Directions for Formatting a 10-Minute Play in Word with sample pages

Directions for Formatting a 10-Minute Play
in Word with sample pages
Created by Nancy Gall-Clayton, [email protected]
Instructions and notes are in italics. Words in roman type are examples of correct format. Some
contests modify the “standard format” rules. Always follow guidelines of the contests and
theatres you submit to.
A 10-minute play has 12 pages: a title page (unnumbered), a character page (unnumbered), and
the play (numbered beginning with page 1). The title page should have no clip art or special
designs. Use Times Roman 12-point type with 1-inch margins.
Center 3 lines:
The Sands of Arizona (upper and lower case, underlined)
A Ten-Minute (Comedy/Drama/Play) (identify genre if you wish)
By Jane Smith (Use the name you want the theatre to use.)
Contact information can be left aligned, centered, or right aligned. If you are a member of the
Dramatists Guild logo, use the logo above your contact information. You are entitled to – and
should -- use the copyright symbol (“Insert” “Symbol” in Word), whether or not you submit
your play to the US Copyright Office. A telephone number(s) and email address follow your
street address.
© 2012 Jane Smith
1234 5th Street
Sixville, SV 10000
666-777-8888
[email protected]
At the bottom of the Title Page, use a Section Break, so that you can easily begin numbering with
Page 1 on what is really the third page. Choose the Page Layout tab. Choose Breaks. Under
Section Breaks, choose Next Page. The next page shows a Title Page without directions.
The Sands of Arizona
A Ten-Minute Play
By Jane Smith
© 2012 Jane Smith
1234 5th Street
Sixville, SV 10000
666-777-8888
[email protected]
The Sands of Arizona (exactly as on the title page, no author name, centered)
Characters
Sam
21, male, a planner
Angela
24, Samuel’s sister, doesn’t see the forest for the trees
Bets
20, Sam’s girlfriend, a worrier
(Give age, gender, and relationship if any between characters. An adjective or two helps the
actor and director. When creating characters, think of practicality. If you are sending your play
to a high school, creating a cast of 80-year-olds, for example, limits the chances your play will
be picked.)
Setting
The waiting room of an auto repair shop in an isolated area of Arizona
(For 10-minute plays, one setting is preferred. Name the place the action happens and add
information such as city or state. Remember, settings may be suggested with just a prop or two,
wooden cubes arranged to represent basic furniture, sound elements, or even by dialogue alone,
especially with 10-minute plays. Designers may have their hands tied by budgets, time, and
requirements of other plays. Don’t ask for a helicopter on stage.)
Time
February 14, 2015, afternoon
(Directors, designers, and actors need to know when the action occurs. “The Present” is fine,
but should be indicated. A decade at minimum (the 1920’s), a season, and time of day are all
helpful.)
At the bottom of the Character Page, use a Section Break, so that you can easily begin
numbering with Page 1 on what is really the third page. Choose the Page Layout tab. Choose
Breaks. Under Section Breaks, choose Next Page. The next page shows a Title Page without
directions.
.
The Sands of Arizona
Characters
Sam
21, male, a planner
Angela
24, Samuel’s sister, doesn’t see the forest for the trees
Bets
20, Sam’s girlfriend, a worrier
Setting
The waiting room of an auto repair shop in an isolated area of Arizona
Time
February 14, 2015, afternoon
The Sands of Arizona
Page 1
Create a header for page 1 with The Sands of Arizona on the left and the page number
(beginning with page 1 ) on the right. Do not put your name on any page except the title page.
Go to the Insert tab. Choose Header. Choose the second option “Blank (Three Columns).” On
the left, delete the bracketed words and input The Sands of Arizona without underlines. Delete
the centered words. Go to the right aligned words and delete them. Input the word “Page” and a
space. Choose Page Number and select Current Position and then Plain Number. To get rid of
the “3” that appears automatically, choose Page Number again and this time, Format Page
Number. Where it says Start At, choose “1.”
The Sands of Arizona (even though it’s in the header, center title at the top of Page 1.)
At rise: Sam is pacing with the manual to his car in his hands. Bets is emptying the contents of
her purse item by item, and Angela is reading a romance novel. (If the dialogue makes the
opening action clear, this information is not needed. “At rise” means when the curtain rises or
when the lights go up.)
SAM
I had the car checked out before we left!
(pause)
Hey, are you two listening to me?
ANGELA
Could you keep it down? Sandra and Harold are about to kiss.
SAM
Do they know anything about cars?
ANGELA
Not so far.
SAM
If you have to read, try this, would you?
ANGELA
A car manual? That would be boring.
BETS
Have you looked in the index under Smoke yet? That’s what I would do. Is that what you would
do, Angela? Did you go to that workshop at U of L about changing your own oil? I was thinking
(Character names are in all caps centered. Speeches are single spaced with double spaces
between them. Stage directions – which should be extremely minimal –(let the director direct)
are double-indented in parentheses.)
The Sands of Arizona
Page 2
BETS (cont.)
of going, but then I couldn’t figure out what I’d do with the old oil.
(BETS stands and dumps the remaining contents of her purse on the floor.)
I wish I could find my drill bit!
If a character’s speech or action continues from one page to the next, type the name again on the
next page followed by the abbreviation “cont.” in parentheses. If the continuation is just a line
or two, it’s simpler for the actor if you put the whole speech on the next page.
SAM
Is anybody paying attention to what’s happening here besides me?
(END OF PLAY)
At the bottom of the last page (page 10 presumably), center the words “END OF PLAY” in all
caps within parentheses.
Unless instructed to the contrary, 10-minute plays should be bound with one staple in the upper
left hand corner.