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Use Real Characters to make Fictional Characters Real

By – John Sammon

When it comes to creating a character, truth is often stranger than fiction.

Weโ€™ve been talking about creating characters for your novel that are realistic, full-dimensional figures, figures that the reader comes to identify with, or loathe (if the character is a bad man). A character who provokes in some way an emotional response from the reader.

A multi-faceted character behaves in a way that is interesting and sometimes contradictory. Who exhibits irony, a character for example with differing and competing alternating traits, brutality, self-pity, righteousness. Who often considers himself a victim, but at the same time professes to others gentility or love for them, which in reality can be a form of contempt.

This could also be called โ€œnarcissism.โ€

A character like this is likely to be interesting to a reader. The reader might have known someone like this in real life.

Rather than a character who is boring, bad all the time for no reason that is explained to the reader, or a hero who is always good for the same non-reason. Because as an author, you perhaps havenโ€™t shown the reader why the character acts the way he or she does.

Do not as an author simply tell the reader why a character is good or bad. Show the reader why through the characterโ€™s actions, thoughts and dialog.

If youโ€™re a good fiction writer you may be able to dream up a multi-faceted character out of your head.

If you canโ€™t invent a characterโ€™s traits and background, you can use real people that you have known or met to make a character in a book more interesting. You can attribute the traits of those real people to the characters in your book.

Do not use a personโ€™s real name in a fiction book or expose their real job so they can be identified by a reader, especially if the portrayal is unflattering. That can get you sued for libel (Iโ€™ll talk about libel in a later installment).

Let me show an example of using a real person for a book character.

Back in the 1970โ€™s I was an actor in Hollywood mostly just a bit player, the kind who appears on film for a few minutes and says perhaps a line or two. I appeared in some of the worst films of all time including Deathsport in 1978 and It Lives Again (also 1978, something about a demon baby with big teeth who goes around eating people).

To survive (there werenโ€™t enough acting jobs to make a decent living which is about 99 percent of the SAG Screen Actors Guild members in Hollywood). To support my acting and have a dingy apartment I took a job selling office supplies of dubious quality and was a failure because Iโ€™m honest. Iโ€™m not a good liar over the phone. You have to talk people into buying the products.

In this job I met Lance.

Lance was a Canadian who had immigrated to the U.S. I think to pursue an acting career (they come from all over the world). It was clear pretty soon that Ralph was a person with some very unpleasant qualities. Lance had a hard edge. He was perfectly at home lying and cheating customers.

That was just a part-time job. The rest of the time Lance was a gardener at the mansion Hollywood home of Canadian singer Joni Mitchell.

I got into it with Lance when I suggested to him it would be better to deal with the customers honestly over the phone. He got in my face and I thought I would have to fist fight him, but I wasnโ€™t going to do so in a business office.

Lance was a ruthless, dishonest bully and a braggart.

But when he talked about Joni Mitchell his manner changed. He became affectionate and sweet. I canโ€™t remember his exact words, but he portrayed some kind of relationship with her. I was highly dubious.     

As he described Mitchell in saintly terms, you could tell it was an act, his boastful manner dripped with insincerity. But you could also realize that even a bad and violent man can have a softer side.

Iโ€™m certain he was more interested in Mitchellโ€™s money and fame than he was in her personally, and he hoped to become her consort for those reasons. Iโ€™m also pretty certain his described exaggerated relationship with her was pure invented fantasy.

In reality Mitchell hardly knew who he was.

Letโ€™s say Iโ€™m wrong about Lance. If I am I apologize.

But here the potential scenario for a book character isโ€ฆโ€ฆ

A foreign immigrant with delusions of grandeur becomes a gardener for a celebrity and in imagining a false romance with herโ€ฆ.to steal a little of her for himself, ends up stalking her.

You could build a whole book around that kind of character.

The point is, make your characters full of contradictory neurosis and foibles to make them interesting.



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