Acting
Encyclopedia : A : AC : ACT : Acting
- For legal meaning of acting, see Acting (law).
- For the military sense, see Acting (rank).
Actors are generally expected to possess a number of skills, including good vocal projection, clarity of speech, physical expressiveness, a good sense of perspective, emotional availability, a well developed imagination, the ability to analyze and understand dramatic text, and the ability to emulate or generate emotional and physical conditions. Well-rounded actors are often also skilled in singing, dancing, imitating dialects and accents, improvisation, observation and emulation, mime, stage combat, and performing classical texts such as Shakespeare. Many actors train at length in special programs or colleges to develop these skills, which have a wide range of different artistic philosophies and processes.
Modern pioneers in the area of acting have included Konstantin Stanislavski, Jerzy Grotowski, Lee Strasberg, Uta Hagen, Stella Adler, Eric Morris, Michael Chekhov, Viola Spolin and Sanford Meisner.
For history and other details, see actor.
See also
Suggested Reading
- Letters to a Young Actor by Robert Brustein (Basic Books, 0465008062, 2005).
- Sanford Meisner on Acting by Sanford Meisner, Dennis Longwell (Random House, 0394750594, 1987).
- An Actor Prepares by Konstantin Stanislavski, Elizabeth Reynolds Hapgood (Routledge, 0878309837, 1989).
- [The Actor's Menu] by Bill Howey (Compass Publishing, 0975310224, 2005).
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