Use this bar to show information about your cookie policy.
Roll over image to zoom inClick on image to zoom
/
Description
This book is a must for all professional and student actors, and for acting teachers as well.
A concise, clear explanation of exactly how to create a character in plays of any period, using the Stanislavsky system. Known for his detailed approach to the art of acting and for the authenticity of his historical productions, Stanislavsky believed that actors should immerse themselves completely in the era in which a play or film is set.
The chapters provide inspiring cultural, social, and historical introductions to the periods from ancient Greece through the end of World War Two. Each chapter covers the way men and women moved, stood, and sat in the clothing they wore; the use of accessories such as fans, swords, snuffboxes, gloves, and hats; greetings, bows, andcurtsies; table manners; and the etiquette, civility, and automatic hab its of thinking and of social intercourse depending on social class. Allthese things that people took for granted as the background of their li ves, as part of their conscious and unconscious mental world, are the essential components of building a character with real, organic behavior associated with a specific era. Literature, music, painting, and other graphic arts are all discussed as well, and the sections on films and television programs, as well as bibliographies of books and recordings, willguide your further research.