekend on Twitter - using the hastag #TAPSdiary, if you're interested - but I had so much to quack about this evening, that only a blog would do.

We had a full day of rehearsal on my TAPS script Ghost Writer at ITV Yorkshire, with the five-actor cast going through the whole thing twice - firstly in chronological script order, and then in shoot-order (literally the order in which it'll be shot tomorrow morning, grouping all the scenes together in terms of their set, in order to save valuable time).

Director Guy Slater is a veteran, and brings every bit of that experience to bear on the production. He's fantastic: a walking cauldron of persistence, perspective, ingenuity and cut-glass vowels. I love the fact that he so clearly 'gets' Ghost Writer, and wants to bring it to the screen in as intact a form as possible. I had my laptop with me today, along with a print-out of the script. As we went along, I made notes on that print-out with a red pen, but a new draft of the script wasn't deemed necessary. On a couple of occasions, I spoke to an actor about a line-change and they then simply made the adjustment to their own script. Simple. Phew. Not that I'd mind making more extensive changes - I'm primarily here to learn, after all - but let's be honest, it's much nicer when it just works. Actors also made minor changes to lines, in order to make themselves more comfortable, which is great, because provided the meaning isn't changed, it just comes across as more natural.

The actors are fantastic, and today has seen me gain an even greater appreciation for thesps in general. Barrie Ryan English, who plays Ghost Writer's main character Darren, deserves special mention. Not only does he go through the emotional wringer during this story, but he's in all 21 scenes, which puts tremendous pressure on him. But he was great today, delivering the Darren I had in mind, and more besides. The outrageously delightful Fiona Wass (previously seen in the series Grownups) plays Sadie to a tee; hard Manc fella Giles Ford (The Bill, Corrie, Emmerdale) is perfect for brash laddish bloke Corin; bee-yewtiful Lisa Brookes (Casualty 1909) is just great as Helen; and Seamus O'Neill (from Dead Man's Shoes - one of my favourite films, hooray) rocks the house as cafe owner Ron. I feel truly spoilt to have a cast without a single weak link in sight. I also feel terrible that one of the characters dies in a heartbreaking fashion, after comparatively little screen-time.

Christ. I've turned into a luvvie.

In fairness, it's hard not to. When you sit through a full day of rehearsal and see how much work everyone puts in, how many different variables they need to constantly bear in mind, and how damn good they are at doing so, you'd be a madman to speak about them with anything less than the highest praise.

Tomorrow morning, over the course of four-and-a-bit hours from 8.30am, Ghost Writer will be shot on four interior Emmerdale sets. We took a lunchtime look at those sets today, in order to familiarise ourselves with them - for the rest of the day we were in a rehearsal space, constantly moving furniture about to simulate the different sets. I can't wait to see it all committed to film: Ghost Writer means a lot to me, and this is the best Christmas present I could hope for.

Tonight, I think, will be all about beer, takeaway pizza and brain-numbing TV of the highest order. Hello X Factor...

TAPS: The Weekend Begins

Will be off to Leeds shortly, for the rehearsal-day and shoot of my Ghost Writer script, thanks to those lovely TAPS people. Will blog about it ASAP afterwards, naturally - until then, feel free to follow me on Twitter. Good DAY to you.

Ghost Writer & TAPS

Hello, you utter delight. I recently had some good news. A month or so back, I took part in TAPS' annual Continuing Drama course, which this year took place in Old London Town. It was a three-day affair which I can heartily recommend: I learnt a great deal, which I will almost certainly blog about separately soon.

The culmination of the course, however, had a competitive element, in that everyone needed to pitch a 23-minute one-off original TV drama, then write the script. Ten people out of 30-odd would then be chosen to address their assigned script-editor's notes (my script editor was the lovely Nicola Larder) in order to produce a second draft, at which point four final scripts would be selected. Ghost Writer, my own script - a relationship drama with a supernatural undercurrent - turned out to be one of those four, which made me very pleased indeed.

So, what next? It's all happening rather quickly, much like TV. The four scripts will be shot over the weekend of December 4-6, on the Emmerdale sets. I'm delighted to have a wonderfully experienced director in the shape of Miss Marple/Love Hurts veteran Guy Slater, with whom I spoke on the 'phone today. It was great to hear that he liked the script a lot, and that the only tweaks he needed to discuss right now were practical, physical concerns like sets and props. It was also nice when he 'phoned me back after having spoken to the casting director, and asked whether I'd be "miserable" if an Irish character had to be made non-Irish. Needless to say, I wouldn't be miserable about that at all.

I'm very much looking forward to heading for Leeds over that weekend and experiencing a day of rehearsal before the shoot. During that prep-day, I'll need to be armed with a laptop, in case spontaneous rewrites are needed. Love that pressure and that challenge.

After Ghost Writer and the other three scripts have been filmed and completed, they'll be readily available to view on the TAPS site. You can see the last few years' films there right now, including Rewind by m'learned colleague Rob Eveleigh.

I've privately thanked - or at least, I really hope I have - everyone who helped me, in some way or other, with Ghost Writer's evolution. But thanks once again. The script means a lot to me, and I can't wait to get it on film.