GETTING IT RIGHT is a play that can be best described as being experimented on literally by all those on the stage at the cue of the director. It is devised through improvisations that arise out of the actors� imagination. The central themes of the play are love and relationships. There are two couples in the play; both are given the eternal subject of love and are asked to improvise on it. One of the couples forms Act I of the play while the other forms Act II. There is an interval between the two acts after which the second couple takes over from the first.
The first couple creates a collage by taking up different characters and enacting scenes that resonate the different situations that young people may find themselves in when they are in a relationship while the second couple simply traces the relationship of just a single couple from the beginning to its end, exploring the various stages of their relationship. Both the couples rehearse separately and the director is the only link between them. He is just there to make sure that the two pairs of actors do not end up doing the same stuff. The final play can best be described according to its team as offering a very slice of life with enacted observations that range from the hilarious to the outrageous.