Photograph by Paul Harkin. |
For me, though, one of the biggest bonuses is having a
mandate to get out there and talk to writers. I was recently listening to a
five-part Radio 4 production of The Other
One, and was so impressed that I immediately tracked down the dramatist, Oliver Emanuel. As writing drama isn't something I've ever tried, I wanted to find out
what I've been missing.
Oliver, as well as The Other One, you recently had a play,
Ancient Greek, broadcast on Radio 4. Can you talk us through the commissioning
process please?
Ooh. It’s a mystery.
I’m kidding. But in
all seriousness I find it very hard to describe. Here’s what I can say…
It starts with an
idea. In the first instance, I try out the idea on my director (most frequently
Kirsty Williams at BBC Radio Drama Scotland) and see what she says. We chat a
bit and then I put the idea on paper. No more than a page. There might be a few
drafts of the idea. Then it disappears into the BBC machine for a couple of
months and I forget about it.
If I’m very very
lucky I get a call from Kirsty to tell me we’re on.
We will often have
notes from Jeremy Howe (commissioning editor Radio Drama) at this point.
Although you are only one of hundreds of commissioned writers, the BBC are
incredibly invested in each and every play.
I have written about
ten plays and stories for the BBC radio but I still have more of my ideas
rejected rather than accepted.
I don’t mind.
It should be
difficult to get a commission.
When it happens, it means
that the idea has real potential.
Was radio drama your first port of call as a writer, or did
you start out somewhere else?
I am a theatre
person.
My mum was a drama
teacher and my dad is an excellent amateur actor. I was in loads of plays when
I was a kid so that’s my natural habitat.
Saying that, the
radio was always on in our house.
I love radio drama.
When I saw an
opportunity to submit ideas to the BBC Writersroom for a short commission, I
jumped at the chance.
As it happened, it
was at roughly the same time as my first big theatre commission.
So I’m lucky in that
I have parallel careers. I have always written both.
Has the increase in digital and Internet radio stations
opened up opportunities for dramatists?
Hmm. I would so yes
and no.
In the first instance
there is potential for downloads and the iPlayer has revolutionised how most of
us listen to the radio.
You can listen to my
play live, in the car or the week after broadcast. Radio is a popular medium so
the more people it can reach, the better. It’s brilliant that you can
experience a play at any time in any place.
But there’s really
only one place that makes radio drama and that’s the BBC.
There aren’t any
other channels that do it.
I would love it if
there was the equivalent of a Channel 4 or an HBO but there aren’t. Not yet at
least.
In your own writing process, do you generally start with a
voice, a character or a plot?
Sometimes I read a
news article that interests me. (This is true of my recent play The Other One which was based on a news
article from Russia). Sometimes a picture appears in my mind. Other times I
just sit down and see who’s talking.
I never know the
ending to what I’m writing. I just launch myself into it and see what happens.
I know a lot of writers who plan meticulously but I’m not one of them. I wish I
could but I can’t.
My work is often
about ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances. I like to have a sense
that this person could be me or you but then I like to jam them up and make
trouble. So I’ll have a character and then I’ll give them something impossible
to get out of and see what comes out of my head.
With The Other One, there is a twelve-year
old girl called Laura who comes home from school only to be told that the
people who she thought were her parents are not her parents. I didn’t know what
she was going to do next but I wanted to find out. And the tougher I make the
situation, the more charged the drama will be.
Which writers (dramatists, novelists, short stories writers
and others) inspire you and why?
I get inspired by
lots of people. Not just writers but musicians, artists and people I meet in
the course of my research.
I’ve done a couple of
writing projects with vulnerable young people. Two projects in a Young Offenders Institute and one with runaways. The children I met had lived
incredible lives and they were generous enough to share their stories with me.
Their openness has inspired a whole raft of work about young people in
contemporary Britain.
But you asked about
writers.
I live in Scotland
and we have some amazing playwrights up here. David Greig, David Harrower,
Linda McLean, Rob Evans, Lewis Hetherington, Davey Anderson, David Ireland and
Robert Forrest.
I read a lot and
almost every book I read inspires me. Too many to mention here.
But Elvis Presley is
the king of most things to my mind.
I was once advised, if I was serious about writing comedy,
that I ought to move to London, Glasgow or Manchester.* Do you think the
location of a writer is a factor in getting work commissioned?
Good question. If I
were you I’d move to Manchester or Glasgow. London has too many of everything.
I think it won’t be too long until it explodes!
I think you can write
anywhere but it is difficult to be a writer without a base.
Glasgow is the place
I became a grown-up writer.
I don’t honestly know
how it is in other places. I know that as a playwright I have a lot of
meetings, rehearsals and events that are part and parcel of being a writer.
Could I live somewhere else? Probably. Do I want to? No.
What are you working on at the moment?
I am currently
writing a play called Dragon for a
theatre company called Vox Motus in a co-production with the National Theatre
of Scotland. It’s about a twelve-year old boy whose mum dies and then he
discovers a dragon in his bedroom. It opens in October 2013.
What other writing have you had published / performed /
broadcast?
I’ve had about ten plays
and short stories on BBC Radio 4.
I’ve also written
theatre pieces for the National Theatre of Scotland, Dundee Rep, Visible Fictions, Oran Mor, Tron, Traverse, Macrobert, and the West Yorkshire Playhouse.
I write quickly. I
have to. I’m rubbish with money.
What advice would you give to anyone contemplating
writing for radio?
Listen.
Just listen to what
is out there and decide what you like and what you don’t like. Get an opinion.
Develop a taste for it.
And find a story that
you need to tell or you will explode.
And then start
writing words.
How many dramatists does it take to change a lightbulb?
That’s not a
lightbulb, that’s magic.
4 comments:
Really interesting post, thanks, Oliver!
This was such an interesting insight into a writing world that I knew nothing about previously. Thank you, Oliver. I wonder how you cope with the process of waiting for verdicts on commissions? Do you go quietly mad, like the rest of us who are waiting to hear from agents/editors..?
Fantastic interview, well done Derek and thanks Oliver for giving us an insight into writing drama...am full of admiration and thanks for keeping this fabulous genre alive!
great interview! your blog is very intresting, can some blog followers have a glance at my blog please and leave a comment, its also about writing.
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