
Just click on the left-most icon on the lower-right corner of the Word screen. Starting with this blank document, the first thing to do is turn on “Print Layout” view. The formatting you create in this document will not appear in other Word documents. This is the document you will use when you want to write a new script. That said, my instructions are very precise so you shouldn’t have any trouble following them (famous last words). If not, get familiar with it and then re-read this post. I can’t recall if Word 2003 does, but in any of these versions you should be able to adapt what I’m showing you here.įirst of all I am assuming you know the basics of Word. As I noted in an earlier post, I have used Word with styles to write hundreds of scripts and actually find it easier than the top screenwriting software. If you follow the instructions below you will turn Microsoft Word into a simple but effective screenwriting program. If you are familiar with screenwriting software such as Final Draft you know that what they basically do is make it easier to write scripts by automatically formatting script elements, fonts, paragraphs, etc. A style is simply a saved bundle of formatting instructions. Several of you have asked me for instructions on how to set up Microsoft Word “styles” for script writing.
