Todd Anderson (
mumbled_truth) wrote in
poly_chromatic2012-07-22 07:24 pm
Entry tags:
║ seventy-seventh stanza ║ video
[Todd is seen sitting at a desk, scribbling away in a notebook. Every few moments, he pauses, moves his lips as he silently reads over what he's just written, and considers it. Sometimes, he lets it remain as is. More often, he scratches out a bit - or all - of it, and hesitantly rewrites it, pushing forward a line at a time. A narrator's voice comes over the feed, grand and imposing but warm.]
The creative process of one Todd Anderson, a young but promising poet recently turned playwright, is not an easy one. Constantly retooling, rewording, and rethinking his work, Todd is reluctant to call any piece finished.
[Perfectly timed, he rips out a page, crumples it up into a ball, and tosses it into a trashcan he keeps near the desk. The ball is far from alone in that bin.]
But he presses ahead regardless, his slight confidence bolstered by the belief of others, friends and admirers who encourage him not only to find the strength to form his words but also to share them. It can never be said that Todd has not made progress, with a show opening under his belt, and a modest but sincere following.
[The scene switches now, to a grainy night-vision shot. Clearly, some stock footage that's been on hand, somehow.
The trash is there, by the desk, but someone creeps up to it in the night - clearly it's none other than one Neil Perry, for those who would recognize the boy.
Neil reaches into the bin and, one by one, pulls out the crumpled-up papers, smooths them out, and stacks them on the desk. When he's retrieved all of them, he slips away with the stack, to stow them away in some hidden spot.]
A following which, in later years, Todd may very well thank for their drastic measures.
The creative process of one Todd Anderson, a young but promising poet recently turned playwright, is not an easy one. Constantly retooling, rewording, and rethinking his work, Todd is reluctant to call any piece finished.
[Perfectly timed, he rips out a page, crumples it up into a ball, and tosses it into a trashcan he keeps near the desk. The ball is far from alone in that bin.]
But he presses ahead regardless, his slight confidence bolstered by the belief of others, friends and admirers who encourage him not only to find the strength to form his words but also to share them. It can never be said that Todd has not made progress, with a show opening under his belt, and a modest but sincere following.
[The scene switches now, to a grainy night-vision shot. Clearly, some stock footage that's been on hand, somehow.
The trash is there, by the desk, but someone creeps up to it in the night - clearly it's none other than one Neil Perry, for those who would recognize the boy.
Neil reaches into the bin and, one by one, pulls out the crumpled-up papers, smooths them out, and stacks them on the desk. When he's retrieved all of them, he slips away with the stack, to stow them away in some hidden spot.]
A following which, in later years, Todd may very well thank for their drastic measures.

video;
video;
[Should. Won't, but should.]