|
|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
Why are so many women still not properly listened to? Why do they
sometimes feel that they're less interesting than they are? Why do
they often rush when they speak? Why do some women feel the
pressure to sound like little girls? From one of the world's
leading experts on the voice comes this call to arms for women to
reclaim their voices. Using elements of experience and practice
from her prolific career, Patsy Rodenburg examines these questions,
and many more, to decipher what lies at the heart of female
empowerment. From the age of four, Rodenburg knew that she found
communication difficult. Her struggle with her own voice set her on
the journey that led her to discover her vocation. She has spent
her life re-finding and re-empowering voices, particularly the lost
voices of women. Watching her highly intelligent working-class
mother and grandmother ignored and often silenced gave her the
insight to investigate why that was and how to help women overcome
this centuries-old issue. With warmth and humour, Rodenburg
interrogates Shakespeare's texts and his presentation of female
characters; develops the notion of rhetoric in relation to the
female voice; and applies concepts explored in her previous books,
including The Three Circles of Energy. And, perhaps most crucially,
through arguing that power and voice are directly linked to breath,
Rodenburg makes the case that Western society's oppression of women
has diminished their natural ability to breathe. Exploring the
female voice through practical exercises and stories from the front
line, as well as profoundly personal and formative experiences from
her own life, Rodenburg defines the art of accessing the voice
within and reclaiming the woman's right to speak.
You know that person: the one with that certain something. And
you've probably dismissed that something as unattainable, simply
innate. But it's a myth that some are born with "it" and others
aren't. Everybody can have that presence-and the peaceful
self-acceptance that powers it. Patsy Rodenburg reveals that the
secret is learning to inhabit "the second circle": the optimal
state between the first circle of introversion and self-doubt and
the third of aggression and narcissism. She provides exercises to
help you break the habits that constrict your real power and to
better cope with the negative behaviors and attitudes of those
around you. With wisdom and patience, Rodenburg teaches you how to
communicate effectively at home, work, school, and-most
important-with yourself. The Second Circle will empower you to meet
life's most extraordinary trials with brio and to embrace the joys
and challenges of every single day.
From A Midsummer Night's Dream's Puck to Othello's Desdemona, this
new edition of Speaking Shakespeare gives you all the necessary
tools to bring any of Shakespeare's eclectic characters to life.
Patsy Rodenburg uses practical exercises and textual analysis to
hone in on your dramatic resonance, breathing and placement in
order to unlock your potential for playing these iconic characters.
Speeches and scenes such as Mark Antony's 'O, pardon me, thou
bleeding piece of earth' and the bloody scene in which Macbeth
admits to Lady Macbeth that he has 'done the deed' are placed in
context and discussed in depth. Combining clear practical, textual
and imaginative work with a brilliant analysis of scenes and
speeches from the whole range of Shakespeare’s plays, this is an
essential and inspiring guide for anyone working on his plays
today. It brings a renewed focus on the language of power, so
frequently spoken in the worlds of politicians and company
directors, which will give readers insight into the potency of
clear, direct communication, specifically in the context of
Shakespeare. Each chapter has been revised following the author's
20 additional years of experience as a voice coach and includes
techniques necessary for a clear and convincing performance.
Why are so many women still not properly listened to? Why do they
sometimes feel that they're less interesting than they are? Why do
they often rush when they speak? Why do some women feel the
pressure to sound like little girls? From one of the world's
leading experts on the voice comes this call to arms for women to
reclaim their voices. Using elements of experience and practice
from her prolific career, Patsy Rodenburg examines these questions,
and many more, to decipher what lies at the heart of female
empowerment. From the age of four, Rodenburg knew that she found
communication difficult. Her struggle with her own voice set her on
the journey that led her to discover her vocation. She has spent
her life re-finding and re-empowering voices, particularly the lost
voices of women. Watching her highly intelligent working-class
mother and grandmother ignored and often silenced gave her the
insight to investigate why that was and how to help women overcome
this centuries-old issue. With warmth and humour, Rodenburg
interrogates Shakespeare's texts and his presentation of female
characters; develops the notion of rhetoric in relation to the
female voice; and applies concepts explored in her previous books,
including The Three Circles of Energy. And, perhaps most crucially,
through arguing that power and voice are directly linked to breath,
Rodenburg makes the case that Western society's oppression of women
has diminished their natural ability to breathe. Exploring the
female voice through practical exercises and stories from the front
line, as well as profoundly personal and formative experiences from
her own life, Rodenburg defines the art of accessing the voice
within and reclaiming the woman's right to speak.
Everyone has known the feeling of being present. Babies and
toddlers live there almost constantly. Great performers work in
this state. Great athletes win in it. Great teachers teach in it.
Every great communicator speaks from this place. It is when fully
present that we do our best work and make our deepest impression on
others. In her years as an acting coach, Patsy Rodenburg has
discovered the secrets to that elusive quality actors call 'it'.
There are three basic ways human energy moves between people and
you can be in any one of the 'three circles' in any situation. In
the first, your focus is purely inward, in the third, all your
energy is moving outward. In the second you are focused, you give
energy out and you receive it. You communicate spontaneously and
listen well, you are generous and people are generous in return.
And by working on your breath, posture, voice, language, listening
skills, focus, courage and trust you can access the second circle
on a daily basis. Your work, relationships, spirituality and
passions will all benefit.
From the bestselling author of The Right to Speak and The Need for
Words comes this Bloomsbury Revelations edition of the essential
guide to voice work: The Actor Speaks. Beginning with what every
first-year acting student faces in class and ending with what
leading professional actors must achieve every night on stage,
Patsy Rodenburg's celebrated work as one of the world's foremost
voice and acting coaches is fully revealed in this thoughtful and
inspirational book about acting. Written for the training and
working actor, Rodenburg's book brings to life a wide range of
exercises and methods to release the actor's voice, covering
everything from posture, breath and the body, performing in
specific spaces, previews and first performances, managing
different length runs, using microphones and dealing with an ageing
or sick voice. This book allows the reader to perform every night,
reaching the pitch, passion and vocal intensity that the best roles
require.
"It shouldn't surprise us that politicians, clerics, rock singers
as well as actors queue up to train their voices under the
supervision of Patsy Rodenburg. This book will explain her
popularity among her pupils." - Sir Ian McKellen Practical,
passionate and inspiring, this book teaches how to use the voice
fully and expressively, without fear and in any situation. Patsy
Rodenburg is one of the world's foremost voice and acting coaches,
having trained thousands of actors, singers, lawyers, politicians,
business people, teachers and students: her book distils that
knowledge and experience so that everyone can enjoy the right to
speak. Part one is a discursive account of our right to speak which
examines impediments to clear, natural, confident speech and
establishing habits that will help overcome these, while part two
is a practical 'workbook' containing exercises and practical tips,
providing a step-by-step approach to using the voice effectively.
Covering speech and phonetics, dialects and accents, vocalising
heightened emotions, singing, auditions, recording and caring for
the health of your voice, these approachable and informative
exercises aren't just designed to benefit actors and singers, but a
wide range of readers who wish to improve the use of their voice to
help them at work or when communicating in formal and informal
situations. This Bloomsbury Revelations edition also considers the
effect of social media on communication skills, the need for
empathetic listening, how scientific discovery now illuminates why
and how voice exercises work, and cultural and global issues of
ethics and storytelling.
As one of the world’s leading voice coaches, Patsy Rodenburg
describes practical ways to approach language, using Shakespeare,
Romantic poetry, modern prose and a range of other texts to help
each of us discover our own unique need for words. In Part One
Rodenburg attacks the myth that there is only one correct way to
speak by clearing away the blocks that can make language
inaccessible. Part Two, a series of language and text exercises,
connects the voice to the shape and quality of individual words and
phrases. Drawing on Rodenburg’s time spent coaching in the worlds
of business and politics, this edition reflects on how the way we
use words has changed since the book was first published. It brings
a renewed focus on the language of power, spoken in the worlds of
politicians and company directors. This gives readers an insight
into the potency of clear, direct communication. Language and text
exercises provide readers with unmediated access to this new
research, allowing them to practice and master the language and
words that drive the modern world. Foreword by Anthony Sher.
F.M. Alexander developed the Alexander Technique of movement in the early 20th century. Combining vocal clarity and body movement, Alexander developed a performance coaching method that is used by dancers, actors, singers, etc. In The Actor and the Alexander Technique, Kelly McEvenue writes the first basic book about how this unique technique can help actors feel more natural on the stage. She provides warm-up exercises, "balance" and "center" exercises, spatial awareness exercises. She talks about imitation, the use of masks, nudity on the stage, dealing with injury and aging. She talks about specific productions that have successfully used the Alexander Technique, such as "The Lion King". With a foreword by Patsy Rodenburg of our own phenomenal The Actor Speaks this is a book that belongs on the shelf of every working and studying actor.
In "Speaking Shakespeare," Patsy Rodenburg tackles one of the most
difficult acting jobs: speaking Shakespeare's words both as they
were meant to be spoken and in an understandable and dramatic way.
Rodenburg calls this "a simple manual to start the journey into the
heart of Shakespeare," and that is what she gives us. With the same
insight she displayed in "The Actor Speaks," Rodenburg tackles the
playing of all Shakespeare's characters. She uses dramatic
resonance, breathing, and placement to show how an actor can bring
Hamlet, Rosalind, Puck and other characters to life. This is one
book every working actor must have.
In The Actor Speaks, Patsy Rodenburg takes actors and actresses, both professional and beginners, through a complete voice workshop. She touches on every aspect of performance work that involves the voice and sorts through the kinds of vexing problems every performer faces onstage: breath and relaxation; vocal range and power; communication with other actors; singing and acting simultaneously; working on different sized stages and in both large and small auditoriums; approaching the vocal demands of different kinds of scripts. This is the final word on the actor's voice and it's destined to become the classic work on the subject for some time to come.
Patsy Rodenburg is the leading acting coach in the UK (she has
worked with Judi Dench, Helen Mirren, Ian McKellen and Cate
Blanchett). Patsy has discovered the principles of speech in
theatre apply extremely effectively when transferred into the
workplace. Do you want to be more persuasive? Do you want to
enthuse and inpsire and feel good whenever you present or speak in
public? This practical programme will make you as effective as Judi
Dench is on screen in every meeting, pitch and conversation in
person or on the phone. You will learn how to impress your boss
without being overbearing, connect with people if you are introvert
and you will have true confidence in all your communication. There
are practical exercises and example throughout and Patsy's results
are amazing.
|
You may like...
Dog
Channing Tatum
DVD
R264
Discovery Miles 2 640
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R342
Discovery Miles 3 420
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|