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THE ACTOR. Chapter 4. What is acting?. It is the oldest of the theatrical arts. THESPIS, the first actor, was the author of the plays in which he appeared. . From his name comes the word THESPIAN, another word for actor. Acting is a public art. The average theatregoer can name many actors.
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THE ACTOR Chapter 4
What is acting? It is the oldest of the theatrical arts. THESPIS, the first actor, was the author of the plays in which he appeared. From his name comes the word THESPIAN, another word for actor.
Acting is a public art The average theatregoer can name many actors
Two notions of acting The actor “presents” to the audience in a form that we call “presentational.” It is also called “external” or “technical” acting. The second notion emanates from somewhere “inside” the actor. The actor works honestly and effectively to “live the life of the character.” To feel the emotions. It can be called “representational.” Actors of this school are often “method actors” named for a “system” devised by Konstantin Stanislavski.
Lee Strasberg In the United States, the “method” was made popular by the actor Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio in New York City.
Presentational actors Represented by classically-trained British actors
Internal vs. external Has been long debated See text (page 78) for examples from the classical theatre including a passage from Socrates In the 18th century, French encyclopedist Denis Diderot discussed the differences in his essay “The Paradox of Acting” At the Moscow Art Theatre, Stanislavski taught that motivation gives meaning to action. And, as such, plays have subtexts the actor needs to understand.
Stanislavski’s legacy Almost all American teachers of acting pay homage to Stanislavski and his “theories” of acting... Famous American actors trained in the method include...
The actor as virtuoso • Greatness in acting, like greatness in almost any endeavor, demands a superb set of skills • In order to play HAMLET, for example, the actor himself needs to embody the genius of the character. • To achieve this virtuosity, the actor must possess two features • An expressive voice • A supple body
Magnificent voices James Earl Jones Glenn Close
Splendid supple bodies Bill Irwin Meryl Streep
Magic Beyond conviction and virtuosity, great actors possess “presence” or “magnetism” or “charisma”
BECOMING AN ACTOR Actor training takes place in colleges, universities, conservatories and private and commercial schools
The actor’s instrument The self • Mind • Mettle • Metabolism Training is both physical and psychological • In France and Japan, actors are trained through apprenticeships • All training requires practice, not simple book learning
PHYSIOLOGICAL TRAINING • VOICE AND SPEECH • VOICE: breathing, phonation, resonance • SPEECH: articulation, pronunciation, phrasing • PROJECTION
MOVEMENT • Dance, mime, fencing, acrobatics • Relaxation, control, economy • Strength and endurance
PSYCHOLOGICAL instrument Imagination, and willingness and ability to use it in the service of art, are major components of the actor’s psychological instrument Make the artifice of the theatre real (flats and platforms become streets or mountains) Place the self in the imagined world of the play (Really fall in love with your acting mate) Characterize the role with uniqueness and life (liberate the actor’s imagination)
Discipline The fourth and final aspect of the actor’s psychological instrument • Follow the working conditions • Collaborate with fellow artists • Be on time to calls • Stay well and healthy • Train your instrument in exercise or class • Memorize parts before they are due • Work vigorously to develop craft
THE ACTOR’S APPROACH Stanislavski described the actor’s ZADACHA which also translates to mean objective, task, goal, victory or intention. Each character has a primary goal and several minor goals in the play. Secondly, the actor develops TACTICS necessary to achieve the GOALS Finally, the actor must understand the style of given circumstances of the play and apply it to the role
Cohen’s GOTE GOAL. What the character wants OBJECT (Other). Who does the character want it from? TACTIC. How does the actor get it? EXPECTATION. Why does the actor expect to reach the goal?
THE ACTOR’S ROUTINE The audition
Rehearsal process Plays are in rehearsal for several weeks At rehearsal, actors learn lines and blocking Explore the characters motivations (goals) Memorize Work on the external elements of timing and delivery The most creative time for the actor
Patrick Stewart, Simon Callow & Ian McKellan Performance
...what the theatre is all about The excitement of live performance Philip Seymour Hoffman in DEATH OF A SALESMAN
The shift from rehearsal to performance Now, the actor is aware of his audience... The audience affects the actor’s timing, delivery and energy
Stage vs. film Stage actors must re-create their performance over and over. Each actor develops ways to adapt to the different demands of various media Dame Judi Dench in film and onstage.
Acting is an art... Actors are privileged people, they get to live the lives of saints, sinners, lovers, rulers, the great and the meek They get to reenter the wonder of childhood and play They get to fantasize freely and get paid for it Many want to act, but true acting is a calling The addicted actor is probably not very good
Actors must know more than acting, they must represent the human and therefore must understand humankind The proper study of acting is life: common sense, observation, perception, tolerance and understanding Actors need to possess training, business acumen and a realistic vision Very few are capable of a professional career in acting. Those that do possess great talent, skill, persistence, fortitude and luck