How NOT to Ruin a Soap
Interview with the late Douglas Marland; SOD, 4/27/93:
1. Watch the show.
2. Learn the history of the show. You would be surprised at the
ideas that you can get from the back story of your characters.
3. Read the fan mail. The very characters that are not thrilling
to you may be the audience's favorites.
4. Be objective. When I came to ATWT, the first thing I said was,
what is pleasing the audience? You have to put your own personal
likes and dislikes aside
and develop the characters that the audience wants to see.
5. Talk to everyone: writers and actors especially. There may be
something in a character's history that will work beautifully for
you, and who would know
better than the actor who has been playing the role?
6. Don't change a core character. You can certainly give them
edges they didn't have before, or give them a logical reason to
change their behavior. But when
the audience says, "He would never do that," then you have
failed.
7. Build new characters slowly. Everyone knows that it takes six
months to a year for an audience to care about a new character. Tie
them in to existing
characters. Don't shove them down the viewers' throats.
8. If you feel staff changes are in order, look within the
organization first. P&G does a lot of promoting from within.
Almost all of our producers worked
their way up from staff positions, and that means they know the
show.
9. Don't fire anyone for six months. I feel very deeply that you
should look at the show's canvas before you do anything.
10. Good soap opera is good storytelling. It's very simple.
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