Acting (Re) Considered - Preface Chapter
Acting (Re) Considered - Preface Chapter
Acting (Re) Considered - Preface Chapter
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
Between theory and practice
Phillip B. Zarrilli
Scientists of the body speak in figures, teachers of acting speak in images, artists
speak in words, theorists speak in propositions. To speak in any of these forking
tongues is to be split from the others. It is necessary, though perhaps not pos-
sible, that we describe a line that will join these several points. The gap between
performance and thought is not simple, but is composed of sub-gaps on either
side, between the pedagogical imagery of performance and the flesh which per-
formance possesses, between thought about the theatre and the metathought
which plays through theatre . . . The performer and the thinker could momen-
tarily meet in the sign’s provisional and already receding closure. The two might
be – is it too much to ask? – the same person.
(Hollis Huston 1984: 199)
There are many languages and discourses of acting, each written/spoken from a
particular point of view. Theorists often speak only to theorists; practitioners only
to practitioners. Too seldom do they speak to each other. This book invites us to try
to speak and listen across these gaps and boundaries to each other and to those
parts of our “selves” which might practice theory or theorize practice.
Like the seminal book of Toby Cole and Helen Krich Chinoy, Actors on Acting
(1970[1949]), this collection, by juxtaposing historically diverse and often contra-
dictory views of acting, invites the reader to (re)consider both acting and discourses
on acting. I use “(re)consider” to mark clearly the implicitly processual nature of
“considering.” This view invites us not only to see performance as processual but
also to see that “both society and human beings are performative, always already
processually under construction” (Drewal 1991: 4).
From this point of view, theatre-making is a mode of socio-cultural practice. As
such, it is not an innocent or naive activity separate from or above and beyond
everyday reality, history, politics, or economics.1 As theatre historian Bruce
McConachie asserts, “theatre is not epiphenomenal, simply reflecting and express-
ing determinate realities and forces” (1989: 230); rather, as a mode of socio-cultural
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Or, there are moments when the actor’s relationship to his or her practice is
altered in a way that makes clear that there can be no “neutrality” in art. As Eelka
Lampe reports in this volume (Chapter 23), performance artist/feminist
Rachel Rosenthal’s (re)consideration of acting was prompted by her attendance at
a conference of women artists at the California Institute of the Arts in 1971:
Because she had been taught a history of art that considered only the contribution of
male artists, and because she thought of herself as an artist, she identified with men.
“Then I came to this conference, and I saw slides of extraordinary work. . . . And so
for the first time in my life, I began to shift my identification, and began to see that I
could be an artist and be a woman.”
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• GENERAL INTRODUCTION
clarifies the differences between the later Stanislavsky’s method of physical actions
and Strasberg’s notion of affective memory may lead to a profound (re)consider-
ation of acting. So might encountering a performance (in the flesh or via type or
tape) by Dario Fo, Rachel Rosenthal, David Warrilow, DV-8, Forced Entertain-
ment, a Tadashi Suzuki-trained actor, or a performance of kathakali by Gopi Asan.
Whatever prompts a particular (re)consideration, the reverberations of that encoun-
ter have the potential to affect not only one’s acting but also one’s understanding of
“self,” society, ideology, politics, etc.
Acting (Re)Considered invites students of acting, actors, and theorists alike
to put aside parochial preconceptions and points of view that propose acting
as a truth (that is, one system, discourse, or practice). This book invites instead a
pro-active, processual approach which cultivates a critical awareness of acting as
multiple and always changing. Of course, in the moment of performance, the actor
must embody a specific set of actions as if these were absolute. But every “absolute”
viewed historically and processually is part of a multiplicity.
The critical awareness and reflection which (re)considerations can prompt does not
occur in a vacuum. Teachers of acting, professional actors, directors, and produ-
cers have control over, and therefore responsibility for, the working/learning
environments we create. To what degree are we actively making an environment
which encourages critical inquiry and reflection, not only about “art” in the narrow
sense but also concerning the material circumstances and issues implicit in the art
we make? How theatre is made – from scene work and exercises, to rehearsals, to
productions – includes attention to issues of race, gender, class, and ethnicity.
Failing that, we abrogate our responsibility not only to train students’ acting skills
but also to educate them about what they are being trained to perform.3
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• PHILLIP B. ZARRILLI