examples drama scripts

Drama course helps script!?
In the development phase when you're writing a script, if a character speaks with an accent where not pronounce all letters, cockney for example, can be written in the script of how they speak? For example: To: Get another will and us, friend me good ol '! And if so, gain extra marks?
I think that's a personal choice playwright's playwright. Personally, I haaaaaaaaate when the accents are written phonetically. Almost the only playwright I excuse this behavior is by Shakespeare, and that's because when you write the Welsh accent phonetically, we have a wonderful line "no good men in Monmouth" in "Henry V". (Apparently Elizabethan Welsh delivered his Bs As Ps.) Makes it easier for everyone – and much more safe for you! – If you just put in the description of the character that the character speaks with a pronounced [lo] accent. What I mean by "safer" you ask? Well, imagine the following scenario: – You have written the script carefully, and love as one of his characters cockney accent very well written, with consonants missing throughout the store and a few bits of rhyming slang thrown in for good measure. It took much effort, because you are not a cockney, but you are satisfied with results and stroking her back with force. – The script to dial. – The marker is a true Cockney, born within earshot of Bow Bells, which spends more Weather well-intentioned errors servile in the dialect which has made taking the job at any significant level. – The brand has more to do, so just classification Based on the overall impression of their work (which was cringeworthy to them) and not in any real merit (and could have been as follows Pinter, Stoppard, etc.). It's OK to write the occasional colloquialism, If you absolutely insist that a character says, "and" instead of "you", but that really should avoid writing a whole accent phonetically.
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