Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1971316734> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 78 of
78
with 100 items per page.
- W1971316734 endingPage "195" @default.
- W1971316734 startingPage "181" @default.
- W1971316734 abstract "The Four Fundamental Verbs: An Approach to Playing Actions Paul Kassel (bio) When I began teaching acting, I emphasized the playing of actions, as did all my teachers. I helped students generate objectives using active and outer-directed verbs—that is, verbs that did something to someone. Such is the standard practice within the Stanislavsky-based actor training system found in most theatre departments. However, most programs have an eclectic production calendar that leaps from musical comedy to Shakespeare to non-Western forms of theatre. Many of these are forms that Stanislavsky-based training does not appear to serve. Acknowledging the problem, many of us in liberal arts programs squeeze nontraditional training techniques into an already crowded syllabus, offer special courses, or simply hope that the cast of a given production will master the specific requirements of a piece in rehearsal. Given these limitations, is there a way to train actors for the demands of the wide variety of theatrical forms normally included within the curricula and production seasons of theatre departments? I believe that we can discern what might be fundamental to these many forms of acting and adapt these fundamentals into a pedagogy that serves most productions. Such an action-based pedagogy, grounded in these fundamentals, can effectively serve a wide range of forms. At its most basic, acting is the application of physical or psychological energy to a task. Since this energy cannot be measured until something has been done, it is easy for students to doubt its existence. Yet when we speak of “sparks flying” in a confrontation, the “electricity” of a moment, or the “chemistry” between individuals, we are, in fact, referring to this energy. In such interactions, we may sense the jolt without actually seeing the current. This current of energy provides a common denominator to all forms of theatre—what Eugenio Barba has called “pre-expressivity” (186–204). Though I prefer to use the concept of “ki” in teaching, the terms “dynamisphere” and “personal space” are similar expressions that convey the same idea. 1 Acting, then, is doing. In modern realistic theatre, the doing/action is psychologically motivated by the character, but, even in nonrealistic dramatic forms, the actor must do something. The question is: do what? All performed [End Page 181] actions can be viewed as transitive verbs invoking something done toward a direct object. This premise precludes such actions as thinking or reflecting because no one can directly perceive performers’ thoughts, only their behavior. In other words, actors must be able to play verbs. Most theatre practitioners are familiar with this notion but, because modern realistic theatre so dominates their training, they tend automatically to link the playing of actions to the playing of a character’s actions. When faced with an experimental or non-Western script that shows little linear development, recognizable characters, or psychological motivation, what is an actor to do? Actors who simply do what the director tells them face the same problem as those who are the most independent-minded: how to jump from one style of playing to another, one form of theatre to another, one medium to another, without feeling completely disempowered, frustrated, and ineffective. If action-based training is an answer, the question remains: what should the nature of those actions be? Is there an approach to playing actions that is not tied to subjectivity (character) or cause and effect, which the actor may then apply to almost any style, genre, or form of theatre? As I sought a clearer, simpler way to teach the playing of actions, I noticed certain patterns in my own students’ practices. On one hand, when students tried to play vague verbs such as “to threaten” or “to seduce,” they tended toward generalized, stereotypical behavior. On the other hand, when they played more physical, visceral verbs, such as “to gouge” or “to disembowel,” they struggled, once they had found the actions in their bodies, to achieve a believable middle ground in representing it. I realized that I needed a way to start their training with simple, physical verbs that were grounded in the body and were neither too vague nor too fantastic. I needed verbs that were simple enough..." @default.
- W1971316734 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1971316734 creator A5003916403 @default.
- W1971316734 date "1999-01-01" @default.
- W1971316734 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W1971316734 title "The Four Fundamental Verbs: An Approach to Playing Actions" @default.
- W1971316734 cites W1537414168 @default.
- W1971316734 cites W1875479236 @default.
- W1971316734 cites W2024774269 @default.
- W1971316734 cites W2059864726 @default.
- W1971316734 cites W2270192830 @default.
- W1971316734 cites W3144601744 @default.
- W1971316734 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/tt.1999.0013" @default.
- W1971316734 hasPublicationYear "1999" @default.
- W1971316734 type Work @default.
- W1971316734 sameAs 1971316734 @default.
- W1971316734 citedByCount "2" @default.
- W1971316734 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1971316734 hasAuthorship W1971316734A5003916403 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C105795698 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C136197465 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C153349607 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C154945302 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C186370098 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C19417346 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C199360897 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C24253811 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C2780791683 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C2781454322 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C33923547 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C523419034 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConcept C62520636 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C105795698 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C107038049 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C121332964 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C136197465 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C142362112 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C144024400 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C153349607 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C154945302 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C15744967 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C186370098 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C19417346 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C199360897 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C24253811 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C2780791683 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C2781454322 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C33923547 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C41008148 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C523419034 @default.
- W1971316734 hasConceptScore W1971316734C62520636 @default.
- W1971316734 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W1971316734 hasLocation W19713167341 @default.
- W1971316734 hasOpenAccess W1971316734 @default.
- W1971316734 hasPrimaryLocation W19713167341 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2150683035 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2361320601 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2363922353 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2379058500 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2389731083 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W4205636629 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W4311564405 @default.
- W1971316734 hasRelatedWork W593745709 @default.
- W1971316734 hasVolume "9" @default.
- W1971316734 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1971316734 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1971316734 magId "1971316734" @default.
- W1971316734 workType "article" @default.