I think it's time to make a spooky tv series for C31. The urge I have to do this is ridiculous!— Fiona Eloise Bulle (@fifail) September 25, 2013
It started, as things often do in the 2010s, with a tweet.
Writer, producer Fiona Bulle wanted to make a spooky TV series for Channel 31. I was the first to respond. Overly excited, as I tend to be on Twitter.
And while I was being cautious about taking part, I did have a heap of work on at the time, I knew I wanted to be involved. Somehow. Just do some script editing, I thought. Write an episode, I said.@fifail ZOMG! GREAT IDEA!— Keith Gow (@keithgow) September 26, 2013
As a writer, one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to learn was saying no to getting involved in a project. Because soon you can be involved in too many projects; they could all turn out to be great, but any writer working on too many things will see the quality of their contribution diminish.
Then we started to talk logistics. Fiona wanted to create a writers’ room, using the American model. We’d meet as a group to discuss concepts, ideas, characters and plots. And then we’d start breaking down the stories together. Find the big ideas first. The setting. The concept. The lead character.
And away we would go.
But how much would I be involved?
2013. My play "Who Are You Supposed to Be" had just premiered at Edinburgh Fringe and it was opening in London in November of that year. And I already knew it would probably land at Melbourne Fringe in 2014.
I had been approached by a producer to write a feature film script, which I was deep into when Fiona tweeted. I couldn’t put that on the back burner for a six-part TV series, could I? Should I? Would I?
And I was planning a trip to Los Angeles and New York the following year; that would certainly interfere with any plans I had to be involved in a project like Sonnigsburg which was generically called "Horror TV Series" on the Google Group we created to start spitballing ideas.
The more we talked about the concept and our plans for how would we make the series work, the quicker I got drawn in and committed myself to another project.
Because while writers should learn how to say no, sometimes they should say yes.
Sonnigsburg premieres in two weeks’ time, to this very hour, on C31 in Melbourne & Geelong. Over the next two weeks, I’m going to write more about my involvement with the series, how deep I got in – and how the hell we made a 6-part one-hour TV series on a tiny budget.
Follow Fiona on Twitter. Follow Sonnigsburg on Twitter. Follow me on Twitter.
Follow Sonnigsburg on Facebook and Instagram, too.
And keep following my blog about the history and development of Australia's first supernatural TV series, that eventually couldn't have that title.
Comments
But there is also learning which projects you will learn from and which projects will actually happen. Young/new writers spend a lot of time working on projects that never get produced. You've got to learn how to choose ones that are more likely to happen. I knew when Fiona said she was going to make a TV series that it would happen.