Copyright 2016 by Gary Pullman
In
Dusted: The Unauthorized Guide to Buffythe Vampire Slayer, Buffy writer Jane Espenson explains how the
series' team of writers wrote the show's weekly scripts.
First,
Espenson says, they'd start with the emotion upon which a particular
episode would be built.
Then,
they would create a metaphor expressive of this emotion.
Using
“A New Man,” an episode that she wrote, Espenson says the team
decided that Rupert Giles feels alienated from Buffy and her friends,
who are now enrolled at the University of California, Sunnydale,
pursuing lives and interests of their own. He feels left out, almost
as if he is estranged from them, because, during high school, as the
school librarian, he saw them frequently and was more central to
their lives. To prepare for this emotional experience, Espenson
observes, previous episodes of the series had marginalized Giles.
The
writers decided that Giles' transformation into a demon would be the
metaphor expressive of his feeling alienated.
After
deciding upon the emotion and the metaphor, the show's creator, Joss
Whedon, and the writing team determine the “emotional high point,”
or cliffhanger, that is to occur at the end, or “break,” of each
act, Espenson says. In “The New man,” these incidents occur
during the episode's four act breaks:
Act I: Sorcerer Ethan Rayne
appears. (It is he who casts the spell that transforms Giles into a
demon.)
Act II: Giles is a demon.
Act II: Buffy, believing that
demon-Giles has murdered Giles, threatens to slay him.
Act IV: Despite his demonic
appearance, Buffy recognizes Giles as she is about to slay him.
Prior
to Act I, a brief “teaser” captures viewers' interest in the
story to come.
After
the emotion, the metaphor, and the act breaks are identified, the
writers, working “scene by scene, from the general to the
specific,” Espenson explains, break each scene of the episode into
beats. (Espenson defines a “beat” as the smallest dramatic
moment, which expresses an emotion or presents an action, and,
according to her colleague, writer Tracy Forbes, each scene contains
from seven to nine beats.)
Then,
an outline is constructed.
Finally,
with feedback from Whedon, between each draft, the writer responsible
for writing the week's episode's script—Espenson, in the case of “A New Man”—writes one or two preliminary drafts, depending upon the
time available, before writing the final draft of the script.
Forbes
points out that every Buffy
episode is built upon three elements: “emotional arc,”
“metaphor,” and “monster.”
To
sum up, Buffy episodes
were written according to this process:
- The emotion upon which a particular episode would be built was determined.
- A metaphor expressive of this emotion was created.
- The “emotional high point,” or cliffhanger, that is to occur at the end, or “break,” of each act was identified.
- Working “scene by scene, from the general to the specific,” from seven to nine beats are created for each scene.
- An outline is developed.
- One or two preliminary drafts are written, with revisions involving feedback from Whedon.
- A final draft is written.
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