What is the difference between
acting and role play?
Acting:
conscious connection with character
Role
play: unconscious connection with characte
In
order to transcend from simply pretending to be a character to becoming a role,
actors should focus on living and breathing that person onstage. In order to
act, one might partake in conscious exercises, but for a character to become
truly real actors should focus on: COMMITMENT to the role and the given
circumstances, SENSITIVITY to the behavior other actors/characters around them
and responding to them accordingly in an instinctive way and HONESTY in the
portrayal of character and making offers. We are aiming to release our ideas and unconsciously
become someone else.
Quotes
“Acting
is the ability to live truthfully under imaginary circumstances”
“An
ounce of behavior is worth more than a pound of words”
“Silence
is an absence of words, but never an absence of meaning”
Stage One
Face
a partner, sat or stood in an open position, allowing for energy and connection
to flow smoothly between you.
Making
observations of each other about things such as clothing, hairstyle or
behavior, repeat these observations to each other, accepting and acknowledging
everything your partner says about you. An idea is repeated until one of you
instinctively moves on to another thing they have observed.
For
example, the dialogue could resemble something like this:
A:
You’re wearing Doc Martins
B:
I’m wearing Doc Martins
A:
You’re wearing Doc Martins
B:
I’m wearing Doc Martins
This
first stage of Meisner’s exercise helps establish honesty between two actors
but is not any type of therapy. It will only work if actors live on their
instincts and think about INTELLIGENCE of response and BODY AND VOICE
FLEXIBILITY.
Nina and I were successful in this stage
because we listened and spoke in to each other with full commitment and
engagement, aiming for our own and each other’s emotional core. Whenever one of
us was speaking, the other took a breath and emotionally prepared for the next
response. Areas we could have improved on were our discipline and focus when
the repetition became more trivial. Furthermore, when more personal
observations were beginning to be explored, we found ourselves in the dangerous
territory of manipulation and began voicing opinions instead of facts.
Stage Two
This
stage is about making emotional offers and developing the ideas based on fact,
to create more opinionated and rounded ideas about character. This way, the
opinions are entirely based on fact and come from the root of what is given,
rather than being made up ideas inside the actor’s head. Actors must stay
physically open and have an emotional connection to every observation.
In
this stage the dialogue may resemble something like this:
A:
You’re wearing Doc Martins
B:
I’m wearing Doc Martins
A:
You’re wearing Doc Martins
B:
I’m wearing Doc Martins
A:
You’re wearing red Doc Martins
B:
I’m wearing red Doc Martins
A:
You like the colour red
B: I
like the colour red
A:
The colour red reflects your personality
B:
The colour red reflects my personality
A:
You’re an angry person
B:
I’m an angry person
Etc.
Stage Three
Now it
is possible to work a scene through the Meisner technique. We combined
objectives with Meisner repetition to begin to bring a scene to life. Repeating
lines to each other within a duologue until the next line feels instinctual and
natural. This way the plethora of ways in which lines can be delivered and
relationships can develop is revealed.
Molly
and I had the chance to play out one of our duologue scenes using the Meisner
technique and it helped immensely in making our relationship more natural. It
was a challenge at first to fully connect with each other when attempting to
play our objective and emotionally invest in our responses, but balancing these
out made it much easier and more effective.
Evaluation
At
the beginning of the lesson I felt that the exercise didn't achieve very much.
From my previous experience of it in year 12 I have found it quite superfluous
and I felt there were more productive exercises around. However, this morning
showed me that Meisner's concept of scene development works not only as a
rehearsal technique but also as a focusing warm up to aid actors in becoming
more instinctual.
Working
with Molly on one of our scenes was incredibly useful. In Acting Technique
class we had also worked on this scene, applying Laban forces to the dialogue.
At first it had felt very wooden and unnatural. In the few hours since that
lesson, the scene has begun to come alive and breath in a human way. Combining
an objective with the repetition of the Meisner technique opened up the
plethora of opportunities for us to create real characters in the given
circumstances. Each performance is fresh, allowing us actors to let innate,
natural energy flow between characters and all silences feel natural and real.