Method Acting Lessons
Excellence in Method Acting
Training To Grow Your Ability And
Advance Your Acting Career
Method Acting Classes

London - Los Angeles - New York

           

Call us on: 02089 066899

VIP Members Login

Corpsing: What You Probably Won’t Learn in Your Acting Courses

Friday, December 11th, 2009


Without the phenomenon of corpsing, TV out-take shows would be a lot shorter. There’s something infectiously funny about actors, TV presenters and other public speakers getting the giggles. And the more they try to control themselves, the more helpless they become.

Corpsing is an occupational hazard for actors, but it has its unfunny side. It wastes time, money and VT. It contaminates the other actors and inconveniences everybody involved in the production.

On stage it is particularly disastrous. The mood and atmosphere that has been carefully built up simply vanishes. The illusion shatters. The audience is jolted out of the world of drama, reminded only too forcefully that these are actors behaving badly – even if they truly can’t help themselves.

What makes an actor corpse? Psychologically, it seems to be related to anxiety. Freud argued that laughter provides a release of psychic tension. Support for this comes from the fact that the altar is a popular place for brides and grooms to start giggling uncontrollably. Or consider the much-viewed YouTube clip of MP Keith Hill in the House of Commons: every time he encounters the challenging tongue twister ‘short sea shipping’ in his speech he cracks up.

The fact is: you can’t make a living from out-take royalties and anything more than the occasional collapse into hysterical laughter starts to look unprofessional. Though the actual outbreak of mirth may be short-lived, its effects are longer lasting. Getting serious and back ‘in the zone’ is a huge challenge for corpsers, especially since the slightest trigger is likely to set them off all over again.

You can do dozens of acting courses but, however many you take, you won’t be able to insulate yourself from the possibility of corpsing. The best you can do is to hone your recovery skills so that you can get back on track as fast as possible. The skills of method acting can come in useful here.

There are two strategies you can use to deal with the giggles. One is relaxation, to release that psychic tension. The only way to stop cracking up again – and again – is to regain your focus and concentration. This is a staple of method acting. Your teachers will tell you that concentration, vital to good acting, is something you can learn if you know the techniques.

Controlling corpsing may not be the main reason that actors choose method acting classes over other kinds of acting courses but it can come in really useful in your acting career.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Interpreting Roles

Friday, December 11th, 2009


Give the same script to a dozen actors and every single one of them will play the same role differently. That’s partly a matter of individual acting style, but there’s more to it.

The words on the page don’t dictate how a role is played. Rather you, as an actor, make a bunch of decisions about how to create the character in question. In your acting courses, you will learn how to interpret those words on the page and translate the skeleton in the script into a three-dimensional being.

So – what exactly do you have to do? What do the critics mean when they rave about an actor’s interpretation of a role (or if they pan it as a misinterpretation)?

The script gives you guidelines to sculpt your character, as well as limits. You’ll have a tough time if you try to play Hamlet the ditherer as Hamlet the bold decision-maker – and your director probably won’t be happy if you try. Most directors have their own visions that you have to take into account – or ignore at your peril.

Even if your director is a dictator, you still have choices when realising (literally ‘making real’) your character. Your first step is to have a thorough understanding of the play or film. Then you can figure out how best to use your voice and body to give your character a physical presence, personality and inner life.

The best actors find ways to bring out new dimensions of a character or to breathe new life into a familiar one. You may have a gut feeling about how to proceed but it takes effort too. It’s an exercise in imagination and lateral thinking – plus good judgement and taking feedback on board.

Acting courses in london can help you to develop the skills you need to interpret roles intelligently. Method acting is a technique that will help you visualise those possibilities and enter into the character. Amongst the acting courses on offer, method acting classes will be especially helpful in giving you many of the tools you need to take your interpretation of the character and give it form, texture and soul.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Tips For Actors: Understanding the Industry

Friday, December 11th, 2009


You probably wouldn’t go to a foreign country without a map, or at least something to help guide you to your destination. The same applies to anyone starting out with acting courses and hoping to carve a career path in acting.

Think of acting as a kind of foreign land. You’ve seen it on TV and in brochures but of course the reality isn’t quite the same. Residents of that land (established actors) know that even reading the guide books doesn’t give you anywhere near all the inside info you need.

In your acting courses you’ll soon learn about the different roles that people play in the industry and how and where you can slot into the structures. That’s part of the battle, because acting is not the easiest arena to succeed in.

The longer you spend creating your acting career, the more you’ll discover – including the unwritten rules. You’ll learn a lot as you become a part of an acting community, even if you’re only on the margins. You’ll probably get some hands-on experience of the terrain of the theatre even if you only have a part-time job manning the box office, for example.

Members of all professions indulge in ‘shop talk’. If people are talking about something, maybe you need to know about it. You never know when snippets of information about the workings of the industry will come in handy. From casual conversations you can pick up tips to help avoid the pitfalls as well as identify the opportunities for you as an actor.

I keep mentioning ‘the industry’ but it’s not a solid or unchanging thing. Keeping tabs on developments is always worthwhile. Fashions and social currents shift. Think of burlesque, which sank in the thirties and came back as humorous theatre sixty years later. Think of the openings for actors that new technologies have created.

Being an actor is more than about honing your dramatic skills. If you don’t know the lie of the land you can make mistakes and miss opportunities. You can’t start exploring too early either. You can start checking out this new world you plan to live in even if you’re a first year student at one of the acting schools.

All careers need some planning, even if there’s no guarantee that your well-laid plans will come to fruition. Getting to know the world of acting extends well beyond your acting courses, but if you’re dedicated it will be a journey of discovery rather than a chore.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Role Models

Friday, December 11th, 2009


As an actor, who inspires you? More importantly, what is it about Robert De Niro or Meryl Streep’s work that says to you ‘Wow! This is what great acting looks like’.

One of the great things about being an actor is that you can chalk up going to the theatre or watching movies as an extension of your acting courses. As an actor you’ll learn a great deal about your craft in acting courses in london, from your teachers and fellow actors, and from your own efforts to master roles. After hours, watching the legends of stage and screen can also be an important part of the learning process.

The thing about great acting is that it doesn’t look like acting. It’s hard to separate the actor from the character. If you ask ‘How do they do it?’ the answer may not be obvious – because the experts do it so well.

It’s worthwhile studying the techniques used by the actors whose work blows you away. You can download film scripts from the web and try playing suitable scenes yourself. Having the words in front of you may help you to identify just what the actor is adding to the scene.

That could be the emphases, tone and pacing of their verbal delivery. It could be the way they marry gesture and movement to the spoken word or the way they use the performance space. If you can get a sense of how different actors amplify and add texture to the roles they play you can use that insight to analyse and enhance your own technique.

Of course you can’t see an actor’s approach to the role and the way he or she prepares. No amount of watching films or plays will reveal how top actors achieve the task of dissolving the boundaries between their own persona and the character they are playing.

Luckily, one way to do this is an open secret, though not all acting schools teach it. Many of the most celebrated actors of our times use the techniques of method acting to prepare for a performance. One principle of method acting is that drawing on emotion-laden memories helps actors to focus and to break down those boundaries.

That results in the seamless performance that is the hallmark of the greats. If you take the time to study their performances, the actors who entertain and move you can also be role models and teachers, from whom you can learn a lot.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Do Your Parents Affect Your Acting Ability?

Thursday, October 1st, 2009


The simple answer is yes, they do.

Every one of us has what psychologists call conditioning. Conditioning is the effect that our culture, environment, the people in our lives and our life experiences have on us.

No two people are alike and the way we perceive the world is different. For example, if two people see a car crash, each will experience it in a different way. Why? Well, one may seen the accident from a slightly different angle, one may be physically fitter than the other, which affects their sensorial perception of the incident, one may have experienced a car crash themselves, one may have lost a friend in a car crash and so on. All these different elements mean that each individual will perceive things differently.

So, how does all this tie into your acting training, and what is your parents’ role in shaping your acting ability?

Well, our parents pass on their fundamental beliefs, many of which you will have consciously or unconsciously adopted.

This affects your acting ability.

Let me give you an example. Say someone has to play a scene in an acting class where they cry. If the actor has grown up in an environment where parents have said that he or she shouldn’t cry, or no one in the family ever cried, it will be harder for that actor to suddenly cry on cue for acting purposes.

Now, this is not to say that actors cannot change this, because they can. They just need to be aware of their conditioning and how it is affecting their acting. Actors can then use particular exercises developed when they attend acting courses to address the issue.

Here is another example of conditioning. When Sharon Stone walks into a room do you think casting directors have any trouble seeing her in the sexy diva-type role? No, of course not. Why? Her natural conditioning supports this type of character. However, if she were to play Mother Theresa then she would need to address her natural conditioning and change it for the audition.

You just have to be aware of your conditioning and any limitations it has placed on your acting ability. Then you can start to address them. In some cases your conditioning will be extremely helpful and will help you play a role better…something you can thank your parents for.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

50 Different Ways To Play A Character

Thursday, October 1st, 2009


One of the most common mistakes I see actors make at is assuming that there is only one way to play a character or a scene. What you may not know is that there are at least 49 other ways that the character and scene could be done.

Let me demonstrate this for you.

If you have a group of 10 actors on an acting course and you ask them to read the same part, each one will be different. There may be commonalities but, because each individual is unique, they will bring their own take on the character.

Of course this is unconscious and driven by the conditioning of the actor.

Great actors are very conscious of this and are constantly looking for the variety of ways a character or scene can be played.

Marlon Brando was a master at this. He used Method Acting and attended method acting classes at The Actors Studio in New York.

Each time he did a film take he would often change what he did in the scene and play with it to see what the possibilities were.

It’s best to have an inquisitive mind as an actor. You should constantly be asking the question – why?

I was speaking with my sister the other day; she has a 2 year old son called Luke. She told me his current favourite word is ‘why?’. Often he will ask ‘why?’ ten times in a row to get the information he needs.

We could all do with a touch of this child-like inquisitiveness. You will discover a lot more than just how to develop your logical train of thought.

Another great quality kids have, that allows them to explore many possibilities, is their ability to play without fear.

Kid’s don’t worry what others may think of them. They just want to play and get what they need. And boy, when they need something, they go after it 100%, finding it in many different ways.

This is something all actors need to develop during their acting training. They have to go after what the character needs in a creative, inventive and fearless way.

We can learn a lot from the little people.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Why a B.A. In Acting Could Spell Disaster In Your Acting Career

Thursday, October 1st, 2009


I often get asked, ‘Is it important to have a degree in acting?’.

My answer is ‘definitely not’. In fact, it can be a hindrance.

Acting is not an academic subject. Sure, you need to analyse a script logically, but you don’t need a Ph.D. in acting to be able to do that. More importantly, you have to be able to take impulses and actions.

In my experience, too much thinking is a killer in creating good acting.

Over-analysing and academic approaches don’t sit well in the professional acting environment. Acting is a practical activity. Acting training requires constant ‘doing’. It requires you to take action…to act.

Often students take the degree route so that at the end of it they can say they have a degree. Why? Well, it’s really an ego thing. It sounds good to say you have a degree but, trust me, it won’t count for anything in the audition room.

Casting directors and agents couldn’t care less if you have a first in acting. What they want is to see is the goods in the audition room. If you have spent years with your head in a book instead of in practical acting courses then it will show.

The current situation in the UK is that many drama schools and acting schools are aligning themselves with universities to ensure student intake and funding from the universities. If it’s an academic course then the government will throw grants at people.

Because of this, I predict that the quality of actors emerging over the coming years will reduce. With more focus being put on academic study, the craft will suffer.

The other reason I hear people give for doing a degree in acting is that it is a safety net. If the acting doesn’t work out then you have a degree to fall back on.

This can be a counter-productive thought process. Having the ‘net’ in place can subconsciously give people a reason to fail. In fact, the ‘net’ unconsciously becomes the plan, because the belief that you can actually make it was never deep enough in the first place. Hence the reason for having a plan B from the outset.

At this point I would like to tell you about the Mongolian army in the 14th century. They were a force to be reckoned with and never lost a battle. The reason? They created conditions which, if they lost, would have devastating effects. When they went to battle they took their wives and children to the battlefield. If they lost the battle, they lost everything. The result was they never lost. They didn’t have a net. It was all or nothing.

Now, I cannot say what is right for you, but what I can tell you is that having a plan B can work against you.

My preference is to build your acting ability to an exceptional level and teach you the business of acting so that you succeed first time round.

When you are looking at this choice – between a degree or practical acting – you have to ask yourself what you really want. If you want to be an actor, then nothing beats acting courses that focus on the practical application.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Does Having A Regional Accent Help Or Hinder Your Acting Career?

Thursday, October 1st, 2009


Coming from Scotland I have had my fair share of discussions over this subject and my view, which is shared by many a casting director, is that accents are cool. Your accent is very much a part of you. It’s part of your identity and so it should be embraced.

The days are gone when every actor had to speak in RP (Received Pronunciation – similar to how a newsreader talks) to get a job. Casting people need regional accents because many dramas require them.

I remember constantly being told to lose my Scottish accent when I was at drama school in london. Which I learned to do.

However, I got the shock of my life when I started working in the profession. My main selling point became my Scottish accent. Admittedly ‘Trainspotting’ and ‘Braveheart’ had just been released, which caused a big change in how Scottish actors were perceived.

It also marked a change for people with regional accents all over the UK.

Now, I am not saying that you should only use your own accent. I think you should be able to adopt another accent if the part demands it and when you are practising scenes during your acting courses, this is a good way to test yourself.

The main thing to remember is that when you change accents it’s for a creative purpose, not just because you think the industry wants you speaking the Queen’s English.

I like accents because they are also part of our history in the UK. RP is a social accent and therefore has no real history behind it.

The thing that really tickles me is how Shakespeare is spoken in RP by much of the acting establishment. But in Shakespeare’s day RP didn’t exist and you were much more likely to hear his words spoken in a London accent or another regional tone.

It seems that we have come full circle since those days.

Remain flexible is my advice during your drama school and acting training. Keep the individuality of your own accent but have the ability to change should it be necessary.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Acting: Is It Art or Craft?

Monday, August 24th, 2009

You’re an actor – or on your way to becoming one. Do you think of yourself as an artist? Or do you regard acting as a craft? The difference between arts and crafts has been hotly debated for a very long time, especially in the visual arts. What does the distinction mean in the world of acting?

The difference between art and craft is partly a product of recent times and is often tied to modern aesthetic judgements. If you like it a lot it’s art. If you want to put it down, call it craft. Alternatively, you might think of the amateur actor as a craftsman and the professional, who has had acting training, as more of an artist. Some might even argue that the art of a dramatic work lies mainly in the writing and direction, and that actors are largely craftspeople who deliver the artistic product. But there are other ways you can see it.

A useful way of distinguishing art and craft is to think of craft as something that potentially anyone can learn. It’s that component of your capacity as an actor that is developed through teaching, by learning methods and techniques (at drama school and in acting training) and honing those techniques in practice. Artistry is harder to pin down, but typically refers to that indefinable quality that exceptionally skilled or gifted people possess. It’s what Robert De Niro or Cate Blanchett have in spades and a lot of other actors don’t possess to the same degree. No doubt that is what you aspire to in your acting career.

There are other ways of looking at the art : craft distinction as well. You can think of the art of acting as a question of individual style. Someone who not only masters a technique but also makes it his or her own might be regarded as an artist rather than a craftsperson. Art is what happens when it you have mastered your craft and are able to add something that is uniquely yours. Each of your performances is larger than the sum of its parts and we can call the difference ‘artistry’.

Wherever you stand in this endlessly arguable debate, most people agree that there is no art without craft. In your acting career, you would probably rather be seen as an artist than a master craftsperson. The thing to remember when you start out in acting is that everyone begins in the same place: learning the craft and the ‘tricks of the trade’. For almost all successful actors, this begins in the classroom or actor’s studio.

From this perspective, acting lessons deal in the craft of acting. It doesn’t follow, however, that your acting training doesn’t also concern acting as an art. Without a doubt, some of the artistry we admire in the performances of celebrated actors is also learned. It’s just harder to label. Acting training will also help you recognise what artistry looks like – even if you can’t pin it down. Perhaps another way of seeing the artist is as someone who, perhaps subconsciously, sees, understands and internalises that which cannot be taught.

Your acting lessons are about learning the nuts and bolts of the job. But drama classes are also a key environment for developing the ability to appreciate quality. That will help you, as an actor, to fine-tune your own performances, extend your scope and up your game. In this and other ways the art v. craft distinction breaks down. Method acting is a technique that is taught in academies and actor’s studios. It is also one that is associated with many of the actors we regard as great artists. That probably isn’t just coincidence, and the art and craft of acting can be tough to separate.

As an aspiring or novice actor you can set aside thorny questions and academic debates about acting as an art if you wish. Answers will surely take shape as you learn the craft that is always the foundation stone of all good acting.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

Character Creation and the Method

Monday, August 24th, 2009

The process of working on characters – believable, flesh-and-blood characters – comes early, way before you step into a role. You, the actor, will prove crucial in rounding out the screenwriter’s and director’s vision. Great actors bring themselves and an emotional understanding of the role that either makes or breaks a part.

Few actors in film have been as successful as those trained in The Method. Why? Because from the point of view of directors, screenwriters, and the audience, method acting works because it delivers the characteristics promised by a character.

One of the screenwriter’s first steps is to write a character biography. This comes after the initial inspiration taken from the real cast of characters in the writer’s lives. By taking one trait from one person and another from someone else, a real person takes shape in their mind.

For instance, they’ll take Aunt Martha’s jealousy of younger beauties and combine it with Mum’s need to wipe off surfaces all day long even when there’s no sign of dirt anywhere. This establishes, for the writer, someone who is insecure, aging, and trying to hold onto a sense of control. In remembering Aunt Martha, the writer smells her icky-sweet perfume, and sees her crusty makeup’s mark on napkins and cups. These details provoke emotions (pity and disgust perhaps) in the writer. Method acting classes aims for a similar result, using the actor’s own emotional memories.

When the director “takes the helm” of a script, the characters take another test of believability. Directors have their own references for a role. Perhaps it’s a male friend who goes on drinking binges in response to his wife’s cheating. The director remembers his yellow fingertips from smoking cigarettes and his shaky manner. As a real person, this friend is totally believable. Solid acting training gives you just the kind of honesty that will convince the director that you’ve turned into this guy. (For the time being, of course!)

Everyone has life experiences with real people in it. It’s up to good acting schools and method acting in particular to point the way to how you can pass those “truth” tests with amazing results.

An actor bring a character out, from inside, using emotional intelligence. For the writer and director (not to mention producers and crew), the process stays trapped in their heads. An actor trained in method acting goes on a natural process of bringing personal emotional memories to serve the character’s needs.

How well the actor does this is key. It’s a lot to live up to, I know. But it’s also one challenge method acting training is equipped to meet. As the leading provider of method acting classes in London, I can help you get there.

When you get there, you’ll feel it. The director sits back, setting the script aside. All that matters now is you, the character, in action. That’s powerful. And there’s no faking it. Aunt Martha won’t go for it.

Sign Up FREE
Join Brian’s email list to receive Special Acting Reports and important tips and advice on how to grow your ability and advance your acting career.
First Name
Email

 
 

About Brian Timoney | Acting School London | Acting Classes London | Drama School London | Sitemap | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us

Copyright Brian Timoney Actors Studio Limited 2008-2011.