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    Grotowski Poor Theatre

    Theatre cannotexistwithout the actor-spectator relationship of perceptual, direct, livecommunion

    The essential concern is finding the proper spectator-actor relationship for each type

    of performance

    Actors can

    o Play among the audiences, directlycontacting the audience giving it

    a passive role in the drama

    Byrons Cain, Kalidasas Shakuntala

    o Build structures among the audiences and thus include them to a

    sense of the pressure and congestions and limitation of space

    Wyspianskis Akropolis

    o Play among the audiences and ignore them, looking through them

    Audiences may be separated from the actors

    i.e. by a high fence, over which only their heads

    protrude. From this slanted perspective, they look down on the

    actors as if watching animals in a ring or like medical students

    watching an operation

    Calderons The Constant Prince

    It canexistwithout make-up, autonomic costume & scenography, w/o a separateperformance area (stage), w/o lighting & sound effect, etc.

    One truth in theatre: Communication between audience and actor

    (Rich Theatre = Use of multimedia)

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    Grotowski

    Actors are the life of the theatre

    o Using only their body and craft

    The piece is interpreted from the actors point of view

    Portrayal of realistic life etc. but not in realistic ways (stylized to an extent)

    o Highly stylized gestures (not so much of realism)

    Makes sure that the audiences get the signs

    o Clear of the signs placed on the stage

    o Concerned with the theme but not concerned with how the actors do it

    Wants to impact the audiences

    Immediate response/physical reaction from the audiences whenthey see the play

    Hieroglyphic signs of the oriental theatre are inflexible (disagreement with Artaud)

    Wants his audience to come out feeling alive

    3 Concepts

    1. Notion: Conjunctio Oppositorum (Contradiction)

    Bringing together opposite forces in order to create a unified whole

    o To stimulate a process of self revelation

    o Going in to the self conscious

    o Moving in to move out

    o i.e. east + west

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    2. Method: Via Negativa

    Single act (not group activity)

    Influenced by Zeami a state which one doesnt want to do it but refrains from not

    doing it

    o Between impulse and action etc.

    Seeks the causes behind the negative forces so as to find better communication

    o So the actor is aware of himself

    o The forms of common natural behaviors obscures the truth

    At a moment of physic shock, a moment of terror, of mortal danger or

    tremendous joy, a man does not behave naturally

    A man in an elevated spiritual state uses rhythmically

    articulated signs, begins to dance, to sing.

    o A sign, not a common gesture is the elementary integer

    of expression for us

    (grotowskis infatuation with signs being clear on stage

    for audiences)

    3. Objective: Total Act

    Crux of actors arch

    Actors body cease to be an obstacle to direct communication with the audience

    o Does not distinguish between character and self

    Fused together => full immersion, forgetting oneself

    In order to compel the audiences, the actors must first be uncompelled

    o Need to be spontaneous but need to have self-discipline

    (spontaneity & discipline are the basic aspects of an actors work)

    o Natural inclinations from heart are not enough

    Must have both judgment/thought and self-control

    (natural instinct, self control and own thinking)

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    Artaud Theatre of Cruelty

    The cruelty it takes for actors to completely strip away their masks and show an

    audience a truth that they do not want to see.

    o Artaud hoped by showing images of mans cruelty to man, audience

    members would experience a form of delirium (A temporary state of mentalconfusion and fluctuating consciousness resulting from shock) whereby they

    would experience trances and inspiration, leading to personal change

    meant to inspire transformation and change on the micro- or individual

    level

    o To evacuate deeper mentality which hides behind gestures and signs:

    Exorcism

    Cruelty signifies

    o

    Rigor, Implacable intention and decision, Irreversible and absoluteDetermination

    The only real theatre is expression in space

    o Halfway between gesture & thought (unique language)

    To capture ideas like creation, chaos => cosmic nature

    The value of dreams => only descriptive of the outside world

    Plot: No acting of a written fact. Retain only the characters, periods etc. strip of the

    text

    o We will not act written plays but will attempt to stage productions

    straight from subjects, facts or known works.

    o The type and layout of the auditorium itself governs the show as no theme,

    however vast, is precluded to us

    Inspired by Oriental theatre, particularly the Balinese theatre.

    o The design of the sets (masks hung on walls) and the way the actors would

    use the physical resources on the stage around them left no theatrical

    possibility unturned utilizing music, props, movement and gesture to

    full capacities.

    o Artaud felt that the Western theatre needed to adopt these abilities.

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    actors on the stage are not acting at all, but are feeling true emotion, and are

    showing authentic spontaneous impulses

    o the show's success depends on the effectiveness of his acting,

    o as well as a kind of neutral, pliant factor since he is rigorously denied any

    individual initiative. Besides, this is a field where there are no exact rules.

    o And there is a wide margin dividing1a man from an instrument between an

    actor required to give nothing more than a certain number of sobs and 2one

    who has to deliver a speech, using his own powers of persuasion.

    o wanted life to be spontaneous, authentic, primitive, and wild, he lived

    these emotions out on the stage

    Irreproducibility.

    o no singular moment in life can be reproduced:

    an expression does not have the same value twiceall words,once spoken, are dead and function only at the moment they

    are uttered

    a genuine expression can never be repeated twice

    therefore, a true expression cannot be repeated twice by an actor,

    and

    cannot even be interpreted the same way between two people,

    since everyone holds an utterly distinct subjective filter within their

    subconscious

    The show will be coded from start to finish, like a language.

    o no moves will be wasted, all obeying a rhythm, every character being

    typified to the limit, each gesture, feature and costume to appear as so

    many shafts of light

    Spectacular visual image -> entertainment but it will change your life

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    7 Elements

    1. The Spectacle

    Every show will contain physical, objective elements perceptible to all

    Visual impact (emotional impact)

    o Movement, prop language

    o Body language was very important because he wanted his actors to transmit

    feelings or ideas in a metaphoric way; almost without speaking

    Cries and groans, surprises, costumes from rituals, the physical lighting not to

    illuminate but simulating the sensations to create heat & cold

    2. The Misc-en-scene

    Text does not capture MES

    Should be a part of departure

    3. The Language of the Stage

    Words spoken on the stage will then have the power they possess in dreams

    o no not intend to do away with dialogue, but to give words something of the

    significance they have in dreams

    Transcribe words into music notations/sounds or code

    o this coding and musical notation will be valuable as a means of vocal

    transcription

    can obviously take our inspiration from hieroglyphic (a figure or symbol with a

    hidden meaning) characters not only to transcribe these signs legibly so that they

    can be reproduced at will, but to compose exact symbols on stage that are

    immediately legible.

    Facial expression should be a mask

    o New language not subjugated to text

    Action will remain the center of the play, but its purpose is to reveal the presence of

    extraordinary forces in man.

    o The metteur-en-scne becomes a kind of magician, a holy man, in a sense,

    because he calls to life themes that are not purely human

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    4. Musical Instruments

    Treated as objects, part of the set

    Need to act deeply and direct on our sensibility through the senses, and

    from the point of view of sound they invite research into utterly unusual sound

    properties and vibrations which present-day musical instruments do not possess,urging us to use ancient or forgotten instruments or to invent new ones.

    Apart from music, research is also needed into instruments and appliances

    based on refining and new alloys which can reach a new scale in the octave

    and produce an unbearably piercing sound or noise.

    5. Lightings & Costumes

    Not psychologically real. Should be in a wave etc.

    o Produce light quality of music notes.

    The lighting equipment currently in use in the theatre is no longer

    adequate. The particular action of light on the mind comes into play,

    we must discover oscillating light effects, new ways of diffusing

    lighting in waves, sheet lighting like a flight of fire-arrows. Fineness,

    density and opacity factors must be reintroduced into lighting, so as to

    produce special tonal properties, sensations of heat, cold,

    anger, fear and so on.

    i.e. Sensation of heat & cold, hunger etc.

    costumes should be old

    Modern dress will be avoided as much as possible not

    because of a fetishistic superstition for the past, but because it

    is perfectly obvious certain age-old costumes of ritual

    intent, although they were once fashionable, retain a

    revealing beauty and appearance because of their

    closeness to the traditions that gave rise to them.

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    6. The Stage The Auditorium

    Direct contact will be established between the audience and the show, between

    actors and audience, from the very fact that the audience is seated in the center

    of the action, is encircled and furrowed by it. This encirclement comes from the

    shape of the house itself. Abandoning the architecture of present-day theaters, we

    will rent some kind ofbarn or hangar rebuilt along lines culminating in the

    architecture of some churches, holy places, or certain Tibetan temples. However, a

    central site will be retained which, without acting as a stage properly

    speaking, enables the body of the action to be concentrated and brought to

    a climax whenever necessary.

    Just one single side

    o Airport hanger, farm barns etc

    Audiences should be put on mobile chairs so they can move around

    Different gallery

    7. Objects Masks Accessories

    Use of large masks

    No set, set functions taken by heliographic, mannequins that are 10ft high

    o No decor. Hieroglyphic characters, costume, tan meter high effigies of King Lear's

    beard in the storm, musical instruments as tall as men, objects of unknown form and

    purpose are enough to fulfill this function

    Puppets, huge masks, objects of strange proportions appear by the same

    right as verbal imagery, stressing the physical aspect of all imagery and

    expression - with the corollary (result) that all are requiring a stereotyped

    physical representation will be discarded or disguised

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    Schechner Environmental Theatre

    Schechner

    Overlaps

    Do away with frames

    Frames of performance can change anytime during the play

    Surrounds/happens around the audiences

    6 Axioms

    1. The Theatrical Event is a Set of Related Transactions

    The relational concept of theatre (Social rituals & Flashmobs)

    Primary

    o Among Performers

    o Among members ofAudience

    Orthodox theatre has strict rules/behaviors for audiences

    ET: Line between audiences & performers not clear.

    Dynamics among audiences will keep shifting.

    o Between Performers & Audience

    Normally: audiences empathizes with characters

    Secondary

    o Between production elements

    Set, costumes, etc. Need not support the performance

    o Between production elements & spectators

    Create performance with their own elements

    Not necessarily just support the performance

    I.e. Wild Rices Animal Farm = Phillp Tan > Percussionist

    Aperformance on its own

    o Between the total production & the space(s) where it takes place

    Spectators part of the performance

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    2. All the Spaces is used for the Performance

    o Entire space is a performance area

    Street demonstrations

    Systematic change between performance and space

    Bali

    o whole village participates

    o Village becomes the performance space

    Social Rituals

    o Recap of social experiences of performers

    blurring everyday life & play

    Performers are mobile

    o Movements dont stay in one spot

    o Spectators move along with performers

    Have a variety of perspectives

    Body contact with performers

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    3. The Theatrical event can take place in Either a Totally Transformed Space or a

    Found Space

    Transformed Space

    o What one can do with a space

    o Creating an environment by transforming a space

    o Producers have more control over audience

    o No fix sitting

    o Action painting > collage > inter-media happening > environmental theatre

    o Action collage: action pictures > Canvas as an event 23 locations in NY

    o Demonstrations

    Anti-war demonstration

    At recruiting center at Times Sq

    Port Authority Bus Terminal

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    4. Focus is Flexible and Variable

    Orthodox theatre: single focus > most important/pivotal part of the stage

    Environmental Theatre

    o Multi focus

    More than one event happening at the same time

    Fighting for spectators focus/attention

    Spectator can choose what to focus on

    No single coherent statement

    No spectator can focus on everything

    Not all actions have rich meanings

    Intellectual kaleidoscope

    o Local focus

    Only a fraction of spectators can see or hear them

    Other spectators are aware of something happening but they dont get

    the gist of it

    i.e. A kind of intermission

    actor may wisper something to some/a handful of spectators

    (indication of intermission)

    5. All Production elements speak their own language

    All elements function operationally

    i.e. :Victims of Duty

    o characters can be just part of settings

    o John Cage: Musician

    o Cunningham: Chorographer

    Music can be louder than dance

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    6. The text need be neither the Starting point nor the Goal of a Production. There may

    be no verbal text at all

    Playtext is not really prominent because playtext can be changed during the play

    o It is a map with many possible routes

    Not necessarily the most important

    Those making the performance are the most important

    It need not startnorend with a playtext

    o Not that there is a playtext but it does not have to start nor end with one

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    Brecht Epic Theatre

    Action

    Alienation

    Bertolt

    Brecht

    Change

    Critique

    Wanted changes done in Marxist line

    o Propaganda plays

    Social commentary behind plays

    Brecht attempted social change with his epic theater

    o Tried to provoke audiences to change society, to overhaul society

    o Brecht's belief is that theatre can show how the suffering of those on

    stage could be avoided

    the audience is continually reminded that epic theatre gives a report of events.

    Theatre of Illusion

    o What we are watching on stage is life itself

    o Plays are like theyre in a fish tank

    o Its like peeking in a room with walls surrounding it

    Watching a slice of life

    The walls make the audiences feel safe

    o actor explores the character, trying to merge

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    Anti-Illusionist Theatre

    o Brecht rejects Theatre of Illusion/Aristotelian theatre

    the bourgeois convention of the fourth wall is rejected

    bourgeois theatre

    the fourth wall

    anything which precludes thought, excites emotion or reinforces

    capitalist values

    o Manifestation of the characters mind or thinking

    o The characters coming alive

    Actor and character existing in the same temporal play

    o inner life is of no importance

    The story is the point of interest, not the characters

    Epic vs Dramatic/Aristotelian

    o Dramatic Spectator

    Empathizes with what he/she sees

    o Epic Spectator

    Forced to see things in a new light

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    9 Elements

    1. Verfremdungseffekt: Alienation Effect

    Forcing the audiences to see things in a new light/perspective

    To discourage audience from identifying with character and so losingdetachment

    o To alienate the audiences from what they are used/accustomed to seeing

    o The status quo neednot be acceptable.

    Skeptical to change (the social custom)

    o i.e. A child whose mother remarries, seeing her as wife not just mother, or

    whose teacher is prosecuted, seeing him in relation to criminal law,

    experiences a V-effekt

    2. The Epic Narrative

    The there & then

    o Historization

    the attempt to represent the present event

    Happening at that time

    the audience must be made aware that events are not

    present events (happening now), but past events beingrepresented as narrative

    Suspense is not needed, and the whole can be loosely knit and

    episodic

    each partmaking sense on its own

    Narrative is loosely & episodic structured

    o Each scene is self contained in its own

    Topical, no continuity

    Focusing attention on a central information

    within each scene

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    3. Performance-Audience Relationship

    Critical distance between audience & play

    o Does not want the audience to suspend their beliefs during the play

    Dramatic Theatre/Aristotle (Differences with Brechts Epic Theatre)

    o Prioritizes plot above anything else

    Lures the audience into believing what they watch on the

    stage is real

    Undermines the ability to think

    4. Lightings, Stage sets & Props

    Theatre brightly lit in illuminate and brilliant white light

    Source not hidden but available to audience

    o Changed later to reduce distractions

    Bring in an artificial moon to represent the night

    o Unrealistic representations

    Simple stage sets

    A stage should only be a stage

    Props: aims at the importance of it

    o The set behind the curtain is suggestive, not realistic;

    that is to say, while very authentic props may be used, (as, say,

    Mother Courage's handcart) there will be no elaborate arrangement

    of these in a naturalistic stage set.

    The curtain is to be used for the display of titles, captions or comments.

    Placards may be placed in the auditorium, bearing instructions, such as Don't stare

    so romantically ( from Drums in the Night).

    The music, too, must have a visible source

    o musicians may even be on the stage. Interruptions for songs are announced

    or indicated by projection of a title, or flags and trumpets will descend from

    the flies.

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    5. Placards, Projections & Music

    Placards, Projections

    o Announce a scene before it takes place

    Scene is foretold

    Audiences focuses on WHY it is happening instead of

    WHAT is happening

    o suggest the proper attitude for the audience to adopt

    to it

    o critical interrogation stance

    Mother Courage scene 3

    o prefaced by a caption

    She manages to save her daughter, likewise

    her covered cart, but her honest son is killed.

    o The words in red express the playwright's view of

    how we should interpret the scene;

    Courage's saving her business at the expense of

    her son is meant to prove how contemptible our

    actions are made by war.

    Music

    o stand alone or in opposition

    o Need not enhance the event

    no longer auxiliaries to text, reinforcing it

    Songs are not used to heighten emotions at moments of climax;

    o Separation of elements

    o Comment on plot/dialogue

    they serve as commentaries, generally leading to a V-effekt

    o Not coherent with the play

    Can contradict the plot

    Both the melody and/or the lyrics

    i.e. actor is sad but music is happy

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    6. Acting: To Demostrate

    Step out of roles to address audiences directly

    Acting is not to identify the character but rather a narrate of the character

    Turned own dialogue into a 3rd person narrative

    o actor should not impersonate, but narrate actions of another person

    as if quoting facial gesture and movement

    o Brechtian actor must always be in control of his emotions.

    o Brecht sees the actor's task as greaterthan Stanislavsky's merging of

    character and actor.

    o the actor should show the audience that he has chosen one action, as

    opposed to another, he must be aware of the presence of the audience

    o Critical distance between actor character and audiences

    o Stage directions are narrated

    o Practice scenes > helps the actors to understand the play better

    o Bridge scenes > omitted in actual play but is done in rehearsals

    o Undergoes character identification then moves beyond to corporate social

    attitude/judgment in portrayal of character

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    7. Acting: Gestus (Gist + Gestures)

    Brecht's term for that which expresses basic human attitudes - not merely

    gesture but all signs of social relations: department, intonation, facial

    expression

    o expressing social attitudes in clear and stylized ways

    Motives done through the gestures of the actor, the social attitude can be seen

    Recurring action/motive to remind audiences

    o Gestures not merely an action but contains social attitudes

    Mother Courage

    the constant clipping of the purse

    scene 3

    o prefaced by a caption telling the audience what is to

    be the important event, in such a way as to suggest the

    proper attitude for the audience to adopt to it - for

    instance (Scene 3):

    o She manages to save her daughter, likewise her

    covered cart, but her honest son is killed.

    o The words in red express the playwright's view of how

    we should interpret the scene; Courage's saving her

    business at the expense of her son is meant to prove

    how contemptible our actions are made by war.

    o

    o Episodic is gestus as well

    Not all gestus are social gestus

    o Allows certain conclusions to be drawn

    o Music as a gestus

    Used to cue a particular mood

    Audiences not used to it

    Alienated

    o Propels a certain action to be done

    o Subtle use of rhythm pause, parallelism and counterpointing,

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    8. Lehrstcke

    Teaching or dialectic play

    o short, parabolic pieces

    written to instruct children, are not attractive to audiences.

    Their simplicity and didacticism makes them austere (severe) to the

    point of severity.

    o no fixed text and no fixed boundary between actor and audience

    the emphasis in performance shifts to the process rather than the

    product produced

    primary purpose, intention, or goal of these performances is for the

    actors to acquire attitudes

    o Actor = Audience for actor

    o Spect-Actor

    a member of the audience who is able to get up onto the stage to

    actively intervene in the drama presented

    9. Model Books

    Recording exemplary plays & strategies

    o Use of recording devices

    o minute details are recorded

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    Stanislavski Naturalist Theatre

    THE SYSTEM - ELEMENTS OF AN ACTION

    Stanislavski broke the constituents of naturalistic acting into the following elements:

    9 Elements

    1. The Magic "If"

    An actor inhabits a fictitious arena - the stage.

    o He can't honestly believe in the truth and reality of[not] events on stage,

    but he can believe in the possibility of those events

    By using the magic if

    e.g. "What would I do if I were in King Lear's position?"

    o This way, he transforms the character's aims into his own - it raisesproblems and he will think of efforts to overcome them, leading

    naturally to inner impulses and physical actions.

    o The magic if is a powerful stimulus to imagination, thought and correctly

    executed logical action

    o Examples of improvisation-exercises:

    Imagine you have made preparations to go on vacation. What would

    you doifsomeone at your office called to say you must postpone your

    trip? Think of the circumstances, see in your mind real persons you

    might need to negotiate with, placate (pacify) or disappoint.

    2. Given Circumstances

    Definition

    o The external environment that affects the psychological and physical

    behaviour and action of the character.

    An actor must become familiar with the environment of the play so that he

    becomes part of it. All the minutiae (details) of the event and its

    circumstances must be studied so that the nuances and color of the action will be

    just right.

    o I.e. Imagine you are putting on a clean shirt after working a fully day in the

    coal mines. Take your time to buildthe imaginary circumstances.

    o I.e. Imagine you are going to a party after work or that there has been a

    serious accident in the mine. Concretize in your mind the circumstances.

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    3. Imagination

    Definition:

    o The transformation of the elements in the play into artistic, scenic reality.

    Stanislavski says an actor's imagination must be rich, alert and active. Since a

    playwright rarely describes the past or future of his characters and even often

    omits details of their present life, an actor must flesh out his character's

    biography from beginning to end because knowing how the character grew up

    etc shapes an understanding of present motivations and gives substance

    and perspective. Otherwise the life the actor portrays will not be complete. Never

    imagine vaguely; be concrete. Think ofa logical sequence of images.

    A rich imagination also fills out the meanings behind the lines - the subtext.

    o Stanislavski says: the spectator comes to the theatre for the subtext;the text he can read at home.

    o A simple phrase like I have a headache - am I thinking this is a symptom of a

    serious illness? Or am I feigning a pretext to leave early etc.

    o An improv: look at a picture of an unknown person, try to guess his

    preferences, tastes, learn to judge from attire etc.

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    4. Concentration of attention

    Definition:

    o the key to public solitude

    Actors of the Moscow Art Theatre, when studying the Stanislavski System, wouldspend 10 or 15 minutes in complete silence in order to concentrate.

    Public Solitude - An actor must concentrate focus his attention on stage

    objects to offset distracting factors beyond the stage without forgetting his

    audience

    o The actor acknowledges the presence of the spectator as a creator of

    the performance, yet he can feel completely at ease and forget everything

    that interferes with stage creativeness.

    o To achieve this public solitude - an actor needs fully concentrated

    attention on the execution of physical actions.

    To facilitate this Stanislavski introduces circles of attention

    o an actor must limit his attention to separate parts of the stage, which

    he establishes with the help of objects on stage.

    A small circle of attention: small area that includes the actor at the

    centre and perhaps a nearby table with a few things on it.

    A medium circle of attention may include several people and

    groups of furniture - an actor should examine this gradually - not

    trying to take it in all at once.

    A large circle of attention is everything an actor can see on stage

    - the larger the circle, the more difficult it is to keep attention from

    dissipating.

    When an actor feels his attention wandering he should immediately direct to

    a simple object and concentrate on it - finally he can then redirect his attention,

    to a small circle, then to a medium one, then to a large one.

    Concentration is not confined to what an actor sees but extends also to what

    he hears and objects in his mind.

    Hence, concentration is very important because the actor often pretends hecan hear & see on stage, where the natural psycho-physical union is broken.

    An actor's eye which doesn't see takes the spectators' attention away from

    the stage.

    Improv exercises suggested by Stanislavski:

    o examine an object that is close; notice its form, lines, colour, detail.

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    o Then without looking at it, tell what you remember.

    o Gradually, cut down the [absorbing] time (allowed for absorbing the

    object.)

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    5. Truth And Belief

    Treating things and persons as if they were what we want the audience to

    believe who/what they are.

    After all, truth on stage is different from truth in real life - since everything

    on stage is an invention.

    scenic truth - making the audience believe what he wants them to believe.

    o An actor is not to believe he really is King Lear but if his fellow actor is playing

    his father, he can still treat him as his father.

    Once again, Stanislavski believes there are varieties of truth - uninteresting truth

    as well as unusual/interesting truth.

    o In executing his actions, an actor must look for the true yet unexpected

    at the same time. To find such unusual forms of truth, an actor must see,

    watch, observe, & absorb all possible impressions.

    Physical actions without the help of any objects (e.g. with air) also develop an

    actor's concentration, feelings of truth and beliefand a sense of the right

    measure.

    Stanislavski's recommended improv.s for engendering truth and belief include:

    o Drinking a liquid - first as hot tea, as cocktail, and as poison.

    o Treating a chair as a vicious dog, a throne, a seat in a spaceship. . .

    o Improv.s without objects - raise a pail full of water, raise an empty pail,

    thread a needle.

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    6. Communion

    The awareness of the mutual relationship with external presences.

    An honest, unbroken communion between fellow actors holds the spectator's

    attention and makes them part of what they see.

    Stanislavski insists that, as actors, we must be thoroughly aware of another

    actor's presence, and to make sure he hears and understands everything

    you tell him or vice versa. That entails "mutual influence".

    If an actor communicates with determination even to a bad actor, the other will

    respond. Always remember that verbal action depends on physical action - the

    gestures of the body before & after the wordsmust allproject what the

    words cannot project.

    Even in a monologue when an actor talks to himself on stage, it is possible to be in

    communion with himself. Stanislavski makes the brain and the solar plexus the two

    centres of our nerves - get them to talk to each other.

    To communicate with an imaginary orbit - an actor must use the magic if

    o e.g. ghost of Hamlet's father - imagine what he would do if he saw a ghost.

    An actor should never practice a dialogue without another person. Otherwise

    he'll be accustomed to receiving no reaction. Rather, he must continually

    respond to changes in intonation from another actor.

    Stanislavski stressed the importance of communion even in crowd scenes.

    Stanislavski would demand from each actor - not only the principals, but even actors

    in a crowd without a single line - a detailed biography of the character. This way,

    even those actors with no lines will create characters full of inner content and

    bring individual life to the stage.

    Communion therefore requires sharp use of the senses.

    o GRASP When the actors sees intensely, hears intensely and his body

    expresses those mental processes

    An improv exercise to engender communion: 2 secret agents meet in a public place;

    one has to hold an important secret document to the other. There is a detective

    watching them. Try topass over the document without getting caught. You

    must attract your partner's attention and make sure he understands your

    instructions. Then react appropriately to his behaviour while being aware of

    situational contingencies.

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    7. ADAPTATION

    Theovercoming of a physical obstacle in achieving an aim.

    First, the actor has an aim in mind, then he needs to assess the qualities of the

    person with whom he has to deal; finally he will think of an adaptation.

    An adaptation assumes the 3 questions: "How do I do it?" "What do I do?" "Why do

    I do?"

    Remember that in real life we may have determined the aim & action

    beforehand, but the adaptation will depend on the partner's behaviour and

    other obstacles encountered.

    o E.g. you want to ask a friend for some money he has borrowed but when you

    see him, other situations like his telling you a sob-story etc might make you

    change your approach.

    Adaptation is an especially effective means of communion between actors onstage - one must be well aware of that person's presence and personality, in

    order to adjust oneself to him.

    New conditions, a new atmosphere, a new place etc. all require appropriate

    adaptation.

    Moreover, contrasting & unexpected adaptations are impactful

    o when the audience expects an actor to scream at another actor but he speaks

    softly instead - the effect can be v. powerful.

    Adaptations should be logical in terms of the play's given circumstances. Too

    much preoccupation with how before the actor knows what he is doing and why will

    lead to superficial adaptations.

    Example of improv exercise: you meet a man you were trying to avoid because you

    owe him an explanation. What would you do? Use all possible adaptations to achieve

    your aim.

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    8. Tempo-Rhythm

    A condition for concreteness and truthfulness in the execution of an action.

    Tempo-rhythm refers to the speed & varying intensity of experience during

    every minute of our lives.

    o E.g. we go to work & we come home in different T-R's. We listen to a pop

    song and hear a fire siren in different T-R's. Entering exam hall and

    leaving it - also different T-R's.

    Hence every action on stage must be executed in the tempo-rhythm required

    in life.

    Correct tempo-rhythm contribute to concentration and keep actor from

    being distracted. Tempo-rhythm must correspond to given circumstances

    o e.g. an actor cannot act sluggish when energy is required - the truthfulness

    of the actor would be lost if it is played too fast or too slow, even thoughit may be logical.

    Think in terms of the struggles in a building role and the different means

    used in a struggle. Thereby the rhythmic pattern changes. Also, the wrong

    tempo-rhythm in one actor unbalances the other actors, & the audience then

    doesn't believe.

    E.g. imagine writing a letter to a person you love, and writing one to a creditor - find

    the correct tempo-rhythm for each. Alternatively, having breakfast versus running

    late for work. What's the correct tempo-rhythm?

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    9 Emotional Memory

    Transformation of the actor's own experience into that of the character.

    Stanislavski was especially interested in psychology & behavioral sciences, and was

    much influenced by the work of a French psychologist Theodule-Armand Ribot, whose

    term "affective memory" he used; though by the 1930s he replaced it with emotionalmemory.

    Stanislavski believes that an experience of an actor on stage is different from an

    experience in life, because the actor is simultaneously living both the character and

    the actor creating that character. Yet he can use experiences from his life to inform

    the character and transform into that of his character.

    Time, according to Stanislavski, plays a crucial role - it filters & purifies memories of

    emotions once experienced and in the process, poeticizes them.

    We must remember that what the actor lives on stage is a "repeated" experience,

    not a "primary" one. If actor lives a primary experience there will be real murders onstage. Instead, the actor stirs a needed emotion within himself by recalling an

    analogous emotion from his own life.

    Stanislavski believes that emotional memory retains the imprint of an experience &

    also synthesizes feelings of a different nature. For example, the feeling of envy - if

    one has felt envious about a classmate getting a better grade, then one can use this

    emotion for a character who envies his colleague getting a promotion.

    The actor needs to bring out the imprint of the past experience & make it respond to

    the stimulus on stage at that moment.

    Through rehearsals - the actor develops an instinct & conditioned reflex in which hisemotion is stirred through the stage stimulus

    Because it is a repeated rather than primary experience, it doesn't absorb the actor

    entirely. Nevertheless the emotion is sincere. Hence, while the actor fully conveys his

    character's emotions, he also never forgets he is merely an actor performing.

    There are 2 scenes Stanislavski asks the actor to draw from - his inner life & his

    observation of the outside world. We must read, go to the museum, watch people,

    etc.

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    The System:

    Method Of Physical Actions

    -The Method of Physical Actions formed the later part of Stanislavsky's work.

    -Focusing on physical action which stirs the psychological side of the psycho-physical

    act.

    -From the conscious to the sub-conscious.

    - Stanislavski was interested in the work of neurophysiologists Ivan Pavlov and I.M.

    Sechenov. From them, Stanislavski believed that internal experiences and their physical

    expression are entwined. Hence, he says - the elements of the human soul and the particles

    of a human body are indivisible. In short, our rich psychological life - moods, feelings,

    intentions, desires etc. are all expressed through physical actions. Science has confirmed

    this - neural pathways connect our physical actions with inner emotions.

    - Whether it's a shrug of the shoulder or twitch of our lips, our bodies express what we

    are thinking/feeling

    - But if an actor breaks the psycho-physical union by executing on physical movements,

    then his performance is mechanized and untrue.

    - Because the stage is a different arena from real life, there is often a break between the

    intellectual and physical preparation in the actor's work on the character.

    - So it is mandatory to include the body in the psychological process from the beginning.

    - However, Stanislavski found out that emotions are credible only when there's a real

    reason and since there's nothing real on stage, he faced great difficulty in stirring the actor's

    emotions.

    - But bearing in mind the mutual influence of psychological and physical behaviour - he

    then decided to start the actor's creativity on stage from the physical side - in other words,

    from the conscious to the subconscious. This became his system of Method of Physical

    Actions.

    - Instead of forcing an emotion before going on stage, the actor fulfils a simple, concrete,

    purposeful physical action - which stirs the psychological side of the psychophysical act,

    thus involving the combination of both.

    - Here is where Stanislavski differentiates between PHYSICAL MOVEMENT and PHYSICALACTION. The actor does not go on stage to enact just any physical movement - which is a

    purely mechanical act. Rather, he uses physical action, which has a purpose, a psychology.

    The action must be carefully selected on the basis of the play's circumstances. It must be

    connected with the emotion which the actor must bring out. The building of a character's

    logic of physical actions is simultaneously the building of the character's logic and

    consecutiveness of emotion.

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    - How the actor finds the correct physical action involves a great deal of experimentation

    through improvisation - hence the improv exercises recommended for each other elements

    earlier.

    - Through a great deal of preparatory work, the actor must achieve spontaneity- so that

    during the performance, none of the prep work is evident and he behaves as in real life.

    - Stanislavski superseded a system of "expressive movement" formulated by Francois

    Delsarte (1811-1871) who had prescribed gestures for each emotion. But Stanislavski found

    no truth in such actions since a human gesture depended on numerous factors - the

    environment, circumstances of situation, interlocutor, etc. not so simple and reductive as

    Delsarte suggested.

    - Stanislavski had some improv exercises for developing the system: - he says always

    begin by concentrating & building in your imagination the circumstances in which the action

    takes place. WHY you do it; WHERE & WHEN it takes place, etc. Think of all possible details

    in each situation. Picture people you know in real life. After you have built the situation, find

    physical action that will express what you want to project. Search for that unique physical

    action connected to the emotion you want to stir. The action will then trigger the emotion

    which enables you to behave in a psycho-physical way.

    - E.g. Justify everything you do, whether sitting, standing or walking. Compare sitting in

    order to rest with sitting while waiting for news at a hospital or sitting at the window to spy

    on what's happening on the house opposite. Likewise, walk to pass the time or walk to

    annoy the people in the apartment below.