It's interesting because you feel on the one hand, we understand people from what the say, and in another sense, you'd think that you'd be able to convey more through dialogue.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think it's interesting to speak when you have something to say.
If you have a good ear for dialogue, you just can't help thinking about the way people talk. You're drawn to it. And the obsessive interest in it forces you to develop it. You almost can't help yourself.
For me, the dialogue is the easiest part of writing. It just always seems so obvious what a character will say. Maybe it's because I talk too much!
I've found that if I say what I'm really thinking and feeling, people are more likely to say what they really think and feel. The conversation becomes a real conversation.
It is not what we learn in conversation that enriches us. It is the elation that comes of swift contact with tingling currents of thought.
I see people in terms of dialogue and I believe that people are their talk.
It's much easier to read the stories that have a lot of dialogue; of course, they flow much more easily into speech.
You really have to think a lot before speaking, and the things that are written about you, sometimes you might not like it.
Once you see the entertainment world from both sides, you really get a greater understanding of how it all operates. As an actor going into screenwriting, I was able to understand what type of dialogue feels natural and what an actor could actually say.
Honestly, dialogue is a weird area for me. It just comes naturally; I know I'm quite good at it, but I can't actually tell you why or how in any detail.