Let’s be honest: reading a new script can feel like doing your taxes.
Most publishers send you these dense, tiny-print “tomes” that are written to be studied in a library. But you aren’t a librarian—you’re a director. If you’re wondering how to read a play script without losing your mind or your lunch break, here is the un-stuffy way to “skim with intent” and find the heart of a show in under 20 minutes.
1. Skip the Flowery Stage Directions
If a script starts with three pages describing the exact shade of the wallpaper and the way the dust motes dance in the light… skip it.
Those are “literary” stage directions. To find the pulse of the play, jump straight to the dialogue. Can you hear the characters’ voices? Is there a rhythm? If the dialogue doesn’t grab you within the first five pages, no amount of fancy wallpaper is going to save the show.
2. The “Page 15” Litmus Test
By page 15, someone should want something desperately, and someone else should be standing in their way.
If you get to page 15 and everyone is still just sitting around drinking tea and talking about the past, you’ve got a “pacing problem.” A great show needs clear stakes early on so your audience knows why they should care.
3. Look for the “Gasp” or the “Guffaw”
Flip through the script and look for the peaks.
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Is there a moment that makes you lean forward?
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Is there a line that makes you laugh out loud in an empty room?
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Is there a visual beat that makes you think, “I know exactly how I’d light that”?
Better Script Analysis for Directors
A script shouldn’t be a hurdle you have to climb over; it should be the fuel for your production. When it comes to script analysis for directors, you aren’t looking for deep metaphors on the first pass—you are looking for playability.
At TLC Scripts, we approach this differently. Our play catalog is designed for the “tired director”—our scripts are breathable, playable, and—most importantly—understandable from the very first read.
Choosing a Play for Community Theater
When it comes to choosing a play for community theater, you need a script that builds excitement, not exhaustion. If a script feels “stuffy” on the page, it’s probably going to feel stuffy on your stage. Now that you know how to read a play script with a director’s eye, you’re ready to find “the one.”
Ready to find a script that actually speaks your language? Check out our Play Previews here.