Thursday, 11 June 2015

Cardiff, Manchester, Birmingham Sitcom Trials updates

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_xVPF-Q2Ik

Cardiff, Manchester, Birmingham Sitcom Trials updates

On Tuesday night the Cardiff Sitcom Trials team, aka Dan Mitchell and A Boxfull of Comedy, had a reading of some of the scripts that have been shortlisted for their forthcoming show. They also gave a brief reading to the script which ranked lowest in the online poll, the results of which you can see in the video above.

(This script, I have subsequently learned, was a deliberate exercise in writing the most offensive piece possible. Elliot and his co-writers will be delighted to learn they've succeeded).

The Boxfulls read some of the most popular scripts from the online shortlist, including a couple of their inhouse creations and have three scripts still to read at another meeting before they make the decision as to which scripts they'll do on July 28th.

Two of the favourite scripts, Agent of LOVCRAFT and Matchmakers, are written by Cardiff writers, one by a member of the cast, so they look most likely to make the final show, and went very well in the reading.

Other scripts read on Tuesday were My Boss Was In An Indie Band, The Magic Men, and Bringing In The Sheep.

http://www.kingsarmssalford.com/?id=9 http://www.eventflask.com/event/43364/sitcom-trials-cardiff

The Manchester team have expressed an interest in performing:
The Magic Men
Ann Dram
The New 20
and Thrift
- in their show on June 21st. A final announcement will be made soon.

Birmingham's team, aka Aaron Twitchen and Foghorn Improv, have drawn up a shortlist of the favourites from the scripts that were sent directly to them (they didn't do an online vote). They are:
Both Sides Now - Rachel Sambrooks
My Boss was in an Indie Band - Mark Hibbett ***
Mary Godmother - Dan Sweryt
Friday Nights - Arthur Burke
The Cleaners - Richard Constable & Roger Sanders
Thrift - Ashley Freize  ***

(The asterisks show scripts that are also being done by Cardiff or Manchester). Aaron will be announcing the final line-up for Birmingham's July 3rd show shortly.

Congratulations to all the writers who've entered scripts, and thanks to the team leaders and performers in Cardiff, Manchester and Birmingham for the sterling work they've done so far.

A reminder that scripts are still wanted for the Glasgow Sitcom Trials, details here, deadline August 8th.

Kev F Sutherland
Executive Producer
The Sitcom Trials



Monday, 8 June 2015

Sitcom Trials online script voting - the results

http://www.kingsarmssalford.com/?id=9 http://www.eventflask.com/event/43364/sitcom-trials-cardiff

Thankyou to everyone who read, reviewed and voted on the scripts in the online script selection for the forthcoming Sitcom Trials in Cardiff and Manchester. Here are the results, totalled and checked by Judgement Dave. Every YES vote scored 2 points, a MAYBE vote scored 1 point, and a NO vote scored minus 1 point. This table shows the results when writers votes for their own scripts are discounted:

RankScoreTitle
125Agent of LOVCRAFT
218My Boss Was in an Indie Band
314The Magic Men
411The Matchmakers
59Ann Dram
67The New 20
67Thrift
86POPSCENE!
95Blue Door
95Bringing in the Sheep
95Serenity House
123Yesterdays News
132Jehovah the Hill
132Malibu Crush
15-1Secret Agents
16-2Mentalectro
17-3Death Runs a Cornershop
18-4Their Majesties' Secret Services
19-5Boys in the Band
20-6NEGATIVE
20-6Reis & Paul
22-9Ruther Edge
23-15A Different Band of Brothers
24-16What was your porn name Darling?

The votes, including votes for the writers own script, are at the foot of this post. I propose the selection for the shows be made on the table above, and not the one including writers votes for themselves.

I shall now be talking to the Manchester and Cardiff teams about which scripts they would like to showcase from the favoured top end of the chart. We will report back as soon as we can as to which scripts are to be performed where.

Birmingham's script were sent directly to producer Aaron Twitchen , who will be making the decision on which scripts they will be showcasing. Stay tuned for details.

All the best, and thanks again everyone.

Kev F Sutherland
Executive Producer
The Sitcom Trials

http://www.kingsarmssalford.com/?id=9

http://www.eventflask.com/event/43364/sitcom-trials-cardiff

The votes, including votes for the writers own script, look like this:

RankScoreTitle
125Agent of LOVCRAFT
218My Boss Was in an Indie Band
316The Magic Men
413The Matchmakers
59Ann Dram
68POPSCENE!
77Blue Door
77Serenity House
77The New 20
77Thrift
115Bringing in the Sheep
115Yesterdays News
134Jehovah the Hill
134Malibu Crush
15-1Secret Agents
16-2Mentalectro
16-2Their Majesties' Secret Services
18-3Death Runs a Cornershop
19-4NEGATIVE
19-4Reis & Paul
21-5Boys in the Band
22-9Ruther Edge
23-15A Different Band of Brothers
24-16What was your porn name Darling?




Tuesday, 19 May 2015

Announcing the first Glasgow Sitcom Trials

 

Are you a budding sitcom writer in Scotland?

We are delighted to announce that Glasgow based comedy team Beyond A Joke will be hosting The Sitcom Trials' inaugural Glasgow show* at YesBar on September 8th 2015.

We are currently doing an open call for scripts and
Glasgow's head honcho Colin McQuaid has taken on the onerous task of receiving all your scripts. So please read the submission details below, and send them to the address shown. The deadline for scripts is Saturday August 8th.

Full details below:


 

Interested? Take a look at the brief:

The Sitcom Trials wants situation comedy scripts that a small group of actors can perform in a live environment with minimal staging in front of an audience, who will hopefully laugh! Ideally these sitcoms will be so marvelous that the TV and radio industry representatives in the audience (should there be any) will snap them up immediately.

Your script must have no more than four main characters and a first 'half' of less than ten minutes. This first half should ideally end in a cliffhanger, or something that leaves the audience wanting more. It must then have a second 'half' of no more than five minutes long; after the audience have voted, the top two favourites will battle it out and perform their second 'half!'

Scripts will be performed by the regular team of Beyond A Joke comedy, and a selection of other local professional actors. 
Entries are also welcomed from writer-performers, ie people who wish to perform their own scripts. In this case, could you include Youtube clips of you in action so we know what to expect.

Please put your name, email address, and the title of your sitcom on the first page of your script, and send it as a PDF or Word file. Entries must be submitted to beyondajokelive@gmail.com by midnight Saturday 8th August 2015.


Have we found the new Still Game? The new Rab C Nesbitt? The new Gary Tank Commander? You decide.


*PS: In fact this is the second Sitcom Trials to take place in Glasgow. The Trials touring show came to Glasgow on March 12th 2005, hosting a Sitcom Masterclass and a show at The 13th Note featuring special guest Janey Godley (here's a blog about how it went). It'll be good to be back.

If you would like to create the next great British situation comedy, The Sitcom Trials is an opportunity for your sitcom to be seen live.

Details of new shows, and our ongoing competition, are to be found here at sitcomtrials.co.uk and on Twitter and Facebook.


See the Best of The Sitcom Trials videos, here.

What Makes A Good Sitcom Trials Script - Sean Mason



BEGINNING.

Hello. My name is Sean and I'm behind the Manchester heat of The Sitcom Trials. I know the submission deadline is looming and some of you may have already submitted stuff. I meant to do this sooner but I've been busy trying to clear my to do list in prep to read all of your scripts.

I want to talk a little bit about what I think makes a good script entry and, perhaps controversially, the answer isn't jokes*.

MIDDLE.

STORY

Let's start with a little narrative theory that pretty much all sitcom falls into. Sorry if this is teaching a fish how to swim for some of you. Todorov's theory of equilibrium is thus:

1. Equilibrium. Our hero is going about their day.
2. Disequilibrium. Something happens to affect their day. This can be your inciting incident (the thing that gets your story moving).
3. Our hero tries to restore order. (There can be multiple attempts – in sitcom these often make the situation worse).
4. A new equilibrium is established (though in sitcom it is often a return to the old equilibrium – Fletcher is still in prison, Ted is still on Craggy Island etc.)

Beginning. Middle. End. This sounds like common sense but you'll be surprised how often people forget this stuff.

Disequilibrium doesn't have to be a major event. It could be a little thing like running out of tea bags, getting a flat tyre or forgetting a birthday. The same goes for your cliffhanger.

This is how too many scripts I have read tend to go: Banter. Banter. Banter. Banter. Banter. The Inspector is here! Cliffhanger. Hurried resolution (often skipping out the resolution of the problem and going straight to what happened after).

The inspector arriving towards the end isn't as interesting as the inspector arriving in the first scene and being the ex wife of our lead character and them being forced together. We want to be able to see the resolution happening too.

Whatever your cliffhanger is, maybe you should make that your inciting incident. A story isn't about what happens, it's about how your characters deal with what is happening. That is the driving force of any comedy.

You don't have much time. Don't waste it with extraneous set up. A great example of expedient writing is Episode 2 of Father Ted: “Entertaining Father Stone” - the inciting incident has already happened – we're not dreading the arrival of Father Stone, he's already there.

Just because we're doing this on stage with zero budget doesn't mean you can't have scene changes. Try and keep your locations to a minimum but too often scripts read like over long sketches or one long meandering scene. I say you don't have a lot of time but you'll be surprised what you can fit into your script – the average TV sitcom episode is maybe about 25 minutes long and they often pack loads in. Cut anything extraneous and give yourself more time for action and gags. Enter a scene late. Leave early.

Kill your babies unless they absolutely deserve to be there. This will only set you free as a writer.

CHARACTERS

This is what most people remember about a sitcom. Not it's jokes – unless they are exceptional. They remember Captain Mainwaring's red faced pomp, they remember Hyacinth Bucket's phone manner, they remember Edina Monsoon's terrible fashion sense and desperation to be on top of new trends. How a character deals with situations is the key to any story.

The humour stems from your characters. Example: Father Dougal not remembering having met Sister Assumpta until they mention the jumper he was wearing.

People sitting around delivering constant witticisms, being snarky or just bantering constantly is dull. It's deathly bloody dull. If I don't care about anyone in the script I don't care about what they have to say. People sitting around being “funny” and nothing happening is boring. The Royal Family was people sitting around yes, but loads happened and they had interesting things to say. Sarcasm and jokes = not the same thing.

What do your characters want? What stops them? How can/do they over come it? Every character, every scene and every story is driven by a want, both external and internal.

Example:
External want: Lee wants to stop a mugger from stealing a handbag.
Internal want: Lee wants to save face in front of Lucy.

Both of these wants drive your dialogue, your story and are where the comedy stems from.

Think about archetypes – different to stereotypes – and how your characters fit together. Examples: The bossy one. The loveable loser. The sensible one. The slightly mad one. The horny one. What happens when the loveable loser fails to attract the sensible one because the horny one had wrangled their hands down his pants?

How do your characters fit into their situation? How do they react to each other and the problems they are faced with? What drives them? Who is our hero and who is the character that we associate with. Arguably, David Brent is the “hero” of The Office but Tim is the character that the audience latches onto.

I, as a reader, actor and director need to get your characters straight away. We, as an audience, need to get your characters straight away.

END.

Write interesting characters. Write stories with action**. The jokes will come last.

*To qualify, by jokes I mean “gags” that have nothing to do with the story or characters.
**stuff happening, not car chases.

POST CREDITS GAG.

If you want to look at other advice written by people far more qualified than I then check out these links:




Tuesday, 21 April 2015

Sitcom Trials Manchester & Cardiff (& Birmingham, and now Glasgow) - call for scripts



You wait ages for a new Sitcom Trials to turn up, and suddenly three come along at the same time*. No sooner have we announced the inaugural Midlands Sitcom Trials, taking place in Birmingham on July 3rd, we are delighted to announce the return of the Manchester Sitcom Trials on June 21st and the first ever Cardiff Sitcom Trials on July 28th.

*UPDATE May 19th: Glasgow Sitcom Trials announced for September 8th. See here for details

And your scripts are invited for all three shows now!

Yes, if you would like the opportunity to see your situation comedy script performed on stage and voted on by a live audience, please send them in now, the deadline is May 22nd.

TO ENTER THE MIDLANDS SITCOM TRIALS - send scripts direct to producer Aaron Twitchen, see guidelines and details here.

TO ENTER THE CARDIFF & MANCHESTER SITCOM TRIALS:

1) You'll need to join the Facebook Sitcom Trials Group here*.

2) Go to the Group Files here, and follow the instructions marked "Sitcom Trials Summer 2015, how to enter a script (READ BEFORE ENTERING)"

*Joining the Facebook Group is different from Liking the Sitcom Trials Facebook page, though you're advised to do both. The Group is a closed group & therefore more private.

Happy comedy writing everyone. And don't forget to follow us on Facebook and Twitter for news.

Citizen

Monday, 20 April 2015

Sitcom Trials Birmingham - call for scripts



Are you a budding script writer in the midlands?

Along with Foghorn Improv, we will be hosting The Sitcom Trials midlands division at The Old Joint Stock Pub & Theatre on July 3rd.

Producer/Performer Aaron Twitchen writes: We are currently doing an open call for scripts. See details below. Please share and enter. I, personally, would love to see a script with a strong, handsome, vest-wearing, brunette male lead in his mid-20s.

Full details below:


Plebs" 

Interested? Take a look at the brief:

The Sitcom Trials wants situation comedy scripts that a small group of actors can perform in a live environment with minimal staging in front of an audience, who will hopefully laugh! Ideally these sitcoms will be so marvelous that the TV and radio industry representatives in the audience (should there be any) will snap them up immediately.

Your script must have no more than four main characters and a first 'half' of less than ten minutes. This first half should ideally end in a cliffhanger, or something that leaves the audience wanting more. It must then have a second 'half' of no more than five minutes long; after the audience have voted, the top two favourites will battle it out and perform their second 'half!'
Scripts will be performed by resident improvisation group, Foghorn Improv, and a selection of other local professional actors.

Please put your name, email address, and the title of your sitcom on the first page of your script, and send it as a PDF file. Entries must be submitted to scripts@foghornimprov.com by Friday 22nd May.

We're in the process of setting up the Radio Sitcom Trials, and we'll offer the writer of the winning sitcom the chance to have their script recorded as a full-cast audio play (with music and FX) and then hopefully broadcast on BBC local radio sometime this year.
~
Just want to come along and watch?

A selection of the top entries recieved will be performed on Friday July 3rd at the Old Joint Stock Theatre in an exciting rehearsed-reading radio-style affair! These sitcoms will be in competition with each other, the winner to be decided by an audience and panel vote.

Tickets on sale soon!


Bookings
oldjointstocktheatre@fullers.co.uk 0121 200 0946

 

Thursday, 29 January 2015

Good Little Boy - excellent review

This review for Lewis Cook's Good Little Boy, just in from Bristol 24/7:

Review: Good Little Boy, Wardrobe Theatre

James Prescott, January 28, 2015

Billed as ‘a darkly comic tale about morality, masculinity and Monopoly’, this latest outing from noted comedy stable The Sitcom Trials follows tells the nervous (and wonderfully camp) school caretaker George and his desperate attempts to win back his bored, adulterous wife.

Local comedian Lewis Cook supplies the script with his delightfully endless loop of witty callbacks, while high jinks such as the description of an extra-marital affair as a ‘love lasagne’ in which he plays the Bolognese and she the béchamel seem to scream for a television adaptation.

The cast and creative team demonstrate the magic that can be achieved in a room above a pub. The play’s funnier aspects, however, do well not to supplant the subtle character renditions and intriguing plot.

The hilarious situations serve to make the more tender moments all the more poignant, while the miserable reality of certain situations leaves the audience in stunned silence. Beneath the comedy, the play has a serious import – to expose the grim underbelly of modern suburban living.

The writing might not be considered wholly original, as one scene in which our hero meekly purchases condoms on behalf of his wife’s new love bears a striking resemblance to Peep Show Season 2, episode 5.

There is, however, some exhaustive attention to detail from the props department while, on the acting side, Ian Halverson’s portrayal of Stuart the schoolteacher nets by far the most laughs – it would lift the show to see the other actors pouring as much enthusiasm into their performances.

Good Little Boy runs until Friday, January 30 at The Wardrobe Theatre. For more info, see our listing here.

If you would like to create the next great British situation comedy, The Sitcom Trials is an opportunity for your sitcom to be seen live.

Details of new shows, and our ongoing competition, are to be found here at sitcomtrials.co.uk and on Twitter and Facebook.


See the Best of The Sitcom Trials videos, here.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...