"Organic Script Analysis knows that a play, like any work of art, is alive."
This is a document to help you think about what Organic Script Analysis is.
The first question is, "What is Organic Script Analysis?" Once it is explained, the difference between it, and classical, mechanical script analysis will be clear. Organic Script Analysis is based on the principle that life is spontaneous, a living, moving reality. If that is true, then any analysis of any living thing must also be able to be fluid, moving and changing according to who, how, and in what moment, the reality that is being analyzed is being perceived. Organic Script Analysis knows that a play, like any work of art, is alive. Something of the artist who created it exists within the structure. So, a great painting is alive. Every time you look at it, you see new and different realities in it. The same is true of a musical composition. Many great musicians play a piece differently every time they play it.
A play is also alive. Therefore, all of the classical, mechanical ideas of analysis, that looks at a play as though it were dead, lack something in their interpretation. There is the idea in this type of analysis, that there exists a correct, ideal interpretation that we all want to make. There can be only one number of beats and scenes, the protaganists are clearly defined, etc. While this is sometimes, it cannot be supposed that it is always true. I can t go into depth about this here. Suffice it to say that when we discuss the plays of Sophocles, Shakespeare, Chekhov, Ibsen and Beckett, what I am saying will be made clear. The point is, there is not simply one. Each one of us will analyse the play differently, depending on our life experience, our knowledge of life, and our ability to perceive what the playwright has written. While everyone must see what the playwright has written, how they interpret the events, and how they break down the structure of the play may differ. Obvioiusly, some interpretations will be better than others. And, some people will analyze the structure with more clarity and perception. This is based on their knowledge, experience, talent, and ability to clearly think about what they are reading, and express what they perceive in a coherent form.
Read the play at least once without thinking about analyzing it. Read it to see whether you like it, whether it resonates in you. Sometimes, one gets lucky, and you just intuitively understand a play. You may even enjoy reading it. You may want to read it again before you start to ask yourself questions about it.
Then, you begin to ask questions:
- Do I like the play?
- Do I understand what the play is about?
- To know this, you should be able to find moments in the play, where something is said or done, that determine what you think the play is about? For instance, in Hamlet by Shakespeare, the play is normally interpreted as being about either, "to be or not to be", or "something is rotten in the state of Denmark." Perhaps, it could be about something else. Like what?
- Who are the protagonists? Why are they the protagonists?
- Can a play be interpreted with different characters being the protagonists? Or, is there a clear structure that determines this for all readers?
- Who are the antagonists? Why are they antagonists?
- Determining this, leads to, and comes from, what you think the play is about?
- To help understand the play, and its structure, more deeply, break it down into Acts and Scenes.
- How many Acts are there?
- Are the acts structured in any particular way?
For instance, Chekhov's acts each take place in a different season of the year? Greek plays are in one act. Why? Shakespeare has five acts. Chekhov, Ibsen, etc., have four acts. Twentieth century plays had three acts in the first half of the century, and two acts from then on. Is this Organic, commercial?
- Are the acts structured in any particular way?
- Can the number of acts be changed without destroying the structure and meaning of the play?
- As you begin to see the structure of plays, it helps you understand them. And understand how playwrights tell stories.
For instance, I tend to analyze plays and structure the scenes like a film. I often have many more scenes than seem to be indicated by the playwright. This helps me understand what is going on in every moment of the play. I don't know why I began to do this. But, with experience, I understand why I do it. However, I believe that it could be done in more than one way. In an organic creative process, there may be numerous possibilities that could all be true and applicable. There is not some mechanical idea of perfection. There are no absolute, linear realities that everyone must accept as the only right way to analyze. This doesn't mean that anything goes. Some analyses are better than others. Because, they reveal more clearly what the playwright is trying to express. Unfortunately, playwrights do not always know best what they have written. Or, what they are trying to say.
- As you begin to see the structure of plays, it helps you understand them. And understand how playwrights tell stories.
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Are all the characters essential to the story? Why?
- If not, can they be cut? Why?
- Is each scene you perceive in the play essential to the story? Why?
- What happens in each scene? Why is it different from every other scene in the play?
- If it isn't, can it be cut? Why?
- If you reorganize the number of scenes, or where they are, do you change the play?
- Does it change the meaning? Is it better?
- What are you saying by restructuring, that you believe illuminates what the play is about, for you?