Session 2 -
Actions Speak Louder than Words
Body
language and facial expressions play a large part in our conversation, they are
natural reactions to what we speak and hear. Our characters should react the
same way. If we forget these important elements, our dialogue will appear flat,
boring, and our characters dull. Even setting plays a part in every day
conversation.
Did you ever avoid someone’s eyes – focus on a
picture or a lamp - maybe even lowered your eyes or stared at the ceiling? We
tend to focus on things other than the person speaking to us if we are
uncomfortable with either the situation or the person.
We
wave our hand, cross our arms, tap our foot, or raise our eyebrows to show
impatience. Maybe we wrinkle our brow, scrunch up our nose, and let out a deep
sigh when we're doubtful. We cross our leg, wiggle our foot, or tap our
fingers when we're nervous. All of
these actions show something about our moods, our reactions to conversation and
even about us. We react differently when we're nervous, upset, irritated,
happy, sad, or doubtful. These actions show what dialogue, alone, cannot. Our
characters need to do the same.
Teamed
up with dialogue these expressive actions say more about our character, their
setting, and their dialogue then the typical he said, she said and their
counterparts -replied, asked, responded. These are unnecessary words. Also,
other than said, they put the author into the story – something we never want.
Said, on the other hand, disappears into the story and most readers don’t
notice it. Although, overusing said puts the author in the story, too. Most times we can avoid using it.
Think of a strong dialogue scene as having
three elements: words, visuals, and
thoughts.” Let’s see how it works.
How
often have we created dialogue like this?
“I
can’t believe you said that,” he said.
“Why
not, it’s true,” she replied.
“But, you didn’t have to say it,” he answered.
“No,
I guess I didn’t,” she said.
We
tag the dialogue with he said, she said so our readers do not get confused
about who is speaking. We vary said with replied, answered, snapped or other
like words. The dialogue is boring. We know nothing about the characters. We
can change the he/she to Tom and Laura, but it won’t change the dialogue. All
we have are words. We can add adverbs to the tag lines to tell us what
they’re feeling as in the following example.
“I
can’t believe you said that,” he said angrily.
Now
we know he is angry, but you, the author, told us that, not the character and
we still have he said. Our characters are not showing us anything. And we
already learned about the misuse of adverbs in lesson one. We know that doesn’t
work. It’s telling, not showing.
Next step adding visuals. We add
visuals by setting a scene - Tom and Laura sat in a restaurant. Sure, we can do
that, but then the author’s voice is back in the story. Remember, we want to
stay out of the story as much as possible. We want our characters to show us
the scene.
Think
about a conversation with your spouses or good friends. While they were
speaking, you formed your answers in your mind. And you watched their face,
noticed their body language at the same time. Maybe their body tensed, their
jaw set, their brow furrowed or they frowned. Through their body language you
knew they were upset or angry, happy, or sad. Other thoughts flowed through your
mind. Maybe you were angry too or thought they were wrong. The interchange
included words, body language and your thoughts. Many things happened during
that conversation.
Now,
let’s add some visuals and body language to our earlier conversation and
see how it plays out.
“I
can’t believe you said that.” Tom stared at her.
Laura
looked at the waiter, avoiding the hurt look on Tom’s face. “Why not, it’s
true.” She watched him out of the corner of her eye.
Tom’s
jaw tightened. He picked up his cup, took a sip. “But you didn’t have to say
it.”
“No,
I guess I didn’t.”
Notice
how we eliminated the he said, she said completely. Yet, we still know who is
speaking. We can see and hear their emotion. Examine what the above exchange
shows us, based on the criteria. We had the conversation in the first dialogue
session but it showed us nothing but the speakers. In the example above, we
added a visual and a scene, the restaurant.
We
know this because she stared at a waiter and he picked up the cup. We've added tension with body language -
His jaw tightened. We know she is our POV, because she sees the hurt. We see the
scene and hear the words through her. We see her visually ignoring him, yet
watching his reaction. We vary the length and pace of the sentences to keep the
reader’s attention. Sometimes, as in the case of his last comment, it is more
powerful not to add a visual or tag line. If we add visuals or
tag lines to all dialogue, it becomes monotonous and boring and can even
disrupt our story.
We
now have two elements, words and visuals. Let’s add the third, thoughts.
“I
can’t believe you said that.” Tom stared at her.
Laura looked at the waiter, avoiding the hurt look on his face. “Why not, it’s true.”
She watched him out of the corner of her eye. He’s angry.
His
jaw tightened. He played with his cup. “But you didn’t have to say it.”
“No,
I guess I didn’t.” She stood up. She had enough. Glaring at him, she pulled
some change from her purse and threw it on the table. It’s always about him.
Time to leave before she said something she'd regret.
We
have completed the elements. We hear the characters voices and see their
emotions. They have showed us the scene and their reaction to the words and we
have her thoughts, paraphrased - we don't have to say she thought, we know she's thinking. Our characters have brought the scene to life, and
you, the author did not tell us anything.
Next time: The Senses
Next time: The Senses