A NOTE TO CLASS
A note to zoom class • September 4, 2023
Today I started reading a book on Kazan and Directing.
This quote hit me: “You have to start from the actor, and you have to find out where the part is
alive for him. Somewhere within them the part must exist.”
It’s one of the reasons we’re working so hard with connecting to everything you’ve selected. If
you have a connection, if you have something that is alive for you, then you bring that to your
work … and you get people to feel differently. They feel what you feel. It becomes your
signature on the part you’re playing.
Working slowly, especially in the early stages of rehearsal, is helpful. Maybe it means simply
giving yourself a break from the pressure of ‘I’ve got to come up with something’. When you
consider how many areas of the technique there are, – relationship to the partner, relationship to
the place, what the images are, what the theme might be, … countless possibilities, – just sitting
with the material and allowing yourself to let what’s there to affect you, is no doubt a great key
to creativity as an artist.
Another issue, which I believe comes from working too fast, is the one of jumping to
conclusions. It’s kind of a stab in the dark, hoping that it might land. Sometimes we not only
make clichéd choices, we make uneducated ones. Greg did it by announcing that the character
was working class and, because of that, this was a really exciting event for him. Even though I’m
not sure what one fact had to do with the other, making a choice like that comes from rushing too
quickly to make actor decisions. I’m almost certain that it comes from the thought either
conscious or not, “If I were working class (which Greg isn’t) this would be exciting for me.”
It’s good actor practice to be able to think, “I have no idea what it must mean to be working
class,” – allowing you to have a jumping off place. Working class is a bit obscure as an example,
but a possible starting place for your work might come from asking yourself the question, “What
do I think the audience will find the most difficult to believe about me?” The answer is in the
facts of the play: I’m a mother, I’m a lawyer, I’m a violinist, I’m gay, I’m straight, I’m Margaret
Thatcher… Giving yourself permission to sit with one of these facts of the play to see what
comes up is such an exciting part of our work.
Vakhtangov: “An actor, at every given minute, must believe in the importance of what happens
onstage.” I would add to that: what happens in the text. You really have to take the time to look
at what is there and have a clear sense of how it impacts your choices. Why does this character
talk about certain events? What does that tell you? You’re not going to get it all at once, but you
want to begin to incorporate all you know.
Another quote from Vakhtangov: “the important thing is not to play an étude well, but to include
as many aspects of our training as frequently and as consciously as possible. This is necessary so
that you develop a subconscious habit of using all the abilities we ‘cultivate.’ This can be
compared to learning a foreign language.”
Learning a foreign language is no doubt a better metaphor than my sport’s metaphors. If you
only use certain words when you learn a language, then you will never know the language. It's a
good actor habit to attempt to actively use all of the tools we have. Talent without a technique is
like having a Porsche with no gas.
I cannot encourage you enough to take your time going through the text. Really figure out what
feeds you. What your relationship is to what is there. “You have to start from the actor, and you
have to find out where the part is alive for him. Somewhere within them the part must exist.”