All Study Guides Playwriting Workshop Unit 2
✍️ Playwriting Workshop Unit 2 – Character Development & ArchetypesCharacter development and archetypes form the backbone of compelling storytelling in playwriting. These elements breathe life into narratives, creating relatable figures that drive the plot forward through their actions, choices, and interactions.
From the hero's journey to the trickster's mischief, archetypes provide a framework for crafting diverse characters. Building believable personas involves giving them clear goals, backstories, strengths, and flaws. Dialogue, relationships, and character arcs further deepen their complexity and growth throughout the story.
What's the Big Idea?
Characters drive the story forward through their actions, choices, and interactions with others
Well-developed characters are essential for engaging the audience and creating a compelling narrative
Archetypes serve as a starting point for character creation, providing a framework for understanding common traits and motivations
Believable characters have a mix of strengths, flaws, and contradictions that make them relatable and interesting to watch
Character development involves revealing a character's personality, background, and inner life over the course of the story
Conflict arises from the clash between characters' desires, beliefs, and circumstances, creating dramatic tension
Character arcs trace the transformation and growth of characters as they face challenges and make decisions
Dialogue is a powerful tool for revealing character, advancing the plot, and creating subtext
Meet the Archetypes
Archetypes are universal character types that appear across cultures and stories (hero, mentor, trickster)
The Hero embarks on a journey of self-discovery and faces obstacles to achieve a goal or complete a quest
The Mentor provides guidance, wisdom, and support to the hero, often serving as a teacher or role model
The Trickster uses cunning, humor, and mischief to challenge the status quo and expose truths
The Shadow represents the dark side of human nature, often serving as the hero's antagonist or inner demon
The Shadow can also be an external character that embodies the hero's repressed desires or fears
The Ally is a loyal companion who aids the hero on their journey, providing support and encouragement
The Shapeshifter is a character whose loyalty or identity is uncertain, creating tension and suspense
The Herald announces a change or challenge that sets the hero's journey in motion, often delivering a call to adventure
Building Believable Characters
Give characters a clear goal or desire that motivates their actions and decisions throughout the story
Develop a backstory for each character, including their family background, education, and formative experiences
Use the backstory to inform the character's personality, values, and behavior in the present
Assign characters both strengths and flaws to make them more realistic and relatable to the audience
Flaws can include negative traits, fears, or blind spots that create internal conflict or hinder the character's growth
Use contradictions and inconsistencies to add depth and complexity to characters, making them more unpredictable
Show characters' personalities through their actions, choices, and interactions with others, rather than relying on exposition
Give characters distinct voices and speech patterns that reflect their background, education, and personality
Avoid stereotypes and clichés when creating characters, instead focusing on unique traits and quirks
Consider the character's role in the overall story and how they contribute to the theme or central conflict
Dialogue That Pops
Use dialogue to reveal character, advance the plot, and create subtext, rather than simply conveying information
Give each character a distinct voice that reflects their personality, background, and emotional state
Vary the length and rhythm of characters' speech to create a natural, conversational flow
Use subtext to convey characters' underlying thoughts, feelings, or motivations that are not explicitly stated
Subtext can be created through word choice, tone, or body language that contradicts or complicates the surface meaning
Avoid overusing character names in dialogue, as it can sound unnatural and expository
Use silence, interruptions, and overlapping speech to create tension, conflict, or intimacy between characters
Employ metaphors, analogies, and figurative language to add depth and complexity to characters' speech
Read dialogue aloud to ensure it sounds natural and authentic to each character's voice
Character Arcs and Growth
Character arcs trace the transformation and growth of characters as they face challenges and make decisions
Positive arcs involve characters overcoming flaws, fears, or limitations to become better versions of themselves
Negative arcs see characters succumbing to their flaws or making choices that lead to their downfall or destruction
Flat arcs feature characters who remain unchanged, but whose unwavering beliefs or values inspire change in others
Use pivotal moments or turning points to mark significant stages in a character's arc, such as a moment of realization or decision
Show how characters' experiences and interactions with others shape their growth and development over time
Ensure that characters' arcs are consistent with their established personality, motivations, and beliefs
Use the resolution of the story to show how characters have changed or grown as a result of their journey
Relationships and Conflict
Relationships between characters create opportunities for conflict, growth, and revelation of character
Establish characters' roles and power dynamics within relationships (leader, follower, equal)
Use characters' conflicting goals, values, or personalities to create tension and drama within relationships
Conflict can be external, such as a physical or verbal confrontation, or internal, such as a moral dilemma or personal struggle
Show how characters' relationships evolve and change over the course of the story as a result of their shared experiences
Use subtext and body language to convey the unspoken dynamics and tensions within relationships
Create triangles or complex webs of relationships to add depth and complexity to the story's interpersonal conflicts
Use characters' relationships to reveal their strengths, weaknesses, and hidden desires or fears
Explore how characters' relationships with others influence their own growth and development throughout the story
Putting It All Together
Integrate character development with plot, theme, and setting to create a cohesive and compelling story
Ensure that characters' actions and choices are consistent with their established personality, motivations, and beliefs
Use characters' interactions and relationships to create a web of cause and effect that drives the story forward
Develop characters' arcs in parallel with the main plot, allowing their growth and transformation to impact the story's outcome
Use the climax of the story to bring characters' arcs to a head, forcing them to confront their flaws or make difficult choices
Ensure that the resolution of the story satisfies characters' arcs and relationships in a way that is consistent with the theme
Revise and refine characters through multiple drafts, deepening their complexity and ensuring consistency throughout the story
Seek feedback from others to gauge the effectiveness of character development and make necessary adjustments
Beyond the Basics
Experiment with unconventional or subversive character types to challenge audience expectations and explore new territory
Use minor characters to provide contrast, comic relief, or thematic commentary on the main characters and their journeys
Explore the intersection of character and identity, using characters to examine issues of race, gender, class, or culture
Use non-linear storytelling techniques, such as flashbacks or multiple perspectives, to reveal characters' backstories or inner lives
Create an ensemble cast of characters with interwoven arcs and relationships that complement and complicate each other
Use allegory or symbolism to imbue characters with deeper meaning or significance beyond their individual stories
Experiment with different character voices, such as unreliable narrators or multiple perspectives, to create ambiguity or tension
Draw inspiration from real-life people, historical figures, or personal experiences to create authentic and resonant characters