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Radio Play

To challenge your creative abilities, take a short story you've written and turn it into a radio play. This exercise gets you to focus on sounds. One benefit is that when you write your next piece of prose fiction you will be more likely to enrich the work with sound references.

A variation of this activity is to listen to a short extract of a radio play and transcribe it using the technical terms and page layout below.

  1. Ext. AT THE RENDEZVOUS POINT. Night.

    (Blake stands motionless at the top of the steps, keeping to the shadows.

    He is obviously nervous. He reaches inside his coat pocket,

    as though to reassure himself. Suddenly another figure appears...)

    BLAKE: Who are you? Where's Jim?

    TULLY (with a throaty voice): Jim has been — ah — detained. You're dealing with me now.

    BLAKE: How do I know I can trust you?

    TULLY: You don't. Listen, if you don't like it you can walk away now... Or you can ring Davis to check my credentials... Or we can simply do the deal that you arranged. If I mention that I've spoken to Jenna tonight, does that put your mind at ease...?

    (Blake reaches again into his coat. Tully gasps and turns, as though to run.

    There is the sound of a single shot being fired.)

  2. Ext. LATER, AT THE WAREHOUSE. Night.

    TULLY: So, Jenna, you thought I wouldn't be coming back...

— Steve Bowkett.

Author: Steve Bowkett ♦ Created: 10-Jun-2017 ♦ Access: public ♦ Article: radio-play ♦ Topics: old WordPress site, resources