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The purpose of this theatre blog is to promote what I’m doing (and what I think about what I’m doing)—and what you’re doing, if you care to share.

Showing posts with label philosphy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philosphy. Show all posts

Monday, September 13, 2010

How Good Are You?

If you're as good as they say you are, you may believe it. But if their response is silence—no roles, not even audition callbacks, that means you're no good?

Let's forget what they say—or don't say. You are God's gift—some say that, too. I'm saying it. Being a success as an actor is assured if you persevere. If you never step on a stage again—outside of classes and workshops—and you just can't count those, can you?—then you're an actor, period, end of discussion.

I believe in you. Not personally, at least not at this moment—I mean, anybody could be reading this. But, whoever you are, I truly believe in you. I believe your success as an actor rests on you refusing to stop auditioning, continuing to think like an actor, whether it's critiquing someone's film performance or reading a play with your imagination in gear.

All art is process, though we will always obsess on the end product. Be an actor. After all, you are one.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Whose Play Is It, Anyway?

I have made many changes to several plays based on a director's sensibilities and suggestions. Granted, this was during the development process—though the development process never really ends, does it? This is called artistic collaboration.

Audiences are never in on any of this, and the audience experience means everything to me, more than my creative self-approval. I save all my material, including many alternate endings, cut scenes, songs. My art is all that others see and all that they don't. I'm king of my universe, as self-absorbed and proud of my work as the next megalomaniac. But in life, in business, even in the arts business, I strive to be patient, kind, and ever so tolerant.

The meek inherit the earth—and don't get an inflated sense of themselves.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

An Inveterate Actor

If I were many persons, one of them could devote his entire life, all his energies and love, all his creative powers, all his aspirations, and put all his values in the service of acting in theatre.

What lost, sorry soul he would be.