I’M READY FOR MY CLOSE-UP, MR. DEMILLE
Monday, June 2nd, 2008
We here on the Romance Writer’s Revenge are proud to welcome, once again, Erotic Romance author, Toni Blake. Toni is a favorite here on the ship and definitely a total pirate. No one could create heroes the way she does and not be a pirate. Without further ado, the lights are up and the cameras are rolling, and here’s Toni.
If you’re young, you might not know that the above is a paraphrased line spoken by a character named Norma Desmond in the 1950 movie, Sunset Boulevard. And now that you know that, you might be thinking: Hey, I thought this was a blog about writing, so what does a movie have to do with writing?
Lots, actually. In fact, so much that I couldn’t begin to cover it all in one tiny blog post. So in this blog post I just want to talk about “writing as acting.”
Now I myself am a victim of severe stage fright. I’m pretty sure this links back to some bad elementary school experiences, but whatever the cause, I’m not comfortable “performing” in front of others, be it on a stage or in front of a video camera. (Although I do these things from time to time anyway, because a girl’s gotta confront her fears, right?) Anyway, despite my dislike of being on a stage, when I’m writing a book, I feel I’m every bit as much an actress as Julia Roberts or Reese Witherspoon. (Okay, not really, but bear with me.)
I may not be up on a stage or screen, but I’m still performing a role – in my head. And then I’m putting it on paper. At any given moment, I am my book’s heroine, hero, or a secondary character to whom I’ve given a point of view. Because if reading a book can be equated to watching a movie, then writing a book is like making the movie. And the best movies and books hinge on emotion.
My main job, when I’m at the keyboard, is to be deep inside my point-of-view character’s head at all times and make sure I’m conveying their world, experiences, thoughts, and emotions in a way that the reader will feel. I can’t leave anything out if I want the character to be complete, and by the time I finish a book, I want the reader to feel they know my characters so well that they could probably tell you, (within reason, of course,) what that character would do in almost any situation. I want the reader to completely relate to the heroine and be totally in love with the hero.
And how do I try to accomplish this? I “get inside their skin.” (The characters’, not the readers’.
) Actors do this, too. I’ve read that Johnny Depp spends time preparing for roles by dressing as his character dresses or doing things his character might do. And as many of you probably know, Daniel Day Lewis stays “in character” on the set for the duration of every movie he shoots. Like these guys, I spend a lot of time with my characters up front, in my head, before I ever write a word of their story, and when I do finally sit down to start writing, I am “in their skin” and I see myself as acting their roles.
In my new book, LETTERS TO A SECRET LOVER, my main characters have very diverse backgrounds and differing personalities. Rob’s past is a difficult one, and seeing myself as “acting” his role when I wrote his point of view gave me a sense of connection to him that I don’t think I could achieve otherwise. Writing Lindsey was easier – I’m actually a lot like Lindsey, at heart – but writing her role was still just as much a job of acting to me, (figuring out her lines, her facial expressions, her reactions,) as it was writing.
There are probably as many methods for characterization as there are writers, but the “writing as acting” analogy works for me, thus I consider it a big part of my process. So how do you get close to your characters? Does the idea of being an actor when you sit down to write work in your mind? Why or why not? And for readers, how do you liken books to movies? Do you see the book you’re reading like a movie in your head? Do you imagine your favorite stars in the “roles”?
And of course, I’m happy to chat about pretty much anything – craft, industry, other stuff writers can learn from movies, LETTERS TO A SECRET LOVER (now available in a bookstore near you
), or whatever else floats your boat – or, I should say, your pirate ship. J