Scriptwriter

Role

Writes scripted material for performance, recording, narration, dialogue, scenes, or guided sequences.

Description

A Scriptwriter writes scripted material for performance, recording, narration, dialogue, scenes, or guided sequences. Their work gives spoken or performed parts a clear structure, voice, and progression.

In immersive media, scripts may need to support nontraditional conditions. A participant may be addressed directly, guided through space, interrupted by interaction, or placed close to a performer or character. The Scriptwriter helps make scripted material work inside that relationship.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within writing, narrative, and dramaturgy, the Scriptwriter provides authored language and scene structure that can be recorded, performed, triggered, or delivered live. The script may function as a conventional text, a cue document, an interaction script, or a hybrid production document.

Scope Note

Includes narration, dialogue, voiceover, guided instructions, scene text, performance scripts, cue-linked lines, alternate takes, branching script variants, and revisions for timing, clarity, and tone.

Boundary Note

More text-production focused than narrative design or dramaturgy. A scriptwriter may not be responsible for interaction systems, visual world design, casting, performance direction, or the full experience arc unless those duties are explicitly combined.

Collaboration Note

Commonly collaborates with narrative designers, directors, voice directors, actors, sound designers, producers, dramaturgs, experience designers, and editors.

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