TIPS II, More Ideas for Actors
By Jon Jory
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About this ebook
Until very recently, directing wisdom was passed on in the form of "tips." Continuing this tradition, you will find these tips ranging from developing back-story to confusing flirting with sexual tension. The tips are clear, concise, evocative, and constructed to give you a better day in rehearsal and performance. A buffet of ways to improve immediately that you'll refer to over and over again!
Jon Jory
Jon Jory served as the producing director at Actors Theatre of Louisville for thirty-one years, during which time he directed over 140 plays and produced over 1,300. He is recognized as a major innovator and initiator for the American theater during a crucial era of its growth. Throughout his career, Mr. Jory has devoted his energy to the rebirth of the regional repertory and to excellence in all facets of production, but especially to the encouragement of new writers and the production of new American plays. Mr. Jory is himself a published playwright. He has brought new plays to festivals all over the world and Plays from Actors Theatre directed by Mr. Jory have been seen On- and Off-Broadway, on national television, and in fifteen regional theaters in the US. He has directed plays and taught in Greece, Canada, Bulgaria, Australia, Hungary, Israel and Ireland.
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Reviews for TIPS II, More Ideas for Actors
8 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A fun and insightful book that is exactly as the title states. Jory shares so many interesting tips for situations I have never even thought of. I love the stories and the candor in which he writes.
Book preview
TIPS II, More Ideas for Actors - Jon Jory
Miranda
Preface
If you think of the great acting theorists as architects, then this acting book is by a carpenter. Although the art of acting must be complexly addressed and is an intellectual, spiritual, and emotional discipline, there are a number of simple things to say about it. Hopefully, this book says some of them.
The tips work two ways. They remind you of necessities you have overlooked while you’re trying to accomplish something else: My view is that simply because something is self-evident doesn’t ensure you recognize it in the heat of battle. They also deal with small parts of larger problems, and this gives you a place to start without being overwhelmed by the big picture. Tips are, in fact, shortcuts while pursuing larger game.
In other words, this is a book of reductionist thinking about acting that attempts to give you, or remind you of, small tools for whittling this profound art of acting down to a size you feel comfortable coping with. It’s a big deal to confront a grizzly bear in the woods; however, if you knew a bunch of smaller things—such as walking slowly backward while maintaining eye contact—you would probably survive the encounter. That, in my opinion, is a tip. You don’t need to know everything about grizzly bears to employ the tip and benefit from it; it’s something that works for that situation. These tips won’t explain the bear, but they’ll help get you out alive.
Jon Jory
BASICS
CIRCUMSTANCES
These are no subjective opinions. These are facts in the text. It is six o’clock. It takes place in Las Vegas. Jack is a butcher, etc. Sit down and list them. Then ask questions of yourself to break them open. It says Bethany had an abortion. Ask why. Ask if religion affects her choice. Ask if anyone influenced her choice. Ask whatever strikes you as pertinent. Answer and ask again until it creates a lake of information you can draw on in rehearsal. To break open a single circumstance may take a half hour, so pick the most pertinent to work on if your time is limited. This is crucial work. If you don’t understand the circumstances, you can’t build the role appropriately or understand the rules of the text. Acting serves the text, and the text gives boundaries to the actor. Let’s call these boundaries the rules. The circumstances are the rules for that particular play. We need the rules to do the work.
BEATS
The beat is to acting as the paragraph is to writing. The beat changes when the subject (textual or sub-textual) changes. The beat is ordinarily defined not from your character’s viewpoint but from the text’s. Beats are ordinarily marked by the actor with brackets [ ]. The uses of marking the beats are many. It forces us to ask what is really going on before we can identify it. It helps us understand the text’s rhythm and style as it would in music. It points out that a transition exists and must be played between beats. It gives us units of text that we can further analyze for context and structure. It makes clear when the action changes. Sometimes a beat may seem to be about going shopping but is really about the characters’ relationship on a subtextual level. The beat then ends when the subtext changes. Beats strung end to end with different actions, obstacles, and tactics identified create the role’s landscape.
AN ACTION
Whole tomes are written on the action. Whole theories make it central. Every actor claims to use them. Why then do they seem so often absent? To remind us, the action is either what you want the other person onstage to do, to feel, or to understand. If you’re alone onstage, the action has the same definition only applied to you. Because large roles are made up of hundreds of actions, very few performers will do all that homework. Admit you are lazy and use them for spot work. This moment isn’t working—what’s the action? This beat seems unclear—what’s the action? I feel self-conscious here—what’s the action? For an action to be dramatic, it needs a counterbalancing obstacle; so make sure you know what it is. When you know the action and the obstacle and it still isn’t working, raise the stakes. Simple as that.
ACTION II
This action: What you want the other to do, feel, or understand, hopefully puts the scene between you. The action probably relates to the meaning of the scene or the theme of the play. If the action of the beat is I want him to kiss me,
that’s good because you will know when the action is completed. If, however, the action oversimplifies the intent of the moment, it will demean the scene. To further pursue the idea of the action, use the words to what end?
The answer to the question I want him to kiss me, but to what end?
(nothing bawdy, please) will add a resonance to the acting. In a sense, every action contains philosophy and poetry; it is not simply the pursuit of a square meal.
By understanding not only the action’s simplicity but its resonance, the acting will have weight and dimension. No action is graven in stone. You can try it and then change it. The action isn’t a result
; it’s an attempt. But have one.
TACTICS
The action is what your character wants another character to do. The tactic is how you get the other to do it. The action, as in Lopahin trying to get Madam Ranevskaya to sell the cherry orchard, may last for an entire play, but the tactics keep changing. The same thing is true in a single beat. Even in six lines there may be several changes of tactics. You may cajole, play on her sympathy, demand, and sulk all on a single page in the service of a single need. The more difficult the obstacle, the greater the number of tactics. The values to the actor of varying the tactics are many. On the simplest level, it provides crucial variety, which is the staff of life for both the actor and the audience. Needing to change tactics is the sign of a good, juicy, frustrating obstacle that engages our full attention. Each change of tactic also provokes a new and different response from our scene partner, which moves the scene forward. One warning: Make sure the tactics are appropriate to the character and to your common sense view of what people actually do in real circumstances.
SUBTEXT
Subtext is, obviously, what you really mean under what you say. You say, I’m going to bed
; you mean I don’t want to talk to you.
Over the course of a career as a director, I’ve found that asking what the subtext is improves work more immediately than almost any other tool. Usually when you identify the subtext, you find it also describes an action and thus is doubly useful. While most actors use subtext consciously or unconsciously, they may not think to decode the other characters’ unspoken intentions, which can unlock a recalcitrant scene. We not only speak code, we are always busy decoding one another’s conversation, which deeply influences the way we relate to each other. If the scene is eluding you, write the subtext for the other character as well as your own, and see if it isn’t wonderfully clarifying.
THE ARC
This is the difference between what your character wants and feels at the beginning and at the end. There’s arc for the whole play, the act, the scene, and even the beat. Pick a section you are working on and think about it. Once you can articulate a starting and finishing point, look for the fulcrum moment where your character starts the journey away from A and begins the transformation to B. Yes, you can go on a journey from Peoria to Peoria, but who wants to? And more important, who wants to see it? What really animates a major character is change. The arc helps define what that change is. When working on the play as a whole, it is valuable to start with the end, define it, and then go back to the beginning and make sure it is situated differently. Remember that the arc can also be used on microsections for spot work. Arcs also enforce variety and give you the crucial sense of the role as a whole. Without it, you can get lost in the details.
BACKSTORY
This is the character’s offstage history, both mentioned in the text and imagined by the actor. Back-story helps you explain behavior, stimulates you emotionally, and allows you to deepen and make more dramatic key moments and scenes. Don’t develop the backstory until your character understanding is quite advanced. Use backstory to assist in clarifying your behavior. If you can’t point to the line in the play that your backstory affects in a way that helps you make a point the playwright wants to make, don’t go to the trouble. The wrong back-story produces the wrong moment. The childhood you imagine must produce the character the playwright imagines. Backstory is not playwriting; it is supportive evidence for the case the text makes. Don’t play the character to support your backstory. Create the backstory to heighten circumstances clearly in the play—best done after a week of studying text and revised in rehearsal.
THEME THREADS
If you don’t know what the play’s about, how are you going to recognize the important moments? If you don’t recognize the important moments, how are you going to act the part? Don’t neglect the big picture. Theme threads are strings of meaning that run through the play. This is about loneliness, that’s about loneliness, over here they mention loneliness. Hmmm, could be a theme thread. When you’ve identified five or six theme threads in the text and subtext, write them in order and see if you can think of a category that includes all or most of them. This is a central theme. Now take the theme to the text and identify moments that explicate the theme or theme threads. These are likely to be important moments—important to give focus to and play interestingly and well. The basic idea is that without a map of the big picture, it’s difficult to make the little things work. You owe several hours to this process.
TECHNIQUE
CLAIMING THE SPACE
There are mysteries in acting, and this is one of them. Why is it that some actors and some performances do what we call hold stage
? I personally think it’s an absence of fear. When shards or splinters of your fear of the role, the play, and your adequacy are present (I shouldn’t really be up here, I know you’re not going to be interested in me
), the audience senses that desperate edge and retreats from it. The actor’s physical and emotional discomfort makes the audience uncomfortable as well. The actor who truly feels