The 7 Basic Plots: Comedy

by Liz Bureman | 16 comments

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This post is part of our series exploring Christopher Booker’s theory of plot types in The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Write StoriesSee type 12345, and 6, and 7.

I've recently gotten my roommates to watch Arrested Development with me, which is great because Netflix released the new season a couple weeks ago (which I still haven't watched), so the three of us are working through the first three seasons together. We're pretty much all snickering through each episode. But that's the whole point of comedy, right?

Welcome to the last of the seven basic plots: the Comedy.

Sponge Bob in NYC

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What is a Comedy Plot?

A Comedy is a work in which the hero and heroine are destined to be together, but something is preventing them from doing so. Over the course of the story, whatever is keeping them apart is removed from the equation, usually after a great deal of increasing confusion and miscommunication, which usually results in mass hilarity. In the end, the confusion is cleared up, the bad guy is punished, and everyone gets married.

The structure of a Comedy according to Booker is less rigid than the other six plot types, but for the most part there are three acts to the story.

The “Shadow of Confusion”

We're introduced to the hero and heroine, who are clearly marked as destined to be together (along with possibly a few emerging beta couples), but they're being separated. This could be physical separation (maybe they haven't met yet), or emotional separation (see A Midsummer Night's Dream‘s Demetrius and Helena for a good example of this). Either way, there's confusion, miscommunication, and frustration, and the designated couples aren't hooking up.

It Gets Worse

The confusion previously mentioned gets even more convoluted. The darkness separating everyone is at its thickest, and the tension for the characters is at its peak. Things are going disastrously for our hero and heroine.

The Confusion is Lifted

Someone or something explains the misunderstandings, all the characters breathe collective sighs of relief, weddings are arranged, and the bad guy is either punished or repents in time for the engagement party.

The key in Comedy is the execution and transition between the stages. Also, it's important to keep in mind that Comedy in this definition isn't necessarily funny; the name just indicates that everyone lives happily ever after. But as anyone who has seen Singin' In the Rain or read The Importance of Being Earnest can attest, confusion is a great mine for humor.

The Write StructureNeed more plot help? After you practice this plot type in the exercise section below, check out my new book The Write Structure which helps writers make their plot better and write books readers love.

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PRACTICE

Take fifteen minutes and write a scene of traditional comedy. Post your practice in the comments and leave notes for your fellow writers. Have fun with this one!

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Liz Bureman has a more-than-healthy interest in proper grammatical structure, accurate spelling, and the underappreciated semicolon. When she's not diagramming sentences and reading blogs about how terribly written the Twilight series is, she edits for the Write Practice, causes trouble in Denver, and plays guitar very slowly and poorly. You can follow her on Twitter (@epbure), where she tweets more about music of the mid-90s than writing.

16 Comments

  1. Christine

    The place was almost deserted when he walked into the Tea Shop that morning. Was that just happenstance, she wondered, or had he been watching for a slack time? She picked up her order book and walked over to the table he’d chosen.

    “May I take your order, sir” She felt the corners of her mouth wanting to curve into a smile, but she ordered them to smarten up.

    “Hello, Sweetie. Fancy meeting you here.”

    “I doubt if there’s anything fancy about it. I’m thinking just plain persistence.” She glared at him sternly. If only those corners of her mouth would stop twitching! “May I take your order please.”

    He gave her a broad smile. “Do I dare order coffee in a Tea Shop…since I’ve dared to come in here in the first place? The waitress doesn’t seem friendly.”

    Lianne glanced at the only other occupied table, where two elderly ladies were sipping their tea. She saw one of them adjust her hearing aid. “All the better to hear you with, my dear,” she thought to herself.

    When she looked back at Mike, he was grinning mischievously. “Can’oo canoodle?” he asked with a wink.

    Lianne heard a little twitter from the other table. “I believe we could see out the window better if we moved over a bit,” the one lady said to her friend. Both ladies slid their chairs over as far as they could in her direction.

    She gave Mike an exaggerated frown. “Can’oo get lost.”

    He chuckled. “Now, Lee. Is that any way to treat a paying customer? Why, I might even buy a cinnamon roll and leave you a big tip when I leave.”

    “Perhaps I should leave you a big tip, too,” she said.

    “If you can tell me how to impress a girl my heart throbs for.”

    She sat down beside him at the table. “We have a special Healthy Harvest whole grain bagel with low-calorie spread. It has no wheat flour, no sugar, no cholesterol, no cream cheese. It’s perfect for people with heart problems.”

    He sighed and put his elbows on the table. “I was hoping for something with dates in it.”

    (I cheated; I did this as a writing exercise last fall for my critique group –but it took me about 15 minutes. Canoodle was one of the words we had to use.)

    Reply
    • The Striped Sweater

      I like the banter about the food.

    • Winnie

      The scene fits nicely at the start of a romance.

    • Christine

      I think it would have to be the start of Chapter Two. In chapter one you’d have to read about Lianne, a young woman who’s had her heart broken by some smooth-talking fast-flying casanova and now she’d determined to never repeat the mistake of falling in love with types like Mike.

    • jim

      lol

  2. The Striped Sweater

    Reading this post, I realized I’ve never written romance before–not that I can think of. Of course, I’m so new at this I haven’t written much! For today’s assignment I just focused on brainstorming a couple of characters.

    Newton tapped his pencil on his desk and bounced his knee. “X equals. . . .” His
    glance drifted to the window. He was proud of his campus, especially the
    library. Floor to ceiling glass in the warehouse-sized library offered an
    unobstructed view of the grass below. It was marked off for marching band
    practice. If high school kids were band geeks, what were college music majors.
    . . at a college not especially known for music?

    Olivia scratched her head. The library smelled like stale books. Stale books and new books and geeks and everything that gave her a headache. She was headed to the rare books section to snag an original Scott Joplin score for her professor. If there was a good reason to enter the library, this was it. An actual Joplin. The master of ragtime himself. She shivered deep down, remembering the thrill when she’d first noticed the continuity between Schubert’s waltzes and Joplin’s rhythms. They really weren’t all that far apart in time.

    Reply
    • Christine

      Now this is a true starting point. I about know how it’s going to end twenty chapters down the line. 🙂

  3. Winnie

    “That was part of the deal, Buddy.”
    “You tell me now I had no say in the trade-off?”
    The mad scientist shifted his chair closer and took his hand. “You can feel my
    hand, yes?”
    Bob nodded. He felt nothing, but he sensed that now wasn’t the time to start a fight. “You never told me – ”
    The scientist muttered a foreign-sounding curse and thumped the table, so hard the coffee cups bounced off and shattered on the ground. “Now you are being stupid! It’s like you say, win one, lose one. You didn’t think this would be a lunch for free?”
    “I thought – “ Bob had visions of himself being turned into a Frankenstein clone.
    “It is not for you to think, Dumbo. I am in charch here.”
    Bob swallowed. He didn’t want to be on the receiving end when this bloke got cross. Why had he ever agreed to this? “Okay, okay. Chill. Let’s get some more coffee.”
    The scientist turned to a waitress and clicked his fingers, so hard the sound sliced into Bob’s head. Bob smiled weakly, and made as if he was sticking a finger into his ear to clean out the wax.
    “Now,” the scientist growled. “You still want to go back on the deal?”
    The sight of the lissome young waitress standing before him like a Venus with arms, made him catch his breath. He closed his eyes, and opened them again, slowly, taking in every inch of her pneumatic presence. Come to think of it, he was more than happy with his enhanced eyesight.
    “Two more coffees, please,” he said, very slowly, the longer to keep her there, this vision from heaven that glowed with an inner radiance.
    As he watched her sway away like an angel doing a slow waltz, the scientist leaned over. “That was worth it, or it was not, my friend?”
    Bob nodded. Enhancing his eyesight while weakening another sense was a fair deal. But how long would he hold out? Why did the scientist pick his sense of feeling as the other one?
    From now on it would be look, but don’t touch.

    Reply
    • Christine

      I’d have to read on. So far this sounds scary, not funny!

    • Winnie

      Thanks for the comment, Christine. I’ve just been reading from Carl Hiaasen’s latest book. His novels are so scary, they’re funny. If that’s possible.

  4. Dave Peters

    If you asked me whether I like the job or not, I’d probably have a difficult time answering. I hate the commute, spending a total of 408 hours—17 days—in my Jeep each year, driving back and forth on the cruddy I-90. I hate my boss, she’s a spiteful violent woman who squeezes the fun out of every encounter, but I do enjoy some of the girls around the office.

    Just take last Tuesday, for example. It was late in the day when I asked Jen, the secretary, to send me a copy of the invoice regarding the last purchase from the New Report—a publishing company in Holyoke that deals with small-end publications, brochures, event programs et cetera, et cetera. So I filled in all of the expenses in Excel: 800 reams of white-stock eight-and-a-half-by-eleven computer paper, took down all of the manufacturing costs, the man-hours spent in the shipping and warehouse departments. I was shocked when I saw the total they owed us, nearly $25,000, for their paper supply, they never go above $3,000, but whatever. I printed the invoice, popped it in the envelope, and hit the grime-way.

    On Wednesday, a goddamn minute right before I was out of the door for lunch, Double-D Donnely called me into her office and had me close the door just to scream my head off because I had apparently fucked everything up.

    “That wasn’t the New Report invoice, dumb ass! It was Crane I.T.,” Her flabby face was hot-red like an over-ripe tomato.

    “We billed New Report so much, they think we don’t know our asses from our eyeballs. If you can’t get this simple task straight Johnny, I’m afraid you’re fucked.”

    When I returned to my desk, Jen came over with a jolly rancher from the bowl on her desk. She said she heard the yelling and figured out what it was. She said she was sorry, that it was all her fault. It was all her fault, but I said it wasn’t to make her feel better.

    She has a crush on me, which is fantastic cause she is pretty cute.

    A little stupid, but pretty cute.

    Reply
  5. Dan Erickson

    I’ll have to think about this for awhile.

    Reply
    • no

      Come up with anything yet?

  6. Elise White

    The Shadow of Confusion stage:

    Ainsley was very interested in meeting her father’s new student in spite of herself. She did not want to be interested in anyone who chose to live in this city.

    “Trent Randall,” her father said, “will be my first paying student here in Horse Shoe. He’s a young man about 25. He’s a very good business man, very involved in the community, and highly intelligent…”

    Ainsley tried to picture him. She hadn’t met any men that she admired here in Horse Shoe. They all seemed to walk the streets with saggy pants and something belligerent to say. Trent sounded like a strong name, and she pictured a clean cut, muscle bound black man in a tight fitting suit.

    There was a knock on the door. “He’s here!” Beth called from the living room. “Should I send him in to your office, Harold?”

    “Yes, please, Beth. Send him back here!” Harold said.

    Her father seemed to live in his writing den these days, Ainsley thought. She started to get up and leave, but her father grabbed her arm.

    “No, Ainsley, stay and meet him. I want him to meet my family.”

    Reluctantly, Ainsley sat down across from the open seat reserved for their special guest. She felt set up.

    Beth hurried into the room trailed by the horrible man Ainsley had just argued with on the street the other day. He was Trent Randall!

    “Here he is!” Beth said with a wave of her hand and disappeared around the corner.

    Ainsley stood up from her chair in surprise and disgust. Trent looked back at her with equal dismay.

    “We’ve met before,” he said carefully.

    “Yes.” she said looking at her father, who was leaning back in his desk chair, puffing on his pipe. He was amused.

    “You met before,” he said cheerfully. “Splendid. Sit down, then, you two. I’m sure that you’ve introduced yourself, all ready then, dear?”

    Ainsley’s face was burning. “No”, she said. “We spoke briefly.”

    Trent’s jaw was clenched and his eyes seemed to bore into Ainsley’s like missiles. “Trent Randall.” he said and offered her his hand.

    Ainsley hesitated. She did not like this man. He was a tyrant and she had just seen him beat a man in the street. She did not want to shake hands with a man who could be so callous, but she did not want to offend her father’s only current source of income.

    She shook his hand quickly and stood up again. “I’m sorry, Dad, I don’t feel well all of a sudden. I think I’d better lay down.”

    “It must be the heat.” Harold said, still jolly and dubious of the fiery tension in the room. “Make sure you drink some water and please ask Beth to turn on the air.”

    Ainsley wanted to run out of the room as fast as she could. More than that she wanted to run out of this city, this neighborhood, this cesspool of violence and greed. She wanted nothing to do with the underworld of Horse Shoe that was Trent Randall’s lair.

    Reply
  7. janetb

    This reads like the breakdown for a romantic comedy. It leaves out the trip gone wrong, the misunderstanding and exaggerated reaction comedies among family and friends, and many others. Janet

    Reply
  8. agadah vicVERNA mich

    hello liz, its been a while, what thou ist the structure of le comedy? Liz Bureman my friend.

    Reply

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