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A matter of style....
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once I finisf it I'll send it to you. I want to hear your oppinion on it.

While I don't agree with the notion of 'instant classics' but I think that when an author sets themselves the task of creating a new work which obeys all the principles of a tradition in drama, comedy, or the genres--you can then claim, at the very least--that you are working with rigor.
Seriously, instead of following whatever informal, perhaps marketing-driven trend might be going on in the field you're working in; harken back to some older tradition and accept the hardships and constraints. If you create a work which is comparable to time-tested exaqmples of the genre; then you have something to really be proud of. And guess what, when you go back to an older style and do it well; audiences of today are usually caught by surprise and enjoy it. There's a good chance it will make a splash.
The Zuckerman brothers did it with 'Airplane!' and Robert Towne did it with 'Chinatown' and a few years ago it happened again with, 'The Man Who Wasn't There'.
Of course, it can at times become strangulation of new creativity; for example the resentment of the neo-classicist school of painters in France towards the Impressionists. Nevertheless.

-Nihar
www.niharsuthar.com

I'm fairly new to playwriting and had the odd experience of writing a heightened piece about drama school. Because actors are exposed to so many different styles, I had the challenge of finding ways to slip from style to style. I think the voice class scenes, which involved a lot of iambic pentameter, were the most fun to write.
I think there's something to be said for blending different styles, and I'd really like to figure out how to make it work. 'Casablanca' inspires me a great deal.
So, I'm wondering, are there any other style-lovers out there? And if so, what do you find you gravitate towards and why?