Plotting
the Musical by Warren Bull
I
have written before about plotting a song, i.e., identifying the motivation and
aspirations of the character in a song and following the journey of the
character during the events depicted in song. Right now I am planning to write
and direct a comedic political musical skit with a number of songs and
characters as part of the local fringe festival.
I
find writing the explanatory scaffolding is easier than plotting a novel and
harder than plotting most short stories.
It does not make sense (to me) to have one character after another
simply stand up and sing. Admittedly some quite successful musicals have skimpy
plots. Others toss any coherent story out the window in favor of a musical extravaganza.
For example, in the old Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney “Lets put on a show”
movies, the show starts in a barn or a backyard and ends in a flashy finale
that could take place only in a film studio set.
I
have written parody lyrics to seven tunes sung by or about political figures.
That was the easy part. The mood I want is more playful than condemning. I have
references to the President, the Vice President, two Supreme Court Justices,
and two Senators.
I
think I need to add an emcee to introduce the event and a piano player to
comment musically and ironically on the action. The President is the
protagonist. Because I’m writing the show and directing it and producing it, I
get to play that part. It seems to me that the most effective presentation
would be to stay in character until the very end when, like Judy and Mickey, I
drop out of character.
Two
wonderful singers have agreed to participate and I persuaded a great
jazz pianist to join us.
My
tentative outline of the event starts: An introduction by the emcee with some
humor; the President appears sings and rushes off; the piano makes a musical
comment by playing a few bars of Hit the
Road, Jack.
Then
two characters each give a brief statement of their interaction with the
Commander in Chief and then sing a song followed by a musical commentary.
The
Prez reappears sing and dashes off again. Another musical riff.
Two
more characters repeat the actions above. The man in the White House sings his
swan song. The singers croon along with him.
I
step out of character (somehow.) The singers join me in a joke song. Then we
engage the audience in a final farewell tune.
Of
course I am still changing lyrics and sharpening the spoken parts at the
moment.
It
sounds complicated as I read over this. Thanks for helping me think about the
process. I think I’ll go lie down for a while. Mental exercise wears me out
because I rarely do it.
What
do you think?
Sounds like a plan!
ReplyDeleteWhile I love musicals, I have to admit I've never given much thought to how they work.
ReplyDeleteNow you've given me a lot to think about.