The Who, What, Where Experiment

The Who, What, Where Experiment

The Who, What, and Where Experiment

Use this structured improv game to experiment with options for your next scene.

Style

Architect

Skill

Improvisation

Time

10 minutes

THE STUDIO:

The Who, What, and Where Experiment

One way to invite your creativity to play is to ask it to work within specific limitations. In this game, you’ll brainstorm a variety of characters, settings, and actions, and try them out in a scene to find a strong combination for your next drafting session.

Remember: there is no right way to play an improv game. So, while you’ll start with the limitations to point your creativity in the right direction, let go of rules as much as you can as you engage more deeply in the game. As in all improv games, say yes, and … to your ideas and see where your spontaneity leads you. 

 

Materials

The Who, What, and Where Experiment

  • Space to move
  • Paper
  • Pen

1. Start by making three quick lists. Who could be in this scene? What could the main action of the scene be? Where might the scene take place? Push past your first ideas toward the more unusual ones that come after you’ve cleared your mind of what’s most obvious or likely.

2. Stand up. It’s important that you don’t just think about this game. You need to play it!

3. Choose a combination from your list:

  • at least one character to join your main character in the scene.
  • an interesting action
  • an unexpected setting

4. Strike a frozen pose of your main character at the beginning of this potential scene. Once you’ve frozen, emphasize the action and the emotion of your pose. You’ll know you’re starting to play when you begin to feel the emotion in your body.

5. Fast forward to the middle of the scene. Strike at least one pose to show the middle of the scene, or use a sequence of a few, if you like.

6. Create one more frozen pose of your character at the conclusion of the scene. Here’s an excellent opportunity to make sure you’re truly showing the emotion rather than just having your character think about it. What action might they take at the scene’s end?

7. Now that you have your key moments, try putting the scene in action. Move your body through the scene, listening as your mind silently narrates the scene. You might take ten seconds or so to play the scene through.

8. Now, rewind, and try out a different option. Try at least three possibilities before sitting down to write. You may have found an interesting combination of who, what, and where to include in your scene. However, even if you write the scene as originally imagined, you’ll have a more expansive sense of what’s possible as you write, and will shake loose the possibility of surprise as you capture your ideas on the page.

Try On Other Creative Styles

Improvise the Highlights

FOR SPECIAL AGENTS

Use this quick-thinking improv game to identify key moments in your scene and shortcut the experimentation process.

Try This

Step Into Your Character's Shoes

FOR INVENTORS

Take on your character’s mindset and play through a scene in a variety of ways in this improv game for writers.

Try This

Improvised Storytelling

FOR COLLABORATORS

Create a collaborative scene with a partner, using their questions to help you better understand your main character’s point of view.

Try This

Improvise the Highlights

Improvise the Highlights

Improvise the Highlights

Use this quick-thinking improv game to identify key moments in your scene and shortcut the experimentation process.

Style

Special Agent

Skill

Improvisation

Time

10 minutes

THE STUDIO:

Improvise the Highlights

As a Special Agent, improvisation may not be your favorite approach. If you already have a solid idea, why experiment with other options? However, if your ultimate goal is to be able to quickly draft from beginning to end of your book, improvisation can actually be your most powerful tool.

By trying out a few options before you start to write, you identify pitfalls and possibilities. You end up saving yourself time by avoiding sticky detours and the dreaded situation of writing yourself into a dead-end.

Materials

Improvise the Highlights

  • Space to move
  • Paper
  • Pen

1. Stand up. You’ll be much more engaged with the visualization process if you put your body into motion.

2. Strike a pose of your main character at the beginning of your scene as you’ve planned it. The more you physically engage with your character’s action and emotion, the more information you’ll gain from this exercise. Find two more poses for the middle and end of the scene.

3. Mentally rewind back to the beginning of your scene, and do a quick review of your strategy. What’s your objective in this scene? What information do you want the reader to take away from this scene? What feeling do you want the reader to take away?

4. Choose one element in your scene to shift in some way. You might exaggerate an action, add a new action, or try a setting that evokes a different tone.

5. Either use frozen poses again, allowing yourself to make as many as are helpful to take you through the scene’s sequence, or play through the action of the scene. Play through an active, emotionally connected summary of the scene (as opposed to moment-to-moment action).

6. Try a couple more run-throughs of the scene. You may want to try three vastly different options, or follow one idea, making it better with each iteration.

7. Even if you don’t use one of your improvised versions of the scene in your draft, you have quickly gained a large amount of information. Celebrate your progress, and then use that momentum as you head into your next drafting session.

Try On Other Creative Styles

The Who, What, & Where Experiment

FOR ARCHITECTS

Use this structured improv game to experiment with options for your next scene.

Try This

Step Into Your Character's Shoes

FOR INVENTORS

Take on your character’s mindset and play through a scene in a variety of ways in this improv game for writers.

Try This

Improvised Storytelling

FOR COLLABORATORS

Create a collaborative scene with a partner, using their questions to help you better understand your main character’s point of view.

Try This

ARCHITECT: Zoom In On Your Heart

ARCHITECT: Zoom In On Your Heart

Zoom In On Your Heart

Answer three key questions to focus your attention on the core of this project, and its importance to you.

Style

Architect

Skill

Finding the Heart

Time

15 mins

THE ATTIC:

Zoom In On the Heart

While there are only three questions in this exercise, there are likely a number of answers to explore. Give yourself the space to answer in a variety of directions to start. Then, review the ideas that arose, choose the answers that are most helpful, intriguing, or surprising, and follow that thinking through the second and third questions.

Your goal is to zoom in on what matters most to you in this project, and you are more likely to find that key insight by looking at the question from a number of angles.

 

Materials

How to Play

  • Timer
  • Paper

  • Pen

1. Set the timer for five minutes. List as many answers as you can to this question: In this idea, what matters most to me?

– If you run out of ideas, and there is still time, keep thinking until the timer buzzes. Sometimes the ideas that come after we think we’ve run out are the most helpful.

– If you run out of time but you still have more to say, allow yourself to keep going for a reasonable amount of time. Keep in mind that there are two more steps, and you want to have time for the entire exercise.

2. Review your answers, and star the ones that are most helpful, intriguing, or surprising. Ideally, you’ll have two or three ideas starred.

3. Set your timer for two minutes per starred item and list reasons why. Sometimes it helps to think in categories: personal, professional, community, etc.

4. Review your reasons, and then set the timer for a final five minutes. Write in as much detail to answer: What might success look like? Paint the scene of the project, finished, and how it will be experienced by others. If you can, invent a specific moment, a specific person, and build a circumstance that is meaningful to you.

5. The timer may run out, but keep going if you’re on a roll. You may want to revise your story into a short two-three paragraph reminder of where you’re headed. Keep your writing close at hand–it will help keep you focused on what’s most important in your work.

Try On Other Creative Styles

Freewrite Your Heart

FOR INVENTORS

Move your hand across the page speedily to bypass your critic and discover your heart.

Try This

Share Your Heart with a Loved One

FOR COLLABORATORS

Choose a confidant and write a letter about your project. What is most important to you about creating this artwork?

Try This

Frame Your Heart in Three

FOR SPECIAL AGENTS

Choose three adjectives that focus your attention on the core of this project, and its importance to you.

Try This

Frame Your Heart in Three

Frame Your Heart in Three

Frame Your Heart in Three

Choose three adjectives that focus your attention on the core of this project, and its importance to you.

Style

Special Agent

Skill

Finding the Heart

Time

5 mins

THE ATTIC:

Frame Your Heart in Three

Don’t let the simplicity of this exercise fool you. Taking the time to choose three adjectives that you’d be proud to use to describe your project when it is finished can give you a powerful focus. Your adjectives will help you avoid detours, and ensure that when you reach the end of your creative process, you land at the desired destination.

Materials

How to Play

  • Timer
  • Index Cards

  • Pen

1. Take a moment to picture your project when it is finished. Picture the circumstance in which you might you share it with a friend.

2. Imagine for a moment how you would describe the project. What kinds of words might you use?

3. Set your timer for two minutes and write one word per card, listing as many adjectives as you can think of that describe how the project will look and feel. Go for a variety.

4. Spread out your index cards and begin to sort them. Stack synonyms. Then, try to rank the words in order of importance. Your goal is to finish with three words that create a frame (think triangle) that show three key aspects of your finished work.

5. Post your three words somewhere where you can see and reference them often.

Try On Other Creative Styles

Freewrite Your Heart

FOR INVENTORS

Move your hand across the page speedily to bypass your critic and discover your heart.

Try This

Share Your Heart with a Loved One

FOR COLLABORATORS

Choose a confidant and write a letter about your project. What is most important to you about creating this artwork?

Try This

Zoom In On the Heart

FOR ARCHITECTS

Answer three key questions to focus your attention on the core of this project, and its importance to you.

Try This

Freewrite Your Heart

Freewrite Your Heart

Freewrite Your Heart

Move your hand across the page speedily to bypass your critic and discover your heart.

Style

Inventor

Skill

Finding the Heart

Time

15 mins

THE ATTIC:

Freewrite Your Heart

You’ll do best with this activity if you can get your heart rate up before you start. Consider turning on some music you love and dancing for a few minutes before sitting down to write. Then, without thinking too hard, dive into the writing with the same intensity that you used when you were dancing. Make writing as physical as it can be, bypassing your brain as much as possible.

You want to race the clock right past your inner critic to find those aha! moments that you might not discover in a different state of mind.

Materials

How to Play

  • Timer
  • Paper

  • Pen

1. Set your timer for ten minutes.

2. Ask yourself: What matters to me in this idea? What are the non-negotiables? How do I hope the outcome will feel and flow? Start writing as fast as you can, using connecting phrases to keep your pen moving.

– And so …

– Which makes me think that …

– Because …

– What I really mean to say is …

– Another way to look at it is …

– It reminds me of …

3. When the time is up, read over your entry. Underline thoughts that stand out. If you think there’s more to say, and you have more time to write, expand on the thoughts you’ve underlined.

5. Tuck this writing away for a day when you need a reminder of why you’re working so hard on this project.

Try On Other Creative Styles

Frame Your Heart in Three

FOR SPECIAL AGENTS

Choose three adjectives that focus your attention on the core of this project, and its importance to you.

Try This

Zoom In On the Heart

FOR ARCHITECTS

Answer three key questions to focus your attention on the core of this project, and its importance to you.

Try This

Share Your Heart with a Loved One

FOR COLLABORATORS

Choose a confidant and write a letter about your project. What is most important to you about creating this artwork?

Try This