Every script contains within it a range of production possibilities — the theatrical choices that could be made to bring the text to life. A script is not a blueprint with one correct solution; it is a set of potentials waiting to be unlocked through the creative imagination of a production team.
Understanding the production possibilities of a script means reading it not as a literary text but as a stimulus for live performance — asking what it could become, not just what it says.
KEY TAKEAWAY: There is never one “correct” production of a script. Every interpretation is a selection from a range of possibilities, informed by context, concept, and creative vision. Your task is to identify those possibilities and justify your selections.
When approaching a script to identify its production possibilities, read on multiple levels simultaneously:
Not all possibilities are equally available or appropriate:
| Factor | How It Shapes Possibilities |
|---|---|
| Intended meaning | Some possibilities serve the script’s themes better than others |
| Theatre style | A script written for naturalism has different possibilities to one for physical theatre |
| Context | The original and current cultural context opens or forecloses certain interpretations |
| Practical constraints | Budget, space, technical capacity, and performer skills limit what is achievable |
| Audience | The intended audience shapes which possibilities are accessible and appropriate |
Identifying possibilities is different from making choices. In VCE, you must:
EXAM TIP: In written responses about production possibilities, show that you understand there are multiple valid options before explaining why you favour a particular choice. “While this scene could be staged as an intimate realistic encounter, I would instead use elevated staging and formal positioning to suggest the power dynamic between the characters.”
Production possibilities are not always immediately obvious — they emerge through:
- Close script reading — annotating for theatrical potential
- Dramaturgical research — historical and cultural context reveals possibilities
- Practical experimentation — trying ideas in rehearsal
- Collaborative discussion — other team members see possibilities you may not
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes present their interpretation as the only valid reading of a script. Demonstrate awareness that your production represents choices made from a range of possibilities — and that these choices are deliberate, justified, and purposeful.
APPLICATION: For any script excerpt, practise generating at least three distinct production interpretations before settling on one. This forces you to think beyond your first instinct and demonstrates genuine engagement with the range of theatrical possibilities.
REMEMBER: The richness of theatre lies in its interpretive openness. A script that has been produced a thousand times is still capable of yielding new possibilities in the hands of a thoughtful production team.