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Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/6785-Fun-Drama.html
Drama: January 21, 2015 Issue [#6785]

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Drama


 This week: Fun Drama
  Edited by: NaNoNette Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

Hello dramatic writers and readers, I am NaNoNette Author Icon, your guest editor for this issue.


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Letter from the editor

Fun Drama


Drama can make you laugh.


I know it is hard to believe, but before Writing.Com, there was Aristotle. Lucky for those who had to write or read before August 2000, because Aristotle laid it all out for those who wanted to find out about the best way to entertain by telling stories.

Aristotle broke drama down like this: Comedy is a dramatic imitation of poor or below average people while tragedy imitates rich or better than average people. In short, if a poor man falls from a train, it's funny. If a rich man falls from a train, it's sad and we are not allowed to laugh but have to show concern.

As messed up as it sounds, that's how Charlie Chaplin made us laugh with his impersonation of a poor chap who gets into one accident after the next. In the same era of silent movies or the beginning of rudimentary sound motion pictures, when a well-dressed person had an accident, everybody else in the movie stood with shocked and worried faces.



Editor's Picks

War and Wine Open in new Window. (13+)
Young Edmund Huet struggles to maintain his family's vineyard during World War II.
#1452559 by StephBee Author IconMail Icon

 road accident Open in new Window. (E)
an incident from my life.... which could have killed me......
#1615810 by Mystic Soul Author IconMail Icon

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#1888669 by Not Available.

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#2014108 by Not Available.

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#1159738 by Not Available.

 
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A Rookie's Tale Open in new Window. (13+)
Nothing exciting ever happened in Logan's Helm, until the night she came ...
#1068306 by iKïyå§ama Author IconMail Icon

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#775838 by Not Available.

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#1988055 by Not Available.

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#1873134 by Not Available.

 
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The Defiant Hunter Open in new Window. (18+)
A hunter determined to protect the defenseless.
#1992123 by Chasing Worms Author IconMail Icon

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#1805328 by Not Available.

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#1463757 by Not Available.


 
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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer


Comments I got for my last Drama Newsletter "Sad DramaOpen in new Window..

StephBee Author Icon wrote: Loved your look at Drama this week. The drama masks which are generally used to represent drama depict "tragedy" and "comedy." Here's a one act play I wrote, meant to focus on "drama." I agree - there's a lot more tragedy out there as compared to comedy. I think comedy gets overlooked in the drama genre. "War and WineOpen in new Window.

Thank you for your praise of my newsletter and for giving me an item to showcase.

Quick-Quill Author Icon wrote: I lable Drama as somehting that isn't in one of the other obvious genres. Not particularky a a mystery, fantasy acifi or thriller. A story that is character driven with the point being the conflicts or dramatic events. Nicklas Sparks comes t omy mind.

Yes, definitely.

SkyHawk - Into The Music Author Icon wrote: Octobersun,

         The writing I do that I consider "dramatic" usually has at least one conflict of some sort. It can be an overall conflict, say man vs nature (e.g. medical helicopter teams evacuating patients before a hurricane arrives). It can be personal conflicts (e.g. clashes of personalities, or scheming by one person to damage / destroy another's career). It could be man vs machine, such as mechanics having to deal with a helicopter that, despite their best efforts, can never stay in service because of needing more repairs. It can even be person vs future, as someone tries to figure where they go next in their career.

         I also feel that any good "drama" has at least momentary, well-placed splashes of "comedy." Case in point -- in the film "Apollo 13", the crew suddenly finds their CO2 levels climbing dangerously high. Freddo Hayes, who computed the rates, suddenly realizes he only figured for two people, not the whole three-person crew. Jack Swigert, a last-minute change to the crew, quips, "Does that mean I have to hold my breath?" A quick comedy line that punctuates the underlying dramatic problem. "road accidentOpen in new Window.

Love the many helicopters here. Especially the one with that cheeky personality and kept resisting repair attempts. That sounds like comedy gold right there. (If it weren't so serious.)



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