How to write photoplays
| Language | en |
|---|---|
| First published | 2025-09-06 |
| Rights | Public domain in the USA. |
| Gutenberg ID | #76829 |
Description
"How to write photoplays by Embrie Zuver" is an instructional guide written in the early 20th century. It teaches aspiring writers how to craft silent-era screen stories, focusing on the principles of photoplay construction, technical terms, and professional practices for the moving-picture industry. The book opens with clear definitions of studio and camera terms, then walks readers through idea generation, plot formation, pacing and reel length, scenario formatting, titling, synopses, character lists, scene design, continuity, and practical staging. It explains subtitles, inserts, letters, entrances and exits, sets, crisis-to-climax architecture, emotion and sympathy, revisions, manuscript preparation, sales practices, censorship, and the production pipeline, and ends with pointed “don’ts” and a reassuring conclusion. A complete sample scenario, “Timid Teddy,” illustrates everything in practice: a timid young heir is plied with drink by his friend, proposes to the wrong women at a dance, and, after comic complications and a feigned report of financial ruin prompts both fiancées to withdraw, finally proposes to the woman he truly loves, securing a happy ending. (This is an automatically generated summary.)