More Inciting Incidents From Recent Plays

THE PLAYWRITING SEMINARS > STRUCTURE > SHAPE > DIAGRAM > INCITING > TECHNIQUES > EXAMPLES > MORE

Order '. . . this isn't a comedy about the Holocaust, it's a film about the Holocaust made by a comedian, which is different. The idea was simply this: What would happen if you put a comedian -- me, in other words -- in an extreme situation? And what is the most extreme situation that exists? A concentration camp. At first it was no more than a paradox . . . but then I realized that when I said the words concentration camp, Holocaust, shoah, they had a strange effect -- they discombobulated me, as the Americans say. For days these words wouldn't let go of me, wouldn't let me sleep. . . . I tried to find an alternative scenario with the same power, but I don't think there's anything in the world that has the same power. I sort of fell in love with this idea -- and you can't fall in love without being a little bit afraid.'

-- Roberto Benigni

These contemporary inciting incidents range from the so-quiet-they're-hardly-there variety to the sledgehammer approach. And they're not selected because they follow the "rules" . . .


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