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Character Profile for Irene (a practice character creation) ·Perhaps
Irene is unique in that she had cancer and survived it.
Maybe this was before she became a police officer. ·What
color is her hair? Is it dyed or
real? Is it well coifed or messy?
Is she using color rinse to hide the strands of gray that have begun to
show up prematurely? Does she wear anything in her hair? A comb or such? When
on duty, does she wear her hair differently? ·Does
she use excessive or not enough makeup? Does
it seem she knows how to use makeup to enhance her appearance?
Are her eyelashes real? Does
she use too much blush? Does she
use the wrong color eyeliner and lipstick for her complexion?
Or does that nice tan look phony also?
Does she have a year-round tan? Is
she tanned where it shows, but lilly white beneath her clothing? For that matter, is she white at all? Is she Asian? African
American? Hispanic?
Perhaps Irene is the only black woman on an all white police force in a
small town in Georgia? (Im looking for uniqueness here.
Dont be afraid to throw in a half dozen possibilities as you initially
get to know Irene. Is she Polish
and hates Polish jokes?) ·Does
Irene dress neatly, whether in work clothes or going out?
Does she lounge around home in shorts - jeans - sweat suit - halter top -
blouse - mans shirt? Does she
dress manlike on the job? Does she
deliberately dress and look feminine while working?
Does she push the line of good taste to the point that her supervisor or
partner is afraid shell get his butt in a jam, even though he likes looking
at her taunting style of dress? Does
she wear fancy, chic clothes when she goes out on a date, or is she more the
tomboy, who would rather go to the rodeo in jeans and boots?
Are her clothes name brands - K/Mart - Macys? ·What
does she carry in her purse besides the snub nosed .38 caliber Colt Chief
Special revolver and her police ID? Dump
her purse out on the table. What do
you see? A small sewing kit for
emergency repairs? Does it look
like it has ever been used? A stack
of credit cards with a rubber band around them, or are they contained in a
Gooney & Jerk credit card case with her initials in gold on the side. Is there a small pocket sized package of pop-up tissues?
How many key rings? Does she
carry a Gooney & Jerk key chain to match the credit card case and the Gooney
& Jerk purse you have just dumped out? Or are her keys on a cheap
advertising key ring given her at the used car lot or the new car dealer?
How about a half-used pack of year-old, crumbling, hard chewing gum?
Two give-away cigarette lighters? Does
she smoke, or is that half-pack of cigarettes a reminder that she quit?
Are they a deliberate temptation to prove she can do without?
Receipts from the last thirty trips to the grocer?
An unpaid utility bill? A
small stack of stubs from paid utility bills wrapped round with another
rubber band? A small cross given to
her for her birthday when she was eight, a gift from the nine year old boy next
door who became a priest? How many
combs, brushes, mirrors, compacts, lipsticks etc.
There are a million possibilities in Irenes purse that could tell you
a lot about your character. ·What
does her kitchen look like? Piled
up with dirty dishes and the clothes she shed on the way to the dryer in the
garage to pull out the sweat suit she washed a week ago?
Or is the kitchen neat as a pin? What
about the house or apartment? Is it
small, large, lower priced, too expensive for a cop?
(Maybe she has an inheritance or another source of income.
Is the other source legal or has Irene been on the take from drug
dealers?) Are her clothes hung
neatly in the closet, all ironed ahead of time, or is there a huge pile of
un-ironed clothes and an ironing board permanently set up in the bedroom or
living room? Or is her entire house
so neat one would swear it was vacant or the person living there was trying to
sell it? Is there too much
furniture? Not enough furniture?
Maybe the payment eats up so much of her income she has to furnish her
house or apartment with hand-me-downs. ·What
about her car? Is it neat and clean
or do you see twelve dozen McDonalds wrappers in the back floor board?
Does it look so scuzzy that you wouldnt accept a ride in it if you
were on your way to your favorite aunts funeral and your own car broke down?
What color is it? Sedate
white - bright red? Does Irene
drive carefully, or does her driving reflect the condition of her back
floorboard? Does she drive courteously or does she bully her way on
through, cuss the other stupid drivers and flip them off? ·What
about the way Irene walks and moves? Does
her stride exude confidence? Slow
and steady? Unsure?
Does she put her hands on her hips when she speaks?
(body language for, Im just as good as you.)
Does she hold her hands out in front of her with her palms down when she
makes a point? (body language for,
Im right and dont question it!) Does
she hold them out palm up in a pleading, Say Im right manner?
Does Irene have a certain way she tilts her head when she smiles?
Is her smile warm and friendly, or condescending and more like an insult? ·How
does Irene speak? Does she have a
soft voice? A powerful, overbearing
voice? Is her personality and size
matched to her voice? Does she
speak softly, even though she can be just as tough and mean as the situation
calls for? Is there a special
softness in her normally crude tone when she speaks of certain things?
Her mama, the man she lost to heart attack, the baby she lost, any small
child? ·Does
Irene like sports? Does she hate
them? Is she addicted to soap
operas? Does she hate them?
Does she like swimming, fishing, lounge hopping?
Does she read a lot? Never
reads more than necessary to do her job? Does
she go jogging? Does she have a lot
of friends or is Irene a loner when off duty? ·What
about her friends? Are they mostly
cops? Or are her real friends all
people far removed from her job? What
kind of people are they? What are
their professions? Are they mostly
church goers? Never go to church?
Does Irene believe in God? Does
she go to church? Are her friends
wealthy? Poor?
A mixture of both? Average? ·Does
Irene have a pet? Cat, dog, monkey,
goldfish? ·Does
Irene hide a deep dark secret? Was
she raped by her father as a young girl? Did
the boy next door rape her before he became a priest?
Is she torn between letting him continue to get by with it or should she
tell? Did Irene accidentally kill a
child when she was a teenage driver? Was
she driving the car in which her husband died? ·How
does Irene feel about her fellow officers?
How does she feel about men in general?
Women? People in general?
Does she worry about what people are doing to the environment?
Does she dislike other law enforcement agencies? Respect them?
Does Irene dream of becoming the top cop of her police department?
Perhaps chief? Or does she just want to get her twenty or thirty years in
and retire? As
you can see, Irene, the police woman who will be your main character, needs a
lot of defining before you really know her.
Lets do a profile of Irene and answer a bunch of the above questions.
First, we must decide if Irene is going to be a completely straight,
honest cop who wouldnt even take a cup of coffee at Dunkin Donuts without
paying for it. Or does she take
advantage of her uniform to get whatever she can for free or at a discount. Lets
make her a good cop, but one who might become vulnerable during your story and
fall prey to taking a bribe to pay for her sick mothers operation.
Shoot, lets make this a humorous story! Irene
is exceptionally neat in her dress and manner.
She has received officer of the month awards a half dozen times in the
last five years. And, Irene is one
of the most respected members of the Dulopolis, Georgia Police Department.
In her thirteen years on the force, she has worked her way up from
traffic patrol to detective sergeant. Of
course, she is assigned to homicide. She
drives a two door Toyota Camry, keeps it neat as a pin, but her garage is a
mess. Its filled with all the
stuff her husband left behind when he died. Irene doesnt have the heart to
have a garage sale and get rid of Franks stuff.
She is a smiling, likable, but no-nonsense cop.
Irene truly believes in her duty to protect people from the baddies. She
has the ugliest dog in the world - one which no one else would have around. I
mean, this dog would be turned down for entering an ugly contest on the grounds
of unfair competition! But she
picked him up injured along the road and spent three hundred dollars at the
vets to make him well. She did
it exactly for the reason that he was so ugly.
She knows no one else would want him.
Besides, Irene has always considered herself less than pretty and has an
affinity for being attracted to those who would make her look good.
Alongside Ralph, she is a beauty queen.
Ralph is the ugly mutt. Irenes
compassion for the down and out guides her handling of victims of crime and
their relatives. Her
voice is strong, but tempered. But
when speaking of Frank or other sad
memories from her past, there is a special softness in her voice that entrances
anyone who hears it. Its as if
she undergoes a complete transformation at times. Irenes
house, other than Franks garage is so neat it would seem she has a full time
maid. She seldom has company, so
the cleanliness and order are for her own peace of mind. And, speaking of peace of mind, although outwardly, she is
the brave, tough cop, inside, she is scared to death. Is there something in her past shes afraid might surface
and ruin her facade? Yes.
Irene unwittingly caused the death of a college classmate fifteen years
earlier. Although
she regularly turns down dates with fellow officers, and continues the facade of
being at least mildly satisfied with her life, she is lonely - desperately
lonely. Does Irene know someone
unapproachable who she would like to know better? As a matter of fact, she has a real crush on a fellow
officer, but hes married. She
hides her feelings for him by deliberately avoiding and being aloof and
unfriendly with him. Irene
is but one small example of building your character and getting to know her/him
intimately before you begin writing. If
you were writing about nuclear power plants, you would have to learn everything
there is to know about nuclear plants and, indeed, nuclear physics.
How could you possibly write about Irene without knowing her every bit as
well? As
I wrote earlier, usually, I work without an outline. But I do know my main character or characters intimately
before I put them in my story. I
know what my story is going to be in terms of genre, setting and so on, but the
only character I know for sure, is my hero or main character.
I say, or main character, because your main character does not always
have to be the hero of your story, contrary to common belief.
But if Im working with a hero, will he meet a sexy lady and fall in
love? I dont know.
Will he team up with someone else in pursuit of a solution to the earth
shaking problem he faces? I dont
know. Will he win in the end?
Probably, but normally I dont truly know when I sit down to put that
first page in my computers fantastic brain. One
of the things I have done over the years, is build up a repertoire of characters
through my practice writing of character profiles.
They are listed alphabetically as documents in that fantastic computer
memory and on a tablet in which I keep a record of all my documents.
Do I need a naval expert who has served on an aircraft carrier in my
story? I pull up that old salt,
Barry Nelson, former navy commander and, now, private investigator. Do I need a woman of particular aspect to join my hero in his
search for justice? Army
Lieutenant, Tracy Smith, a beautiful, intelligent member of military
intelligence. (Actually, shes a
colonel, but it suits her military investigations to be a lieutenant.) And the list goes on and on. I find it an enjoyable exercise to create real people on paper. I can make them as good looking as I want, as ugly as that dog, Ralph, as smart or as dumb as I want, as charitable or greedy as I want. I think you get the point. And while it is good writing practice to create all these characters you may never use, I promise, indeed, I guarantee - with practice, creating just the character you want will soon come automatically. Youll have a reserve of characters you can call on to enter your story as a major player or a minor character any time you need him/her. The following is a link to get a character profile form from my website. Cut and paste it into your word program, then you can print out a copy whenever you need to create a character.
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