How to Tell a Ghost Story
It was a dark and stormy night, and you wanted to scare the crap out of your campfire friends…
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Have a happy Halloween with the ideas in this Howcast video series.
You Will Need
- The right setting
- Practice
- An active imagination
Steps
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Step 1
Find a good setting
Your story won't work if you're shouting over street noise or basking in a bright, sunny day. If you want maximum scare impact, find a spot that's dark, quiet, and secluded, and pick a time when you won't be interrupted.
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Step 2
Understand the basic structure
Whether it's about a vengeful spirit or a stalking serial killer, ghost story structure is simple. We meet the hero, who has a problem. The hero's attempts to solve the problem unwittingly upset the bogeyman, who takes a lengthy ironic revenge. The story ends with the bogeyman still out there somewhere, possibly very nearby…
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Step 3
Make it personal
Make it personal. Say the story happened to the friend of someone you know, or fill in the specifics with places and names familiar to your audience. In other words, if you're in the woods, your story should be set there, too -- and the characters should be a lot like your listeners.
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Step 4
Build suspense
Start your story with a quiet, casual attitude. As you work towards the scary climax, ratchet up the suspense by increasing — or decreasing — your speed and volume.
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Step 5
Be presentational
If you've got a flare for the dramatic, now's the time to break it out. Give each character a different voice and mannerism, and don't be afraid to use your body.
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Step 6
Make contact
Target someone a little jittery. When your performance hits its scariest peak, make quick physical contact with that person. Watch your audience jump a foot in the air.