|
This brief overview is adopted from THE HISTORY
and SCIENCE OF
ACTING
ACTING..... Imagine a
person with all the desires and fears, thoughts and actions that make a man
or a woman. Acting is becoming that imaginary person. Whether the character,
or role, that the actor creates is based on someone who really lived, a
playwright's concept, or a legendary being, that creation comes to life
through the art of acting. Acting is an ability to react, to respond to
imaginary situations and feelings. The purpose of this ancient profession
is, as Shakespeare has Hamlet say, "to hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to
Nature, to show . . . the very age and body of the Time, his form and
pressure."
It is the audience that sees itself in the
mirror of acting. Acting is a process of two-way communication between actor
and audience. The reflection may be realistic, as the audience sees its own
social behavior; the reflection may be a funny or critical exaggeration; or
the audience may see a picture of its mind--of the way it thinks--or a
fantastic projection of its fears and desires--of the way it feels.
Acting makes use of two
kinds of physical skills: movement and voice. Either may dominate. Body
movement is highly developed in Far Eastern acting traditions, while the
voice has ruled in Western cultures. If either voice or movement takes over
completely, the activity is usually not called acting but dance, perhaps, or
singing. But neither ballerinas nor operatic singers can reach the top of
their professions without being able to act.
Tradition and Technique
In one sense there is no technique of
acting; that is, when the actor is on the stage or in front of a camera,
there should be no thought of technique. The actor attempts simply to be
there. Technique in acting has to do with getting ready to act. There are
two basic requirements: developing the necessary physical, external skills
and freeing the internal emotional life, the actor's "inspiration."
The physical skills needed by actors have
been understood since ancient times. They are a well-developed body and
voice, ability to imitate other people's gestures and mannerisms, and
mastery of the physical or vocal abilities required by the type of theater
for which the actor is preparing.
Before the 20th century, the inner
emotional training of actors was not thought about in a systematic way.
Young actors developed a "feel" for the art by watching older, more
experienced performers, but the creation of emotional truth on stage was
largely thought of as a problem of imitation.
Konstantin S. Stanislavsky, a Russian
director and actor, believed that actors in realistic plays should
"incarnate" their roles, should live the parts. He decided that a technique
was needed that would guide the actor and create a "favorable condition for
the appearance of inspiration." His system does not consist of a fixed set
of rules but of practical approaches to the physical and mental preparation
of the actor and to the creation of a character. Some important aspects of
the Stanislavsky system are (a) learning to relax and to avoid distraction;
(b) developing the imagination and the ability to memorize sensory details
(tastes, smells, and so on) of past emotions in order to recreate those
emotions on stage; and (c) developing a naivete, a belief in the imagined
truth of the stage (he called this the magic or creative "if"). In the
rehearsal process the actor thinks of being the character to be played. The
most important questions become "What do I want, and why?"
Stanislavsky's system was taken to the
United States, where it was taught and then transformed by Lee Strasberg and
others into method acting, often called simply "the method." The method is
sophisticated in psychological terms but has been criticized for emphasizing
the "inner life" of the actor at the expense of total development.
An alternative to Stanislavsky-based
technique is that practiced in epic theater, developed by the German
playwright and director Bertolt Brecht (see Brecht). The Brechtian
actor does not attempt to inhabit the role but to remain outside it, to
comment on it. The difficulty of understanding this concept led Brecht to
give the example of a street scene. The actor is compared to an eyewitness
of a traffic accident demonstrating to bystanders how it took place. The
witness does not want to entertain the bystanders but simply to tell them
what happened. Only enough information is given about the "characters"--the
driver of the car, the pedestrian who was struck--for the bystanders to
understand the essential action. If the demonstrator is too skillful, if he
creates a dramatic illusion for the bystanders, then he fails. They will
applaud him instead of thinking about what happened. For Brecht, character
does not determine action, as in Stanislavsky's view. Rather the action
reveals the characters, who are viewed as being able to change and to learn.
The Polish director Jerzy Grotowski has
made the most extensive investigation of acting technique since Stanislavsky.
His theater laboratory in Opole and later in Wroclaw, Poland, was active
from 1959 through the early 1970s. He reduced the theater to bare
essentials: the actors and an audience. His aim was for the actor to make a
"total gift of himself" to the audience. Grotowski's actors underwent
intense physical discipline. Those who saw the performances were impressed
by the actors' strength, control, and concentration as they attempted to
give physical form to intense states of mind. Grotowski saw his method not
as a collection of skills but as a removal of blocks or resistances in the
actor.
Another technique that
has become important is improvisation. In the United States, Viola Spolin
has taught it through creating gamelike exercises. The actor has certain
given conditions to respond to and a goal. In performance, improvisation
becomes a collaborative art of spontaneous theatrical creation.
Theory
There have been numerous philosophical
efforts to define the nature of acting, but none of these has been able to
arrive at a satisfying theory of acting without developing some scientific
understanding of the sources of human behavior. Practical contributions to
acting theory in the 20th century have come mainly from psychology, though
speculation has also drawn on the fields of anthropological research,
linguistics, and other disciplines.
Stanislavsky borrowed from late
19th-century French psychology the concept of emotional memory, recreating
past emotions on stage by recalling the sense details that surrounded the
original experience. This became the centerpiece of method acting. In the
late 1940s, when the Actors' Studio, home of the method, was founded in New
York City, Gestalt psychology was just becoming fashionable (see
Psychology). The concepts behind many method exercises are in line with
Gestalt ideas about how emotion is experienced and remembered.
Social psychology has contributed much to
the understanding of what happens in the complex interaction between actor
and audience. The concept of "role-playing" in everyday life has broadened
the possibilities for actors in the creation of their own performing
material.
A major influence on 20th-century acting
emanates from the writings of the French actor and director Antonin Artaud.
He conceived of the actor as an "athlete of the heart," giving physical
expression to dreams, obsessions, the nonrational side of human beings.
Although Artaud produced no convincing examples of his theories, experiments
during the 1960s by Grotowski and the British director Peter Brook have
shown some of the potential value that may lie in Artaud's thought.
Kinesics, the science of communication
through body movement, has made it possible to analyze the meanings of
gestures in daily life, how the body's movements have psychological
significance. The development of kinesics may create the potential for the
very subtle art of psychological mime.
Theory
There have been numerous philosophical
efforts to define the nature of acting, but none of these has been able to
arrive at a satisfying theory of acting without developing some scientific
understanding of the sources of human behavior. Practical contributions to
acting theory in the 20th century have come mainly from psychology, though
speculation has also drawn on the fields of anthropological research,
linguistics, and other disciplines.
Stanislavsky borrowed from late
19th-century French psychology the concept of emotional memory, recreating
past emotions on stage by recalling the sense details that surrounded the
original experience. This became the centerpiece of method acting. In the
late 1940s, when the Actors' Studio, home of the method, was founded in New
York City, Gestalt psychology was just becoming fashionable (see
Psychology). The concepts behind many method exercises are in line with
Gestalt ideas about how emotion is experienced and remembered.
Social psychology has contributed much to
the understanding of what happens in the complex interaction between actor
and audience. The concept of "role-playing" in everyday life has broadened
the possibilities for actors in the creation of their own performing
material.
Style
Personal style in acting is the imprint of
the actor's art and personality on the roles that he or she creates. Style
can also be the "look" associated with the work of a particular acting
company.
A third type is historical style, which is
based on approaching a play through study of the period in which it
originated. The aim of historically stylized acting is to give the audience
an illusion of authenticity. This is a relatively recent phenomenon in the
English-speaking theater, dating only from the late 18th century.
Shakespeare's theater made no attempt at historical accuracy in acting or
staging.
The emphasis on historical style is
characteristic of a "conservatory" approach to theater in which acting is
seen mainly as a process for interpreting great dramatic literature of the
past. The danger in playing styles is that they may remain empty shells with
no believable life inside the characters.
Woman of the Year in 1974 by the United
Service Organizations (USO). She won Academy awards for 'The Sin of Madelon
Claudet' and 'Airport'.
History
Acting is an ephemeral art: once the
performance is over, there is nothing left but the memory of it. There is no
history, no documentation or record of acting itself before the end of the
19th century except for the written recollections of those who saw it.
Acting masterpieces are known only by hearsay. It is as if all of
Rembrandt's paintings had disappeared and only the recollections of one of
his admirers remained.
The origins of acting are in the act of
remembering. Acting may have begun as early as 4000 BC when Egyptian
actor-priests worshipped the memory of the dead. The first nonreligious
professional acting may possibly have developed in China. Players there kept
alive the memory of the triumph of the current emperor's ancestors over the
former dynasty. Acting has remained an art of remembering to the present
day, when actors rely on their memories of emotions and sense experiences to
perform a reenactment of those feelings on stage.
The great periods of acting are those in
which actors were valued highly by their contemporary society or by some
part of it. Greek acting developed from the reciting and singing of poetic
texts and from ritual dances honoring Dionysus, the god of wine and
fertility. The first actor, tradition says, was Thespis, who introduced to
Athens in about 560 BC impersonation--pretending to be another person. Early
actors developed acting with a mask in order to portray several characters
in one play. Through mime--stylized gestures indicating the characters'
emotions--they made the body express what the face, hidden by a mask, could
not. Even though masks may have been designed to amplify the voice, the
ability to be heard in the large outdoor theaters must have required
intensive vocal training.
The Romans derived their theater from that
of the Greeks and further developed the emphasis on voice. The Roman art of
oratory, or public speaking, much valued because of its use in politics and
law, was often compared to acting; rules for orators have continued to
influence actors. Actors in Rome were slaves, and the theater was viewed
principally as entertainment. Acting as showmanship flourished as the
virtuosity and beauty of an individual were emphasized.
Side by side with the "high," or serious,
acting tradition of the Greeks was a "low," or comical, type. Little is
known about it except that it was very physical, relied on crude jokes and
situations, and was apparently popular. Although serious professional acting
declined along with the Roman Empire and was suppressed by the church in the
Middle Ages, this "low" acting, practiced by wandering minstrels or mimes,
helped to keep the spirit of acting alive.
Modern professional acting in the West
began in Italy during the early 16th century. There troupes of actors
performed the commedia dell'arte (see Theater, "The Commedia
dell'Arte"). Actors practiced improvisation, inventing words and actions to
flesh out plot outlines called scenarios. Actors learned to work with each
other, creating an ensemble, though the emphasis remained on an individual
actor's skills and cleverness. A feature of commedia is the lazzi
(probably from le azioni, Italian for "the actions"), short sections
of comic business, stunts, and witty comments. The characters that appear in
commedia are stock social types such as young lovers, a pompous old
man, and Harlequin, the mischievous troublemaker who is often a servant.
In Elizabethan drama of the late 16th and
early 17th centuries in England, actors faced the problem of portraying not
types but individuals. The characters of Shakespeare demand an understanding
by the actor of the motives, the psychology that determines the action.
Elizabethan acting was probably not "realistic" in the modern sense. The
emphasis was still on admirable vocal delivery and choice of gestures
appropriate to the poet's words. The Elizabethan legacy of portraying people
with complex emotions was gradually enriched by a series of brilliant
English and continental actors. In the 18th century these included John
Philip Kemble, his sister Sarah Siddons, and David Garrick. In the 19th
century Edmund Kean, Ellen Terry, and Henry Irving dominated the stage in
England, and Francois Talma and Sarah Bernhardt did so in France. Their
contribution lies not so much in technique as in creating a living
tradition, an intangible heritage of accomplishment passed from one
generation to the next.
The story of 20th-century acting may be
summed up as the attempt to rediscover an "inner truth" in performance. The
form that truth takes, however, depends on different and sometimes
contradictory perceptions of essential human nature. Superior acting has
continued on the basis of strong national theatrical traditions; this is
especially true of acting in Great Britain. The popular theatrical
traditions of minstrelsy, variety, and vaudeville culminated in the United
States with a group of brilliant actors whose work blossomed in early motion
pictures, including W.C. Fields and Will Rogers. But great changes in acting
have been brought about by individuals and companies committed to a way of
approaching acting that is based on current psychological and political
ideas.
Stanislavsky provides a kind of bridge
between the old traditional acting and the new psychological approach. His
system enabled the Moscow Art Theater (which he directed) to achieve
ensemble productions, especially in the plays of Anton Chekhov, in which the
actors functioned as an organic, living unit. Brecht founded the Berliner
Ensemble in East Germany after World War II. This "epic theater" group
produced a series of brilliant productions in the 1950s, including Brecht's
'The Days of the Commune', 'The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui', and 'Coriolan',
an adaptation of Shakespeare's 'Coriolanus'.
Innovations in 20th-century American acting
resulted from revolts against what was seen as the commercialism and
spiritual emptiness of "show business." The Group Theater of the 1930s
believed in acting as a means of promoting social change. The Group Theatre
included Strasberg, Stella Adler, and others who created method acting from
Stanislavsky's system.
Viola Spolin's son, Paul Sills, co-founded
in 1956 the Compass Players in Chicago, a group that became known as Second
City. This was the first professional improvisational theater company in the
United States. In the 1960s, Sills created Story Theatre, improvisational
theater in which actors narrated and acted out folktales and legends.
During the 1950s and 1960s, there was a
continuous movement away from the big business of commercial theater, as
typified by New York City's Broadway theater district. Actors moved
"off-Broadway" and then "off-off-Broadway" along with productions to escape
the need to show a profit. At the same time, many regional theaters offered
opportunities for acting "the repertoire," the established body of great
dramatic literature. University theaters provided extensive training
programs and facilities. Dinner theaters staged small-scale productions.
The story of 20th-century acting may be
summed up as the attempt to rediscover an "inner truth" in performance. The
form that truth takes, however, depends on different and sometimes
contradictory perceptions of essential human nature. Superior acting has
continued on the basis of strong national theatrical traditions; this is
especially true of acting in Great Britain. The popular theatrical
traditions of minstrelsy, variety, and vaudeville culminated in the United
States with a group of brilliant actors whose work blossomed in early motion
pictures, including W.C. Fields and Will Rogers. But great changes in acting
have been brought about by individuals and companies committed to a way of
approaching acting that is based on current psychological and political
ideas.
Stanislavsky provides a kind of bridge
between the old traditional acting and the new psychological approach. His
system enabled the Moscow Art Theater (which he directed) to achieve
ensemble productions, especially in the plays of Anton Chekhov, in which the
actors functioned as an organic, living unit. Brecht founded the Berliner
Ensemble in East Germany after World War II. This "epic theater" group
produced a series of brilliant productions in the 1950s, including Brecht's
'The Days of the Commune', 'The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui', and 'Coriolan',
an adaptation of Shakespeare's 'Coriolanus'.
Innovations in 20th-century American acting
resulted from revolts against what was seen as the commercialism and
spiritual emptiness of "show business." The Group Theater of the 1930s
believed in acting as a means of promoting social change. The Group Theatre
included Strasberg, Stella Adler, and others who created method acting from
Stanislavsky's system.
Viola Spolin's son, Paul Sills, co-founded
in 1956 the Compass Players in Chicago, a group that became known as Second
City. This was the first professional improvisational theater company in the
United States. In the 1960s, Sills created Story Theatre, improvisational
theater in which actors narrated and acted out folktales and legends.
During the 1950s and 1960s, there was a
continuous movement away from the big business of commercial theater, as
typified by New York City's Broadway theater district. Actors moved
"off-Broadway" and then "off-off-Broadway" along with productions to escape
the need to show a profit. At the same time, many regional theaters offered
opportunities for acting "the repertoire," the established body of great
dramatic literature. University theaters provided extensive training
programs and facilities. Dinner theaters staged small-scale productions.
The story of 20th-century acting may be
summed up as the attempt to rediscover an "inner truth" in performance. The
form that truth takes, however, depends on different and sometimes
contradictory perceptions of essential human nature. Superior acting has
continued on the basis of strong national theatrical traditions; this is
especially true of acting in Great Britain. The popular theatrical
traditions of minstrelsy, variety, and vaudeville culminated in the United
States with a group of brilliant actors whose work blossomed in early motion
pictures, including W.C. Fields and Will Rogers. But great changes in acting
have been brought about by individuals and companies committed to a way of
approaching acting that is based on current psychological and political
ideas.
Stanislavsky provides a kind of bridge
between the old traditional acting and the new psychological approach. His
system enabled the Moscow Art Theater (which he directed) to achieve
ensemble productions, especially in the plays of Anton Chekhov, in which the
actors functioned as an organic, living unit. Brecht founded the Berliner
Ensemble in East Germany after World War II. This "epic theater" group
produced a series of brilliant productions in the 1950s, including Brecht's
'The Days of the Commune', 'The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui', and 'Coriolan',
an adaptation of Shakespeare's 'Coriolanus'.
Innovations in 20th-century American acting
resulted from revolts against what was seen as the commercialism and
spiritual emptiness of "show business." The Group Theater of the 1930s
believed in acting as a means of promoting social change. The Group Theatre
included Strasberg, Stella Adler, and others who created method acting from
Stanislavsky's system.
Viola Spolin's son, Paul Sills, co-founded
in 1956 the Compass Players in Chicago, a group that became known as Second
City. This was the first professional improvisational theater company in the
United States. In the 1960s, Sills created Story Theatre, improvisational
theater in which actors narrated and acted out folktales and legends.
During the 1950s and 1960s, there was a
continuous movement away from the big business of commercial theater, as
typified by New York City's Broadway theater district. Actors moved
"off-Broadway" and then "off-off-Broadway" along with productions to escape
the need to show a profit. At the same time, many regional theaters offered
opportunities for acting "the repertoire," the established body of great
dramatic literature. University theaters provided extensive training
programs and facilities. Dinner theaters staged small-scale productions.
New developments in acting have continued
to emerge from the work of individuals and small groups operating outside
the commercial theater. From 1963 until the mid-1970s, the off-off-Broadway
Open Theatre directed by Joseph Chaikin was active. This group developed
scripts collectively and set a standard for collaboration in acting. The
1980s brought a decline in the activity on Broadway, with fewer shows
produced in 1986 than in any other year. Actors increasingly turned to
regional theaters as several small Chicago and Los Angeles companies
produced innovative plays in New York theaters.
Return to Advice |