How To Be A Sitcom Writer: Secrets From The Inside
By Marc Blake
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How To Be A Sitcom Writer - Marc Blake
Part 1
Sitcom Essentials
What is Sitcom?
Sitcom is not about the situation but the characters. Whether Fawlty or Frasier, Blackadder or Brent, it’s people that we love to watch behaving badly. These extraordinary types are monsters whom we would cross the street to avoid in real life but who in sitcom are given free rein to follow the consequences of their actions to the limit. There are other character comedy shows, of course; for example Little Britain, but this is really a sketch show. TV people call this broken comedy because they are vignettes and there is no single story running through each episode.
Sitcom is usually recorded in front of a studio audience. In the early days of television these shows were aired live, but as technology improved, editing became possible before transmission. Nowadays, all kinds of tweaking goes on before the final product is broadcast. Yet it is beneficial to have a live audience as it will not only help to get the best possible performance out of the cast, but can also indicate where the jokes are falling flat. In this case – a boon to the writer – last minute rewrites, added bits of business or extra scenes can be included.
Most sitcoms today are filmed with a single camera (live recordings usually have four). This allows for multiple retakes to get exactly the performances or shots required (more on this in Part Seven). Motherland, Fleabag and Afterlife were all done in this way, but there will always be a need to road test comedy in front of living, laughing people.
There is little character development in sitcom because we keep our characters trapped. They can’t move. They are stifled by their lives, their jobs, their relatives, and in situations which are often all of their own making. It’s also always a small cast. Four people irritating the heck out of one another are quite enough to have the audience glued to their screens. The characters don’t stray either; playing out their anxieties in a single domestic or workplace setting (occasionally both). There are rarely big plots in sitcom. A missing key or impertinent accusation is sufficient to create laughter for thirty minutes.
Of course, it has to be funny as well: gloriously, unpredictably, irreverently hilarious.
Sitcom is always half an hour. On the commercial networks this can be reduced to almost twenty-five minutes. If a comedy stretches to an hour, then it is called comedy drama. This is a confusing term. Is it comedy or is it drama? Ideally it is both, but where this form differs to sitcom is that the characters grow over the course of the series. They mature and develop and are caught up in major life changes.
What Makes Great Sitcom?
First and foremost, a situation comedy should be funny. Many people watch TV alone and it’s hard to laugh in those circumstances (although, for me, Family Guy will do it nine times out of ten), but you ought to be amused enough to keep watching and to want to tune in again.
Good acting is vital; not just for the lead character but for the ensemble cast as well. Porridge relied not only on the superb talents of Ronnie Barker, but also those of Richard Beckinsale, Brian Wilde and Fulton Mackay. Would Fawlty Towers have been as successful without Prunella Scales as Sybil? A single star rarely carries the show, although he or she will help get it off the ground. Harry Enfield is quoted as saying that Men Behaving Badly would not have got made without him and would not have been a success had he not left (he bowed out after one series).
Nevertheless, what makes a sitcom great are characters who provoke the phrase ‘I know someone just like that’. Take David Brent in The Office. None of us really has a boss who’s that awful, but he does seem to represent all the qualities (insensitivity, rudeness, arrogance) of a certain kind of middle-management drone. The fresh idea – the one that elevates him above other more traditional sitcom bosses – is that he so desperately wants to fit in and be one of the lads. Plus he thinks he’s a comedian, or rather a ‘chilled-out entertainer’ – a master stroke of self-delusion. These lead roles are archetypes. Originals. Characters that sear themselves onto our retinas.
Believability is crucial too. When you watch a sitcom you don’t want to be asking: ‘Why are these people living together? Why don’t they just move away or divorce their partner?’
Another key to good sitcom is to make it relevant. The Office struck a chord with a large viewing public, not only because of David Brent but also dim Gareth, comatose Keith, Finchy’s balls-out sexism and Tim’s inability to escape a job that he was only slightly better than.
In previous decades Men Behaving Badly exposed the new lad, The Good Life captured a desire to escape the rat race and Carla Lane’s sublime Butterflies spoke to a generation of women who wanted to escape stifling marriages.
There is also surprise in sitcom. Nobody expected Basil Fawlty to give his Mini Cooper a thrashing with a branch, Del Boy to loosen the wrong nut above the chandelier or the Meldrews to find a strange old lady in their bed, but these were in keeping with the characters and the show. This is what we watch for – extremes of behaviour – but coming from people whom we have grown to know.
In this regard, the element of familiarity is important. People need to warm to this strange person in their living room. They need time to learn about their faults and foibles and to love and hate them, which is why it takes time for sitcom to bed in – often at least two series. Therefore, characters must be written with an eye towards longevity. Take the longest-running UK sitcom, Last of the Summer Wine, which was written by one of the most prolific writers in TV; Roy Clarke. Despite many cast changes and the deaths (and subsequent recasting) of most of the principle players, it still continues to garner audience ratings on repeat. Modern Family, Friends or Dad’s Army operate on similar levels.
Studying the Genre
To become any kind of writer the first thing you’ll want to do is research the area in which you wish to write. A putative crime novelist scours newspapers for gore and wannabe screenwriters will spend their hours binge-watching shows and movies. As an aspiring sitcom writer you should be no different. Watch everything, good and bad, British and American, new and old. Many classic shows are available online on multiple streaming services. Don’t forget radio sitcom - many shows are on rotation on BBC Radio Four Extra. Scripts are also available to read on IMDb Scripts or on the BBC Writers Room website.
What are your personal top ten? Why? Do you like silliness or smart retorts? Do you prefer US humour to British? Do your favourites contain oodles of visual gags or do they produce a sly grin?
Now think about the sitcoms you don’t like. Some of these may be in the top 40 as well. Try to come up with three. What makes you turn off? Sometimes it’s a good idea to know what you don’t want to do.
It’s useful to see sitcom being recorded. Most major broadcasters offer free tickets and a quick online search (e.g. the BBC ticket unit) will provide details. Seeing it done live with all the excitement that that generates is a huge encouragement to any writer. You may see an existing show, a new one or possibly even a pilot (the first script or recorded show of a potential series). A pilot is shot so that the commissioning executives can decide whether it’s working or not. If they and the channel controllers are happy then a series is commissioned.
When you’re there you’ll see the main set in front of you – picture, for example, the Friends apartment. This is where nearly all the action will take place. It’s almost like a stage play. See how many doors there are so the actors can get on and off quickly. To the left and right there will be two or three other sets made to look like other parts of the flat or home, or maybe an office, pub or restaurant, depending on the plot. If you think of Friends again, it would be the corridor between the two apartments, Joey’s apartment and the Central Perk café.
Above you are monitors, suspended from the roof. On these are played the opening and closing credits and any footage that has been pre-recorded. Exterior shooting, for instance, is always done first.
During the recording they will stop and start; actors will fluff their lines and chunks of dialogue or action may be repeated several times.