|
Home / Back to disciplines / Request exam/desk copy / Purchase / View cart / Checkout
|
![]() Playwriting Writing, Producing, and Selling Your Play
Louis E. Catron
A practical guidebook for effective playwriting! This imaginative and enthusiastic book is designed especially for those having the desire to create, to entertain, and to express their emotions and ideas. It features a practical, down-to-earth emphasis on craft and structure rather than on theory as its step-by-step approach shows just what’s involved in creating a stageworthy play. Coverage includes basic considerations such as plot and character development, theme and dialogue as well as production and publication considerations. Outstanding features: offers concrete writing guidelines; includes exercises that get the reader going and inspirational anecdotes; presents excerpts from such classics as Macbeth, The Glass Menagerie, and The Dumb Waiter that help the student grasp key concepts; lists plays to read for instruction; includes valuable information not usually found in comparable collections.
About the Author: One of America’s leading authors of books and articles for playwrights, Professor Catron’s writing reflects his years of teaching playwriting as well as his extensive experience directing modern and classical plays and musicals. He shares this accumulated practical knowledge with his readers as he guides them in a friendly, personal way through the process of creating stageworthy scripts.
$23.95 list, 272 pages 10-digit ISBN: 0-88133-564-9 13-digit ISBN: 978-0-88133-564-4 © 1984
“. . . it makes for compelling reading and,
once begun, is difficult to put aside. Paradoxically, Catron’s is also a book
which the reader will also, we believe, quickly but temporarily set aside in
order to capture immediately on paper some new idea or rediscovered technique
inspired by Catron’s amiable and often eloquent prose. In our opinion, this is a
book that avoids the pitfalls and embraces the triumphs of every other work
currently available on the subject of playwriting and should be held as
essential reading in the eyes of dramatists of all levels of their careers.” —The
Playwright’s Companion Table of Contents
Part I. THE MAKER OF PLAYS |