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Full Description
Stanislavsky and Screen Actor Training is a collection of essays mapping the acting field's current engagement with Stanislavsky practices and concepts for training in the screen industries across continents.
This edited volume collates the efforts of teachers of screen acting to identify, investigate, articulate, document, and disseminate Stanislavsky-inspired practical tools for actor training for the screen. Providing reflections from instructors and teachers of acting for the screen, it interrogates the ways in which the actor's craft affects cinematic processes and experiences through the lens of Stanislavskian methods. Part one looks at the ways in which Stanislavsky's concepts can be applied within the screenacting studio. Then, part two moves on to investigate the process of active analysis within the studio. Part three presents ways in which Stanislavsky's methodologies can be adapted for the screenacting process. Finally, part four looks at Stanislavsky-inspired pedagogical innovations for training screen actors. Support material for this book is available at www.routledge.com/9781032986081
Stanislavsky And... is a series of multi-perspectival collections that bring the enduring legacy of Stanislavskian actor training into the spotlight of contemporary performance culture, making them ideal for students, teachers, and scholars of acting, actor training, and directing.
Contents
Introduction
A. Positioning The Anthology Within Contemporary Screen Actor Training
B. Stanislavsky on Cinema and Film Acting
Part 1: Stanislavsky's concepts in the screen acting studio
1. Visualization: Stanislavsky and Rosenstein on Fostering Imagination and Concentration
2. "Fragmented" Radiation [Izlucheniya] for Camera
3. Accessing Stanislavsky's state of 'experiencing' [Perezhivanie] for the screen actor
4. Presence [Prisutstviye] Without Rehearsal: States of Being in Daily Television Production
Part 2: Active Analysis in the screenacting studio
5. Prompting Inner Monologue through Active Analysis
6. Embodying Active Analysis and Inner Monologue for the Screen
7. Reimagining Active Analysis: Cultivating Spontaneous Actor Responses for the Screen
Part 3: Adapting Stanislavsky for screenacting processes
8. Exploring Internal vs. External Tempo-Rhythm: Live-Editing in Screen Acting Training
9. The Film Actor Prepares with Michael Chekhov and SynthAnalysis™
10. In-Camera Études: Delivering Purposeful, Precise, and Readable Performances in Every Take
Part 4: Pedagogical Innovations Inspired by Stanislavsky
11. Discovering Sensorial Shakespeare Through Language and Focal Points
12. Bridging Practices: Enhancing Mike Leigh's Method Through Stanislavsky's Tools
13. Ethnoacting in VR for Resilience in Screen Actors: a Vakhtangov-inspired intervention
Index



