By Shelly Frome
As it happens, one day the dramaturge at the Harford Stage
Company advised me to key on provocative imagery when developing a script. At
the time, I didn’t quite get it. It’s only recently when I came to an impasse
in my latest mystery novel that I thought back and began to understand what she
meant.
My first recollection centered on a period when Tennessee
Williams was developing a play called Sweet Bird of Youth at a
theater in Coral Gables. After declaring “This is too pat. It just doesn’t
light up!” he would return from Key West with a new version. In one instance, I
started out as an extra in a tavern scene and the next thing I knew, I was
alone at the bar facing Chance Wayne, a drifter just past his prime (a role
featuring Paul Newman in the movie version). The only other customers were
Chance and a local Southern belle seated directly in front of me. It seems
Williams liked my laugh because it served as a glimmer of foreshadowing as my
part kept expanding.
Another example which came to mind took place in a lounge at
the University of Florida where Edward Albee was confiding to a few of us
graduate students about the creation of the Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton
vehicle Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Every time he tried to script the
inevitable breakup of a timid professor and his wayward wife at a small
college, George and Martha dried up on him. But when he added the subtext of a
fantasy child whose demise George could spring on Martha if she went too far,
the specter of “the other” energized him and brought his tale to life.
I’m not suggesting I’ve come upon the secret. It’s just that
I seem to agree with Stephen King it’s only when the characters and situation
reach a point when unknown happenings occur, that I become fully engaged. That
I have the sense I’m onto something and I’m dying to continue. But when I find
myself enmeshed in anything bordering on the safe and predictable, I start to
lose interest—e.g., Right, this is the one where the drifter-gunslinger rids
the town of menacing elements and has to ride off because only decent folks
belong in a community.
If I had to pinpoint a factor that finally revitalized my
latest, it was the introduction of the occult. It started off promisingly
enough. Miranda, a real estate agent in my adopted small town in the
Blue Ridge, discovers that her client, a prominent church lady who listed the
storied Raintree mansion, has suddenly taken up refuge at a nearby retirement
center. Not only that, she’s been receiving anonymous e-mails suggesting that
the wages of sin have become due. And here is what set things off again. Tarot
cards began appearing under Cloris Raintree’s door. A denizen of the center,
who resented Cloris’ standoffish, uppity manner, let on about a goodwill outing
to Havana where something must have happened on the Malecon (the famous
seawall). Cloris didn’t return with the rest of their party and, when she did
reappear, she was drastically changed.
Other elements began proliferating that I previously knew
nothing about, like astrology, the transit of Venus on a certain month, and the
Southern Cross and its double meaning. All kinds of things came into play that
affected who the sender might be and what was at stake. There were now sins of
omission and commission, and the more it went on, poor Miranda found herself
increasingly way over her head.
Out of the blue, I began devising a scene that took place in
the dark of night when Miranda came upon the showing of The Rocky Horror
Picture Show at a local rural college. Here, students dressed in grotesque
Halloween costumes were echoing the characters on screen, shouting dialogue
they knew by heart like “We’re going insane!”
At that juncture, the advent of Halloween became yet another
intriguing element.
I suppose it’s like realizing if you only had some flint,
some combustible counterpoint you could rub against one another, the two could
create enough friction so that who knows what’ll happen.
________________________________________________________________
Shelly
Frome is the film
columnist for Southern Writers Magazine. He is also a member of
Mystery Writers of America, a professor of dramatic arts emeritus at the
University of Connecticut, a former professional actor, and a writer of crime
novels and books on theater and film. His fiction includes Sun Dance for
Andy Horn, Lilac Moon, Twilight of the Drifter and Tinseltown Riff.
Among his works of non-fiction are The Actors
Studio and texts on the art and craft of screenwriting and
writing for the stage. Murder Run,
his latest crime novel, was just released. He lives in Black Mountain,
North Carolina.
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