Title: Chapter 9 Image Maker: The Actor
1Chapter 9 Image Maker The Actor
- For it is not a game of charades, this acting
world of ours it is an everlasting search for
truth. -
- Laurence Olivier
2Chapter Summary
- Acting is the truthfulness and technique by which
actors bring human presence onto the stage. - Theatre is the art human beings make out of
themselves.
3Acting Is Doing
- Definitions of acting
- Living truthfully in imagined circumstances
(Sanford Meisner) - An everlasting search for truth (Laurence
Olivier) - Foundation of acting search for truthful
behavior - Acting is not
- Showing
- Narrating
- Illustrating
- Exhibiting
- Displaying emotion
4Acting Is Doing
- Three responsibilities of actor
- Select sensory responses
- Select behavior pertinent to character
- Respond to given circumstances of play
- Preparing for a role
- Actor selects emotions, sensations, responses
from personal experience.
5The Actors Goals
- To tell the characters circumstances in play
truthfully and effectively. - Circumstances are conditions of world of play
- Time
- Place
- Surroundings
- Other characters
- To attune him or herself to the reality of the
play
6External Technique Mimetic Acting
- Technical, outside in approach
- Actor observes and studies human behavior.
- Naturalistic
- David Garrick
- 18th century British actor
- Approached acting as imitation of life
- Prepared for role of King Lear by observing
friend who had been driven mad by childs death - Felt that actor should not feel the emotions
being portrayed - Aims to recreate authentic human behavior
7Internal Belief Realistic Acting
- Aims to build authentic response to world of play
from subjective emotional responses - Actor works from inside out
- Searches for emotional impulses from personal
experience - Transfers these to portrayal of character
- Uta Hagen as Nina in Chekhovs The Seagull
- Used awe of fellow actors as basis for similar
feelings experienced by her character - Stanislavskis Method
8The Actors Training
- Traditionally, actors trained in theatre
- Apprenticed to older actors
- Learned time-tested vocal and movement techniques
- In late 19th century, realism dominated
- Large style of acting seen as old-fashioned
- Demand for characters that were recognizable
human beings (as opposed to theatrical types) - Created demand for new training methods
9Preparing the Role Stanislavskis Method
- Method a systematic approach to training actors
to work from inside outward. - Actors must understand how people behave
physically and psychologically in given
circumstances. - Actor must study and experience subjective
emotions and feelings and show them to audiences
by physical and vocal means. - Personal truth must be balanced with playwrights
vision.
10Preparing the Role Stanislavskis Method
- Psychotechnique
- Set of exercises designed to help actor call on
personal feelings and experiences - Actors learned to experience what their
characters experienced as if it were happening to
them - The magic if (e.g., If I were in Othellos
situation, what would I do?)
11Preparing the Role Stanislavskis Method
- Emotional recall (or affective memory)
- Process by which actor creates reality of
emotions - Effort to remember circumstances surrounding a
past emotional event to stimulate emotions that
could be used onstage (Lee Strasberg) - Psychophysical actions
- Reframing of concept of emotional recall
- Physical action as means of triggering emotional
memory
12Trends in Training American Actors
- Sanford Meisners Foundations
- Derived from Method
- The reality of doing
- Instinct and imagination
- Practical Aesthetics (David Mamet and William H.
Macy) - Combined stoicism with Method
- Focused on those things in actors control
- Voice, body, concentration, script analysis
- Process of making acting tools habitual to free
the actor to live truthfully and fully within the
plays circumstances
13Trends in Training American Actors
- The Viewpoints (Mary Overlie and Anne Bogart)
- Postmodern, movement-based approach
- Focused on six principles of movement
- Space, time, shape, movement, story, and emotion
- A physical alternative to Stanislavskis
emotional recall
14Actors at Work Improvisation
- Spontaneous invention
- Exercises and games
- Substitute own words for script
- Repetition between two actors of same word or
phrase - Purposes
- Frees creativity
- Hones concentration
- Spurs commitment to finding truth of behavior
15Actors at Work Movement Training
- Gives actors a range of physical choices in
creation of character - Process of eliminating tensions and mannerisms
- Assumes movement to be expressive signal of
character and intention
(c) Barry Slobin/ Playmakers Repertory Company
Kathleen Widdoes as Maria Callas in Terrence
McNallys Master Class
16Actors at Work Voice Training
- Aimed at freeing the voice, opening up
possibilities - Goal to merge technique with actors imagination
to communicate characters needs through words
17Actors at Work Rehearsal and Performance
- Rehearsal
- Conditions actors responses
- Brings cast and director together to set
interpretation and physical movement - Performance
- Everything actor has established in rehearsal
(objectives, mannerisms, vocal intonations,
movements) should stay consistent. - At same time, each performance requires the actor
to give fresh life to the character.
18Actors at Work Acting with the Camera
- Credibility before camera eye separates the
successful film actor from the talented stage
actor - Camera listens to and records everything.
- Challenges
- Scenes shot out of sequence
- Distraction of technicians
- Camera records every mistake and hesitation
- Fast production schedules
19Actors at Work Stage Acting vs. Screen Acting
- Stage
- Audience more distant
- Auditions focus on match between actor and
character - Rehearsals explore character, relationships,
interpretation - Actors discuss role with director, each other
- Screen
- Audience as close (close-up) or far as camera
- Screen test assesses presence in front of
camera - Rehearsals used to set blocking for camera
- Production schedules often rule out discussion
20Core Concepts
- Actors bring living presence to the stage.
- Their search for new depths of creative energy
and truthful behavior keeps their performances
fresh and lively night after night.