Posts Tagged ‘Acting Classes Los Angeles’

How do I take the emotional freedom I learn to have in class, into my auditions and the workplace?

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

One of my students recently asked how to determine which behaviors to use in your performance from all the ones you experience while rehearsing the scene.

The first step in preparing a performance to allow yourself to experience as many of the possible responses to a scene as you can. (It is destructive to be too concerned about the end result, especially in the early rehearsal stages of the process, because your performance will then become logical, predictable, and barely scratch the surface of what each of the “characters” in the scene is going through emotionally.)

When you give yourself total emotional freedom, your performance of a scene will often evolve naturally to your unique performance of the scene that serves the scene. If that doesn’t happen, you can choose which way you feel is the best way for you to do the scene.

BUT… you always want to leave the door open to have surprising and new experiences with each scene, every time you do it. That’s a little scary, but it’s what the best actors do.

Anthony Hopkins says that the only thing he does now to prepare for work is to keep reading the script over and over. In other words, he trusts himself completely to discover his performance instinctively as he rehearses and films the scene on the set.

I hope this is helpful to you.

Best wishes,
David Kagen
David Kagen’s School of Film Acting
(818) 752-9678
www.davidkagen.com

MSNBC article on Jake Gyllenhaal

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Movies on TODAY

Jake Gyllenhaal as buff action hero? Believe it
‘Prince of Persia’ star doesn’t play it safe when it comes to choosing roles
‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’: May 28
Disney
Jake Gyllenhaal bulked up to play an action hero in “Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time.” But he’s one actor who can’t be pigeonholed.
By Michael Ventre
msnbc.com contributor
updated 5/23/2010
The “Prince of Persia” is a dashing rogue with sculpted muscles and a backbone of steel who teams with a lovely princess to protect an artifact that could determine the fate of all mankind. Fearless and mighty, he is an adventure hero of the highest order.

He is played by Jake Gyllenhaal.

Wait a sec. Jake Gyllenhaal?

Well, non-believers, before you scoff, there was a similar reaction when Matt Damon was tabbed to play government assassin Jason Bourne, and that seemed to work out OK. Gyllenhaal, 29, has already sampled a wide variety of delicacies from the acting buffet so far in his career, including indie turns in “Donnie Darko” and “Lovely & Amazing,” choice roles in prestige releases such as “Brokeback Mountain” and “Brothers,” and even a major part in the Roland Emmerich disaster flick, “The Day After Tomorrow.”

Such an eclectic palate is admirable, but one curious by-product is that it prevents the Hollywood establishment and movie audiences from getting a handle on who Jake Gyllenhaal is, at least as a bankable actor. Is he an independent character actor? A leading man? An action figure? A love interest or a second banana? Is he rough and tough, or vulnerable and sensitive?

Can someone like Gyllenhaal have a long career even though he may defy categorization in a town where even its pigeons are pigeonholed?

“Gyllenhaal’s a real 21st century leading man — the guy who doesn’t play it safe,” said Mary Elizabeth Williams, film critic and contributor to Salon.com and other publications, as well as the author of “Gimme Shelter,” an amusing look at the home-buying process.

“In a lot of ways,” she added, “he’s like Brad Pitt, Robert Downey Jr., or to name one of his peers, Christian Bale. They’re all charismatic, handsome stars, and they can carry a big action movie whenever they want to — but they know the key to longevity is to keep challenging audience expectations of them. To look at the guy, he’s made to be on movie posters.”

Muscled look on poster causes double takes
Ah, yes, the poster. The one-sheet for “Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time,” which opens Friday, depicts Gyllenhaal in full warrior pose, looking as chiseled as the employee of the month at Gold’s Gym. Even director Nicole Holofcener, who cast Gyllenhaal in her 2001 film “Lovely & Amazing” fresh off his breakthrough in “Donnie Darko,” said she did a double take.

“I said, ‘Who’s that?! Jake?!’ But he probably sees that poster and thinks the same thing,” Holofcener said. “But who can blame him for taking that part? He probably had a blast doing it.”
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She said she chose Gyllenhaal for the part of Jordan in “Lovely” because “he had innocence and sexiness, a great sense of humor and an earnestness. And he was just so damn cute. That’s what it boiled down to. Everybody in the room during casting was blushing, so I figured that was a good sign.

“I’m thrilled for his career. I’m not surprised at all at where he’s at. When I cast him there was this feeling that he was going to be really big.”

Certainly, Nicolas Cage is really big, too. But after Cage won an Academy Award for “Leaving Las Vegas” in 1996, he became known less for art than commerce, starring in such big-payday pictures as “The Rock,” “Con Air,” “National Treasure” and “Ghost Rider.”

To be fair, Cage over the years has also mixed in more cerebral work in films like “Adaptation” and “Matchstick Men,” yet his penchant for starring in blockbusters became so magnified that it caused Sean Penn — who appeared with Cage in “Racing With the Moon” and, to a much lesser extent, “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” — to once famously remark to The New York Times, “Nic Cage is no longer an actor. He could be again, but now he’s more like a … performer.”

Could Gyllenhaal’s career lose traction from too much action?

“His next project is from ‘I Heart Huckabees’ director David O. Russell (“Nailed,” co-starring Jessica Biel), so it seems clear he wants to keep stretching,” Williams said. “What Gyllenhaal brings to fare like ‘Prince of Persia’ is his light, funny touch. He’s not just sword-wielding beefcake, nor does he appear to want to be. There’s nothing wrong with a little popcorn in any career, but he’s not making a steady diet of it.

“And he’s one of the few stars, like Matt Damon, who can do action, drama, comedy and weirdo indie. I don’t think it’s just about getting the fattest paycheck — it’s about doing what he hasn’t done before.”

Options are endless, plus he’s a gentleman

David Kagen is one of the top acting teachers in Hollywood. He said Gyllenhaal possesses rare qualities for an actor, and as a result his career options are many.

“There are a lot of actors I’ve worked with where you talk to them and they open up and this wonderful personality comes out,” Kagen said. “All this stuff that’s particular to them that’s interesting. Then you hand them a script and a lot of that goes away. And that’s really bad. One of the things they need to learn is to use themselves, and then get out of the way.

“When I see Jake doing interviews, and then watch him in something like ‘Brothers,’ there’s no change. It’s like this wonderful seamless transition into whatever role he’s playing. Everything seems to be available to him, his sense of humor, his toughness. There is a sort of an ease. … There are just some people who have that.”

That was also apparent to cinematographer Steven Poster, who shot “Donnie Darko” in 2001, featuring a 20-year-old Gyllenhaal. “There was such intelligence with his characterization of Donnie,” Poster said. “You knew from the beginning he would be big. Plus, he was a gentleman. There wasn’t a moment of ego or narcissism.”

Poster believes the actor’s presence in “Prince of Persia” represents an opportunity for Gyllenhaal to have some fun rather than signal a dubious step down an unfortunate career path. “I think Jake is very smart that way,” he said. “Everybody’s got to do one of these pictures on the way up. … I think he’s very grounded.”

In Hollywood, there is often a chasm between how an actor views himself and what the business sees him as. Holofcener, for one, hopes Gyllenhaal doesn’t spend much time thinking about any of that.

“Hopefully he’s not trying to figure out who he is,” she said. “I hope he just keeps taking roles that appeal to him.”

Michael Ventre is a frequent contributor to msnbc.com. He lives in Los Angeles.

© 2010 msnbc.com.

How you relate and react to your acting partner at every moment is at the heart of fine acting.

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

This is a wonderful article by a fine playwright, Theresa Rebeck.
The idea expressed in the article that directly relates to our teaching is in the next to last paragraph and begins with: “…if you start with a few characters who need…”
We learn something deep about the people in the play (and people in life) by how they react to each other moment by moment.

The complete article can be found by clicking on the link below.

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-ca-theresa-rebeck29-2009mar29,0,2065069.story

Agents discuss how to get and work with an agent-see link below.

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Here’s a link for SAG members to a SAG Foundation discussion with agents who talk about what works and doesn’t work for them in terms of getting an agent and how to work with your agent. They talk about how to contact them, marketing yourself, and taking classes.

Perfectionism and success-How does it affect your acting?

Monday, June 8th, 2009

In Paris this year, the number 6 female tennis player in the world beat the number 1 female player in the world. #1′s destructive perfectionism and feeling that she’s not enough destroyed her game and got in the way of her true talent. That’s a great lesson for the rest of us concerning perfectionism in our acting work. Strive for excellence. Not perfection.

The Quest for Excellence (excerpts)

Monday, May 19th, 2008

It is inspirational to know that actors of distinction believe that learning is an ongoing process, and that there are always new avenues toward the goal of continuing excellence. When accepting his Lifetime Oscar, [Lawrence] Olivier referred to himself as a student.

You embark upon a voyage of discovery in training to provide the impetus and opportunity to initially unleash your talent or to further refine it. The best of the training centers also guide you from strong expressive impulses toward the discovery of the true meaning of your gift. You will be thrust into an exploratory process which will afford you and image of your acting instrument and the power it is capable of realizing.

Experimentation is what training is all about and you should lunge into it with daring determination. With an “Anything goes!” attitude, you will perceive what you need and also what you already have. Your acting instrument will be strengthened by the recognition that your talent is becoming superior to anything you thought it could become.

A teacher cannot always give you quick solutions, but can make you aware of your strengths and shortcomings.

If you embrace acting as a profession, then you must invest the same energy in professional development required by other occupations. IT IS A DELUSION TO THINK THAT NO SPECIAL TRAINING IS NEEDED TO ACT. HARDLY ANYONE WILL HIRE AN INEXPERIENCED ACTOR.

Athletes train rigorously; why shouldn’t actors? After a succession of athletic meets, top athletes return to a period of training and improve their skills before the next cycle of competition. They have the capacity to grow even while enjoying being at the top. This kid of discipline will make a gymnast train twenty hours a week for ten to fifteen years or will prevent dancers from letting an entire week go by with out practice. Let there be no doubt about it; champs work hard. The bottom line is that you can only expect it get out of life what you put into it.

Author unknown

Casting director workshops – Will you get a career move from a CD workshop??

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Go to the link below to see what the State of California feels about Casting Director workshops:

http://www.actorsite.com/guidelines.html

How to learn to be the best actor you can be.

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Tip for the day to develop an acting career:

In order to learn any skill, we need to set aside what we already believe in order to be able to learn what we don’t know how to do.

“What get us into trouble is not what we don’t know.
It’s what we know for sure that just ain’t so.”
Mark Twain

In our classes, put aside your ideas about how to do good acting work or what you believe good acting is, to learn how to do your best professional-level acting work.

Quote from Tom Landry, famous, winning, Dallas Cowboys football coach:
“A coach is someone who gets you to do what you don’t want to do, so
you can be who you want to be.”

Best wishes,
David Kagen
David Kagen’s School of Film Acting

Check out our website at www.davidkagen.com or call us at
(818) 752-9678

Acting and Being Receptive

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Some experiences in life can be mastered and directed, as in performing a task or going on a trip. We can have other experiences only by being receptive. They come our way, as in the growing of a friendship or the unpredictable events on a trip.

To be receptive, we must not be so busy with what we can control that we fail to notice all the experiences which are there for us. Our senses need to be open to see what is around us and hear what is in the air. We must breathe in the beauty and pain of life. When there is a message in our experience, let us read it and not demand it fit our narrow, logical minds.

Anonymous

To discover how to do a scene well in our acting  classes in Los Angeles, and find your “choices,” you need to be receptive. Don’t monitor yourself and don’t control your behavior.
Treat a scene and treat acting as though you are dancing to a song you love to dance to.

Copyright 2007 David Kagen

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