








|

The
Family Inside You
1-day Playshop for Actors
This workshop, enthusiastically received by New York actors and acting
teachers on previous occasions, uses exercises to demonstrate a useful
method for developing a character for the Stage by means of a deeper exploration
of your own family.
The images and ideas of a character that an actor gets when first reading
a script stem from one's own life experience, particularly experience
in family of origin. We also learn to model emotional intensity (and under
what circumstances to express it) from family of origin members. Moreover,
our understanding of such concepts as: loyalty, hard work, and mental
illness (to name but a few) are again derived from family of origin experience.
This workshop FIRST takes participants through the construction and interpretation
of their GENOGRAM, a tool that reveals to us large amounts of useful information
regarding our extended family. Genogram work opens up a wealth of uses
and ideas for constructing character; remember that the stage character
you are working on also has a genogram. NOTE: Your privacy will be respected
in this workshop; you can get full value without divulging any private
information.
NEXT, we will look at the use of genograms in analyzing a script and read
passages from playscripts to bring out family information and meaningful
patterns contained therein.
THEN, we will choose themes and features useful for making acting choices
and locate previously unexplored resources (for instance, what would it
be like to express anger like your grandmother, rather than like your
father?). You may also choose to explore different family positions, such
as being (or not being) the baby in the family.
LAST, through role-play, we will explore the experience of expanding the
possibilities for your character's interaction with the roles of others.
For example, what choices are available to you in role as Hamlet, to handle
convincingly an arrogant Polonious rather than a foolish one? Or, how
is your Hamlet going to act differently toward Polonious if their scene
is in private, rather than in front of Claudius?
|