|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
44 matches in All Departments
In the 21st century, actors face radical changes in plays and
performance styles, as they move from stage to screen and grapple
with new technologies that present their art to ever-expanding
audiences. Active Analysis offers the flexibility of mind, body,
and spirit now urgently needed in acting. Dynamic Acting through
Active Analysis brings to light this timely legacy, born during the
worst era of Soviet repression and hidden for decades from public
view. Part I unfolds like a mystery novel through letters, memoirs,
and transcripts of Konstantin Stanislavsky's last classes. Far from
the authoritarian director of his youth, he reveals himself as a
generous mentor, who empowers actors with a brand new collaborative
approach to rehearsals. His assistant, Maria Knebel, first bears
witness to his forward-looking ideas and then builds the bridge to
new plays in new styles through her directing and influential
teaching. Part II follows a 21st century company of diverse actors
as they experience the joy of applying Active Analysis to their own
creative and professional work.
Theatres world-wide embrace Chekhov's handful of plays with a
fervour second only to Shakespeare's. Whatever their native
language or culture, audiences often see themselves in his Russian
characters, making Chekhov seem an author who easily transcends his
own culture and time. Nonetheless, students, actors, and audiences
alike are often initially puzzled by Chekhov's dramatic texts. Are
they comic or tragic, ironic or sincere, starkly familiar or
willfully elusive? How can his often seemingly irrelevant dialogue
create dynamic performances? In his stories and plays alike,
Chekhov challenges his readers to diagnose his characters' desires,
opinions, heartaches and joys in the same way that doctors diagnose
illness by attending closely to apparently trivial details. In the
plays where narrative voice is absent and characters speak for
themselves reading under a microscope becomes all the more
necessary. The expert attention that Carnicke pays to the
performative dimensions of Chekhov's plays makes her book unique
among the published guides to Chekhov's works.
This book paints a vivid portrait of Anton Chekhov - a Russian
writer whose elusive personality and richly detailed plays have
left an indelible imprint upon the world's theatre. Every page
reveals the joys and difficulties of his short life, his comic
sensibility, deep compassion, and often puzzling use of dramatic
style and genre. Carnicke demystifies Chekhov's plays - forged from
his literary innovations, avid theatre going, love of vaudeville,
and loathing of melodrama. She interweaves biographical and
cultural information with insightful case studies and close
analysis to leave her reader with a full and fresh perspective on
an artist, who is as foundational to theatrical traditions as are
Shakespeare and Stanislavsky.
Stanislavsky in Focus brilliantly examines the history and actual
premises of Stanislavsky's 'System', separating myth from fact with
forensic skill. The first edition of this now classic study showed
conclusively how the 'System' was gradually transformed into the
Method, popularised in the 1950s by Lee Strasberg and the Actor's
Studio. It looked at the gap between the original Russian texts and
what most English-speaking practitioners still imagine to be
Stanislavsky's ideas. This thoroughly revised new edition also
delves even deeper into: the mythical depiction of Stanislavsky as
a tyrannical director and teacher yoga, the mind-body-spirit
continuum and its role in the 'System' how Stanislavsky used
subtexts to hide many of his ideas from Soviet censors. The text
has been updated to address all of the relevant scholarship,
particularly in Russia, since the first edition was published. It
also features an expanded glossary on the System's terminology and
its historical exercises, as well as more on the political context
of Stanislavsky's work, its links with cognitive science, and the
System's relation to contemporary developments in actor-training.
It will be a vital part of every practitioner's and historian's
library.
In the 21st century, actors face radical changes in plays and
performance styles, as they move from stage to screen and grapple
with new technologies that present their art to ever-expanding
audiences. Active Analysis offers the flexibility of mind, body,
and spirit now urgently needed in acting. Dynamic Acting through
Active Analysis brings to light this timely legacy, born during the
worst era of Soviet repression and hidden for decades from public
view. Part I unfolds like a mystery novel through letters, memoirs,
and transcripts of Konstantin Stanislavsky's last classes. Far from
the authoritarian director of his youth, he reveals himself as a
generous mentor, who empowers actors with a brand new collaborative
approach to rehearsals. His assistant, Maria Knebel, first bears
witness to his forward-looking ideas and then builds the bridge to
new plays in new styles through her directing and influential
teaching. Part II follows a 21st century company of diverse actors
as they experience the joy of applying Active Analysis to their own
creative and professional work.
Grace-Ella is thrilled when a black cat walks through her door.
She's always wanted a pet. But Mr Whiskins has a secret. On the
ninth day of the ninth month of her ninth year, he tells Grace-Ella
that she is a witch and can start learning magic with the Witches'
Council. Her parents are shocked, particularly Mam, who worries
what other people will think. Grace-Ella has never been good at
school - can she learn to be a good witch? As well as struggling
with lessons, Grace-Ella and her best friend Fflur are bullied by
star pupil Amelia. The Witches' Council forbids using magic against
anyone. But how else can Grace-Ella protect her friends? Grace-Ella
is a magical, funny adventure, first in a series, about friendship
and being true to yourself.
"A significant contribution to the literature on screen performance
studies, Reframing Screen Performance brings the study of film
acting up to date. It should be of interest to those within cinema
studies as well as general readers."
---Frank P. Tomasulo, Florida State University
"Reframing Screen Performance" is a groundbreaking study of film
acting that challenges the long held belief that great cinematic
performances are created in the editing room. Surveying the
changing attitudes and practices of film acting---from the silent
films of Charlie Chaplin to the rise of Lee Strasberg's Actor's
Studio in the 1950s to the eclecticism found in contemporary
cinema---this volume argues that screen acting is a vital component
of film and that it can be understood in the same way as theatrical
performance. This richly illustrated volume shows how and why the
evocative details of actors' voices, gestures, expressions, and
actions are as significant as filmic narrative and audiovisual
design. The book features in-depth studies of performances by
Anjelica Huston, John Cusack, and Julianne Moore (among others)
alongside subtle analyses of directors like Robert Altman and Akira
Kurosawa, Sally Potter and Orson Welles. The book bridges the
disparate fields of cinema studies and theater studies as it
persuasively demonstrates the how theater theory can be illuminate
the screen actor's craft.
"Reframing Screen Performance" brings the study of film acting
into the twenty-first century and is an essential text for actors,
directors, cinema studies scholars, and cinephiles eager to know
more about the building blocks of memorable screen performance.
Cynthia Baron is Associate Professor ofFilm Studies at Bowling
Green State University and co-editor of More Than a Method: Trends
and Traditions in Contemporary Film Performance. Sharon Carnicke is
Professor of Theater and Slavic Studies and Associate Dean of
Theater at the University of Southern California and author of
Stanislavsky in Focus.
This essay collection explores the phenomenon of "teen TV" in the
United States, analyzing the meanings and manifestations of this
category of programming from a variety of perspectives. Part One
views teen television through an industrial perspective, examining
how networks such as WB, UPN, The CW, and The N have created a
unique economic framework based on demographic niches and
teen-focused narrowcasting. Part Two focuses on popular teen
programs from a cultural context, evaluating how such programs
reflect and at times stretch the envelope of the cultural contexts
in which they are created. Finally, Part Three explores the
cultures of reception (including the realms of teen consumerism,
fan discourse, and unofficial production) through which teens and
consumers of teen media have become authors of the teenage
experience in their own right.
|
Three Sisters (Paperback)
Anton Chekhov; Translated by Sharon Marie Carnicke
|
R309
Discovery Miles 3 090
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
First published in her Chekhov: Four Plays and Three Jokes , Sharon
Marie Carnicke's eye-opening translation of Three Sisters appears
in this edition with a new Introduction that expands upon her
discussion in Four Plays & Three Jokes of Chekov's innovative
dramaturgy--especially as seen in this subtle melodrama turned
inside out.
|
Three Sisters (Hardcover)
Anton Chekhov; Translated by Sharon Marie Carnicke
|
R835
Discovery Miles 8 350
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
First published in her Chekhov: Four Plays and Three Jokes , Sharon
Marie Carnicke's eye-opening translation of Three Sisters appears
in this edition with a new Introduction that expands upon her
discussion in Four Plays & Three Jokes of Chekov's innovative
dramaturgy--especially as seen in this subtle melodrama turned
inside out.
Stanislavsky in Focus brilliantly examines the history and actual premises of Stanislavsky’s 'System', separating myth from fact with forensic skill.
The first edition of this now classic study showed conclusively how the 'System' was gradually transformed into the Method, popularised in the 1950s by Lee Strasberg and the Actor’s Studio. It looked at the gap between the original Russian texts and what most English-speaking practitioners still imagine to be Stanislavsky’s ideas.
This thoroughly revised new edition also delves even deeper into:
the mythical depiction of Stanislavsky as a tyrannical director and teacher
yoga, the mind-body-spirit continuum and its role in the ‘System’
how Stanislavsky used subtexts to hide many of his ideas from Soviet censors.
The text has been updated to address all of the relevant scholarship, particularly in Russia, since the first edition was published. It also features an expanded glossary on the System's terminology and its historical exercises, as well as more on the political context of Stanislavsky's work, its links with cognitive science, and the System's relation to contemporary developments in actor-training. It will be a vital part of every practitioner's and historian's library.
Table of Contents
Preface: Stanislavsky Enters the Twenty-First Century Part 1: Transmission From Moscow to New York. New York Adopts Stanislavsky. Part 2: Translation The Classroom Circuit. The Publication Maze. Part 3: Transformation Stanislavsky’s Lost Term. Emotion and the Human Spirit of the Role. Action and the Human Body in the Role. Conclusion: A Legacy for the Future. Appendix I : Reading Between the Lines. Appendix II: Stanislavsky and Modern Dance. The System’s Terminology: A Selected Glossary
This volume offers lively and accurate translations of Chekhov's
major plays and one-acts (complete contents listed below) along
with a superb Introduction focused on the plays' remarkably
enduring power to elicit the most widely divergent of responses,
the life of the playwright in its historical and aesthetic
contexts, suggestions for reading the plays under a microscope, and
notes designed to bring Chekhov's world into immediate
focus--everything needed to examine his drama with fresh eyes and
on its own artistic terms.
|
Acceptance In Ice (Paperback)
Sharon Marie Brown; Illustrated by Damian Aviles; Rina Brown
|
R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
You may like...
Intifada
Joshua Seraphim
Hardcover
R531
Discovery Miles 5 310
Knapsekerels
Pieter Fourie
Paperback
R159
Discovery Miles 1 590
|