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THE ACTOR Wicked Big Fish Catch Me If You Can Dead Accounts

THE ACTOR

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THE ACTOR. Norbert Leo Butz. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: THE ACTOR

THE ACTOR

Wicked

Big Fish

Catch Me If You Can

Dead Accounts

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Norbert Leo ButzBroadway: Big Fish, Dead Accounts, Catch Me If You Can (2011 Tony Award, Drama Desk winner: Best Actor in a Musical; Astaire Award winner, Outer Critics nomination), Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (Tony Award, Drama Desk, Outer Critics, Astaire Awards, Drama League Award winner: Best Actor in a Musical), Enron, Speed-the-Plow, Is He Dead?, Wicked (original cast, Fiyero), Thou Shalt Not (Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics nominations), Rent (original cast, Broadway debut). Off-Broadway: How I Learned To Drive, Fifty Words, Buicks (Drama Desk nomination), The Last Five Years (Drama Desk and Lucille Lortel nominations, Drama League Award), Juno and the Paycock (Roundabout), Saved (TFANA). National Tour: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Cabaret. Alabama Shakespeare Festival (four seasons), Repertory Theatre of St. Louis. Film: Better Living Through Chemistry (2013), The English Teacher (2013), Greetings from Tim Buckley (2013), Disconnect (2013), Higher Ground, Fair Game, Dan in Real Life. Television: Series: “The Deep End” (ABC); Pilots: “County” (NBC), “The Miraculous Year” (HBO) BFA, Webster University; MFA, Alabama Shakespeare Theatre.

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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.

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Acting is a public artThe average theatregoer can name

many actors...

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There are two notions of acting according to Robert Cohen…The actor “presents” to the audience in a form that we call “presentational.” It is also called “external” or “technical” acting.

The second notion comes from somewhere “inside” the actor. It is often referred to as “internal.”

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Presentational actorsSuch classically-trained British actors as Olivier, Guinness, Stewart and Gielgud.

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INTERNAL ACTING

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

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Konstantin Stanislavski (1863-1938)

1918

UNCLE VANYA at Moscow Art Theatre

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STANISLAVSKI disavowed a “System” of acting…"For... Stanislavsky said: "There is no system. There is only nature. My lifelong concern has been how to get ever closer to the so-called system, that is, to get ever closer to the nature of creativity."

According to an article in theNY Times December 2, 2001

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Lee Strasberg (1901-1982)In the United States, the “method” was made popular by the actor Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio in New York.

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Internal vs. externalIn the 18th century, 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.

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Stanislavski’s legacyAlmost all American teachers of acting pay homage to Stanislavski and his “theories” of acting...

Famous American actors trained in the method includeMarlonBrando andMarilynMonroe.

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VirtuosityGreatness 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

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Expressive voices

James Earl Jones Glenn Close

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Supple bodies

Bill Irwin Meryl Streep

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Celebrated actors today

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MagicBeyond conviction and virtuosity, great actors possess “presence” or “magnetism” or “charisma”

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BECOMING AN ACTORActor training takes place in colleges, universities, conservatories and private & commercial schools

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The actor’s instrumentTraining is both

physical and psychological

All training requires practice, not simple book learning

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VOICE AND SPEECHVOICE:

breathing, phonation, resonance

SPEECH: articulation, pronunciation, phrasing

PROJECTION

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MOVEMENTDance, mime, fencing, acrobaticsRelaxation, control, economyStrength and endurance

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IMAGINATIONImagination, and willingness and ability to

use it in the service of art, are major components of the actor’s psychological instrument

Make the unreal real (flats and platforms become streets or mountains)

Play 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)

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Actors need discipline1. Follow the working conditions2. Collaborate with fellow artists3. Be on time to calls4. Stay well and healthy5. Train your instrument in exercise or

class6. Memorize parts before they are due7. Work vigorously to develop craft

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Discipline?

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THE ACTOR’S APPROACHDescribe the 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

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Given circumstancesThe goal of acting is to express your character’s intentions clearly and honestly within the given circumstances of the scene. These include…

Relationship of characters Age of characters Educational level of characters Time. When? Place. Where are you? Socio-economic-political background, etc.

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How do given circumstances affect acting?A: HiB: HelloA: What did you do last night?B: Huh?A: What did you do last night?B: Oh, nothing.A: Nothing?B: That’s what I said, nothing.A: Well…B: Well what?A: Never mind.B: Fine, see ya later…

EMPTY SCENES

EXPLORE…

Relationship

Time Place

Situation

Given circumstances

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THE ACTOR’S ROUTINEAUDITION

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Shift from rehearsal to performanceNow, the actor is aware of his audience...

The audience affects the actor’s timing, delivery and energy

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PerformancePatrick Steward, Simon Callow and Ian McKellan

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Patrick Stewart in Macbeth

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Patrick Stewart in Hamlet

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Patrick Stewart in Extras

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Stage vs. filmStage 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.

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Acting is an art...Actors are privileged people, they get to live the lives of

saints, sinners, lovers, rulers, the great and the meekActors must know more than acting, they must represent

the human and therefore must understand humankindThe proper study of acting is life: common sense,

observation, perception, tolerance and understandingActors need to possess training, business acumen and a

realistic visionVery few are capable of a professional career in acting.

Those that do possess great talent, skill, persistence, fortitude and luck!

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