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SPEECH
COACHING TIPS FOR WRITERS
Prepared specially by GERI
SPIELER
- Select
your material to read and estimate the amount of time that will take about
ten minutes. Adjust the material to the time, leaving about one minute to do
an “announcement” to the audience of what you are reading to them.
For example: “The title is Dead
Aim. It is a non fiction book about the attempted assassination of
President Gerald Ford by a middle-aged woman in San Francisco in 1975.” Keep your announcement short and simple.
- Once
you have adjusted the material, go through it and edit the work to make it
easy to read aloud. Shorten long and awkward sentences. Remember, you are
now reading something that was written for the eye that is now being read
for the ear. What you are reading is not going to be submitted to a
publisher. This is for a listening audience.
- Bold
words for special effect. Put in the word “pause” for a reminder. Underline.
Make special notes that will help you read with affect. And, mark where you
should slooow dooown when you need to.
- Type
the piece in double space with two-inch margins, 14 or 16-point type.
Don’t forget to number the pages. Do
not staple the pages together. It is too noisy to flip them over.
Professionals let individual pages fall to the floor, or put them aside.
Much cleaner and easier
- Practice,
practice, practice. You MUST look up at the audience. You have ten minutes
Think about looking up four to six times. Start by looking to the left, then
center then right. You must make eye contact with one person each time. You
will be surprised that the entire audience will think you have looked at all
of them. Use your thumb to hold your place or mark a word with a highlighter
so you won’t loose your spot. You can stop reading and hold your thought.
Look up. Look down and continue.
- Try
and practice in front of a live person before Open Mic night. It will get
you over the worst of it. It makes a huge difference before the event. THERE
IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR PRACTICING. Practice
is where you will hear the awkward moments and sentences that just don’t
work. Fix them. This is your piece. You do not have to keep them. Take them
out. Cut and paste. Make it work for you.
- Be
sure you have timed yourself properly. You don’t want to get cut off. It
is best if you are just under ten minutes. By looking up, you see the timer
and will therefore appear very professional.
- Try
opening your reading with an original idea; an anecdote related to your
piece, a quick joke, and very short philosophical phrase, something
different. It will set you apart. If you play a portable instrument, bring
it along, strum a few cords, or sing a few lines.
If you would like a free one-hour speech
coaching lesson to prepare for our Open Mic, contact Geri
through CWC.