In the 'Action', you can only describe what a viewer might think from what they see - no thoughts, obviously - and clothing is a good short-hand.
Part of my plot relies on Nikki being an inexperienced walker carrying too much stuff, and Dave being a more experienced walker and carrying the right stuff to deal with blisters etc - it's how they meet, even though blisters don't rate high on the list of things that usually bring two people together :-)
Dave is practical, and Nikki is fairly practical. She's also not afraid to be a grown-up girlie-girl (without being childish) and though she likes to look good, she doesn't *really* care too much what other people think.
But you can't put that in the Action because the script reader will think 'no way can a viewer know that' - so clothes are great.
The director may decide on something else, but your script is aimed at the script-reader - they have to see what you want them to see.
I'm no authority, and this is only stuff I've picked up, but for major characters in something short (and in more depth and for more characters in something longer), a bit of 'character in action' can tell a lot about someone quickly.
* Someone completely ignores a beggar on the street.
* Someone gets a coin out as they approach and throws it in the beggar's cup as they pass.
* Someone stops and says a couple of words and holds his hand while pressing a low-denomination bank note into it.
* Someone comes out of the shop/office near the beggar, says one or two words, leaves him a coffee and goes back in
One sentence, and the viewer has a handle on the different Someones.
Ian
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