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How to Create Great
Characters
by Melanie Anne Phillips
Creator StoryWeaver,
Co-Creator Dramatica
Strangely enough, what makes a character “Great” has little to do
with what makes a character dramatically sound. This is easy enough to
see if you consider the differences between the characters Austin Powers
and James Bond. Both could be seen as Protagonists, and both could even
be seen as heroes, and yet their personalities, mannerisms, interests,
and attitudes are quite dissimilar. What makes them the same is their
dramatic function; what makes them different are their personalities.
Dramatic function is part of a story’s logistic structure. Without
a function, a character is little more than window dressing. Yet, even
the most strongly drawn structural character is quite forgettable
without a charismatic personality. Stucturalist writers tend to start
with the function (Antagonist, Protagonist, etc.) then build a
personality on that foundation. Intuitive writers usually want to get to
know their characters first as individuals, then determine what function
they should play in the structure.
No matter which kind of writer you are, you will eventually need to
develop your characters’ personalities. So, here’s a great trick to
brainstorm your characters and perhaps even learn something about your
plot along the way.
I call this method, “Mix and Match.”
More than likely, you remember a childhood toy that was a book with
pictures of faces, each cut into three pieces: top, middle, and bottom.
The top section of each face had the hair, the middle section covered
the eyes and nose, and the bottom section displayed the mouth. By
flipping parts of each page, you could create all kinds of different
people, swapping the hair of one with the eyes of another and the mouth
of a third.
We can apply a similar concept to character attributes and physical
traits to create dynamic personalities.
As an example, lets start with two ordinary, forgettable characters
with only three traits each (Gender, Age, and Role) and mix and match to
create more memorable characters
Character #1: Male, 38, Mercenary
Character #2: Female, 9, Shoplifter
Pretty forgettable, right? Okay, let’s mix and match:
Character #1: Female, 38, Mercenary
Charcter #2: Male, 9, Shoplifter
Now think about how these characters changed their personalities,
just by swapping a single attribute from one to the other. A Male
Mercenary, age 38 simply has a different “feel” than a Female
Mercenary, age 38. Why? Due to our cultural indoctrination., we expect
certain things of men and certain things of women. We therefore expect a
Male Mercenary to have a different personality than a Female Mercenary.
In other words, it would require a different personality of woman than a
man to become a Mercenary in our society. So, we (as creative authors)
tend to subconsciously assign those personality traits to the character,
even though we have really only spelled out the character’s role and
gender.
Let’s try another swap:
Character #1: Female, 9, Mercenary
Character #2: Male, 38, Shoplifter
Again, we impose our own subconscious expectations of each
character’s personality upon him or her so that we have a completely
different feel for each than we did before.
Let’s try one more:
Character #1: Male, 9, Mercenary
Character #2: Female, 38, Shoplifter
Once again, the personalities change.
We might find that one of these characters strikes our fancy as being
interesting to develop and put into play. But more than likely, we
haven’t found the “Great” character we are looking for. What we
need are more traits and attributes, and more characters to swap them
among.
What I usually do is list various traits and attributes on 3x5 cards,
cut them up into individual items and then assemble them like the Face
Book to create potential characters for my story.
For example, I might have a group off different traits/attributes in
each of the following categories:
Name Age Sex Height Weight I.Q. Hair Color Hair Style Mannerisms
(graceful, clumsy, abrupt, etc.) Physical Impairments Physical
Enhancements (keen eyesight, etc.) Physical Quirks (i.e. twitch)
Religious Affiliations Religious Beliefs (not necessarily the same as
affiliations) Hobbies Skills Talents Accent Speed of Speech Place of
Birth Marital Status Previous Marriages Special powers Job or Role Pets
Siblings (alive and dead) Personality Traits (sourpuss, practical joker,
deadpan serious, etc.) Sound of Voice (deep, high, breathy)
Well, I could go on an on with this list, but you get the idea. The
best way to compile a list of categories like this is to read the
newspaper, watch television, or sit in a coffee shop and look out the
window.
Now, in each category, you need to come up with as many different
items as you can.
For example, in the first category, Name, we might have the usual
Joe, and Sally, but also Zippo, Teaser, Tweezer, and Mulch. The weirder,
the better.
Let’s take our Female, 9 year old Mercenary and name her Sally. Now
how does her personality change if we name her Tweezer, or Mulch
instead?
In tangible reality, there is no indicated difference between Sally,
the 9 year old Female Mercenary and Tweezer, the 9 year old Female
Mercenary. And yet, we cannot help but feel they are different because
of our cultural indoctrination.
As a brainstorming technique for creating “Great” characters, the
mix and match method is the best way I’ve found to break away from the
same old forgettable stereotypes.
Now most of this you’ll need to do this manually, but in fact there
is a place in the Dramatica Pro software that can help take some of the
drudgery out of it. From the main Dramatica Desktop, click on the
Brainstorming tile. Then, select the Character Generator Tile. Here you
can automatically generate characters by arbitrarily assigning them
names, genders, and structural functions as archetypes or complex
characters.
And speaking of structural functions, have you noticed that none of
the attributes we assigned to our characters above gave any indication
as to their status as a Protagonist, Antagonist, other archetype or
complex functional character?
If you are a structuralist writer, you’ll first start with your
Protagonist (or whatever structural function you wish to begin with) and
THEN play the mix and match game on that foundation. If you are an
intuitive writer, you’ll start with mix and match and then pick one
character and determine what function he, she, or it should play.
Take Tweezer, our nine-year-old Mercenary. Would she be a better
Protagonist or Antagonist? When you pick a structural function, it ties
the character to the plot and further defines the foundation of its
personality. And, because you have likely chosen a role for your
character, such as Mercenary, the combination of roles among your
characters can actually start to suggest the outlines of a plot!
Of course, some things will likely have to be changed to make the
characters and plot more consistent. But, this refining process is just
part of the ongoing development of your story. The real trick is to
break free of the stodgy, ordinary character we create by falling into
our well-worn mental patterns, and mixing and matching to create
arbitrarily intriguing characters.
Copyright Melanie Anne Phillips
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