From Stage to Page with Barbara Kyle

I’m
often asked if my previous career as an actor helped my writing.

 

Yes, it
certainly did.

 

Acting gave me a deep appreciation of strong story structure,
because it’s hard to act in a script that has weaknesses like unfocused
conflict or unmotivated turning points or a feeble climax. That stayed with me in writing my eleven novels.


Photo: With crew members (me in 19th-century bonnet) on the set of the TV series “The Campbells”


And, of course, it helped me in crafting a novel’s dialogue. I
often advise emerging writers to develop an “actor’s ear” by listening
carefully to how people talk. For a writer, eavesdropping is good!

 

Parallel Arts

 

There are also parallels between rehearsing a play and writing a novel. An acting
company often gets just four weeks’ rehearsal. That’s not much time to get a
play up “on the boards,” so each week has definite goals. 

Photo: Me (standing) and Dawn Wells (“Marianne” of “Gilligan’s Island” TV series ) in the play “Vanities.”

 

The
first week is spent just on “blocking,” working out which characters
move where and when. The next couple of weeks are dedicated to detailed scene
development, working on individual scenes and delving for motivation and
pacing. Not until the final week does the cast do run-throughs of the whole
play, followed by technical rehearsals (sound cues and light cues) and finally
the full, dress rehearsal.

 

If, instead,
the company plunged from day one into running through the whole play over and
over with full cast and tech effects, the result would be weeks of chaos, and
the final product a mess. The rehearsal process has to be done in manageable
segments.

 

So it is
with writing a novel. No writer would be so foolish as to expect “perfection” in a
first draft. It takes several, and each draft has a function: from the creation
of the raw plot, to drafts that deepen characters’ relationships, enrich
pivotal scenes, and hone dialogue, to the final draft for polishing.

 

Coming Full
Circle

 

Speaking
of the acting/writing connection, here’s a bit of sweet serendipity. Not long
ago I got a note from a writer who told me he was at work on his first novel
and subscribed to my News for Writers emails.

 

He said
that after enjoying my writing advice emails for many months, it suddenly
struck him that he knew me from years ago: that the author Barbara Kyle
was the actor Barbara Kyle he’d worked with when I appeared in several
episodes of the TV series The Littlest Hobo

 

Imagine my delight when I read the signature: the note was from Christopher Dew who’d created and produced that very successful TV series.

 

I’ve so
enjoyed reconnecting with Christopher. His debut novel, Ulysses-Comin’ Home, has just been published.
Here is its beautiful cover.

 

__________________________________________________________________________

 Barbara Kyle is the author of the bestselling
Thornleigh Saga series of historical novels and of
acclaimed thrillers. Her latest novel of suspense is The Man from Spirit Creek. Over half a million
copies of her books have been sold.
Barbara has taught
hundreds of writers in her online masterclasses and many have become
award-winning authors
.
Visit Barbara at https://www.barbarakyle.com/  

 

 

4 replies
  1. T.K. Thorne
    T.K. Thorne says:

    Love this, Barbara! I think if we could "see" our novels visually, this would hit home. I learn a lot watching Netflix! And that picture of you and Dawn Wells is priceless!

    • Barbara Kyle
      Barbara Kyle says:

      Thanks, T.K. Dawn was a dear friend. We lost her last year (f***ing Covid). She and I met when we did that production of "Vanities" together and we became close. I visited her at her home in Tennessee and she visited us at our (then) home north of Toronto. I miss her.

  2. Saralyn
    Saralyn says:

    Glad to hear you liken writing to acting. I often imagine authors sitting at their desks, acting out the part of every character as they write.

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