Writing A Treatment For A TV Series
Writing A Treatment For A TV Series
You are a writer with
great ideas. You’ve had a brilliant one which has to be for television –
there’s a series here you know it, but the sheer weight of the story, the abundance
of characters, the complexity of this world you are creating is overwhelming.
There’s so much going
on here: the characters, the world they live in, the story itself and are you
actually saying something that people will want to engage with? How do you
highlight the bits that are working in your tv idea and those that aren’t? Is
there enough story? What are you actually trying to say? How do you control all
these elements?
I have worked with
many, many writers throughout my career, as a Script Editor on EastEnders,
amongst other great long runners and then as a Producer of Holby City and other
popular series formats. Now, I work with writers one on one via my Script
Consultancy. Writers come to me not only to help fix the script
they’re stuck on, but to also raise the bar of their writing in general. And
often, the first thing I talk to my writers about is the Treatment of their
idea.
This is where it all
starts for me. Television writing is all about structure and I blog about this a lot. The Treatment
is your way in to the structure of your television idea. Writing a good one,
will free up your mind to really see where the strengths of this idea are and
where you need to dig down deeper. The format I have created from working over
the years with writers in the series format, basically cuts through all the
unnecessary stuff you may read on the Internet about what a Treatment should
contain, and shows you exactly what Producers will be looking for, and want to
read, in a Treatment. I can say this with some confidence – I was one.
We Producers don’t
like to read masses of material. We don’t necessarily hanker after clever
pictures or packaging of any sort. We ask for each page to count and for there
to be not many of those.
The Treatments I help
my writers write are all under 10 pages. Any more and we are getting into short
film territory and that is not where Producers of tv want to be. Remember – we
are cash rich but time poor. Do not write a word unless it holds its weight.
I write about this
and lots of other writing related things in my book Writing for Television Series, Serials and Soaps but
I will add the condensed elements of what makes a great Treatment and how to
write one here.
Here is my easy to
assimilate, Go To approach to writing the definitive tv Treatment. Follow this.
You won’t go wrong.
TITLE:
Make yours really
sell your idea by being the best you can make it.
My favourite titles?
‘Fleabag’. ‘Halt and Catch Fire’. Sometimes it’s better that the title
describes what’s in the tin, so to speak eg: ‘The Bodyguard’ or, to take an
example of a show for CITV that I Produced; ‘My Dad’s A Boring Nerd’.
FORMAT DESCRIPTION:
These are the
definitions that describe my working day and most of my television career in
drama production.
Series: A drama that is
open ended. A core cast of returning characters. The backdrop remains the same
and is returned to each week. This is also called ‘the precinct’. There may be
several stories per episode which are resolved, but the series storyline, that
which is carried by the core returning cast, remains open.
For example: ‘Call
The Midwife’ ‘Coronation Street’ ‘Downton Abbey’ ‘The Unforgotten’ ‘Holby
City’.
Serial: A drama of more
than two parts with a strong serial element. A core cast of returning
characters and an over arching storyline, but in this case the storyline is
ultimately resolved. For example: ‘Shetland’ ‘Doctor Foster’ ‘My Big Fat
Teenage Diary’ ‘Peaky Blinders’ ‘The Unforgotten’.
Here in your
treatment you state how long your series or serial is x 3/4/6/8 parts or is it
a series of 13 or more parts?
LOGLINE:
In a small paragraph;
a cluster of lines 3 – 6 maximum (otherwise it’s a pitch paragraph, not a
logline!) summarise your idea as succinctly and entertainingly as you can. You
need to convey the main narrative here – the set up, the jeopardy or challenge
for your protagonist and to give a sense of style and tone by the way you word
this. It’s hard to do but essential. This is what your Producer/Commissioner
will keep referring to in your conversation about the drama and its future
development.
ONE PARAGRAPH OF TASTY DESCRIPTION
SETTING OUT THE WORLD:
Here the job is to be
as descriptive and evocative as possible. Imagine you are telling your friend
about a film you have just seen that truly made an impact on you. You need to
entice them into the storyline, to make them want to see it too.
Use your visual brain and set out some key moments – they need not be the first
ones seen in the first scene of your pilot – but they could be ‘set pieces’ or
significant moments in your story for your main character. Visualise and
describe for us what is going on. Draw us in.
CHARACTER BIOGRAPHIES:
Make these as tasty
as you can. I like to add a quotation relating to each character under their
name; the sort of thing they are most likely to say or something that alludes
to their particular storyline. For example; in a treatment I wrote, ostensibly
about the Eternal Quest For Mr Right and entitled ‘A Man For All Seasons’ (I
did not square this with the estate of Robert Bolt but, if it had been
commissioned I would have had to do a rethink) I created a character called
Plum. Her quotation was ‘Plum is looking for a man she can spar with; so far,
she has only dated a man that shops there’. In each character biography, give a
suggestion of the arc of their storyline across the number of episodes, or
across the span of the script you are intending to write. Make these people
live on the page.
EPISODE OUTLINES:
Be exact and succinct
in your language; avoid ‘then she said, then he said’ (which is oxygen sucking
for anyone to read). Give only the thrust of the A storyline (or the main story
line) with the smaller B and C’s threading in between. The broad stroke is
necessary here, not the detail.
The reason these are
here in the treatment, is to prove to a prospective buyer/producer that your
idea really does fill the slots you say you are aiming for. So if there are 3
parts or 8, a producer will be looking at whether there is enough story
material to go the distance. You need to give an impression of plenty but avoid
tedious details.
MAIN STORY ARCS:
Each character has a
journey and here you outline what that is in story terms. Again, pithy
evocative language is what we are looking for.
Every moment a character exists on screen is a moment weighted with both
subtext and text. Get their story down here for your Commissioner/Producer to
see in an easily accessible way.
EPISODE ONE – THE BREAK DOWN:
Increasingly in conversation
with my Producer friends, I hear the need for more story clarity in Treatments.
So I have added another element of my Treatment Template to include the Pilot
(ep 1) breakdown. This is a good corner-cutter for you because once you have
blocked this out, it will be a much easier transition from Treatment to Pilot.
But be warned, do not go into too much detail here. Set the scene of each story
beat; a paragraph denotes a scene; get all the jump off points in, and the
climatic midpoints of your story lines and of course the ending of the pilot
but do not go into dialogue or extraneous set ups. Remember – keep the story
ball rolling.
THE CENTRAL MESSAGE:
This will most likely
be alluded to in your logline, but here you can extrapolate a bit more and dig a
bit deeper. What do you want your audience to come away thinking having spent
time with your drama? What is it you are saying about the world and your
characters? What is the macro message to be gleaned from diving, as we have
done here, in your treatment, into the micro world of your drama?
Throughout the
writing of your treatment you must also pay attention to the style and tone of
your writing and as much as possible, evoke for your reader the flavour of what
they will ultimately be seeing on screen.
TREATMENTS ARE THE ENCAPSULATION OF ALL
OF YOUR BEST IDEAS.
THERE IS A FORMULA TO WRITING GOOD
TREATMENTS.
ART AND ARTIFICE COMBINE IN THE WRITING
OF REALLY GOOD TREATMENTS
Treatments vary in
length – it depends on what your project really demands. But generally, rule of
thumb, a treatment is no less than 4 pages and now more than 10. The key here
is to get all the information down, as interestingly as possible, as
economically as possible, with as much clarity as possible and not to over
write.
You make each word,
each sentence, each image, each page, count.
BE PITHY:
condensed and
forcible, terse.
As much as possible
and consistently throughout the writing of your treatment you need to be
succinct, to the point, pithy not verbose.
No need to describe
the environment as though you are writing a novel – in fact – this is totally
frowned upon in screenwriting so here, in treatment writing, adopt the same
economy of style.
Only the most pertinent information about your world, your characters, and your
story line (at this stage of the project’s development) is necessary.
HOW TO APPROACH TREATMENT WRITING:
Like a time strapped,
impatient Journalist….
With a week to
live…….
EXPLORE YOUR WORLD IN PROSE:
The only time I
believe detailed description is necessary or welcome in Treatment Writing is
when you are writing your descriptive paragraph; that part of the treatment
where you want to set out the world as you see it; to draw a pen portrait of
the environment you ‘see’, on the page.
BRING IN THE VISUAL:
The world of
television is visual – so enjoy being visual and bring in to your treatment
images that help aid and describe the world and the tone of the world, in which
your characters live.
ENJOY THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE:
Try to be as
expressive as you can in as few words as you can. That is the key. So you need
to be eclectic and imaginative with your use of the English Language. A
Thesaurus is a good tool here. Spread your vocab wings and enjoy yourself!
HONE THE TONE:
Tone is very
important in treatment writing. Full English is clearly a light hearted with an
edge character driven piece. But if I were writing a treatment for a Medical
series, I would adopt a totally different tone in the writing. It would not be
wry or heightened. The tone would have a cleaner, neater, harder edge. Less
frilly. More to the point. Clinical. You need to be able to adopt different
writing styles to portray your various worlds.
BUILD THE TREATMENT AROUND CHARACTER:
Make sure your
characters are as interesting and rounded as you can make them on the page.
In a treatment, they carry the colour, the texture of the document.
Commissioners will be looking very carefully at this part of your treatment. It
is on the attraction/engagement of your characters that a further interest will
be expressed. But you need to back up your character biographies with a
suggestion of their story arc, so the Commissioner can already feel early on,
that this idea will take them further than one episode.
So you need also to….
BUILD IT AROUND PLOT:
Here your main story
arcs come into play. So I am now looking for you to give me a suggestion, in
broad strokes only, of where your story lines will take us over the general arc
of your series or serial.
When you write your
episode outline in your treatment, do not go into too much detail. I am looking
for flavour, for tone and for enough story lines for me to feel the idea has
‘legs’.
DON’T FORGET THE SUBTEXT.
In your character
biographies, I am looking also for SUBTEXT as well as the suggested arc of their
story line which is the TEXT. Subtext will drive your narrative so I need to
see here, what it is that drives or motivates, what it is that pushes your
characters through the narrative, over your various episodes.
Once you’ve nailed
the Treatment, you can go with confidence to the next level – THE PILOT.
Here I show you how to approach it in my blog below…..
How to Write a Pilot for a Television Series
Do you want to
develop your television writing craft with me? I am a tv drama producer and
script editor with 25+years experience in the industry. Take one of my
specially designed DEVELOPMENT PACKAGES and let me bring
your writing game up several notches.
Happy Writing!
Comments
Post a Comment