Difference between revisions 24948941 and 24949000 on enwiki'''Out of character''' (sometimes abbreviated to OOC'''OOC''') is a phrase used in entertainment to differentiate between a person playing a [[character]] and the character itself. When the person is being him-or-herself, he or she is said to be "out of character". The opposite, when the person is acting as the character, is "in character". Occasionally, a [[film]], [[TV show]], or [[book]] will break the [[fourth wall]] by having one of the characters step out of character and comment on the story or the other characters. As examples, the film ''[[Annie Hall]]'' and television show ''[[Malcolm in the Middle]]'' frequently use this device. It may also refer to when a fictional character's behaviour is different from, and inconsistent with, how the character's personality has been established in the past, without any apparent reason. The term does not usually apply to a character acting a certain way which is later explained in [[secret history]], or to characters so minor little of their source personality is ever well-known. This process also applies to [[fan fiction]] where a character is acting differently from how he appeared in the story's source material. OOC is also used in [[role-playing]]. In this case, OOC refers to things said by the author of the message, rather than by the character(s) that author is playing. {{vocab-stub}} [[Category:Fan fiction]] [[category:Television terminology]] [[category:Narratology]] All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=24949000.
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