Posts Tagged ‘Los Angeles Acting School.’

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.

More on being the character vs. “acting” the character

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

Here’s an excerpt from an email from a student talking about her confusion about playing a character vs. being yourself in the scene, along with my answer:

Acting student: In regards to character, things are still a little fuzzy. For instance, playing a prostitute who’s grown up on the streets vs. playing a housewife. They are both being played by ME, yet I’d think each would have different emotional reactions to a same situation…?

David Kagen: This takes practice to really understand it. But… ALL of the imaginary circumstances will determine how you behave. That is, the circumstances of having or choosing to be a prostitute are different than the circumstances of having or choosing to be a housewife. And those circumstances affect YOU differently; make you a different person and therefore a different “character.” Too often playing a “character” results in acting it from outside and objectively, rather than putting yourself in the circumstances which gets you to act it from your insides and subjectively. This is what Meisner means when he says that, “Acting is living truthfully in the imaginary circumstances.” You put yourself in the circumstances; ALL the circumstances.

Acting student: In regards to cold readings, particularly the first time through, I always seem to have to warm up, because I feel like I’m suppose to start neutral, so I don’t take things in the scene as personal as I could.

David Kagen: Yes, we hear this about starting neutral a lot. That’s not what we want you to do. Start responding subjectively with your personal responses. Your personal responses are shaped by everything you’re experienced and everything you’ve felt in your life up to moment you do your scene. Don’t start in neutral.

Copyright David Kagen 2009
All rights reserved

OUR ACTING TECHNIQUE

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Here’s the 4 basic skills we’re teaching:

1) cold reading skills so that you can look at their partner almost all the
time and not worry about being able to easily and quickly pick up words off the page
2) emotional openness and spontaneity
3) getting your emotions from you partner and the imaginary circumstances, not from your idea of how you should be reacting
4) developing the habit of initiating your own openness, spontaneity and
risk-taking as a habit whenever and wherever you act.

You need to be able to do all of the above at the same time at least 90% of
the time to meet the professional standard and be competitive in the
business.
It all starts with emotional openness.

The choices you make for your performance of any scene are arrived at through doing your scene over and over again with an open heart and mind.

Those choices you finally decide to include in your performance are the end result of what you learn through the emotional experiences you have each time you rehearse your scene. You arrive at your final set of choices by going through a process of allowing yourself to fully experience and fully express your instinctive emotional responses to each moment of a scene, without worrying about right and wrong.

There is no purely intellectual process which will lead to your best and unique performance of a scene. Your talent comes from your instincts.

We’re all emotionally controlled and guarded in some ways. Being
emotionally controlled and guarded is the opposite of being instinctive and
spontaneous so it’s bad for your acting.

Everything we do is to get people out of their own way by not being in
emotional control and guarded, so that they can let their instincts take
over and be truly spontaneous.

By being instinctive and truly spontaneous moment by moment, each actor will be able discover his instinctive responses to each and every moment in the scene, during each run-through and thereby discover his best and unique performance of each moment of each scene he performs.

Copyright 2006 David Kagen
All rights reserved

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Excellence in On-Camera Acting [Acting in Film and Television] – david@davidkagen.com
Wednesday, August 9th, 2006

The following is an excerpt from Marlon Brando’s autobiography, BRANDO Songs My Mother Taught Me:

“On the day Gadg (Elia Kazan) showed me the complete picture (of ON THE WATERFRONT), I was so depressed by my performance I got up and left the screening room. I thought i was a huge failure, and walked out with out a word to him. I was simply embarrassed for myself.”

Marlon Brando went on to win the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in ON THE WATERFRONT. It turned out to be one of his finest film performances.

Please think about this when you are so sure your acting “sucks.” Our own feelings about how we are doing in a performance are unreliable. That’s hard to deal with while you’re performing, as well as afterward. You’ve just got to keep hanging in there and keep giving/committing 100% regardless of your personal feelings, and let others be the judge.

This is what we help people learn by practicing in our Los Angeles On-Camera acting classes.

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.

Aristotle

Copyright David Kagen 2006
All rights reserved

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Meisner’s ON ACTING Study Guide [Acting in Film and Television] – david@davidkagen.com
Wednesday, August 9th, 2006

Find each of the following principles in the Sanford Meisner’s book, ON ACTING, and study them over and over again. These are the core skills Meisner discusses that we teach:

1) Meisner quotes George Bernard Shaw who said…Self-betrayal, magnified to suit the optics of the theater, is the whole art of acting. By “self-betrayal,” Shaw meant the pure, unselfconscious revelation of the gifted actor’s most inner and most private being to the people in his audience. (This is at the heart of all good acting. You’re supposed to reveal the most personal, private feelings you have in the course of doing a scene. That’s the hardest part.)

2) Your talent comes from your instincts; from your instinctive emotional responses to your partners emotions and your instinctive emotional responses to the imaginary circumstances

Most of us have ways we control our feelings and ways we control how other people see us. All that control is the opposite of being spontaneous and instinctive when you act and is therefore terrible for your acting. Your controls prevent you from being deeply emotional and expressing the deepest human aspects of yourself in a scene. In order to be a good actor you have to want to reveal yourself emotionally, not hide your true feelings and not fake feelings in your scenes. Never say,”that’s as far as I’m going to go emotionally.”

3) Acting is living truthfully in the imaginary circumstances.

4) The foundation of acting is the reality of doing.

5) Getting your attention off yourself is the big battle won.

6) An ounce of behavior is worth a pound of words.

7) Let the words be the canoe that rides on the river of your emotions.

Act before you think.

9) The pinch and the ouch – that acting requires your immediate visceral response to everything that happens.

10) Acting is reacting – reacting to your partner in each and every moment.

11) Act impulse to impulse, not cue to cue.

12) Try to be as mindless as possible when you act.

13) Don’t change until something happens to make you change.

14) Don’t hold onto your preparation/ideas about any scene.

15) There’s no character; it’s always you in the scene. It’s a part of you that is the “character.”

16) Your emotional reactions in scenes should come out of you like “Elenora Duse’s blush;” from the heart, not the head.

17) Always assume you’re getting something from you partner. There’s no such thing as your partner not giving you anything. There is no such thing as nothing.
—————————————————————————————————-

At our school we are going to the heart of the matter with regard to acting. Learn what we’re teaching and you can work, and do good work, in the film and television business. Though you do need some experience acting on your feet, the getting-up-on-your-feet part is usually very simple for the camera and doesn’t take much to pick up; not anything close to what it takes to learn how to be instinctive and bare your soul.

The following email from one of our students who was in HOUSE OF SAND AND FOG with Ben Kingsley sums up what we’re trying to get across:

So the main thing I learned on the set of House of Sand and Fog or I should say had been reinforced that I have heard you ask of us in class is not try to perform the final product. That it is really a discovery, that everyone is searching for. You the actor, the other actors, the director and even sometimes the DP depending on the shot. You might have some vague idea as a jumping off point but its really about letting go of those ideas to let the discoveries birth. And the ideas are not really “ideas” about how the scene should go but more how you the actor/character feels something. How the Imaginary circumstances affect you. And even after you have rehearsed or even shot a few takes it is still about LETTING GO and really trying to let even more discoveries happen. It never stops.
The other high point was watching Ben Kingsly, Jennifer Connelly, and Ron Eldard work with this Director who I respect very much. The director really put the work and the art first. This made him a bit hard to deal with at some points, but it was great to see everyone just put the ego’s aside and just continue to collaborate. It wasn’t to hurt anyone’s feelings it was a commitment to getting the best work. I loved that.

Copyright 2006 by David Kagen
All rights reserved

How you translate words on the written page to talking the way you really talk

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Many actors say their lines in the same way they “look” in the script.

Visually, when you look at your lines as printed on a page of your script, it will appear to you that you should say every speech without pauses and always stop at the periods unless otherwise written.  And, that your “character” knows exactly how he wants to respond to everything the other person says and does.

That’s not the way it is for us in life.

Recently I was watching DON JUAN DE MARCO with Marlon Brando and Johnny Depp with the English subtitles on.   I strongly suggest you do this.

What you’ll see, is how Marlon Brando breaks up his lines into thoughts based on his emotions and not on the rules of English grammar.  He might turn a statement into a question or vice versa.

That’s what we all need to do… to talk the way we really talk, bunching ideas together based on our emotions and not as dictated by the written form of English (or any language.)  The way we speak is very different than the way our native languages are written.  The written form is much more formal, and the spoken language is more informal.

As actors we need to learn to “translate” the written form of a script into real talking and reacting, while saying the text the writer gave us to say.

Best wishes,
David Kagen

Copyright David Kagen 2007
All rights reserved

Concept acting, script analysis, and playing a “character” vs. revealing your personal feelings in your acting.

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

The following is an excerpt from an email to a student who was struggling to act from his instincts:

I can empathize with your concern that you’ll never be able to overcome the blocks you’ve described in your email, but you haven’t really been in the class long enough to know that.   Remember, this a long-term process. It’s not instant.  It takes most students at least a year or two to really be able to do it consistanly in their work.

What I see your real obstacle/problem is, is the wall you’ve built up around yourself which keeps all of your personal feelings hidden.  We talked about this 2 weeks ago when you revealed that your mother died a couple years ago and you still haven’t dealt with those feelings.  You told me that you have kept yourself emotionally insulated from others for a long time and that’s probalby why you are emotionally detached from your scene partner.  At that time, I made suggestions about what each of us needs to do to get through our key blocks to being sensitive and expressive as actors.  Perhaps you might look at that tape again and listen to my comments once again.  Also, it’s probably a good time for you to watch and listen to your interview tape again.

If you’ve read the Meisner book, you now know that there is no “character;” that it’s YOU in the scene, reacting instinctively and revealing your most private, personal feelings.  “Self-betrayal.”

That’s the core challenge for almost everyone.  And few actors are willing to take it on.  It’s too scary and uncomfortable.  Most of us would rather do a performance that’s comfortable, controlled, and hide our true selves and true feelings, even though it’s not satisfying for the actor or the audience.

You must not rely on understanding the plot of the scene when you perform it in front of the class.  Otherwise,  you’ll be predictable in your acting work, as you are now, and not revealing anything really personal and interesting.

When actors don’t reveal their emotions on a regular basis, they resort to doing their idea of a scene, which doesn’t get them anywhere worthwhile in the profession.

Copyright David Kagen 2007
All rights reserved

Expressing emotions you feel are wrong or improper to express

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Many times scenes require us to express emotions we feel are wrong or improper to express, or that we simply don’t want to express.

However, being a good and successful professional actor requires us to be able to express all emotions FULLY and FREELY regardless of our personal opinions.

Best wishes,
David Kagen

www.davidkagen.com

Copyright 2007
All rights reserved

It’s not in the story!

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

When you go to a movie or play, the story may be very interesting.

Too many inexperienced actors focus only on “acting” the story as expressed in the dialogue.

However, what’s really compelling to the audience is how the each person in the story DEALS with their situation. That’s not fully expressed in the dialogue. That’s in YOU. Your behavior. And it’s what you’re hired to express in your performance. Anyone can act dialogue.

Not everyone can be compelling unless they bring all of themselves to each and every moment in their scenes. That is personal and unique to each of you, and it’s why you love certain performances and remember them for years.

I asked Tim Glenn, a writer and actor who teaches at our school, to give his perspective about this issue.  I think it’s very helpful

“Writers concern themselves with the whole story and the characters and their relationships.  As an actor you are concerned with your character’s journey; his experience as he experiences the events of the drama.  Your job is to take it deeper, to take on the mantle of the imaginary person, who is you.  So the more freedom you allow yourself in experiencing what the writer has imagined for you and what the other actors are doing to you, the more you will fulfill the potential in the character.  Since you are the character, and all the character will ever be, never rest in you quest to be affected and effective as deeply as possible.

Another truth; in film and tv you are providing the raw material for an industrial product.  So telling the story is not as important as most people think.  Find something fresh and different in each scene, in each moment and the editor will love you and favor you whenever possible as they assemble the film.  Be shut down and the same and mild and the editor will cut to more interesting and alive actors.”
TG

Best wishes,
David Kagen

Copyright 2007 David Kagen
All rights reserved

Get emotionally alive before you act!

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

It’s very important to get emotionally alive before you act.

To discover how to do that, you need to experiment with inventing and doing different exercises to feel what you’re feeling before you begin your class each week.  Find what works for you!

One suggestion is to bring a notebook to class and write down exactly what you’re feeling before the start of each class.

For example, write “I feel _____,” and fill in the blank without censoring what you write. Do this exercise for at least 15 minutes before each class.

Your goal is to let your feelings bubble up to the surface, feel exactly what you’re feeling deep down, and to let your feelings take you over physically and emotionally.  Don’t write what you “think.”  Write what you “feel.”  Don’t be cerebral.  What you write is for your eyes only, so be ruthlessly honest.  That’s the only way to benefit from the exercise and get underneath your social mask.

In addition, you can listen to music at home and let it get to you emotionally.  Or watch a documentary about something important to you and let yourself get emotionally and passionately involved.

Discover what you do that causes and allows your emotions to come to the surface.  Do you relax certain muscles?  Do you breathe in to your emotions?  What exactly do you do when you let your feelings take you over?

The goal is to overcome whatever emotional detachment you customarily practice in your everyday life.  And, oddly enough, it takes a lot of practice.

There’s no one way to do this. And, even though there are times to cover up your emotions to some extent, it is important that you do something to break your habitual detachment from your emotions.  Otherwise, you’ll be detached when you act and your scene partner and the imaginary circumstances won’t be able to affect you instinctively and spontaneously.

Your goal in your acting is to NOT be detached, but to express your instinctive, spontaneous responses to everything that your scene partner says and does!

Copyright 2007  David Kagen
All rights reserved

The core issues of learning the art of acting.

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Here are 2 quotes which apply to the core issues of acting.

“As difficult as it seems, you can be sure of this: At the core of the heart, you have the power to move beyond the old issues that are still hindering your freedom. The hardest things—the ones that push you up against your limits—are the very things you need to address to make a quantum leap into a fresh inner and outer life.”   Doc Childre and Howard Martin

“The past is for inspiration, not imitation, for continuation, not repetition.”   Israel Zangwill