WHEN SCIENCE MEETS ART

WHEN SCIENCE MEETS ART

(Excerpt from a Study) […] Our interest in the psychology of emotions led us to undertake an analysis of the creative legacy of K.S. Stanislavski. The result of this analysis was the essay “The Method of K.S. Stanislavski and the Physiology of Emotions,” written between 1955-1956 and published by the Academy of Sciences of the […]

Mikhail Chekhov vs. Yevgeny Vakhtangov

Mikhail Chekhov vs. Yevgeny Vakhtangov

Topic: Training The first known publication on Stanislavski-based training dates back to 1919. At that time, the magazine Gorn, published by Proletkult (Proletariat and Culture), featured two articles by Mikhail Chekhov about the system, describing some of its exercises. Mikhail Chekhov, then a brilliant actor at the Moscow Art Theatre, was deeply influenced by Nietzsche, […]

The Usefulness of Mistakes

The usefulness of mistakes

It is not a good sign when a student performs all exercises flawlessly and rarely makes mistakes. This means that they are not giving the green light to many things emerging within them—they are keeping themselves in a moderate, safe valley, where they can walk comfortably with their eyes closed, knowing there are no holes, […]

You can either BE a character or intellectually KNOW who the character is

Sutherland Donald

Andrei Malaev-Babel explains the words by Demidov by saying You can either BE a character, and be in the heat of the moment, or intellectually KNOW who the character is, what the character does or wants – one or the other. I can either be inside a story or be outside of it and “tell a […]

We say acting is listening…

The eye is the lamp of the body

We also say that the soul is in the eyes… And we know, we damn well know that Meisner, for instance, is trying to teach you how to listen and how to see (to perceive), especially in the foundation of his technique. Do I agree with the way of implementation? Yes and no, but that’s not the […]

Most of you are probably not Star Wars fans. So be patient…

Baby Yoda

There is a Star Wars “spin-off” (yeah I know, there are many spin-offs; Star Wars is merchandise, after all). However one of the not-so-crappy ones was “The Mandalorian.” In a sense, it is an American space western that follows Din Djarin aka “Mando”, a lone Mandalorian bounty hunter who resembles Clint Eastwood, in the outer reaches of the […]

Solve et Coagula

Solve et Coagula

“The desperate need for coagulation.” In the world of alchemy, the precursor of science-based thinking, magic, and logic were intertwined. In the “golden bough” a book by anthropologist James George Frazer, one can see the history of magic, reason, religion, and science. It all starts with a need to “control” the environment and fate. A crude example of what […]

Chekhov’s Five Principles

Michael Chekhov's Five Principles

Michael Chekhov speaks about five principles in a series of lectures he gave to a group of actors in Hollywood in 1955. For example, the “psychological gesture,” which is externally invisible during performance, serves as “material” for inspiration during rehearsal and performance. This also applies to the “imaginary or energetic body,” the “imaginary/ideal center,” and […]

The love for art and the love for me, me, me.

A phenomena I see is the perpetual love for self in art instead of art for art sake. Stanislavski said it best, when he called out “don’t love yourself in art, but the art inside you”, the problem was in all probability as prevalent then as it is now. I am not saying loving yourself […]