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        <Name>Early Stages: Beginning the Playwriting Process, part 1</Name>
        <Summary>I've just started a new play, and I thought it would be helpful for beginning playwrights to follow the show's development, from initial concept to publication (or rejection).</Summary>
        <Description>&lt;p&gt;By Patrick Rainville Dorn&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;This isn't the only way to start writing a play. There are probably better ways. This is how it happened for me, and this is a pretty typical example of what has worked in the past.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;A few months ago I was browsing through the used paperback bookstore, trolling for ideas. I came across a collection of Washington Irving's writings, including &amp;quot;Rip Van Winkle,&amp;quot; a short story about a lazy, easy-going man who falls asleep a few years before the American Revolution, naps through the war and wakes up 20 years later. First published in 1819, I knew that the story was public domain, and therefore ripe for the picking.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The story has always appealed to me, mostly because I'm a lazy, easy-going man who loves to nap! I'd discarded the idea of turning it into a play years ago because the story has far more male characters than female, and in the pivotal scene, Rip gets rip-roaring drunk with the spirits of Henry Hudson and his bowling buddies, precipitating his decades-long snooze-fest. That's a hard concept to pitch to a wholesome, family run publishing house like Pioneer Drama Service. So I let the idea rest--believe it or not, for nearly 20 years!&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;I bought the paperback anyway, hoping that there might be a way to &amp;quot;fix&amp;quot; the problems of the story and make it work for middle and high school students. It was just a dollar, and there were lots of other stories in the book that might work out, even if they are less well known. I like Washington Irving's style, and I also knew that there are many, many stage versions of &amp;quot;The Headless Horseman,&amp;quot; so I ruled out &amp;quot;Sleepy Hollow.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Over the years, I had written &amp;quot;Blather, Blarney and Balderdash,&amp;quot; which incorporates narration, storytelling and dialogue right into the characters themselves. Then I wrote &amp;quot;The Beggar and the Wolf,&amp;quot; in which the townspeople serve as a collective character. As I re-read &amp;quot;Rip Van Winkle,&amp;quot; I realized that my skills and voice as a playwright had developed to the point where I could adapt the tale in such a way as to make it work for the Pioneer demographic and still stay true to the spirit and tone of the original story.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Some playwrights like to &amp;quot;update&amp;quot; a story using modern teenage characters. Many of Pioneer's most successful comedies (like &amp;quot;Twinderella&amp;quot;) remix fairy tales with contemporary settings, characters and costumes. (This has been going on long before &amp;quot;Shrek.&amp;quot;) But I like the colonial/early republic setting for &amp;quot;Rip,&amp;quot; including the costumes and permission to avoid the issue of modern technology. Also, I felt that the &amp;quot;ghost&amp;quot; component wouldn't work as well in the modern world.&lt;/p&gt;</Description>
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                  <Title>Playwriting Brief &amp; Brilliant</Title>

                  <Synopsis>Succinct and thorough, this book will tell you ?everything you need to know about playwriting in just one hour of reading.?</Synopsis>

                  <URL>http://www.pioneerdrama.com/searchdetail.asp?pc=PLAYWRITIN&amp;id=4</URL>

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                  <Title>Young Playwrights 101</Title>

                  <Synopsis>This clear and crisply written practical text will guide you through the playwriting process, from initial idea to production and submission.</Synopsis>

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