Acting Notes
Acting Notes
Acting Notes
ACTING
(COURSE PACK)
CONCENTRATION
NOSE
Just imagine that you are standing in a garden, and are trying to smell:
1. The fragrance of all the flowers
2. The particular fragrance
TONGUE
Whenever you eat different things, try and identify the taste of each food
items separately. Drink a glass of water and feel that you are drinking the
following things bitter medicine, sweet juice, salted butter milk, sour
starch water.
TOUCH
Imagine you are standing on a road and that road:
1. Is made of ice- feel the chill
2. Is made of tar. Feel the tars heat.
While practising you can, as per your wish, concentrate on any topic. The
above exercise helps you in doing the same.
play
MOVEMENT
Proper alignment
Proper balance of tension and relaxation
Proper breathing techniques
Proper worm-up technique
An understanding of his or her body
An understanding of his or her personal
mannerisms
Understanding of basic movement element (time,
space, energy)
An understanding of the mind body- spirit
connection
The ability to work with others
The ability to work alone
Independent from constant monitoring
The ability to apply acting techniques to movement
problem
The ability to apply movement techniques to acting
problem
The art of centring
Proper use of internal and external techniques and
so on.
IMPROVISATION
A good acting is essentially an improvisation, meaning that best moments
are when an actor is alive and reacting to his surroundings in a truthful
way. Improvisation aims to utilize the two elements from everyday life:
spontaneous response to the unfolding of an unexpected situation, and
the ingenuity to deal with the situation.The word improvisation is used in
so many different contexts, for some people improvisation suggests no
more than making do- the need only to cope somehow with blocked
drains. For others there is still a sense of making do, but this time we are
drawing upon our imagination in order to try and achieve an objective we
have set ourselves. There is a further aspect of improvisation we meet in
day to day living: we continually have to adjust to whatever happens
around us. The more unexpected the happening, the more spontaneous
and frank the response is likely to be.
Improvisation: the skill of using bodies, space, all human resources, to
generate a coherent physical expression of an idea, event, a situation, a
character to do this spontaneously without preconception.
Improvisation is fundamental to all drama. All performance uses the body
of the actor, giving space and form to an idea, situation or text in the
moment of creation. It does not matter that the play rehearsed, speech
learned and practised. In the act of performance the actor becomes an
improviser. He hears the lines of his fellow performers as if for the first
time, each time, and respond to them, for the first time. He keeps within
the learned framework of the play; he does not make up new lines, or
alter the plays out come in a drastic way. Improvisation is a part of
natural acting, certainly. But, more importantly, acting is only one part of
the creative process of improvising.
Improvisation is physical response, including the verbal. It is immediate
and organic articulation; not just response, but an idea for the way human
reflect what happens. Where improvisation is the most effective, most
spontaneous, least shyness, it comes to a condition of integration with the
context. And simultaneously express that context in the most appropriate
shape, making it recognisable to others, realising it as act.
The hardest thing to learn is that failure does not matter. It does not have
to be brilliant every time- it cannot be. What is what happens; is what you
have created; is what you have to work with. What matter is to listen, to
watch, to add to what is happening rather than subtract from it. And to
avoid the reflex of trying to make it into something it ought to be, rather
than letting it become what it can be.
The most important moment in improvisation is when you dont know
what will happen next. Learning how to improvise may, therefore, be
rather more than just doing something on the spur of the moment. It
may even be something like a skill for living. Not just doing anything in
the moment, but learning how to make use of ourselves and as much of
the context as possible; learning how to fill the moment.
Improvisation is about order, and about adaption, and about truthfully
responding to changing circumstances and about generating meaning out
of contextual accidents. It is about failing, and about not mending failure.
It is about trying again, and about enjoying the process without straining
to get a known result. It is about creation.
OBSERVATION
Observation: to see things carefully. To become a good actor, one will have
to observe keenly. Observation is one of the most essential characteristic
features an artist must have. We see, but how often do not observe
carefully. Even when we observe carefully, we have fixed parameters of
observation because of which we go wrong. An artist must observe
himself, his immediate environment, natural surroundings, people him
meet, and various characters he comes across. When you are speaking to
someone, notice his face carefully. What do his eyes convey? What does
his voice express? See the movements of his limbs and his body language.
Observation should not be restricted to your brains and eyes but to all
parts of your body.
In this context always remember the 5 Ws-What, When, Where, Why and
Who? You will realise that your observation and memory will improve leaps
and bounds.
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to note that the things you must have seen so many times in the so
many times before, have not mentioned in your list. This time your
list will be longer. Slowly start doing this exercises by going to
others rooms or by going to friends rooms, relative rooms etc.
5. Keenly observe an object, see it shape and size, texture, height,
length, weight, colour close your eyes and try to see the object.
6. Look a painting carefully see the line, colour, balance, structure,
prospective and etc.
7. If you go to someones house, when you drink tea or water from the
cup offered to you, imagine the same container was used by
Chanakya, Chandragupta, Akber or some other great personality.
Now observe the container carefully and try to describe out of
memory.
IMAGINATION
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Here these 4 Ws succinct because they are not only a form of analysis of
what circumstances comprises, but crucially a means of providing an
imaginative springboard for actually entering the circumstances and
emerging with them.
But you must need to know where you are coming from or where you are
going to. The actor has to fill out the given circumstances with his or her
imagination; otherwise there are gaps or blanks in the life of the role.
Here is another way to understand it:Who, When, Where, Why and What are the wives and How is the husband.
Based on the above, if his imagination and his creativity can go really far
then his performance will be excellent. When the actor reaches this level
his words and actions start coming spontaneously to him. His performance
should reveal clearly how his imagination has resulted in such a
performance.
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ARISTOTLE
Aristotle (384-322 B.C), Greek Philosopher. Aristotle is the author of the
earliest extant philosophical defence of tragedy. His treatise is called Peri
poietike (On Poetry) in the Greek manuscripts, and it is often referred to in
English as the Poetics, but it is in fact devoted almost entirely to tragic
drama.
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Aristotle was born in Stagria, a village far to the north of Athens, the home
of tragedy. His father was court physician to the king of Macedon. In 367
B.C. when Aristotle was seventeen, he was sent to Athens to study with
the philosopher Plato (428-348 B.C.) in his school called the Academy. He
remained at the Academy for twenty years, until Plato died. By that time
he has begun to publish philosophical works himself. At first these works
were gracefully composed defences of his teachers philosophical system,
but gradually- perhaps at quiet an early point- he found it necessary to
introduce improvements which Plato and some of his orthodox students
could not have accepted. After Platos death, Aristotle spent some thirteen
years away from Athens, including five years in the East and last three
years in Macedon as the tutor of Alexander the Great (356-323). He
returned to Athens in 335 and set up his own school, called Lyceum after
the sanctuary of Apollo Lykeios in which it was located. He appears to
have published no more, but to have devoted himself instead to lecturing
and research. His interests ranged over the whole of philosophy as Plato
understood it, through his devotion to certain sciences, especially biology,
is peculiarly his own. In 323 B.C. Alexander died and a wave of AntiMacedonian feeling swept Athens. Aristotle said he wanted to prevent
Athens from sinning a second time against philosophy ( the first time
begin the execution of Platos teacher Socrates in 399 B.C.), He left the
city for a nearby island, but then died within a year, of a chronic digestive
trouble.
Plato argued that tragedies involves us emotionally by appealing to the
irrational, thus properly unconscious, part of our psyches- a part that play
a role in the lives of good men only when they sleep but that can make a
less good man incontinent, compulsive, criminal, or even insane in his
working hours as well as his dreams. This, Plato suggested, is why, in
order to move us, tragedies must show us stories like those of Oedipus
and Thyestes, in which appalling irrational fantasies are acted out before
the audience. Aristotle makes no direct comment on this theory in the
Poetics because his analysis of the irrational parts of the psyche was by
now quite different from Platos. In order to reconcile tragedy and
rationality, therefore, all that Aristotle had to argue in the Poetics was that
the arousal of irrational passions in the theatre helped, rather than
hindered, the achievement of balance between such natural drives. Plato
had argued that performance of tragedies increases mens susceptibility
to things like piety and fear. Aristotle insists on the contrary, that arouse
piety and fear only to flush them out. (His term katharsis could mean a
religious purification, as form pollution, or a flushing out, as in a medical
purgative. From his discussion of kathersis at Poetics, it would appear that
the latter is uppermost in his mind.) the fact that the arousal of pity and
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BHARATA MUNI
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STANISLAVASKI
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Practical Man (1883), the company decided to live their roles throughout
the day. Whether they were walking in the garden or taking a meal, they
had to stay in the character, and act according to the plays given
circumstances. It was a significant development. Stanislavski began to
feel he was really living the role rather than simply showing off. It
became one of Stanislavskis basic principle Love the in yourself, not
yourself in art. Stanislavski worked tirelessly, almost obsessively, to
improve his voice, his moment and gestures, watching himself in the
mirror- a practice later he condemned. It is dangerous to use mirror. It
teaches the actor to look at himself from the outside, rather than looking
inside. He continued to copy other actors he had seen. This was a
common practice; indeed many drama teachers actively encouraged it.
But imitation of a favourite actor can only create an external method, and
not the inner soul. He felt, acutely the absence of any system or method
to his acting. In1885, he began to study acting at a drama school, but left
after three weeks the teacher he complained, were very good at showing
students the result results they should aim for... But nothing was said
about how to do it, what method and means to use to achieve the desired
result. There was no system. The famous Russian actor, Mikhail Shchepkin
(1788-1863), had died the year Stanislavski was borne, but his influence
on theatre remained. He introduced a new, realistic style of acting. He
declared: Take your models from life not from the stage. Stanislavski
tried to read trid to read everything what Shchepkin had written. A famous
Italian actor, Ernesto Rossi, saw the ply, and asked Stanislavski to come
and see him. He said Stanislavski that: god gave you everything for the
stage, for Othello, for the whole Shakespearean repertoire. Its in your own
hand. All you need is art. It will come, of course. Stanislavski asked him,
but where can I learn that art? And from whom I learn the art? Rossi
replied, if there is no great artist near you whom you can trust, I can
recommend only one teacher, and that is you yourself. And thus The
Stanislavski System emerged from his own practice and struggles as an
actor and a director. For the actors Stanislavski had written three major
books, first one is An actors prepare, second one is Building a
character and the last but not the least is Creating a role.
Throughout his life, Stanislavski sought way to help the actor to
achieve this condition: to find the secret source of
inspiration: to become someone else.
Magic If: In working on a role, you should ask yourself; what would I do
if I was in this situation? This helps to put you in the characters shoes,
Magic If acts as a lever, lifting us from the plane of reality, into the world
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