Uta Hagen
Transcription
Uta Hagen
UTA HAGEN RESPECT FOR ACTING An Acting Methodology UTA HAGEN Page, Jason Robards, and Matthew Broderick are among the countless others who reached prominence. (1919 - 2004) As Jack Lemmon wrote, "This extraordinary woman is one of the greatest Because Uta Hagen has had a long, distinguished career on the stage, and actresses I have seen in my lifetime, yet Uta Hagen has deliberately made her because for decades Uta Hagen has been one of the most important acting acting career secondary to teaching and directing others so that they might teachers in America, and because she has written with wit and clarity about the benefit. Lord knows what exalted position she might have attained had she technical craft of acting, Uta Hagen has had a profound influence on the way chosen to concentrate on her own acting career, but I guarantee that she has acting is practiced, taught, and thought about in this country. Uta Hagen made absolutely no regrets. Nor should she, because Uta Hagen has given so much her professional debut in 1937 at the age of eighteen as Ophelia in an Eva Le to so many." Galliene Hamlet in Dennis, Massachusetts. In 1938 Uta Hagen made her Broadway debut as Nina in the Lunts production of The Sea Gull. Uta Hagen played in twenty-two Broadway productions, including the legendary Othello with Paul Robeson and Jose Ferrer. In 1948 Uta Hagen re-invented Blanche DuBois for the national tour of A Streetcar Named Desire with Anthony Quinn, and then succeeded Jessica Tandy's radically different Blanche for the Broadway run the next year. In 1950 Uta Hagen won her first Tony award, the Drama Critics Award, and the Donaldson Award for her creation of Georgie Elgin in Clifford Odets The Country Girl. She starred in such classics as Shaw's St. Joan and Turgenev's A Month in the Country, and in 1962 Uta Hagen created Martha in Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, winning her second Tony and second Drama Critics Award, as well as the London Critics Award. Uta Hagen has also appeared in many TV specials and several films. Since 1947 Uta Hagen has taught acting at the Herbert Berghof Studio. Together with her late husband, she trained generations of actors: Geraldine Uta Hagen's books, Respect for Acting (1973) and A Challenge for the Actor (1991) grew out of decades of collaboration and exploration of the actor's craft. In addition to honorary doctorates from Smith College, DePaul University and Wooster College, in 1981 Uta Hagen was inducted into the Theatre Hall of Fame, in 1983 into the Wisconsin Theatre Hall of Fame, and in July 1986, Uta Hagen received the Mayor's Liberty Medal in New York City. In 1987 Uta Hagen was given the John Houseman Award and the Campostella Award for distinguished service. When her husband, Herbert Berghof, died many years ago, Uta Hagen took over the chairmanship of HB Studio and the theatre of the HB Playwrights Foundation. Uta Hagen honored his memory by continuing to shape their school as a source of inspired teaching and practice for theatre artists. Uta Hagen has brought beauty, drama and dreams to the world, leaving her extraordinary legacy every step of the way. She passed away in 2004. SUBSTITUTION a ) Substitution he expression"to lose yourself" in the part or in the oerformance.which has so often been used by great artists in the theater, has always confused me. I find it much more stimulating to say that I want "to find myself" in the part. To oversimplify, these artists obviously meant that one should reiect the desire to show off, that one should not wallow in one'sown ego' that one should not trade on personal tricks. Instead, one should become involved with the performance without concern for its outer form, pyrotechnicsor personalsale. Once we are on the track of self-discoveryin terms of an enlargement of our senseof identiry and we now try to apply this knowledge to an identification with the character in the play, we must make this transference,this finding of the characterwithin ourselves'through a continuing and overlapping seriesof substitutions from our own experiencesand remembrances,through the use of imaginative J4 extension of realities, and put them in the place of the fiction in the play. r0febsterdefinessubstitution as "the act of putting a person or thing in place of another serving the samepurposei to take the place of." A young actressworking on the part of Manuela in Children in Uniform was having difficulty with the moment when Frailein von Bernberg,the teacher sheloves and admires,confronts her with her torn chemise and says,"This will never do!" Manuela must react with deep shame and humiliation. The actresscould not make this moment meaningful. Neither the garment nor the actressplaying the teacherseemedto matter enough to her. AccidentallSI suppliedher with a stimulatingsubstitution for both teacher and chemise. I said, "!7hat if Lynn Fontannehad a pair of your soiledpantiesin her hand and showed them to you?" The actress turned beet red, snatchedthe chemisefrom her Fraiilein von Bernberg and hid it frantically behind her back. Many of you are familiar with substitution as it applies technically to an individual moment in a play when the given material fails to stimulate you sufficiently, and you must searchfor something which will trigger an emotional experience(as in the Manuela incident)and sendyou into the immediateaction of the play. I use the word substitution in a much broadersense.In fact, I could evenprove that substitution can be used in every moment of the actor's homework and throughout the rehearsalperiod for everystageof the work. Consequently, it can have its effect on euery moment of the actor'slife on stage.I usesubstitutionin order to "make believe" in its literal sense-to make me believe the time, the place, what surrounds me, the conditioning forces, my new character and my relationship to the other characters,in order to sendme into the moment-to-moment spontaneousaction of my newly selectedself on stage. In putting himself into the circumstancesof the play, a 36 I I I I A rl I' t L t, I THE AC]'OR talented amateur (as well as a genius actor) often makes substitutionsintuitively.If you ask me if it is necessaryto make a substitution for something that is already real to you, my answeris NO. If it is real, you havealreadymade the substitution.You tell me you believedit was raining when you looked from your stagewindow into the wings. Obviously,you took a specificrain (there are numerous types of rain: drizzle,, splashS gentle, torrential, pelting, etc.)that you haveexperiencedin your life and put it into the play at this moment. An actresstold me that BlancheDuBois' young husband was very real to her when shedescribedhis deathin Streetcar, and challengedthe necessityof making a substitutionfor him. It was apparentthat she had instinctivelymade one, otherwisehe would havestayeda fiction on the page for her. At eighteen,when I played Nina in The Sea Gull with the Lunts, many elementsof the part existed for me in life. Nina is a young, unsophisticated,middle-classgirl from the country who is thrown in with a famous actress of whom she is in awe and a famous man (a writer in the play) whom she hero-worships.That a;asmy relationship to the Lunts, so I was able to usethem head-on. ln Who's Afraid of Virginia Woofi Martha is the daughter of a professor whom she adores; she lives in a collegetown; and as the play opens, she and her husband are returning from a faculty party.l am the daughter of a famous professor whom I adored; I was raised in a university town; I did attend many faculty parties. Consequently,those things were real to me and directly usable for that particular aspectof my work on the part. However, these moments where an actor's life and the playwright's createdlife mesh are rare, and so the processof substitution must be tl-roroughlyunderstood,developed, and practiceduntil it becomesan ingrainedwork habit. Everystageof the searchfor the part needsendlesssub- SUBSTITUTION 17 stitutions from life experience(this includes reading, trips to museums,art galleries,etc.). Even bad frlmscan be of serviceif the locale has authenticityfor you to the point where you can believeyou were there. No director can help you with your substitutionssincehe has not been a part of your life experience.He will help you with the character elements he is after, dictate the place, the surroundings,the given circumstances,and defineyour relationship to the other characters in the play, but how you make thesethings real to yourself, how you make them exist is totally private work. Let me illustrate some of the substitution areas and approximatelyhow you must deal with them (eventhough I will be dealing with similar problems throughout this book). SupposeI am going to work on the parr of Blanche DuBois in A StreetcarNamed Desire.I haveto hunt for an understandingof-and an identification with-the character's main needs:a need for perfection (and always when and hotu have I neededthesethings);a romantic need for beauty; a desire for gentleness,tenderness,delicacy, elegance,decorum; a need to be loved and protected;a strong sensualneedla needfor delusionwhen things go wrong, erc. If I return to my clich6 image of myself-the earthy, frank, gutsy child of n21u1s-l'rn in trouble and there will be an enormousdistancebetweenBlancheand myself. If, on the other hand, I remember myself preparing for an eveningat the opera(bathingand oiling and perfumingmy bod5 soothingmy skin, brushing my hair until it shines, artfully applyingmakeup until the little creasesare hidden and my eyeslook larger and I feel younger,spendinghours over a silky elegantwardrobe, and a day over the meal I will serve before the opera, setting out my freshest linen, my best crystal and polished silver among dainty flowers); if I recallhow I weepover a lovelypoem by Rilke or Donne or Browning, how my flesh tingles when I hear Schubert 78 THE ACTOR how chamber music, how tender I feel at a soft twilight' a someonepulling out a chair for me at the table il.to.ta c"r doo.ior mi or offeringme their arm for.a ;.;;**g " find within -"i[ i" ihe park-then I am beginning to -ys"l{ ,"alitie. connectedwith BlancheDuBois' needs' Belle I was not raised on an elegant plantation like Reve,nor have I lived in Laurel, Mississippi, butlhavevis' mansionsin the East,I haveseenmany photoiJ .t"gu", "of some graphs Faulkner country and estates'I have toured if the So"th, and from a conglomerateof theseexperiences a reallty I can now makemy BelleReve and start to bulld for my life there beforethe play'sbeginning'^ or the Unfortunately,I haveneverbeenin New Orleans many French Quarter, but I have rcad a great deal' seen I have evenrelated the French Quarter filrrr, "nin.*rreels. the Left of New Orleans, rn a way' to a little secdon of myself' s""fr" Paris where I once lived to make it real to for me The Kowalski apartment itself, which is dictated the designerand the director' must' nevby the playwright' 'be ,iade real to me by substitutions from my .nt a.rt, space' own life. It is I who must make the senseot cramp€d the empty the lack of privacn the disorder and sleaziness' rr"i. cigarette butts, the harsh street noises beer cans "nd Each -ou. in on me chaotically and frighteningly' De must "it object or thing that I seeor come in contact wlth and bring ."d" purti.o[t so that it will servethe new me necessary about th. psychological and sensoryexperiences to -- animatemY actlons. io A"a, reality for the fatigue, the heat, the oppression' my telaI will have to examine my own life and senses'In to Stella, Stanley,Mitch, their friends and neighif""tf+ parents and bors (as well as to my young husband,-my I talk *f",rt.r, and th" tt"ueling '"1t"'lu", all of whom haveto.do about but who do not appearin the play),I will full reality a backbreakingiob if I am to bring them to a SUBSTTTUTION 19 for myself through substitutions and combinations of substitutions. I never had a sister,nor did I have a relationship with another girl which was psychologically identical to Blanche'swith Stella.I may put together my relationship to a girl who "felt" like a younger sister (of whom I expected respectand attention, whom I enioyed bossingand giving advice to, and whom I loved) with a relationship to a friend upon whom I felt dependentfor love and comfort. I may evenusea dozen elementsfrom a dozendifferent relationships from my past and put them together to build this new relationship with my stageStella,endowing her at different moments in the play with these borrowed qualities. I must follow an identical procedure with eachof the other charactersin the play. Let me emphasizethat this process is in flux from the beginning of my homework until the rehearsalshave ended. The example of Blanche was given to show you a variety of areas in which you must hunt for substitutions and to give further reasonsfor the necessityof your understanding this hunt. But there are many more aspectsof the work not yet touched upon, which when put together should result in the action for the character,what the character will do. To do is a synonym lor to act. At this point, we are nowhere near the acting; I am still in the processof building a senseof reality and faith in my character. '$fhen an actor has difficulty in finding a substitution for the content of a given sceneas a whole, he can usually find the root of the problem in the fact that he's being too literal. Many actors take the outer event and the outer words at face value. For example,the charactersays,"I hate you" under circumstanceswhere he is actually crying out for attention from someonehe loves. But the actor works only for the hate. Faced with Othello's final scene with Desdemona, an AO I I I I l, rl rl ll ll I 'I THE ACTOR actor may protest' "But how can I find a substitution when I've neverhad the desireto murder anyone?"Or the Desdemona may complain,"I know I should be terrified,but no one has ever threatenedto kill me!" In both instancesmy answer would be, "I hope not!" But, if at this late stagein the eventsof the play the actors have not acquiredsufficient nourishment to zupply a reality for their immediate state of being and consequentneeds,they must searchfor. the psychologicalspringboardwhich will sendthem into the immediate ivents. They must hunt out the psychologicalobiective of the scene,and for that they can find the substitution' If I am Desdemonain this scene,I shouldseethat I want to cope with a foreboding of an unspecifieddisaster'I want to riJ myself of a senseof mounting terror. As illogical as it may sound, I can use an experienceof waiting in a hospital room prior to surgery,even a dentist's office prior to a tooth extraction. The fears that rush in on me are larger and lessstatic than some fictional, preconceivedfear for a Desdemona. If you misunderstand me and again think too- literally that during the performance' while lying in a bedroom in Cyprus, you should be imagining yourself in a -dentist's oifi.. yon have skipped the inevitable step of taking thrs substituted psychological reality and transferring it to the existing circumstancesand events in the play: transferring the essf,nceof the experience(not the original event) to the scene. Othello. in turn, should look for the psychologicalneed for retribution, for having to fulfill a great obligation which tortures him and gives him pain' The actor rs stopped over and over again by his senseof hunting for a simiiarity of events in the play and in his own life, rather than a similarity of psychologicalexperiences(for example, the need to punish a child) which then should allow him to acceptthe eventswith faith. suBsTrTUTtoN 4r Relativelyeasierto understandand apply are thosesubstitutions usedto find a given moment or task in the events which seem insufficiently real (the previously mentioned scene between Manuela and Fraiilein von Bernberg). Another kind of example occurred when I was working on the monologue of Mistress Page in The Merry Wiues of \Yindsor.Shehas just receiveda love letter and gradually realizesit is from Sir John Falstaff, which outragesher. As I was isolaringthe monologuefrom the plry for an exercise,I had no acror to endow with the necessaryrealities of my Falstaff. The clich6 image of Falstaff with his widebrimmed hat, puffy red cheeks,mustachesturning upward, pointed beard and bushy eyebrows, and high ruff around his fat neck didn't help me at all. Then I thought, ..rVhatif I read this letter and discoveredSidney Greenstreetor Jackie Gleasonhad written it to me?" Suddenlxthe contents of the words in the letter moved in or, rne ,t.ongly and made me laugh, outragedme, amazedme, etc. I had worked with Sidneyand knew him personallyand adored him. but even if I hadn't, my knowledge oi his work ir. films might have stimulated me similarly, far more than the conventional image of a Falstaff. In The Country Girl, thereis a point where BernieDodd ca.llsGeorgieElgin a "bitch." This should act on me as deeplywounding, insulting,and producea shockedgasp. But the word itself does not mean much to me. I substituted anotherword. Sfhat if he called me a ,.. . . . ,'? That word does shock and wound me. I imaginedthat Bernie hurled that word at me, and it drove me up from my chair. ln the same play, there *", -o.an, when my husband, Frank Elgin, betrayed me" with a lie and I had ro swallow it. My next given action was to take him to the sink in his dressingroom and get him a glassof water. I was able to receivethe betrayal correctly, but somehowit didn,t seem to make the consequentdealing with him specilic 4L I t a I THE ACTOR enough. But what if I thought of myself as a Put-upon moth-erwith a naughty child? How would I then deal with my own daughter?The moment I applied this substitution to my Frank, I discovered the hou of taking his handJthe hou of alrnostpulling him along with me,the how of giving him the glassof waterl theseactions becamespecific,in fait, loaded. And I must give special emphasisto the fact that Frank was, at this moment' like a child to me, and something brand new happenedbetweenme and the actor' I no longer needed to use my daughter. I had used het to find this reality on stage. In eachexample I have made I have also spelledout the action which risulted from the substitution: Manuela erabbedthe chemiseand hid it; SidneyGreenstreetmade me ihro* attd kick Falstaff's letter; my substitution for Bernie Dodd's word made me leap from my chair; my daughter made me pull my husbandto the sink. Ihave completedmy substitutions by making them synonymous with the actor on stage,the object, the word' the event of my stagelife and forrnJ" conrequent character action. I have used the past to make the present real' I am not playing in the past, but now.lhave looked for substitutions to believethe now, to feel the nowr and done both, in order to 6nd a spontaneous action for now. I will probably repeat this a hundred times becauseit is so often misunderstood,but your substitudons are complete only when they have become synonymous with this actor, this play's events,these obiects you are using in your stage life and produce a significant action. You may evenforget your original souce-fine! I'm certain you have seen an actor on stage with real tears streaming down his face. If your only responsewas, "Oh. look. real water!" this actor was going to his original subsiitution,was doing his homework on stageand was failing to connect it to his stagelife. Consequentlyhis tears could not move an audienceor allow them to have genuine empathy for the character they were observing' To work SUBSTITUTION 43 for an involvement for its own sake on stage bogs down the movement of the plaS disconnectsyou from the play, makes you blind and deaf to the play. Beware. There is still another kind of substitution which I find rmportant in my own work. It is even lessliteral than those I have already describedand lessparallel to rhe character. It is evenmore personal and private but may be suggestible and stimulating ro the acor in addition to his direct life experience.I refer to such intangiblesas colors, textures, music, elements of nature. I must admit that I do not know how to teach this, and I assiduouslyavoid teaching this. I can only make you aware that these,.essences" can be valuable sources and warn you to keep them to yourself, as I do myself. If a new characer has, ro me, elementsof light blue, a field of clover, a Scarlatti sonata, a toy poodle, a shiny blue pond, a pieceof cut crystal-these essences may be of value to my senseof self, my particularizations for my character. But if thesehighly personal conceprs are brought our into the open by the director or by me, they always become a hindrance to me. (I have heard a well-known director complain to an actor, "I asked for October tones; you,re playing in November tones." What is the actor supposedto do with that? If the director tells me, ',I want this character to be like Scarlatti, like a poodle, like a field of clover,,' I feel swamped by a generality. I question what his statement means to him, and I head straight for general, quality playing, rather than specific character action. I start illustrating a prancing poodle with sharp little Scarlatti-like tones, and I look to the director for approval: ,.Is it tinkly enough?Frenchenough?Can you smell the clover?" The essencestops functioning for me altogether. Even the playwright can do a similar thing to you, TennesseeWilliams says of Blanche DuBois that there is somethingabout her "that suggestsa moth.', This image of his blocked me so that I saw myself with flurtering arms on 44 ! t D I I h I l. I il l t I h I .1. t ) THE A( I tippy-toes banging into a light bulb larger than myself' had a hard time overcomingit. There is much in a creativeprocessthat is almost intan' gibly real and mysterious-why compound the felony and make it more so? Pleaserememberthat in any exampleI have given you for substitutions,I was only making my own examples' of Vor, -ort find your own substitutions if they are to be real value to you. If an exampleI have made has stirred you, it was an accident,or you simply took mine as a sugfound your own-possibly-a.similar one' Find g.rtio., "nd i,rcu, o*, substitutions-a warehousefull of them' And let me warn you of the great trap of sharing your substitutions with anyone' Don't fall victim to the temptaor tion of revealing your little goodies to your director here?" using I'm your fellow acto"rs("Do you know what they etc.). The minute others are in on your source-and. it what in knowing wili probably be extremely interested is-t'hey become an audienceto your source a^nd.evaluate i,, .o.,r"qo.n, action accordingly, rather than.6nding their cat own relaiionship to the action' You have truly let the you' for gone be out of the bag. Your substitution will unusablefrom then on. Substitutionis zot an end in itself,not an end to involve you for self-involvement'ssakewithout consequentactlon' L", -. ,,"," strongly, in case any of you have misunderstood, that substituiion is the aspect of the work which each ,r.*gth"n, your faith and your senseof reality,in .,"n.if ,h. iotal work on character'lt is a way of bringing about justified,personalcharacteractions' lr I I Particularizingor to makesomethingparticular,as opposed to generalizingor to keepgeneral,is an essentialfor everyright iftiig in acti; from idintification of the character down to the tiniest physical obiect you come ln contact SUBSTTTUTTON 45 with. I use the term particularizatioz so often that it deservesa little time and space. I can make an object, a person, a circumstantialfact, etc., particular by examining what is therc and breaking it down into detail.As a simpleexample,let me take an ashtray. On occasion, the ashtray given me by the prop man will be, under examination, exactly the sort of ashtray called for in the play. Instead of simply saying, "It's an ashtray sitting on the table in this Greenwich Village garret," I will seethat it ,s tin sprayedto look like copper,probably came from the dime store, has rwo grooves to hold cigarettes, is shiny with a few cigarette stains in the bottom, is lightweight, and I can deal with it correctly under the given circumstances.I have made what is there particular rather than just assumingany ashtray. Now, this same ashtray sits on an elegantmarble table in a Park Avenuepenthouse.It is supposedto belong there, and from the audiencemay even pass for elegant.I will make it particular by endowing it with qualities it does not possessby substitutingfrom my previous knowledge of elegant ashtrays.Now, I turn it into real copper, assumeit comes from Tiffany, and is heavier than it looks, and would look even better if it were buffed up with polish. I can make it even more particular, if necessary,by finding psychologicalendowmentsor substitutions:My husband gave it to me last week for a sentimentaloccasion.I had wanted it for a long time, and now it sits proudly on my coffee table. Obviously, the simple act of flipping an ash into this ashtray will be influenced by the way in which I havemadeit particular to me in my characterin the play. Every detail of place, objects, relationships to others, my main character needs,my immediate needsand obstacles must be made particular. Nothing should be allowed to remain seneral. EMOTIONAL 4 EmotionalMemorY I I I I I I I a I h I ll f. the Tl motional memory or emotionalrecalldealswith release -Dorobl"rn of finding a substitution in order to laughof frt the ,rr",'Ul* U".r, of tearsJh" shriek of terror, or, by ;;; .i.., demanded by the playwright, the director ot an vourselfas interpreterwhen the given circumstances i-mediate .u"r,i in the play (somethingdone to you by or someone)fail to stimulate you sufficiently to ,o-.,ii"g Lri"g i, ai"", spontaneously.Somedmesthe direct substiis not tud; (Lynn Fontanne for Fraiilein von Bernberg) Then .rrgg.*iUi" enough to bring about the desiredresult' of a memory the irr3i"rt -*, go"d..p", in the searchfor big emotional moment. interbccasionallS the term "emotional memory" is ';sensememory" Tg me, th.eyare different' I changedwith Yemotionalmemory" with the recall of a psycholoqiIink me cal or emodonal responseto an event moving in on the use I etc' *hi.h orod,r.., sobbing, laughter, screaming, MEMORY term "sensememory" in dealing with physiological sensations (heat,cold, hunger,pains, etc.). Of course,it is true that a physical sensationsuch as heat or cold can produce emotions such as irritation, depressionor anxiety; likewise, an emotionalresponsecan be accompaniedby or produce physicalsensations(such as getting hot or goose-pimply, becomingnauseated). In life, an emotion occurs when something happens to us which momentarily suspendsour reasoningcontrol and we are unable to cope with this event logically. (This is not to be confusedwith hysteria,a statein which one is flooded by uncontrollable emotions, becomesillogical to the poinr of losing awarenessof and contact with his surroundings and senseof reality, a state to be avoided by the actor at all costs.)At the moment of the releaseof the control, plus our adjustment to an attempt at control, we are ouelcome by tears, by laughter, or we rage, we bang our 6sts, or melt with pleasure,to mention only a few results. As pleasurable as the idea of a big emorion may seemto an acror, human beingsdo not want this loss of control and usually make an attempt to cope with the emotion as it hits them, If we realize that we did not want this emotion, this loss of control in our real lives at the time when it occurred, we can seehow difficult a processit must be for the actor who must now attempt to lecall the emotion and experienceit all over again. This time it is recalled in the serviceof the play as a genuine revelation of a human being, not for any kind of self-indulgenceor wallowing abort. (lf the character the actor is portraying is self-indulgent emotionally o( caught by hysterics,the actor's selectionmust still be made to servethe play, not his oun need.J To bring about tears, the beginning actor's tendency is to think sad things, to pump for that mood or rhat general state of being, to try to remember a sad occasion,the story of that occasion, and then pray to God that somehow he 48 THE ACTOR will be catapulted into an appropriate emotional -response somewhere;long the way' I used to make all of these mistakes and co.,ld ,reu.r understand why once in a while' somewherealong the line, something dld indeed happen to me. But I must emphasizethat it happened only once in a while, not inevitabiy, and it usually took a long timc-before it occurred. SometimesI managed to work myself into a near trauma offstage,which brought me on with the sensation of moving in g1ue.After a few years,I discovered.intuitively that *h"t ,"rrt me correctly was a tiny remembered object only indirectly connected with the sad event: a poik"-do, ii.., an ivy leaf on a stucco wall' a smell or sound of sizzling bacon, a greasespot on the upholstery'.things as a, se.mittgtyillogical as those.I usedthesesmall objects in disstimuli suicessfully and questionedtheir logic only I I I I rl tl h ; rl 'l cussion. Later, I learned from Dr' JacquesPalaci, a close.friend trained in psychology' psychiatry and human behavior' that this liitle indirect object was the release object, a releaseof the censorwhich movesalong with us and says' "Don't lose control." This apparentlyinsignificantobject had been unconsciouslyperceivedand associatedwith the original emotionalexPerience. io e*p..i"r,c" for yourself what I am speaking about' ,rnh"ppy event in your life:-tell tell a friend the story tf "nu time when your lover walked hi-, fo, example, "boot out on you, blaming you uniustly for infidelity' Now tell your friend what suriounded the event; describeeverything yoo ."n remember about the weather' the pattern of the i."o".. u branch brushing againstthe windoq the rumplei collar of your lover'sshirt, the smellof the-after-shave 'he *as *eari.rg, a frayed corner of the carpet' the tune that of was playing o"nthe radio as he left, etc'' etc', etc' One you th"se obj".is will suddenly releasethe pain anew and will weep again. EMOTIONAL MEMORY 49 The consequenceof this discovered procedure is endless. You will learn to build your own storehouseof little trigger objects.In rehearsalyou will not spendendlesstime or-rdigging for past euents;in performance you will avoid "leavingthe stage,"so to speak,while your mind wanders through a seriesof past adventures hoping that you will find a specific stimulus. You should have found and filed away many, many specific obiects, one of which you will now connect and make synonymous with the event, the person, or the obiect of your stage life to trigger the responseyou need. As for questioning the logic of the object you use from your own experienceto take the piace of the one you need on stage,let me give an example (especiallyfor the literalminded student, which, I assureyou, is not intended to be facetious). Supposeyou are working on Uncle Vanya, and you need a big emotional responsefor the moment when Uncle Vanya surprises Yelena in the arms of Astrov, a moment when reiection and a senseof loss storm in on him. Supposethen that you have isolated a red apron from an experiencein a kitchen when your girl friend's aunt, wearing a red apron, rejected you and turned you out. How do you know that Vanya himself didn't link the moment with Yelenawith his own red apron, his own sudden recall of a moment of betrayal with his own early rejection? After all, all of our emotional reactions are basedon a kind of pile up from our past. I must warn you, at this point, to avoid the examination of any past experiencewhich you have never talked about or wanted to talk about. Here you will be on dangerous ground becauseyou will not know what can happen to you, and without an understandingor a degreeof objectivity to the experienceit is uselessto you artistically. There are teacherswho actually force acrors into dealing with something buried (their responseto the death of a parent, 5o I t I I I l THE ACTOR or the trauma of a bad accident). What results is hysteria or worse, and is, in my opinion, anti-art. We are not pursuing psychotherapy.If you feel mentally sick or disturbed and in need of it, by all means go to a trained doctor or therapist, brt not to an acting teacher. Ifhen I say that you must have distance from the experienceyou wish to useas an actor' I am not referring to time, but to understanding.In 1938, I had an experiencewith the death of someoneI loved deeply which I still cannot fully cope with or discuss,and therefore I cannot use as an actress.Yet' I have also had an experiencein the morning which I was able to digest and put to use by evenrng. Actions themselves,verbal and physical,can generate strong emotions and can sometimes be as stimulating to an emotional releaseas any rememberedinner object' (By inner object I mean an object not outwardly present but an obiect existing and representedin one's mind only.) The simple act of banging my fist on the table can bring about a feelingof rage.A logical reasonor motivation for doing so can load the action for me. Motivated pleading with someonefor forgiveness,and sending a.verbal or physical action of begging,stroking or clutching may produce a waterfall of tears' The act of tickling ,o-"on. gently can make me join in a fit of giggles' I don't mean to recommend that you make a practice of predetermining the expression of the action to find the imotion but there is a continuous feeding of the action by the sensationor emotion' and the emotion is furthered by the action. rWhenyou claim that an emotion or a recalled object is wearing out for you by repetition, that it has lost freshness, you are failing technically becauseof a number of possible reasons: EMOTIONAL MEMORY 1. You are stopping to demand that you feel, because you havenot madeyour obiectsynonymouswith the one on stage. 2. You are anticipatinghow or at what secondthe emotion should manifestitself. 3. You have dwelt on the emotion for its own sake, rather than for furtheringyour srageaction. 4. You are weighing the degreeof intensity of previous useof the emotionalexpenence. 5. You are fearful that the emotion will elude vou. erc etc. Is it not monstrous that this player here But in a fiction, in a dream of passion, Could force his soul so to his own conceit, That from her working all his visagewanned; Tearsin his eyes,distraction in's aspect, A broken voice, and his whole function suiting rI/ith forms to his conceit? [Hamlet2.2.535-5411 (Conceitmeansconcepthere,not vanity,and this is still what it's all about, don't you agree?) SENSE MEMORY 5 SenseMemorY ,l I , t I I is otten (r ensememorv.the recallof physicalsensations' lf we emotions' his )eari., for the actorthan the recallof is as actorshave any occupationalhazards,hypochondria senin our perhapsone of them. Most of us are interested examine and discussthem and on occasion ,"tions, ".td make more of them than may be normal for a nonactor' It's all right as long as we rememberthat thesesensationscan t. ot""f.tly e*p-.e.r"d. Some actors are.so highly sensitized a and suggestiblethat a mere conversatlonabout a parn' similarly are they chill or"'"tl itch will convince them that afflicted.Those actorsare the exceptions'Most of us have to learn a correct techniquefor producing sensatronsso that they will be readily available to us on stage' Since the body has an innate senseof truth, we must facts to help us avoid the violalearn some physi,ological tion of the physicaltruth' Sometimes,by a mere incorrect bodilv adiustment we can shatter our faith in a whole 53 sequenceof our stageexistence.It always irritates me when a director or teacher or fellow actor commands me to relax, or concentrate,or usemy imagination when my failure in theseareassprings from a lack of understanding of the given task. If a playwright or director specifiesthat I should be sound asleep and then wake up at the play's opening, and I haven't learned what is physically entaiied in sieepingor waking up, I will probably lie down and fight for relaxation while, actually, my musclestenseup and my nervestingle with anxiety. I will fight for concentration as my mind racesto inconsequentialsbecauseno one has told me on what to concentrate, and my imagination fails me completeiy in the premiseof sleepingor waking becauseno one has told me down what paths to send it. Even my sensory memory doesn't help unless I were to be allowed an hour or so, and then I might actually fall asleepwhich, in turn, would not help me to wake up on cue. It's a relief to discover what the simple physiological processof sleepingand waking entails, and to find out how I can reproduce it in a matter of seconds;how I can execute it quickly, even after running from my dressingroom after a quick costume change, jumping into the bed on stageas the curtain rises and the lights come up, and convince myself and the audiencethat I have been deep asleep and am now waking up. To do this, settle your body snugly into the bed, concentrating on only one area-the shoulders,or the hips, or the feet, for example.Now, close your eyesand center them straight ahead under your eyelids which is the true sleep position (not downward the way they usually are positioned when we first close our eyes).Then direct your inner attention to an abstractobject not connectedwith the given circumstancesof the playa leat, a cloud, a wave. Now, direct your inner attention from the abstract object to something in the given circumstances-\fhat time is it? Have I oversleot?What must I 54 ) I I I I THE ACTOR do today? etc.Then open your eyes'sit up and pursue your objective. Your eyes will feel heavy, your body slowec down as if a{ter a deep sleep, and by reflex your entire behaviorwill be influencedfor the ensuingactivities' If you are supposed to yawn' you must learn that the physital ,."rot fo. yawning is a need for oxygen in the t."in, Mot, of you open your mouths wide and exhale' and then jump to anotheraction becauseit felt so peculiar' Instead,you ihould inhale deeplyas you push your.iaw down and back until the mouth opens,and you contrnue to pull the air deeply into your lungs before forcing it up into your head as you exhale.You can createa yawn at will in this way so that your eyesmay even water' You can fumble about on stage and believe it is very dark when there's actually enough light for the last row of the balcony to seeyou' once you understandthat when yo,l a.tualiy are in the dark your eyesare wide.open and around the eyes are expanded until the eyes th. .or.l., feel almost glazed.(l used to think this occurred becauseI was trying io ,ee bett.. in the dark' Then I realizedthe conversewas true: eyeperception was deadenedeven more bv this muscularexpansionthan by the darkness,but my ."r,r" of touch and i.ns" of sound were heightened'Concentration was focused on the feet, the fingers and the ears.) Experiment with this and you will discover that through the one correct adjustment of the eyes you can believe that it is dark. Your hands and feet will ".ro"iiy t.oly giope for a path through the furniture, and there will be .,o1-bar.assing indication of stumblingaround' Bringingabout your physicalsensationsfor the character's sta;e life is fraught with many of the same.pitfalls as the repioduction of emotional sensations'The actor's t.ndency \s to think hot all over, to think cold' tired, headach6 siik, and then to wait anxiously for sensationswhile notiling happens.Or sometimeshe waits and is amazed SE N S E M E M O R Y 5i when, by accident,somethingdoeshappen.If you are supposedto be hot, you must first ask yourselfwhereon your body you are the hottest, Localize one area; for example, under the arms, Remembera sensationof stickiness,of perspiration trickling down, and then searchfor what you do to alleviatethis sensation.Raiseyour arm slightly,seeif you can pull your shirt or blouse sleeveaway from the underarm to let in a little air. In that moment of adiustment, or attempt to overcomethe heat, you will have a sensationof heat.The rest of the body will feelhot, too. You are to be cold. Do not think cold all over.Localize one areayou remembermost vividly; for instance,a draft on the back of your neck. Try to recall the sensationand then immediately hunch up your shouldersand stiffen your back a little, even make yourself shiver if you like, and you will havea sensationof cold. (lVe often shiveron purpose,not only involuntarily, becauseshiveringincreases the circulation.) The body will respond to the point where you may end up hopping from foot to foot and rubbing your hands in an effort to get warm (although it might actually be a.verywarm day). Fatigueis a condition called for in endlessscenes.How often haveyou seenthe entireaction dissipatedand out of focus becausethe actor was draggingabout and generally trying to feel tired all ouer?There are so many varietiesof fatigue.Ask yourself why you are tired, and where. Suppose you have been typing for hours. There is fatigue and tension in your back, acrossyour shoulder blades.Now get up and stretchyour back, put your head back and try to relax the shouldermuscles.You will feelexhausted. Or rememberyour fatigueon a hot day in Augustwhen you walked for hours in thin-soled shoes,and your feet were hot and sore and more tired than the rest of your body. Try to walk gently on your heelsto alleviatethe sorenessand burning under the balls of your feet.Your whole 56 THE ACTOR body will follow suit and be accompaniedby a strong sensationof tiredness. I am emphasizing the adiustments to overcomrng tne sensationsbecauseI believethat the sensationoccurs most fully at the moment when we are occupiedwith the attempt ,o or"rro*, it, not when we wait for it while trying only you to imagine and remember it. Nor do I mean that withshouldjump to an outer indication of the adiustment yourself o"t f"ith in the cause,or that you should concern with a desire to show that you have the sensation' Sometimes you question whether the sensationsand consequent you make will communicate directly enough: "dj,rr*.n,t Witt ttr. audienceknow that I'm tired?, etc' If on the street you seepeople without knowing the circumstancesof their a iiu.s, it-may look to you as though the person$/ith js heaiache is iired, or that the person who has a headache in hot, or that someonewith a backacheis chilly' However' pi"y yoru conditions are backed up by the playwright " o,ft.t actors; your headachewill be referred to' the ""a heat will be sharediy others, the nauseawill make you ask for a doctor, etc. The concern lot showing the condition must lead to indication and falseness'It is not your responsibility to show the condition' but to haue it so you believe it, and deal with it in terms of the play's action-' Even the old clich6 of wiping the sweat off the forehead to illustrate heat can become new and valid if you stimuof the sweat' the prickling and tricki"t. th. ,.-.-brance it Iing down from your hairline so that you need to wipe off with the back of Your hand' If you require a cough, find the exact spot in.your you throai where you remember a tickle or scratch, and must cotgh to relieve it. If you want a head.cold' a .topped-.tf, nose, localize the senseof swelling in the uvula back of your soft ittti'*rt iobe hanging down at the as you contract the uvula' Sudpalate) and ,ry ,o ,i"[o* denly, your nose will feel stuffy, and if you blow it you might even produce mucus. For nausea,pinpoint the queasinessof the stomach, inflate your cheeksslightly, wait for salivato gather.Breathe deeply and you'll be convinced you feel sick. For headaches,recall a specificone in a specificspot. For example, directly over the right eye. !7hat kind? Throbbing. What can you do to easeit? Slightly push into it? Rise above it? Pull back out of it? Theseare tiny adiustments, but after stimulating the imagination to the remembered feeling, they will bring it into the presentfor you. For a burn, recall the thin, tight feel of the skin on your fingertip, and how it aches.Then blow on it, flip your hand back and forth to easeit, and you'll be convincedyou just burned it. Sometimesit's only the oozing blood which frightens you when you cut yourself, but remember when it hurts and what you do as you dab the wound with iodine. Drunkenness, which crops up in countless tragic and comedic scenes,seemsto be one of the most difficult to make specific, and traps even fine actors into a series of clich6s. Perhapsit is becausein this state, with its endless variations from slightly tipsy, to staggering,to thick speech, we have the hardest time remembering. To find it specifically entails the samestepsyou have usedin the searchfor other physical sensations.First, localize the most suggestiblearea ofyour body, give in to it, and then attempt to overcomeit. In my case,it is wobbly knees,a loose,weakened condition which I attempt to correct by straightening and strengtheningthe knees.The other sensationsof dizziness, lack of eye-and-manual focus seem to follow. My tongue seemsfat and swollen so that I have a wild need to overarticulate. \0hen I am tipsy it usually manifests itself in a psychologicalneedto talk too much, and an assumption that everyoneis interestedin anything I have to say. 58 THE ACTOR Sometimesyou ask, "\7hat if I work for a headacheand it stayswith me?" I can only answer,"Work for an aspirin'' Rememberthe sensationwhen the headacheeasesoff, when you hold yourselfvery still as the tensionleaves,and eventLe back of your neck relaxesas you realizethe pain is gone. this technique-recalling a localized sensationand finding a physicaladjustmentto alleviateit-is applicableto any condition you may be called upon to play' The--accumulation of a lifetime of sensationsshould be sufficient with our newly acquired technique to serveus for any condition or combinationof conditionsdemandedby the playwright. Even if we are to portray pregnancy or labor and haven't had a baby, or are called upon to have consumption or a heart attack, or to be stabbedto death, or any sensation which, except for having a babn we hope we won't ever experience,we can still find them within our command if we apply theseprinciples, coupled with a little researchon the medical manifestationof the condition' Use the knowledge of substitution to bring bronchitis or pneumonia or a simple chest cold to Camille's consumption; the rememberedgiddinessfrom too much cough syrup for a feeling of drunkennessin caseyou have never had a drink; or the moment when you stayed under water too long and came gasping to the surface as a substitute for strangulation, etc., etc. To all this, add the magic "If" of imagination to help tie it all up. I/I were dying! f I were in labor! I trust that you now have sufficient examples to help you find your way for any sensory problem which might arisefor you. Let me warn you of some common erfors and mrsunderstandingsin the use of sensememory. The sensationsof heat, cold, headache,drunkenness,nausea' and illness' etc., are conditions of the scene;rarely is the sceneabout S E N S EM E M O R Y 59 the cold or the headache.The discoveryof the sensations and how they influence you is there to condition your actions truthfully in the scene,and with sensoryaccuracy and faith, but it is not the final aim just to be cold or have that headacheon stage. Furthermore, you are dictating the sensations-they are not dictating you. You will have the sensationsto further the actionsbut not so that they will take over and put you out of control. In line with this, let me state that if a dangerous or unpleasant sensory condition exists for you in your real life, at the same time that your character should have it on stage,avoid it at all costs.If you are really nauseatedat the time of having to be nauseatedin your stage life, simply avoid the condition or the curtain may have to be rung down. If you really have a headacheover your right eye, work for a headacheat the back of your head, otherwise the real headachemay take over and put you out of control, unable to fulfill your stagelife. If you are to be drunk, don't get drunk to be real or the play will turn into somethingother than the author intended. In summation, let me state the opinion that a correctly functioning actor should, ideally, be the healthiest, least neurotic creatureon earth, sincehe is putting his emotional and sensorylife to use by expressingit for an artistic purpose. If he is employed in the theater, he has an opportunity of making use of his anxieties, hostilities, pent up tendernessthrough an artistic expression.I think that perhapsthe peoplewho call us neurotic or vain or exhibitionistic are unaware how many talented actors are that way only becausethey are without work opportunities, and therefore releasetheir need for expression in alcohol or unreasonablebehavior-or perhapsthesepeopleare jealous that when we do function we can do what thev onlv dream of doing. 76 THE ACTOR A mereimitationof naturein take musthavepertinence' of art' irrf"mfirt, daily aspectsis the antithesis '* yet,differentiated not i" ,t . p."..ii.rg .h"p'ers,I have I haveconttnubetweeniruth in life and truth on stage' to do so) in lortu ,rr.r..a life realities(andwill continue and cu.s;;;k;;, ;. steerawav from the misconceptions tricks toms of old theaterconventions,falsetheatricalit5 on-stage' truth and eimmicks.But truth in life asit is' is not evenbefore melt' will it into the theater ft;?;;t;ow milk ,fr. .,rr,luingoesup. I remembera play in,which.real was The audience il.if"a o*t"o" .rr" o" th" stagestove' h:* thrs nao drsillusionedas they audibly speculated9l in Anger' vlar'y beenmechanicallyachieved'lnLook Back did the audiUr.lt"t"a with a realsteamiron' Not only what she,was arraaarrraor, "Realsteam!"astheymissed shewas scalded'ano Tne saying,but at one-performance curtain --in"r. was rung down' is a lovely story about the old German-actor play in which it Albert Bassermanduring rehearsalsfor a designer-were *". ,oppot.a to rain' The director and the be produced it could realwaterand how ;;;;G;4"", I co1t1-on ;; ;g". Bassermaninterruptedth.em:"x0hen in his behaviorconvinced t*gi, ?it-".'" And everything vov th^t it didl '"i."."'or"t.a with an actorwho had to takeme by the I had to put urrrr, ,o .jh"i. -.' After showinghim that rny face' he L"r. ."f.""p on my bruised"'rns th"tt on but tt'ilt *ith, "it" sorry, I l:lt hinally' l:t^,,.i"d at again' "p"ilgir.a me bruised and stage on went pro-pdy his fingers into the one performance I screamedas he dug me in ;t arms' He forgot his linesand let-goof ;;J;;;i weren't "You me: *ild .o.f,rrior-,, Backstagehe confronted but I '.'eam th;e'" I explained' "I'm sorrv' ;;;;;;;; reallv '"i titfelt it." He' neverhurt me agaln' and ,ltply to slug ii out in a stagefight "",';t."r REALTTY possibly send an actor into the orchestra pit or to the hospital. Really hurting someoneis like the boiling milk: the audienceconcernsitself with the wounded actor instead of with the character he is portraying. To bring about a "real" fight requires the detailed and controlled definition of eachmovement.The physical action must be as concrete as the words of the playwright. The intruding realities which spring from our private lives must be put aside so that our stage realities will be allowed to evolve spontaneously.If my Romeo has garlic on his breath it is unreal to the play. It is also unreal if I "useit" asis. (Somany actorsemploythis phrase,evidently meaning that whateuer moves in on them on stageis supposed to be spontaneously put to :use,\In Romeo and luliet, garlic is not a part of Shakespeare'sdictum. I can plead with the actor after the performance not to eat garlic again, and if this fails, try to ignore it or desperately endow it with attar of roses. To swat at a live roach on stage in a room that should be a palace may not only be irrelevant to the play and the character, but will take the audience away from the truth of the stage life. You must see what you haue to seein order to tell the storS or seeit so that it doesn't distort the story. To go from the ridiculous to the sublime, I would like to cite the example of Jean Louis Barrauit's Hamlet, in the sceneof his advice to the players. While the chief player was emotionally reciting about Hecuba, Hamlet quietly approached him and literally lifted a teardrop from his cheek, balancing it on two ingers and regarding it in wonder. It later catapulted him into, "Is it not monstrous thar this player here . . ." etc. This is an exampleof poetic action which might never occur in life, but which becamereal and deepiy meaningful on stage becauseBarrault really did it and believedit so that we in the audiencedid, too. 78 THE ACTOR and sensation and In our search for genune emotion never forget that tr"tftf"f behavior and action, we should the obligation .ii."ir"" J."t goal.Nor shouldwe forget give-him even to io it pt"y*rigf,t' we canperhapsaim of thedetail " hop'dfoibv ourrevelation ;";;'fi;;i;;;J the humanbeinghe envisaged' -'il;;;i;g of and the differencebetweenrealitv in life said,"somethingis addedlo nature r."lit;-;;,,"T.lstov b"fo"';' That "something"is the artist's .iiil ;;;;i,i;.; which comes r"it, .f view and his power of selection' new life' from ltfe and makesfor PART TWO The Object Exercises Introduction performing musician, a singer or a danceris extremely fortunate in that he is presentedwith specificexercises from the time he decidesto pursue his chosen art form. He is forced into certain disciplines and consequently learns to develop them. He must use them daily, and they stay with him until the end of his career.He can practice them at home and put in as many hours a day as he chooses,to perfect his abilities. As an actress,I have always envied these artists. I can participate in some of their disciplines.I can study dance, and practice my stretchesand pli6s alone. I can study voice and speech,and practice my exercisesalone. I can study an instrument and enlarge my musical sense.I can read and study literature,history and plays, and know that I am enlarging my understandingof the theater.I can work on roles to a certain extent, and I can work on monologues. But in the area of human behavior. its discoverv and 8r INTRODUCTION THE oBJEcr ExERcIsEs 8z enlargement,I usually have to wait for a part and rehearsals with my fellow actors. This always frustrat€d me as-an actress, and so I began to devise exercisesfor myself to tackle a variety of technical problems that continued to bother me. Now I presenttheseten Obiect Exercisesto yo.u' Let us take the problem of trying to find and re-create two ordinary minutes out of life when alone-two minutes when I say I wasn't doing anything (impossible!),when nothing happened.To say this is akin to saying that nothing hafpens in Chekhov, to which I have heard the retort! "Nothing does happen except that one world comes to an end and another begins." 'lfhat are the componentsof two consecutiveminutes of mv life-not in crisii, but in the pursuit of a simple need? What do I have to know if I want to re-createthose two minutes of existence? 'Who am I? 'V/hat time is it? 'What surroundsme? Animate and inanimate objects. 'What Past, present,future, and the are the giuen events, circumstances? What is my relationshiP? Relationto total events,other 'what's in my way? 'V/hat do I do to get u.,hatI want? Who am l? 'V/hat time is it? Century, year, season,dan mrnute. Country, city, neighborhood, house,room, areaof room. Whatdo I want? These are the questionswe must ask ourselves,and explore and define in order to act. For the time being, I would like to free you from the interpretative problems of a given play and a character,and ask you to apply these questions to a simple exercise of finding and re-creating two minutes out of your own life when you were alone. Example: I am sitting at this typewriter writing this chapter. Character. Wheream I? characters,and to things. Character,main and immediate objectives. Obstacles. The action: physical,verbal. 61 'Where arn I? I have a strong, still too narrow, sense of identity and self-image formed by my parents,my origins, education.' sociological influences, loved ones and enemies-all the thingsa human beingis conscious of. 10 a.u. on September1,2, 1"972. 'We're in the middle of presidential campaigns.Vietnambombingraids are on the morningnews.The air is very still. The light from outside has a slightly hazy glare. I am sitit is quite ring in a sunsuitbecause warm. My housein Montauk. I am working at the white Formica table in the dining area off the living room. The kitchen is to my left. Through the window to my right I can seethe sundeck,and beyondit the grassydunestoppedby the shellof a World War II lookout tower, long abandoned. Behind me the sun is pouring through the living room, THE OBJECT EXERCISES 84 INTRODUCTION Vhat surroundsme? The typewriter is new. House What are the giuen circumstances? plants, which I recently watered, are in the corner. The white tabletop reflectsbrightly. In the kitchen a fly is buzzing over the newly washed breakfastdishes.My Poisonous cigarettesare at my elbow, and the ashtray needs emPtYing. My poodles bark at a Passingcar. My notes lie piled up in disorder behind the typewriter. My collaborator on this book is expected. !7e have been working all summer.I have been Procrastinating since 7 a'.ut. by cooking, cleaning,arranging fl owers, watering the grass, arranging unanswered mail and all my notes on "The Object Exercises."My book is years in the making. A deadline is coming up. What is my relationshiP? To the book: it representsthe expression of my work both as a teacherand as an actress. To Haskel: he is my collaborator, and also my house guest during the writing of this book. 'What To be of service,to be a particiPant in society as well as to be needed by those I love. To be a Part of art and nature. To live up to resPonsibilities. (Main Objectiue)-To finish this chapter. do I tuant? 8j (Immediate O biectiue)-To have a few pages to show him when he arrivesat noon. What's in my uay! Time: he's coming in two hours. 'Weather: its gorgeousoutside.The garden: the vegetablesneed to be weeded. I would enjoy a frothy, cold drink. I'm unclearabout the organization of the chapter.The onionskin paper crinkles in the typewriter. My poor typing skill, and many typos. V/hat do I do to get what I want? I type. I make typos. I raceahead. I light a cigaretreafrer emptying the ashtray.I battlewith content.I battle with order. I take a breather outdoors, and sniff the clematis,I yell at the poodles.I write ten sentences with clarity. I deserve a drink. These areasare the essentialsto examine in order to define what makes this moment in my life evolve. Every one of them and many more influence and make this moment inevitable.The examplesI havemadein eacharea are minimal to finding my behavior for the moment. Some of the things are primary and deal with the consciousexecution of the task, and some are secondary. In turning this examination of a few minutes of your life aloneinto a practicalexercise,I ask you not only to test all aspectsmentionedabovebut to pinpoint all of the physical and psychologicalsensationsinherentin them,and then to make a layout of the action for the two minutesyou have examined.Then seeif you can re-createthem as if for the first time, 86 T H E O B JE C T E X E R C I S E S I have given an exampleof somethingI was doing n ora at this m"oment of writing, I could take a remembered the event from last year,or seasonor week' I might select sameobjective (to finish a chapter) and put it at a-different on time (March 11, two yearsbeforein GreenwichVillage untidy , .u-, ,1..,y day, with knocking radiators in. an have a I might up"a-.nr. i"h. g^tb"g" men are on strike' head cold, be wearing an old bathrobe and terry-cloth .."ffr. n marred l"athe.-top desk, my twenty-year--old my elbow' some vrcks Remington -dropttypewriter, hot tea at and Kleenex' the telephone ringing incescorlgh night' ,unriu, ur,*"nr.d company coming for dinner at actions' and I will discoverdifferentbehaviorand etc.) - -OUj.., shouldnot be improvisations,although exercises a desreeof the rehearsalprocesswill obviously involve .h"-I But the final work should be exactly like that on a a presceneor a play, and you should be able to repeat cisely defined io.t."pt broken down into actable elements as if it were hapf.o-p"r"bl" to the scoreof a musician), f"t the first time. The only difference between the yourself ""ti.* i".r.i"t. and a sceneis that you will be using ot a insteadof a character'and your life experienceinstead youryou find oi"u. fh. addition of the play requires that of i"ii in .rt"tuoer, using the auditory and visual concept " the playwright, director and designer' iou'will work on these exercisesby yourself under ciralso cumstanceswhen you find yourself alone' This will so help you to develop discipline,which most actors ar€ by all explore iiscipline to work and to ."ily'l".king-the to vouiself. (No partner to tell you, "Let's get down comin wo.k.") Step 2 will be the testingof your exercise -orri."tiorr'wi h your teacher and peers' The final work' play' when you apply the problems of any exerciseto a *itt, o'f .o"tti, includi the powerful recognition not only of the writer but of the other actors' INTRODUCTION 87 When you first work on the exercisesyou will probably balk for all of the reasonsI mentioned in dealing with "Identity." You will think you are boring, and you would rather look for eccentriccircumstancesor "interesting" events.Rememberthe cat! Don't becomebad playwrights. What should compel you into actions are definite needs,not show-off inventions. Don't look for melodrama or eccentrictales, no eviction notices,suicide notes or tragic love affairs. An actor once brought in an exercisein which he prayed to God in a cathedral,ran behind the curtain, fired several shots, staggeredback on stage, and died in front of the Madonna. Don't look for a B-moviestory,but a discovery of your behaviorunder simplecircumstances when fulfilling a preciseneed.To convincea group of your colleagues that you are aliue with forward-moving action for two minutes-that this never happenedbefore in spite of the precisenessand detail of your selections-is what you should aim for, If you can convincinglycreatefwo minutes on stagein which you exist as if you were alone at home, you will havesucceeded. The very fact that you have no playwright's interpretation to hide behind ("But the characterwould feel, Da would do, or wouldn't do . . .") forces you to examine all sourcesand behavior with no excuses.You also are establishinghabits of self-explorationwhich later can be put to use for character.Furthermore,you will establish the habit of working in many of the areasyou must usein a scene.The exercisewill help you to test selectionand pertinence. After having rehearsedand devised the exercises,the problem of presentation-how and where:-will be an individual one. If you are a professionalactor, you will undoubtedly have a studio or workshop available,with 88 THE oBJEcr EXERcrsEs sufficient space,equipped with basic furniture and props (a benchor sofa, a bed, a bureauor desk,a cabinetthat can do for a refrigerator, tables-one of which can substitute for a stove or sink---chairs, a blanket, some cushions or pillows, books, bottles,magazines,ashtrays,etc.). If you are lucky, there will be a movable flat or two with workable doors, and perhaps even a window. You will present your scenesto a teacher or your peers for criticism and possiblereworking. If you are an aspiring actor, you should find a qualified teacherwho will provide you with the samephysical setup, and if you are a teacherinterestedin testing theseexercises you should provide all of the abovefor the students. Necessarypersonal objects which you know can't be supplied,like clothing or an iron or a particular dish, pot, glassor book, must be brought by the actor. As a matter of fact, people who know me will recognizeanyone studying with me as they approach the Studio, becausethey are usually lugging so many shopping bags full of props. Sinceplace is crucial, let me remind you that when you examine every aspectof it at home to seewhat influence it plays on your life, already begin to make considerations for how it can be transferred and constructed elsewhere. Usereal objects.Theseare not pantomime exercises.Avoid any task that will force you to pantomime an activity with an incomplete object (like opening or closing doors when there are no doors to work with). Take what's there and. if necessary,endow it physically and psychologically with what it should be. The exercisesare not mute. If you find that you grunt, use expletives, or verbalize when alone, fine. It will help you with later exercises. A minimum of one hour of rehearsal for each twominute exerciseis recommended-and by rehearsalI mean doing it, not just thinking about it. INTRODUCTION 89 Testing the communication of your selectedexistence with your "audience" is, of course,the proof of the pudding in the valuetheseexerciseswifi havefor you. The Ten Obiect Exercises 1. The BasicObiect Exercise 2. Three Entrances Re-creating behavior which leads to the achievementof a simpleobjective preparation and its influence on the entrance 3. Immediacy Dealing with the problems of anticipationwhile searchingfor somethinglost or mislaid 4. The Fourth Wall The guarantee of privacy while using, not ignoring, the visual areaof the audience 5. Endowment Dealingwith objectswhich cannot have total reality because they might otherwise totally control you; heightenedreality 6. Talking to Yourself The problem of the monolosue 7. Outdoors a/ Relationship ro space and nature &/ Finding forward-moving occuparion wirhout the help of turnrture and props 8. Conditioning Forces Learning to put togetherthree or more sensoryinfluencesheat,cold, physicalpains,hurry, dark, quiet, etc. (The last two exercisesemploy a character from a play) ENDOWMTJNT r5 Endowment you will really enjoy his probably is the first exercise essenceof make-believe' I *o.king on. lt containsthe turn cold water into boiling and in its simplestform: how to hemlock' if trandv or bitter medicine-even ;;;;;;;;"* makeupwithout cold-creamor vou choose;how to remove f n'* t':?-:.1,:-'..o.il' withouta btader l""or'i"- l. .r-,"ve and butter wrtnpotatoes *itiro.tt heat;how to eat mashed soddenclothing seemingly out getting fat; how to remove havingbeenin the rain' etc' with-out "'n"*lJcit"pter for the 5, "SenseMemorn" and then' the endowment exercise'find circumstances orro.* t".i* tangible.objects "f *ftr.tt yo., *ould be dealing with with properttes tnat *liii-t *.tfa'ftave to be endowed example' take a.cup of should not be real on stage' For it with the propertv of steaming l"i -'^" ;; ;;;";J recall how' as vou brlng 1t i;.il;{ iust think it's hot but from the steam' how , t.u pull back slightly "'.i^'t""t, Itz rr3 you carefully blow and puff acrossthe top of the cup to cool the coffee, how you gently test the rim of the cup with your lips before sipping a few drops and gingerly letting the liquid rest on your ronguefor a secondbeforeallowing it to slide down your throat, how your eyespull shut as you swallow and your mouth opens and you exhale and then take in air to cool your mouth. Suddenly,that cup of cold water becomeshot coffeeand staysthat way. I might not even wanr to apply real lipstick on stage, becausewith nervoushands on an openingnight it could slip over the edgeof my mouth. If there is no room in my stageaction for getting cold cream and tissuesand fresh powder to repair the damage, I would rather endow a rrode[,plasticlipstick with color and greasiness as I stretch my lips (alreadymade up) and smearit on evenly. I rememberseeingthe final dressrehearsalof a play in which a lover was walking out on his mistress.During the courseof the action,shehad to polish his shoesas one way of preventinghis leaving her. The acress was wearing a pearl-graydress,and the shoepolish was black.As sheknelt on the floor,a shoein one hand, the cloth with polish in the other,the can of blackpolishon the floor in front of her,she was crying and pleadingwith him to stay with her. Soon shehad globs of polish on her face,hands,and all over her gray costume.It was quite realisticexceptfor one thing. At the end of the scene,the curtain was lowered for only a secondand roseagain for the next scenewhich took place a few days later. Her costumeand face were still covered with black. In following performances,the inside of the shoepolish can was painted black, without real polish in it, and the actresshad found the cor.rectbehaviorof working with it, the cloth and the shoe,so that not only shebut the audiencebelievedshewas actually usingreal polish. In The Farewell Sultper by Arthur Schnitzler,I once had to eat an enormous five-coursegourmet meal on stage I14 THE OBJECT F'XERCISES as specteieht times a week. If all the food had beenreally have been unable to eat it in the time span of i';-i,'i*."fa itf", I would have gained ten pounds a week-and ;;:;;. days' Vhat r.'"i"Uiu becomesick-ceriainly on matinee for the food lookedlike muchmorethan rt was substituted Endowing *u., *u, neither rich, fattening nor too 6lling' runnlng quantity' the food with sweetness,stickiness, and iui-c* ;; butter created a relish for eating, slurping piled I as u.td b.o,rght me a round of applause ;;i;;: (reallv final deJsert of whipped-cream torte i;;;-;f,; mounds of yogurt)' ,''M;;; .;."".s call for sewing and threading needles' Dy an By now, I look forward to seeingthem pertormed -in.*f.ri"rr."d actor becauseI know I'm in for some comic needle r.iJi. iit" panic which setsin as shetakes that small get the to ^"J n". siik thread, the variations of attempts snarls and ,ir.^J,h.o"gtt the tiny eye, how the thread and Panknots up. and how shefinally endsup pretendrng threaded get it becauseshe never could t;*-g ;;;;;; prethreadedand o"i" o."a.tibl.. If -y ,t"tdle can't be the needleI "." that stage'I witl make certain t-*iti a" fatte.t iye in show business;if the thread is-to ,t. "on ,rr. t ", t;f f<''I will usesturdy corton that snarl' If ir ["-nt. -won't through -,rrt ,""-'difficult to thread, I will make it so second exact the still be able to control .'"a.-rn.",, "td will readily go through the eye of the *^i* tft. thread lee.dleneuer needle.Only if it is a part of the plot rhat rhe the hne gets threaded' may I use the small needle and thread. e.ry oUi..t which cannot be handled and controlled rt rn your readily for the purpose to which you want to put And there are selectedaction becomesa dangerousobiect' kntves' the actually physically dangerousobiects-sharp broken boltles, liquor' etc' If it.is one of tlt.lt,l.,'l-"t, actually these, I don't expect you to rehearsewith it and ENDOWMENT IT5 hurt yourself to seewhat you do about it. You undoubtedly remember what it was like when you burned or cut yourself, or otherwise did damageto yourself or were hurt by someoneelse. But wherever an object is not physically dangerous,in the sensediscussedabove, start experimenting-let's say, with polishing your nails (real nail polish on stagecould create a major hazard if it spilled or got on your hands). First, really polish your nails, and then take an empty bottle with its little brush and seeif you can reconstruct the behavior of carefully and evenly smoothing the polish on your nails until you find such belief that, by reflex, you will blow on your nails to make sure they are dry, and you will handle the next object delicatelyfor fear of marring the polish. For your exercise,find at least three tangible objects to endow with physical properties which would otherwise control you. You may also endow them psychologically, but the emphasisshould rest on the physical. Avoid pantomiming the actions. By that I mean, if you take a stif{ drink, don't usean empty glassand then worry about how far to tip it, or what actual swallowing is like. Fill the glass with water and endow the water with whatever properties you needthrough sensememory and muscularadjustment. A studentoccasionallyasksif all threeendowedobjects should belong together. Obviouslg they must belong to your complete and logical set of circumstances.If, for instance,your objective is to try to prepare a splendid meal for your lover, and you have a bad cold at the time, endless ideas for objects to endow will immediately occur to you, connectedwith the food you are preparing, what you wilL cook it on and what implements you will need for it, as well as all the objects you may need to control your cold, from vaporizersto nosedrops to medicinesand chestrubs. Just try to give the objectsvariation so that all three don't 116 THE OBJECT EXERCISES involve tasting, or all three don't have to do with hurting yourself, etc. When you have masteredthe endowments of the individual objects, give yourself fully to the need for fulfilling your objective with faith in your circumstancesin order to avoid simply iumping from one endowed object to the other while checking the accuracy of your execution. 'When the exercise is ready for presentation, you should have found such trust in your objects that you hardly are aware that they are endowed. They should be wholly there for you. Any object we deal with, once it has been made particular, will be partially endowed. If I can endow a dull knife with sharpness,I can also endow it further by giving it a history which will dictate evenhow I pick it up. If the knife was a gift from someone I adore who knows I love to cook-and I am aware that it came from Hammacher Schlemmer'sand probably cost about twenty dollars-I will handle it differently than if I physically have to deal with the identical knife and endow it with having been bought at Woolworth's ten years ago, which by accident turned out to be iust right and becamemy favorite old cutting knife. A rose,which may be wax or plasticon stage,must be not only endowed with the texture, aroma, and thorniness of the real rose in order for me to deal with it with conviction, but will be quite differently dealt with if it is from the favorite plant which I myself grew, or if someone I love gave it to me, or if it is from someone I detest who presentedit to me to butter me up. We can and should charge or load each obiect that we deal with, not only to stimulate our psyche and our senses,but again to learn how these elements condition our consequent actions so that when we have to make selectionsfor the character'sactions in a play, we have discoveredall the areaswe must draw on to make the selections. ENDOVMENT tta Almost nothing in our character,slife rs what it ls_bur we must make it so! .Weendow the given circumstances, our own character,our relationship to others in the plaS the place,each object we deal with, including the clo-thes we wear.All must be endowed wirh the physical,psychological or emotional properties which we want i., o.d., t,, sendus richly into action from momenr ro moment. And so the exampleof turning an apple into an onion c.anbe a beginning of comprehending that by turning one thing into another,or by supplying missingrealities,aclions may_becomesharperthan usual, and that reality can be heightenedinsteadof ordinary.It becomesa distiiledreal_ iry and that is whar I loveabout it. Now, you are halfway through the exercises.If you havc beenactuallyrehearsingand presentingthem for criticism, not iust reading about them, you may have discovered their interestingby-products.By now, you are undoubtedly not just rehearsingduring the hours you set asidefor the exercises,but are "rehearsing,,off and on every day. I can't open an oven door without noting how my head pulls back at an anglefrom rhe heat. If I'm makins a tele_ phone call, a part of me is marking the fourth wall I'm using.Secondaryand reflex behavior becomesmomentar_ ily conscious.I'm aware of what brought me into a room or out into the street.And the most astoundingpart <-rfit all is that I don't feel a bit less spontaneousubout -u behavior. The purpose in establishine habits of seli_ observation, in discovering rheendless uariarions of behav. ior which occur from day to day is not to reproducerhis behaviormechanically &at. . . 1. To find what inner and outer objectsI get involved with under the given circumstances, and whv I deal with them. THE PLAY AND THE ROLE Once I actually succeededin doing this for a Broadway opening by telling myself that the entire event was ridiculous and didn't matter, and that everyone in the audience was a dope. I might as well have stayed home' and I got deservedly bad reviews. Personally, my nerves' iust as in the old adage, have increasedwith experience-or ageand I have come to accept them the way an older athlete might. At best, I hope they will heighten my energy and make me more alert. They should zot make for fear. Above all, I try to control them by focusing on my main obiects and intentions, using my technique to keep me in the universeof the play. An acrobat will not only get nervous but fall from the tightrope if he looks down, tries to show off, or questions his senseof balance instead of trusting his technique and concentrating fully on his task, An actor's nerves can similarly put him out of commission if he shows off or if his acting score is general, has been thrown together quickly or his preparation is shoddy. When you are beginning to learn a correct technique, as your goals get higher and you become more aware of the areasin which you might fail, you also may be, temporarily, more nervous than when you proceededwith the faith of an unknowing beginner.Just remember that the better your technique becomes,the more you should be able to concentrate, to eliminate distractions and shed the concerns of your private life in order to involve yourself in the life of your character.Don't replace the joy of playing (or making love) with the nerveswhich result from a personal ambition for success. "How Do I Get a Job?" "Do the rounds" of agents,producers,directors for off-off, off, and on Broadway, {or regional theaters, for summer PRACTICAL PROBI,EMS zo1 stock, for dinner theaters. Do the rounds over and over again until the solesof your shoesare worn thin. In order to do them and to face everyone, develop a thick skin. (Keepyour rhin skin and your sensitivitiesfo. the work on the character.)Be as.preparedin your craft as is humanly possrble.Keep pracricingforever.Be prepared wirh audi_ tion material. Have thirty things ready to be presented ar tne drop ot a hat. Have material ready for any audition, wherher it be for a soap opera at a televisionofn." o, io, classicin New York or the provinces.Have monologues " ready, and prepare sceneswith obtiging parrners *ho"."n assist you-when you need them. (It wili probably be to their benefit to help you, if you have fo. ,fr. ".r".rg'"d tion.)I haveseenactorslosework again ""ai_ and again because after readingsomerhingfor a direcior, produJ.. o, upon being asked,"What else can yo, sho* ."1:i,i. "n"",. answer was, "Nothing. " Auditions How you land an audition in order to get a iob must be separatedfrom how you work on a part. When you apply for an interview, a job, an audition L g"t the j.b;;.r';;. in.point of fact selling yourself in much the sa.rre*ay th"t a Fuller Brush man sells his merchandise,How yo,:'-"n_ age it is your individual problem. If you are ,.rr.ibl., uou can learn to protect yourself from any .1...rr, yor, -igh, meet up with in the theater,except criminality, and for tfrat you should go.to the police. Or ro Actors Eiuity Associa_ tron, your trade union, which is there to proieci you. The pro.ducer,the agent, the director for whom you'-;rr;;; aldition has the samepower as the housewife*no .iei, stam rhe door in the face of the brush salesman,or w"h<r might let you inside to show your wares. Auditions can range from an open call where the actors THE PLAY AND THE ROLE are lined up across the stage like cattle and are eliminated-without a reading-because they are too tall or short, fat or thin, fair or dark, or lately, becausethey are the wrong astrologicalsign,to a situationin which you are given time to study the script, work on the scene,and have an opportunity to presentyourself at your best.There is also my favorite kind of audition, in which you may present material of your own choosingwhich you have prepared in advance. \Vhat you should do at a reading,even a cold reading for which you have been given little or no time to prepare, is to go out on a limb: give yourselfan objectiveand then head for it with improvised actions which are as real as possible. Try for a full performance with your improvised actions. Endow tuhoeuermight read with you into the living substancewhich could serveyou. Your craft will serve you, if you havea craft. Evena mediocredirectorwill hold you becauseof your reality, not on your interpretation. A director wants what any primitive audience wants-to believethat you are, to believethat you are really saying what you read from the script. Remember:Whoever may employ you is totally disinterestedin your credos,so don't burden them with that. "Do YouThink I HaveTalent?" To quote Max Reinhardt: "Never mind your talent! Do you have tenacity?" Or, to quote my mother: "Talent is a gift which many people have. What you make of it determineswhether or not you will be an artist!" "How Can I Work Conecflv in Summer Stock?" With only a week's rehearsalyou have to set yourself different goals. A painter can make a very fine quick sketch PRACTICAL PROB LEMS zo5 which people enjoy looking at. He doesn,t ask that it be considereda finished oil painting. Very often, long before the stock seasonhas begun, and you have signedyour contract, you may already know which plays and parts are to be yours. Here is where I have found actors to be unbelievably lazy, really missing their chance, when they don,t immediatelyserabout their homework In stock, your speedand flexibility will be marvelouslv tested.Also, the experienceof performing for an audience cannot be replaced by refusing jobs for fear of getting bad habits. rl0hatever damage you do to your instrument bv having to produce quick resulrscan be correcredafteiwafo. "ShouldI StickIt Out in the Theater?" If you have to ask this question-don't! "\I/hat about the Pacing?The Rhyrhm? The Tempo?" These questions fall into the same category as ,.louder, faster, funnier!" or the "mood.', They all soell doom i[ you, the actor, concern yourself with them. Tiey are noq always have been, and always will be the results of the actions,how you head for your objectivesunder the correctly defined circumstances.The responsibilitv for these resultsis in the handsof the director. "Do You Think I WasOveracting?" There is no such thing as over or under. There is only acting. No moment is roo big or too small if it hasvalidiry for the moment in rhe play. Overacting, as it is usually thought of, meansthat the actor is playing to the gallery irrste"Jof THE PLAY AND THE ROLE with the other characterson stage.Or that he is hanging onto his own sensationsor wallowing in false emotion Underactingis primarily an empty imitation of nature,the actor playing in the "manner" of naturalness,unrelatedto the roots of the given reality, "How Do I Stay Fresh in a Long Run?" I think I am one of the few actors in the world who loues long runs. The challengeto make a character live anew, as if for the first time, as if never before, night after night after night, is, to me, almost more exciting than the idea of playing in repertory.Severaltimes I have beenlucky enoughto run as long as two yearsin a good part in a good play, and eachtime I have found somethingbrand new internally at the closing performance which I deeply regretted being unable to put to use the next night. I have found that something getsstale or dries up only whenl becomeaware of outer effectsor ol uatching my actions rather than staying involved and truly executing them. The two-year run can help you to deepen, and to be the character for those few hours every night. It has also fascinatedme how work which I had done, perhaps a month before I began official maybe seemedto emergefrom my subconscious rehearsals, a year later to add a new or different dimension to my character.SometimesI've longedto play at leastsix months in front of an audiencebefore anv critic would come to seeme. "How Do I Work with a Replacement in the Cast ?" If, a{ter a play has beenrunning, an actor leavesthe company and is replacedby a new actor, I find it as challenging to work with the new actor as I do rur-mingfor a long time PRACTICAL PROBLEMS with the sameactor.t have also been a replacementon a number of occasionsand often sufferedfrom the treatment of bored actorswho didn't want to changeor adjust their performancesto mine, or to change their daily routines to come to "new" rehearsals. As a result,I havelived up to a vow never to put another actor into this spot, and have worked as diligentlywith a new replacemeniasthough the play werebrandnew to me. It should be exhilarating,not tedious,to go along with the ideas of a new partner, unless you treat the theater as iust a place to check in and out of, It,s a sure proof of working inaccurately if your performancedoesfii change with a different actor. Your opinion aboat liking the new actor more or lessthan the first actor is irrelevant! An extraordinary experienceoccurred while I was playing Blanche.While the four principals of the New yoik company took a summervacation,they were replacedby the four of us who were to go on tour as the National company. JessicaTandy took off six deservedweeks of rest, and the other three took only two weeks.This meant that I would work first with the National comDanvAnthony Quinn, Mary Velch, and RussellHardie-and then-two weeks later-with Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, and Kim Hunter. I got in a few rehearsalswith the New York company before playing with them, except for Marlon! For a numberof reasons,he didn't appeartackstageuntil thirty minutes before we were to go on stagefor an SRO performance. Ve had neuer seeneach other,s oerformance.Miss Tandy'sand my interpretation of Blanche were as different as Mr. Quinn's and Mr. Brando's Stanley. There was a hasty conferencebackstage:Should we risk playing together without a single rehearsal and without any knowledge of each other's interpretation? Tony, who was standing by in full makeup, said he hoped Marlon would play becausehe didn't want to hear the groans of THE PLAY AND THE ROLE disappointment from the audience if they were told Marlon wasn't playing.Finally,I said, "Let's try to rehearsethe first five minutesofthe play and seewhat happens."It was such an adventurethat we were both game, and on we went. Nothing went wrong, and a lot went right. What made it work? Both of us were totally familiar with place, objects,and circumstances.Neither of us was willful or selfish.Neither of us violatedthe intentionsof our characters. The rest of the four weeks continued to be adventurous. And so was returning to Anthony Quinn. "How Do I Talk to the Audience?" \(hether I am talking to the audiencein a Shakespearean play,a Molidre, inThe Matcbmaker,TheGlassMenagerie, Joe Egg, or The Bald Soprano, specific ptinciples always apply. I am not talking to myself; the audienceis my partner! This partner,the audience,must be made as particular as any other characterwith whom I have a dialoguein the play. Who are they? What's my relationship to them? \Xlhere are they-in time as well as place? Why are they there, what is the obstacle, and tuhat do I want from them? Answeringthesequestions,I stand a good chanceof finding my actions with them. Vhether I'm talking to one person or to many' I specify my relationship to them-are they with me or against me, do we have a past together, or are we new to each other, etc.?I always put my audienceinto the time and place in which the play unfolds. I might use courtiers sitting in the king's loge, contemporariesof Moliire, if I'm working on a play of his and askedto addressthe audience.Or I might take somefriends from Yonkers at the turn of century who are listening to me and watching me from another sitting room or from the street, if I'm talking to the audience as Mrs. Levi in The Matcbmaker. Or I mieht addressthe PRACTICAL PROB LEM S audienceas if they were specific people coming out of the pub into the street if I, as Launce, in The Tuto Gentlemen of Verona, am lamenting to them about my poor dog, erc. I don't want to haye to hurdle the realities I've created irr the play for time and place by having to usethe audiencein the theater on 45th Street in 1973 as is. The faith in my very senseof being the character would be shaken. Now comes the hardest part! You want your audience to be enfolded-as if you were talking to eachone of rhem. Laughtoncould do it. Sinatraand Judy Garlandhavedone it. I try to do it by placing my imaginary audience or, the fourth wall as primary objects,or in conjunctionwith the dim shapesof people in any area of the auditorium where I cannot make direct eye contact with an actual memberof the audience.(I(hen you were in the audience, have you ever been visually contacted by a performer? Didn't you feel self-conscious, uncomfortable,abused?If you were sweet,you tried to guesswhat was expectedof you, and perhapsplayed back with facial reactions.If you were annoyed,you probably made a stony face, or yawned into the actor's face, or simply adiusted your clothing in misery-feeling you were being used.) In a night club or in vaudeville,performersoften make direct useof a member of the audience(at his expense),but if he talks back, the performer can improvise on it, or out of it, or take it further, In plays, too, as in everything, there are exceptions when the play demands that you cope with shifting realities or the director makes the charactert task a direct confrontation with the given audience or a member of it. Occasionally,your character might have to ask for a specific responsefrom the living audience;or the characier may be askedto step out of the play and out of the character for an interlude with the existing audience.But these are the rare exceptions. To return to the rule: remember that your character's 2lo THE PLAY AND THE ROLE dialoguewith the audienceis written down, that it must stay in the time and place of the character, and must be alive as it is sent to your imagined audiencewhom you have put around, in back of, and betweenyourself and the actual audienceso that they will feel included, and enchanted,but not put upon! Accents and Dialects If I have to play a character with a foreign accent or a regionaldialect,I consulta specialist,and with the help I'm given by my good ear (thank God) and my knowledgeof the phonetic alphabet, I work around the clock on the soundsand rhythm of my new speechpattern. I get records of it so I can listen all day. I go to films where peopletalk the way I am supposedto. I make my friends and family the victims of my continuous practicing. I try to speakwith my new speechpattern until it becomessecond nature, until I stop hearingmyselfor checkingmyself.I try to do it long beforc I get to the words of the play, becauseif I practice it immediately or exclusively on the lines of my part, I will set line readings that can't be undone; I will test my words for sound rather than meaning,and do my character irrevocabledamage. Evenmy husbandwas a little shockedwhen I went, as a replacement, into Tbe Deep BIue Sea and was introduced to an almost completely British cast and immediately spoke to them with a British accent (" What a nerve!"). They may even have laughedat me, and I wouldn't have blamed them, but the point was that they didn't largh when I cameto rehearsingand playing my part with them. The transition into Hester's languagewas all prepared for. I recommendthis practicewhether it be Russian,Chinese, Scotch or New England-whatever the accent or dialect may be. PRACTICA L PRO B LEM S 2I I There is an interestingpsychologicalrlillct, n., lor the characterif he is speakingin another lrtrtgrr.rli,rlr:rn his own with an accent,or if hehasthelocaltli,tlc.t , 'l lrrsorigin-his childhood. Rememberthat if you lt,rrr' .r l,'reign accent,you are trying not to have it. Y()rt .trc tr\rnll to (A bc.ttrtrlrrllv. overcomeit and to speakthe new language Rumanian friend of mine, on hearing herscll on ,r l.rpc recorder,asked,"Who eezdat wooman?" and I lt.r,lt,' r,ry, "That's you." She said, "Dunt bee seelly,drrr \\' or])rul t, r lr.rt has an ahksent!")If on the other hand, your chitr.r,. a regionaldialect,"you" are speakingin and dcalrrrlirr itlr the depths of "your" origins. Become familirrr rlrtlr anotherchildhood with new soundsand melodies. I alsoclaim that if you don't havea perfectear,ollc(' v()ll have studiedthe speechpattern diligently,the result rtcc.l n't be absolutelyauthenticas long as you have faith irr ir and belieuethat it springsfrom you in your role. (Laurcttc Taylor, in The GlassMenagerie, did not have an authentic southernspeech,but shethought shedid, so we believedit too!) Dressing the Part-the Costume and Makeup An eyelash,a mustache,a wig, the shoes,evenpaddingput on for a role must becomean integral part of you. They ought to free the new "you" wholly. Everything must be developed for its sensory effect on you, the character. I think an anecdoteabout Alfred Lunt tells the story. He was working on Tlte Guardsman by }i4olnar, In the course of the comedy, the character he was going to play wants to test his wife's fidelity by pretending to be a Russian officer and attempting, in this guise,to seduceher. (Mr. Lunt hac to find the truth of his character's dress and makeup p/zs the realiry of his disguisewhich had to convinceeveryone that he was that Russianof6cer.)He didn't seehow it was