In our life, there are a lot of different staged events that require preliminary preparation. Starting from children's matinees and wedding ceremonies and ending with amateur performances and mass festive events - in all these cases, special scenarios of planned events are prepared. And although the requirements change depending on the severity and level of events, nevertheless, there are some general principles for composing any scenarios.
Instructions
Step 1
A script is the basis for staging an action, performance or movie. Unlike regular narrative text, the script describes in detail the setting, scene, actions of the participants and their dialogues. Therefore, before writing a script, think over in detail all the events and scenes that you have to describe.
Step 2
The script may be devoid of excessive literary figurativeness of the text. After all, its main goal is to describe in detail the actions of the characters and their environment in such a way that the participants playing certain roles can most accurately reproduce the scriptwriter's idea. Therefore, when writing a script, pay more attention to the descriptive part of the actions of the characters.
Step 3
When describing the behavior of the characters, use verbs in the present tense that answer the question: “What is he doing?”, For example: speaks, sits down, walks, takes, and so on. Thus, you will receive a continuous verbal description of the script's action.
Step 4
Each scenario should contain certain stages that will make the described event more expressive and interesting. In the most general case, try to write a script according to the following scheme:
• Exposition - acquaintance with the characters and the setting
• Tie
• Development of action
• Climax
• Interchange
Step 5
Let other people read the script you wrote. If, after reading, they say that they mentally saw the described figurative action, then your script is written flawlessly.