I shall begin with a story I have told before but it fits, so
back it comes for an enjoyable reprise.
It is midnight. Where
are all the great show runners at midnight?
They are home in bed, because they are confident in their decision-making
and exemplarily organized. Being far
from a great show runner, I, by
contrast, am still at work, trying to rewrite a script before daybreak or
slipping into unconsciousness, whichever comes first.
We were taking a break during a Major Dad rewrite. Such intermissions
allow you to recharge your batteries. Or
at least to pee. On some occasions,
psychedelic exhaustion provides fleeting glimpses of illumination, like the
time during Best of the West, it was
twelve-thirty in the morning, we were agonizing over “Page 8” of a fifty-page
script, and I lamented,
“There must be an easier was to make three hundred thousand
dollars a year.”
Nobody said fleeting glimpses of illumination cannot not embarrassingly
painful.
So we’re on this break, and a neophyte member of my writing
staff – whose recent joke pitch had apparently been shot down by my criticism,
“Too many words”, approached me tentatively with a question.
“You often say ‘Too many words’ when you are rejecting a
joke pitch. What exactly do you mean by
‘Too many words’”?
The following is the one the smartest answers I have ever
given to anything.
Rather than responding verbally, I instead sang the familiar opening notes to Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, injecting an extra note so it went…
“Da-da-da-da-daaahhhh!”
Too many notes? – “Too many words.” – It is exactly the same
thing. For me. And possibly for all writers.
Do you remember…
“Ask not what your country can do for you but instead ask
yourself what you might be able to do for your country”?
No. Because it was,
“Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can
do for your country.”
Same sentiment.
One version has too many words.
“Frankly, Scarlett, I don’t actually give a damn”?
Too many words.
“Let he who is less guilty than the person you are all about
to throw stones at lead the way by being the instigator of the entire
stone-throwing operation”?
Way too many
words.
“To be or not to be; that is the dilemma.”
Too many words?
Nope. Too many syllables.
The same with…
“A house divided against itself cannot survive…”
And, at the risk
of rewriting Abraham Lincoln, I would seriously question “against itself”. I can just see myself, whining in the Lincoln
“Speechwriters’ Room”…
“Mr. President. The correct
line is, ‘A house divided cannot stand.’
‘The ‘against itself’ is entirely superfluous. I mean, how else is the house going to be divided? I am begging you, Mr. President. You have in your possession a historically memorable
quotation. Do not diminish its impact
with extraneous verbiage.”
ABRAHAM LINCOLN: “What the heck is he talking about?”
Now you might think my obsession with meter is entirely
ridiculous. And you might actually be
right, at least to the degree that I slavishly
adhere to it. But I will tell you – as a
form of confession – that the most time-consuming element in my blogal rewriting
process involves, not just selecting
the right word, but selecting the right word with the right number of
syllables, and beyond even that, the
right syllabic emphasis within those
right words with the right number of syllables.
Call me crazy, but that’s how I spend my mornings. Stretching frequently into the afternoons.
I perceive the process I am involved in as being analogous –
not analogous, it is identical – with the process of lyric
writing, the only difference being that my blog-postal “lyrics” arrive minus an identifiable 0melody.
That melody, however, far from being non-existent, resides demandingly
in my consciousness. For a fully realized
piece of writing, for me, the “music” and the “lyrics” must be impeccably in
sync.
Which is not easy.
Sometimes, I cannot immediately access the obligatory “right word.” What do I do then? In order to move forward, I frequently insert
an acceptable “placeholder word” – for example, writing “unimpeachable truth” until “indisputable
truth” comes eventually to mind, at which time I immediately make the switch.
Having determined that, in the specific context of what I am
writing about, “indisputable” is the optimal descriptive, I now have not only a
word with the right rhythm, I have additionally discovered the right word.
What happens if the right word with the right rhythm fails
to materialize?
Then I make a word up,
rhythm being more important to me than dictionarial verification.
Complicating matters even further, sometimes, I have the
right word with the right rhythm in a sentence, and then I rewrite the
sentence. Now, though it remains undeniably
the right word, in the surroundings of the revised sentence, it is no longer the
right rhythm.
What do I do then? If I am unable to find a rhythmically
appropriate “replacement word” – and on a startling number of occasions, I can – I will – I admit shamefully – select
the word that fits rhythmically, as opposed to the right word.
That’s how important it is.
I will sacrifice literal precision for “lyrical fluency.”
Though I would certainly prefer to have both.
Experientially, the reader should be entirely oblivious to
such machinations. We are talking
“subliminal infrastructure” here.
Without knowing why, the reader should find the finished product
emerging smoothly and naturally – as opposed to “naturally and smoothly”,
“naturally and smoothly” being literary equivalent of navigating a bumpy
thoroughfare on a punctured tire.
The “appropriate rhythm” would appear to be indisputable, an
“Immutable Law of the Universe”, as it were.
And yet…
(The standard “Earl Pomerantz “Wimp-Out Moment’”…)
I am listening (on CD) to a book by the monumentally
successful murder-mystery author, Michael Connolly. I hear a line about a character Connolly
describes,
“…his heart filled
with hate and cynicism.”
I immediately react.
Not “hate and cynicism”, I proclaim loudly to my treadmill and a humming
dehumidifier.
“It’s ‘cynicism and hate!’ Like ‘peanut butter and jam!’”
And while I am at it, not
“his heart filled with cynicism
and hate”, “…his heart awash in
cynicism and hate.”
My revised version alighting more melodically upon the
senses.
Conclusion:
“Michael Connolly got it wrong.”
On the other hand, it is also possible that different
writers have different music playing
in their consciouness.
Gun to my head, however, what do I really believe?
Michael Connolly got it wrong.
Your beef about "a house divided against itself" isn't with Lincoln; it's with Jesus, or at least Mark, who reported his words (Mark 3:25). Lincoln, like most American politicians then and now, knew how to appropriate Scripture for his own benefit.
ReplyDeleteYou mentionde telling a neophyte writer that the joke they pitched had too many words and you rejected the joke for that reason. I'd be interested in knowing (in a future blog post if you wouldn't mind) how you decide when it is worth going over the joke and refining it and when it is just too far from what you want and you reject it completely. You seemed willing to rework Mr. Lincoln's words (or as Mike pointed out, Jesus' words). But then, those words may have started closer to the Pomerantz Standard than the Neophyte's words.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy your posts about how you write what you do and this one is no exception. After reading your posts about the craft of writing I always appreciate other things I read even more.
Michael is never wrong! Peanut butter and JELLY! And since Michael began as a journalist, covering the police beat, he likely would have been put in solitary if he'd ever used the word 'awash' in the context you suggest.
ReplyDeleteI was immediately reminded of the Emperor's frequent critique of Mozart with the phrase, "Too many notes."