Sunday, November 25, 2012

Stanislavski


Stanislavski, Stanislavski – my first introduction to him was when Mrs. Moon mentioned him to me in ninth grade on the London Theatre Discovery Week trip. I came back from Europe with a whole book on his practice and advice to actors. I hope this presentation will grant me a better understanding of his philosophy.

Constatin Stanislavski
Born January 5th, 1863 as Konstatin Sergeyeich Alekseyev in Moscow, Russia

           Influences on Peter Brook
-       Childhood theater troupe
-       Tomasso Salvini playing Othello in 1882
-       Mikhail Shchepkin (1788-1863)
-       Ernesto Rossi; told Stanislavski that his acting needed art
-        Let him discover the ‘life’ in a role
-        Stanislavski developed the idea of a realistic set in 1898 with Hauptemann’s The Sunken Bell
Key Philosophies
-       “A system is not a hand-me-down suit that you can put on and walk off in, or a cook-book where all you need to find the page and there is your recipe. No, it is a whole way of life…”
-       Key Principles
-       Analysis
-       Perception
-       Experience
-       Objective/Purpose
-       Belief
-       Discipline
-       Realism/Naturalism
-       Definition:
-       Realism – selection and distillation of observations of daily life; capturing the essence of life
-       Naturalism – ‘exposing a slice of life’ and portraying the intricacies of the world; complete attention to detail
-       Terms are generally used synonymously, but they are different
-       Ardent supporter of detail
-       Detested ‘meaningless’ avant-garde
-       Physical Realism
-       Sometimes overrepresented details
-       Lived for character research
-       Psychological Realism
-       Acknowledge the emotional subtext of the characters
-       All action must have a purpose and meaning
-       Always be analyzing your actions
-       Who are you? (funnily enough, this is what I do every time I make a character for a roleplay or a story >w>)
-       Where do you come from?
-       What do you want?
-       Why are you doing this?
-       Where are you going?
-       What will you do when you get there?
-       Outward action (physical) & Inward action
-       The actors is Never unengaged
-       IT MUST HAVE A WHY
-       The Magic If – a way of creating new context
-        The context creates the subtext (oh, I love this >w<)
-       Believe in what is happening onstage
-       Emotion Memory
-       The most controversial part of Stanislavski’s system
-       ‘Scars on the nervous system’
-       Actors should make an effort to broaden their range of experience
-       Recreation > Imitation
-       ‘Always and forever, when you are on stage, you must play yourself. But it will be in an infinite variety of combinations of objectives, and given circumstances which you have prepared for your part, and which have been smelted in the furnace of your emotion memory’.
-       The most difficult and dangerous aspect of the System
-       Stanislavski later disavowed this aspect of his System in 1930
-       Movement, Tempo, Rhythm
-       “Wherever there is life, there is action; wherever action, movement; where movement, tempo; and where there is tempo, there is rhythm.”
-       Every character/actor has his or her own tempo/rhythm
-       Rhythms must be distinct
-       Rhythms can drive a performance
-       Stillness is a powerful instrument
-       Other Aspects of Stanislavski’s System
-       Circle of Attention – helps an actor relax and refocus himself and his character, like the ripples of a pond where the focal point of the ripples is the actor.
-       Units and Objectives – plays can be broken down into Units of Action
Manifestations of the Philosophy
-       Collaborated with…
-       Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko (Moscow Art Theater)
-       Anton Chekhov, the writer of “The Seagull” and Leo Tolstoy, writer of “What is Art?”
-        Chekhov made subtler, emotionally charged projects after he learned upon understanding the implied messages hidden in the writing. This idea was shared by both Stanislavski and Chekhov.
-        Tolstoy influenced Stanislavski, which art had to be simplified and available for all. This helped form the thinking of Stanislavski.
-       The Society of Art and Literature (1888)
-       Stanislavsky, A.F. Fedotov, F.P. Komissarzhevskii, F.L. Sologuh
-       Create a society where they portray acting in a redefining way.
-       Moscow Art Theater (1898)
-       Moscow, Russia’s most valued company
-       Many classic performances all depicting a sense of realism
-       January 17th, 1904 – written by Anton Chekhov but directed by Stanislavski,
-        Cherry Orchard
-       “A man who didn’t find acting through reality, yet reality through acting” – Austin

Oh, I loved the activity. There are just sooooo many options! I hope we can do it again soon, because I really love subtext and there were just so many unrepresented scenarios running through  my head!

Also, I forgot to ask: Stanislavski, or Stanislavsky? 

Peter Brook


I already have a base knowledge on Peter Brook thanks to his book, The Empty Space, but that is all it is: base. Basic. There’s so much more to Brook than I know now, and hopefully this presentation will help me to understand him and his teachings in a stronger way.

Peter Brook: Randomly Relatable
           Influences on Peter Brook
-       Interested in film as a child and in present day
-       Interested in Jean Paul Sarte
-       Gurdijeff
-       Gordon Craig
-       Artaud (Theater of Cruelty)
-        Push to mental, physical, and emotional limits.
-       Merce Cunningham
Key Philosophies
-       Theater should be Relatable
-       Everyone should understand
-       The power of words (different aims for different purposes)
-       Use incredible phrases like the end of a whip
-       Truest expression is ‘silence’
-       A certain degree of applause or laughter
Manifestations of the Philosophy
-       King Lear (1962)
-       Extraordinary Theater with the Royal Shakespeare Company
-       Trusted actors
-       Experimentation
-       Outlandish rehearsal techniques
-       Director as designer
-       Simplification
-       Salvador Dali
-       Salome
-       Christopher Fry
-       Ring Around the Moon

More than any of these notes, I think that the group’s adaptation of the Korean folktale into a short play was able to convey the true essence of Brook’s philosophy to me more clearly than the powerpoint and handout combined.

[will elaborate when there is time and I don't feel ill ><]