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PLAYING THE ACTION

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... actor, you will need to do more than just follow the stage directions to make a ... This is what he meant in his cry to 'Make it real!' REALITY ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PLAYING THE ACTION


1
PLAYING THE ACTION
2
WHAT IS PLAYING THE ACTION?
  • In order for an audience to understand any piece
    of Theatre in performance the action they see
    must be consistent with the words spoken.

3
WHAT IS PLAYING THE ACTION?
  • You should be able to tell your story clearly
    with
  • Posture
  • Gesture
  • Facial expression
  • Tone of voice
  • (what we call KINESIC elements)

4
WHAT IS PLAYING THE ACTION?
  • And by
  • Grouping and movement around the stage
  • (What we call PROXEMIC elements)

5
WHAT ISPLAYING THE ACTION?
  • Which is to say that an audience should be able
    to understand what is happening on stage even if
    they cannot speak a word of your language!

6
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • Each action or utterance (remember, speech is an
    action) performed by an actor must be integral to
    the whole show and have definite, controlled and
    meaningful quality.

7
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • Each action has three basic qualities
  • Weight,
  • Space and
  • Time.

8
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • Each quality has two contrasting forms
  • Weight can be either light or heavy
  • Space can be either direct or indirect
  • And Time can be either sustained or sudden.
  • These qualities can be used in speech as well as
    action.

9
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • The great choreographer, Laban, separated these
    qualities under simple headings to make the
    quality of movement more easy to understand.

10
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • Heavy-Direct-Sudden describes punching
  • Heavy-Direct-Sustained describes pushing
  • Heavy-Indirect-Sudden describes slashing
  • Heavy-Indirect-Sustained describes wringing

11
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • Light-Indirect-Sustained describes stroking
  • Light-Indirect-Sudden describes flitting
  • Light-Direct-Sudden describes dabbing
  • Light-Direct-Sustained describes smoothing

12
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • It is worthwhile becoming familiar with this idea
    because you may find a character changes their
    actions between heavy and light, sudden and
    sustained, but

13
QUALITY OF ACTION
  • Is always INDIRECT in their approach and never
    DIRECT.
  • What would this show about a character?

14
STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • One way playwrights help actors and directors to
    discover important actions to play is through
    Stage Directions.

15
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • Most scripts you receive will have instructions
    to the director, designers and actors contained
    in the form of stage directions.

16
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • What follows is a brief guide to understanding
    Stage Directions as set out in most modern texts.

17
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • At the head of a scene there are Stage Directions
    which give the time and location and describe the
    scene, noting any useful props and features of
    set which will be used in that scene.

18
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • These will be written in italics and have no
    brackets.

19
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • After that there will usually be a brief
    explanation of the opening action. Any
    characters named will be named in capital letters
    so the actors can recognise their actions more
    easily.

20
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • This will also be in italics and without brackets.

21
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • Instructions to individual actors are usually
    placed after the name of the character they play.
  • These Stage Directions are in brackets and
    written in italics .

22
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • They follow a simple set of rules to let you, the
    actor, know when to play the action.

23
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • (If the stage direction starts with a capital
    letter and ends with a full stop you should do
    the complete action BEFORE you speak.)

24
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • (If the stage direction starts with a capital
    letter but does not end with a full stop you
    should start the action BEFORE you speak but then
    CONTINUE to do it as you speak)

25
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • (if the stage direction starts with a lower case
    letter and does not end with a full stop you
    should do the action as you speak or speak in the
    way described by the Stage Direction)

26
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • If a stage direction stands alone from the text
    the playwright wants it to be given as much
    weight as any spoken line because it is meant to
    be noticed by the audience.

27
USING STAGE DIRECTIONS TO HELP PLAY THE ACTION
  • This is true even if the word is simply
  • (Pause.)

28
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • Of course, as an actor, you will need to do more
    than just follow the stage directions to make a
    moment come alive on the stage.

29
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • The whole time you are on stage your actions, or
    lack of them, will be seen by an audience and
  • TAKEN
  • AS
  • SIGNIFICANT.

30
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • The audience will be looking at everything you do
    to help them understand
  • The truth of the world you are creating on stage,

31
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • The meaning and reality of the actions you show,
  • And the honest portrayal of the people who create
    or suffer those actions.

32
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • EVERYTHING YOU DO WILL BE ASSUMED TO HAVE MEANING
  • THEREFORE
  • EVERYTHING YOU DO MUST HAVE MEANING.

33
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • So how do you choose or discover the right action
    to play to make a moment clear and understandable
    to an audience?

34
GOING BEYOND THE STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • The first questions you must ask yourself are
  • What is the truth explored in the play?
  • What reality do I need to show an audience to
    understand this truth?
  • What form of honesty will connect me to these
    truths and realities?

35
TRUTH
  • The first thing you must do is understand your
    text fully, using critical thinking and reading
    any reviews or criticism you can find to help
    answer the following questions.

36
TRUTH
  • On what truthful understanding of the world,
    politics, human motivation, etc does the play
    rest?
  • What is the ideology of the playwright?
  • Is it explicit or implicit?

37
TRUTH
  • It is obvious that Stanislavskis truth is
    different to Brechts, is different to Becketts,
    is different to Grotowskis, is different to
    Brooks.

38
TRUTH
  • Stanislavski aims to serve the audience a slice
    of life, as truthfully and believably presented
    as possible, so they can understand the
    characters as if they were real people moving in
    a real, externally verifiable, true and
    consistent world.

39
TRUTH
  • Brecht aims to show the audience a truthful piece
    of Theatre which explores the truth of the way
    power operates in society so the audience can
    gain an understanding of how they can affect
    issues of power in the real world.

40
TRUTH
  • Beckett aims to show the emptiness of meaning
    from human life the only truth is what we make
    and any attempts to find meaning are meaningless.

41
TRUTH
  • Grotowski aims to show the truth of the
    individual subjective human experience and make
    that universal.

42
TRUTH
  • Brook aims to uncover the truth hidden in the
    relationship between the text and the world which
    created that text, and then translate that
    textual relationship into a meaningful
    relationship with our world .

43
REALITY
  • Once you have located the Truth of the
    performance piece you can start to look for the
    realities presented on stage.

44
REALITY
  • For Stanislavski and the realists, everything on
    stage should be as real as possible so that the
    audience feel they are actually looking in on the
    world of the play and watching real events unfold
    with real people in front of them.

45
REALITY
  • For Brecht the audience must never forget that
    this is really a piece of theatre played by
    actors, who are not really the parts they play.
    The social world is created by people and people
    can really change it. The only things that need
    to be real on stage are things that are used to
    show truthful relationships. This is what he
    meant in his cry to Make it real!

46
REALITY
  • For Beckett Theatre provides a metaphor for
    reality which can explore the difficulties of
    finding a meaning for existence more effectively
    than logical, rational discourse can.

47
REALITY
  • For Grotowski the reality lies in the actual
    power of the emotion generated and communicated
    by the performer.

48
REALITY
  • For Brook reality is created by the demands of
    that texts need to communicate to our world.

49
HONESTY
  • Once the truth of the piece (style) and the
    realities demanded by the presentation
    (conventions) have been discovered, all that
    remains is for you to do is-

50
HONESTY
  • approach these discoveries with the attitude of
    honestly becoming a real part of the
    performance to

51
HONESTY
  • convey the truths of the piece effectively to an
    audience.

52
HONESTY
  • Each major theatre practitioner has either
    written themselves about the role and function of
    the performer or had their ideas explored and
    explained by others.

53
HONESTY
  • An informed performer will read, explore and seek
    practical guidance on the different functions of
    an actor as defined by each major practitioner.

54
HONESTY
  • Just as a musician will practice scales and learn
    to play a range of different styles of music, so
    should you, as an actor, practice not only your
    basic skills

55
HONESTY
  • Fitness
  • Flexibility
  • Coordination
  • Voice control
  • Focus
  • Determination
  • Resilience

56
HONESTY
  • But also practice your ability to read,
    recognise, acknowledge and apply the appropriate
    skills to realise honestly the truth of a piece
    of Theatre in front of an audience.

57
Thank you and good luck
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