


How to Write Audio Drama
4 minutes read
How do you write audio drama? From radio plays to podcasts, the form is thriving â but how do you engage listeners in a story solely through sound?
Mike Harris, tutor on Faber Academy’s Writing Audio Drama course, shares his top tips for writing audio drama (and some for writing any drama).
Audio drama is like every other kind except . . .
. . . unlike screen and theatre, you canât actually see anything. Despite this, itâs the most visual medium because you get to create powerful images in the listenerâs mind, which is the most sophisticated and vivid visual platform there is (movies donât even come close).
However, if your audience doesnât hear it, itâs not there.
Writing something down as if itâs a description in a novel or short story doesnât make it âlegibleâ for your listener â for example, âBruce applying sunblock lovingly to his pulsating pecs on Bondi beachâ is not going to cut the acoustic mustard without dialogue, i.e. itâs got to be in specific scripted words as well as scripted sounds, and usually both or youâre liable to set your audience adrift in acoustic outer space. Get sound and dialogue right and you can take them anywhere, in a few seconds.
But donât overdo the sound because . . .
. . . itâs easy to confuse an audience, especially if you are new to the job. To begin with, keep the noises few but effective and nearly always walk them hand-in-hand with dialogue so neither falls over into that void, for example, something like:
(Fade in âWaltzing Matildaâ add general beach ambience. CU sound of sunblock being slapped on flesh)
SHEILA: (approaching) Jeez Bruce, leave those pecs alone for once will ya?
BRUCE: No way babes, I want them to glow, not incinerate.
Easy to say but hard to do well (as you may have just noticed)
Â
Then, make things happen.
I mean action. Yes, in audio drama, yes! Because people do things. Even when theyâre just talking in rooms (and please donât spend all or most of your drama in them, because there is world upon world out there). What characters do is invariably more revealing and interesting than what they say, which is mostly lies, self-delusion or obfuscation (just like people in real life).
And the rest is the same for all would-be dramatists (audio or otherwise, established or newbie) and maybe all writers? Hereâs some of it anyway . . .
'Drama is bad things happening to people, dummy, not nice people being nice to each other.'
Pin that above and behind your laptop in 140 point, in CAPS, UNDERLINED, EMBOLDENED and italicised adding, if you like, âitâs all about obstacles, conflict and dissonance, not harmony and agreement.â
Oh yes, and turn off your crap detector when writing first drafts . . .
. . . so you can get it finished for, as the screenwriter William Goldman wisely said, ‘Until youâve put a full stop at the end, itâs all just a writing exercise’ and, as I say, ‘you can make crap better, you canât improve something thatâs not there.’
And in the end? Youâll need talent, luck and persistence . . .
. . . of which persistence is by far the most important, especially in those moments when youâre absolutely convinced youâre the worst writer who ever lived whoâs just written the worst thing ever written (and you may be and may have, of course, but thereâs a chance you might not be and may not have, and if you give up now youâll never find that out, will you?)
And donât listen to considerate friends who always tell you your work is great, because . . .
. . . theyâre your worst enemy. Listen to the ones you absolutely hate because they tell you exactly whatâs wrong with your precious babies and, when youâve calmed down, you realise theyâre right (some of the time at least).
And thatâs probably enough to be going on with.

Mike Harris is a script writer, dramatist, director, and experienced creative-writing tutor.
He has written more than 150 single-plays, adaptations, series and soap episodes for radio, stage, touring theatre, and TV. He has taught script writing at all stages from community workshops to MA and has worked extensively with novelists on structure and plotting.
He is the tutor of Faber Academy’s online Writing Audio Drama: From Plays to Podcasts course.
End