I listen to the BBC radio
series “The Archers”. (Yes, I heard that groan!) It is the only soap I follow, mainly because it fits in well with
doing the evening meal.
I am
also revising and fixing a long manuscript right now , which means that - while listening to the
Archers - I look out for lessons for my own writing.
There is a lot to dismiss
or dislike in the Archers, which makes the listening easy when you need to
concentrate on cooking. I am not at all fond of those notoriously awful
romantic scenes (complete with ghastly squelchy radio sound effects) or some of
the characters (back when the series did offer a range of characters) or the
fact that I share a birthday with Linda Snell.
Nevertheless, for those
fifteen minutes, veg-peeler in hand, I take weird pleasure from playing at
script writing. I stand there, predicting lines before they are spoken,
watching out for the foreshadowing moments (or the now thumping great clues)
and pondering on potential plot options and development.
Sometimes (or once upon a
time, as it now seems) the long- running threads could be poignant, especially if
the subject echoed something you were dealing with in your own life too (and I
don’t mean sheep) just because the
thread developed over real time too.
But something odd has been
happening to the Archers. I have heard
rumours of a new Big Editor imported from East Enders, who is trying to “take
the show back to its roots”. Maybe (or
“mebbe” as Ruth would say) the differences between a “heard” script and a
“watched” script aren’t totally appreciated, especially as far as characters go,
and there are no visuals to back a radio story up.
All the big books on
plotting, like Robert McKee’s Story, say that it is the balance between the
character roles that holds a story together and, although these underlying mythic
roles may overlap, each character should be fundamentally consistent.
Not so in this rural soapland.
One central “grumpy character” role – Tony - has been taken over by a new and
reputable actor who sounds even grumpier and nastier. He does it very well. (Has
he been asked to go for the maximum moan?)
However – and suddenly - this “weak”
character is coming over as far stronger character dramatically, which is
unbalancing all sorts of other relationships in the storyline. Unsatisfying. Confusing.
Recently, a long-awaited joyous wedding
ended in wailing when Tom the groom backed
out. Hidden behind his seemingly stone heart was the realisation that he
could not carry on trying to replace his older dead brother. However, the vital scene that would give full dramatic coherence to this strand
just never took place. We got quick glimpses.
One liners and that was about all.
It did not feel like a big
tragedy. It felt odd and strange, or a too-hurried exit for the actor or character in
question. Who? Why? What? (And is it still impossible to contact people in Canada if you
put your mind to it?) I wasn’t involved
or moved. I was just wondering what the behind-the-scenes real-life reasons
or reasoning were and I was cross, because the scripts hadn’t had the courage to
explore that. They also assumed that all listeners really knew the “dead John”
story but it was long ago The story concept was big in
the scriptwriters heads, but did the readers/listeners accept and understand? I don't think so.
The range of characters has disappeared. People are referred to but don't speak. The women seem to have become
sillier and pettier. The male characters have turned into dim hunks,
untrustworthy fools or moany oldies. Even the best in the Archers are suspicious or
seem condemned to the long silence of the budget-cuts.
Then last week came
another drastic character change. Loyal, hardworking conference-organiser Roy and snobby Lady of the Manor Lizzie had the worst-scripted “I’m
at a music festival” fling imaginable. We all know that Roy is the kind of honest fool who will blab.
Oh no. Too, too wearying a plot and too miserable the consequences. (Tempted to write “If I wanted to watch East
Enders . . .”)
Right now, I’m barely
listening to the show when it airs. I
am imagining the script meetings where all the “possibilities” are loudly brainstormed,
scenes where all the writers are so entranced by all the twists and options
that they forget that their story-world has to feel credible. Have the once-many characters been written
out because of budget cuts or did the actors walk? I am sure that I glimpsed an item on BBC Writers Room inviting new writers to submit their thoughts. Are we now listening to someone's mish-mash of all the ideas sent in? It's a mystery.
As I said earlier, I doing my own manuscript-wrangling right now and taking sideways note
from what I hear and don’t hear on the Archers. Right now, the writing lessons I’m
learning are:
Who are your rocks? Some characters are there to act as rocks. They
need to be fairly stable all the way through the story, because if there are
too many “out-of character” character changes, the reader does not know who to
attach themselves, emotionally.
Watch the “volume” of your characters. When you revise, beware of characters that,
emotionally & dramatically, dominate or fade when that’s not what you or
your story need.
Watch your plot. The logic of the plot underpins the pact with the reader/listener.
So don’t annoy with over-long diversions, such as the Jennifer’s kitchen
aga-saga or unbelievable occupations such as Helen’s “successful” organic shop that
closes on a whim.
What was it that you didn’t write? Don’t assume, just because you as writer know a
character’s problems and what happens etc. etc. that readers/listeners do. A
lot of small hints don’t offer the full blown emotional impact of a good big
scene that makes everything clear. Make sure that you write all the scenes that
matter.
Lastly, A is for Attachment. If your reader is no longer attached to a
character – the person acts out of character with not enough explanation, alters
at a basic level, or does unexplained things that lose sympathy, - they will
get angry. And angry readers will close the pages, because you have broken the
story contract.
Are you taking all this on
board, Penny?
Yes, I am.
Good! And get back to
revising that work-in-progress. Now!
Penny Dolan
ps. I’m also rather
annoyed by the thought that this “Archer” tag could register on some media
scanning device, and therefore add another tick to the “attention &
controversy equals success for the new Archers”. ‘Cos it ain’t so. Grrr!
6 comments:
Very interesting post! I only tend to listen to the Archers in the car, and haven't been on any long journeys at the right time for a catch-up lately, so am very out of date with it. But I thought it was a big mistake when what's-his-name fell off the roof; seemed very transparently done to make a big stir for an anniversary, and to provide lots of plot possibilities. It showed just too obviously that the characters are there to service the soap; it punctured the illusion that they are real!
i, too, have listened to The Archers for decades and can't believe how tedious it has become. In the days of Brian and Siobhan we were all hooked, but now ... so this analysis of why it's gone wrong is fascinating. I was almost at the point of giving up on it, but maybe I'll just think of it as learning!
With you on all points, Penny! How funny to think that so many listeners are analysing more than believing!
Yes, the Archers sometimes seems to be able to combine blandness with unbelievable storylines in a truly unique blend! It's the funny and eccentric characters I miss.
Thanks for all your comments. I think the writer's curse to be to always read, listen or watch fiction with that Predictive Hat on!
Sue, I did like your point about characters only there to service the plot - and the next needed buzz or headlines.
So bland and tedious - I agree with you, Pippa & Jo. Oh, for the days of the dead ferret scene!
I gave up on The Archers about five years ago.
Thanks to your analysis I now know why I did so.
Bring back Walter I say.
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