Jeff Kitchen is a chef, but of screenplays-a dramaturge whose clients include top playwrights in Broadway and screenwriters in Hollywood. He has a set of special cutleries and secret recipes to cook a good story and serve it as a dramatic plot. One of his special cutlery is the Enneagram, a psychometric framework that posits that there are nine personality types. He says it not only helps him develop credible characters, but also construct an engaging plot.
"Everyone focuses on the art of storytelling rather than the craft of the dramatist. This is why 99 per cent of scripts get rejected," says the California-based script consultant, whose students include Oscar, Emmy and Tony award winners. One of them is Ted Melfi, whose 2016 directorial, Hidden Figures, was nominated for an Oscar in the best picture and best adapted screenplay categories.
If it was Greek physician Galen's four temperaments-sanguine, melancholic, choleric and phlegmatic-that made Shakespearean characters multidimensional, it was Enneagram that helped Kitchen add complexity to the characters he created. Before discovering the psychometric tool, he mostly drew upon his own knowledge of the people around him. "I know a lot about how people operate in the world, but it's nowhere near as comprehensive as Enneagram," he tells THE WEEK.
Kitchen is not the only person to use personality types to develop characters. Isabel Myers, who devised the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) with the help of her mother, Katharine Briggs, was also a novelist who used typology to build her characters. Her first novel, Murder Yet to Come, won the National Detective Murder Mystery Contest in 1929.
This story is from the November 03, 2024 edition of THE WEEK India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 03, 2024 edition of THE WEEK India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Quit Smoking To Live Longer
Patients who quit smoking after a diagnosis of stable coronary artery disease can reduce their risk of a major cardiovascular event by almost 50 per cent.
AI Is Here To Stay
Every time I hear the words Artificial Intelligence, the millennial in me starts imagining T100s walking the street and Skynet taking over the world.
Silent sentinel
Meet Dozee, India’s first Al-based, contactless remote patient monitoring system that fits under the mattress
Gaining consciousness
Anaesthesiology, a poorly understood speciality, has been gaining recognition for its critical role in and outside the operating theatre
Patients with Parkinson's, schizophrenia, and addiction, will benefit from our device
Actor, TV host, dancer, and academic, Shalini Menon is a true allrounder. The young chemist from Kerala has earned a patent for a groundbreaking device, the Dopameter, which detects dopamine levels in the body.
HOOKED...TO HAPPINESS
Pleasure-seeking behavioural addictions, in search of a dopamine hit, are on the rise
Mach attack
Machiavellians are like JCBs: they will crush your heart, your career, and your bank account, then push you into oblivion
WATCH YOUR FINGERNAILS
Have you ever wondered what the ridges on your nails can reveal about your health?
Killing the killers
Could your bathroom be humanity's arsenal against antibiotic-resistant superbugs?
SIT LESS TO EASE BACK PAIN
SITTING LESS AND INCREASING daily activity could be a simple solution to help back pain from getting worse, and just 40 minutes of less sedentary time would be enough.