The
Thespian Ten Commandments: Part 1
(by Herbie J Pilato, Acting
Magazine Contributor) |
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There are hundreds of "rules" to which
an actor must adhere when performing.
For sake of clarity and space, let's
narrow it down to ten, the first five
of which we will explore this month
(and the second five next month):
1. Apply To Your Craft What You
Know From Real Life - And Conserve And
Reserve Your Energy For Performance
Implementation: We've all
experienced good and bad times in our
lives. Some bad. Some good. Yet, what
better opportunity for the actor then
to take these horrific and golden
experiences, and apply them to our
interpretation and/or performance of
the character we have been chosen to
play, or for the scene we choose to
employ as an optimum audition piece.
Let's say you've won the role of
Blanche Dubois in a Broadway
revival of A Street Car Named
Desire. Blanche has several
mental issues, and she is a very sad
character. If you've suffered a major
romantic breakup, either from the
recent or distant past, this is the
time to recall the strong emotional
turmoil you experienced (especially if
you were the one who did NOT initiate
the break-up). Conversely, if you're
an incredibly happy person (which we
all ultimately should be), who has
been fortunate enough to live a
privileged life - free from the kings
and queens of pain and misery - then
you'll be forced to contact one of
your sad friends if you could dip into
their treasury trove of trauma and
remembrance, and ask them to share
their saddest hours.
Which brings up to the second part of
the first thespian Commandment:
Conserve and reserve your energy for
performance implementation.
Essentially, we must not let the
trauma (that today's stress-ridden
life almost encourages) to poison our
systems to the point that we find
ourselves taking drugs to relieve
ourselves of the medicine that we
initially were prescribed to coat the
inaugural depression (from failed
relationships, death of family members
or friends, or financial challenges).
Save that screaming, kicking, hating,
pouting, sobbing, anger, etc. for the
stage, big screen and TV - and make it
work for you there. Don't let it
destroy you off- camera. Just don't
tax yourself with reliving the
negative emotions in real life, but
rather channel them for your reel
life, on the small or big screen. If
you're lucky (though I really don't
believe in luck, I believe in love),
you'll be cast as a manically loud
character for a stage play, and be
able to shout out those emotions loud
and clear on stage for
an-honest-to-goodness live theatrical
performance every night for months on
end (if the play's a good run).
As to the happy emotions and life
experiences? Shoot. You can never
overuse those. In fact, they're
life-inducing. The joys and triumphs
of everyday living may be applied to
the present from any previous past
turmoil, on stage - or off.
2. Be It, Don't Act It: One of
the surest signs of theatrical
immaturity rears its ugly head when an
actor makes it so painfully obvious
that he is acting instead of
being. I could point out about ten
very successful actors who have done
this (and continue to do so), but I
won't.
Instead, I'll just explain to you what
not to do.
For example, if your character is
directed to cry (either by the script
or the director), don't show
that you're crying or that you're sad.
Just cry and be sad.
Don't raise your hand to your forehead
as if you were acting in a silent
movie. Don't display emotions,
feel emotions - and whatever
you do, don't be conscious of the
camera or the audience.
The worst thing you could do when, say
you are cast as the lead character in
a stage comedy, is to react - and
interact - with pride every time
the audience laughs at one of yours or
the character's humorous antics.
Or, let's say you are Rance Dedlow,
the coolest new actor in town - and
you're cast in Hotties and Studs,
the hottest new daytime soap. After a
few days of rehearsal, the director
calls you over for a few notes and
says, "Rance - you're too conscious of
the camera."
You're like, "Uh?"
"I don't see you playing your
character Rance. I see you playing
Rance Dedlow playing your character.
We have to get Rance out of the way,
and just show the character that
you're playing."
That's right, Rance - you're mugging
for the camera. You know the camera's
on you, and you're fixing your hair
ever so slightly, and using those
jaw-bone moves in your cheeks (upper),
because you know they look sexy
(especially after you've just had your
wisdom teeth removed). "Rance," the
director continues. "Your character is
too happy a human being to employ his
cheek bone muscles that way. You
should laugh and smile as wide as you
can. And if your dimples show, well,
then that's okay. But keep those cheek
bone muscles in check."
This type of immature performing just
doesn't happen on TV. I should know.
For a college production of
Stagedoor, in which I played
Keith Burgess - a very arrogant,
self-absorbed character, my acting
professor once chided me after one
performance. I was looking too much
into a teensy-weensy mirror that
happened to be positioned on the stage
- one at which he never directed me to
gaze.
I was already aggravating him because
I continued to debut as Keith under a
different guise every night. "Herbie
J," he would tell me. "What are you
doing? Last night you were Herbie J
playing Marlon Brando playing Keith
Burgess, and tonight you're Herbie
J playing Laurence Olivier playing
Keith Burgess. Be consistent. And
stop looking into that damned mirror."
As arrogant as Keith Burgess was in
this production, he no way near would
have checked his hair as much as I did
during those performances. I'm
surprised my director didn't check
me out of the production, and
inset an understudy.
3. Skim Milk That Pause:
Pausing between lines is a very risky
business. You have to know just when
to do it, and when not to do
it. Let's reference Goldielocks and
the three Bears shall we?
You know the scene about the porridge?
One is cold, the other is
hot, and the final one is just
right. That's how your pausing
between lines should be: Just right.
Not too long, and not too short. But
just right.
Here's the deal: In the 9th Season of
Friends, Jennifer Aniston - in
a temporary fit of insanity, decides
not to continue her $1 million dollar
an episode contract - just as her
character, Rachel Greene, is
about to tell her beloved Ross
Gellar (David Schwimmer) that
she's pregnant. So you're called in to
replace her as the second Rachel
(just like Dick Sargent replaced Dick
York as the second Darrin on
Bewitched. Well, kinda. Anyway,
you're now playing Rachel, and
she has to tell Ross that she's
expecting their child. And the line
is, "Ross, I'm pregnant." Are you
going to whip that out, speed-queenie,
without any pause? Maybe,
because - due to the pace of this
particular show, that just may be the
right thing to do. Or, will you take
it a little slower, with some pause,
say, in between "Ross" and "I'm
pregnant?" Or will you place the pause
between "Ross, I'm" and "pregnant"?
In this particular instance, each one
of these choices may work. But the
point is to measure very carefully
that choice. Especially if your
character is offering a major
revelation in the way of storyline or
character.
4. Remain Likable: This is one
of the most important of The
Thespian Ten Commandments, and one
of the least understood aspects of
acting.
I don't care how unlikable the
character is that you're playing,
as long as your performance is
likable, you will succeed in bringing
your character to life, and ultimate
acceptance by the audience.
The best example of an optimum likable
performance by an actor playing an
unlikable character is Larry Hagman's
iconic performance as JR Ewing
on TV's classic night-time soap,
Dallas. JR cheated on his wife (Sue
Ellen played to the hilt by Linda
Gray) and swindled his dear brother
Bobby (the affable Patrick Duffy),
and went on to hurt and/or manipulate
everyone who he ever loved or hated.
Clearly, he was evil and highly
unlikable character. But Hagman's
performance as JR is unstoppable. In
rerun heaven forever, the viewers
continue to enjoy disliking JR while
equally embracing Hagman's astounding
interpretation. (While watching him
play JR on Dallas, you don't even
think of him as Major Tony Nelson
on I Dream of Jeannie.)
Quite simply, you love to hate JR
Ewing, because you love Larry Hagman
in the role.
Unfortunately, the gang at Seinfeld
did not follow the same path. And
listen, no one is a bigger Seinfeld
fan than me. I watched it from the
minute it hit the air as only a pilot
in the Summer of 1989 (when it was
called The Seinfeld Chronicles).
Originally, the characters of
Jerry, George, Elaine and
Kramer were unlikable - and the
performances by Jerry Seinfeld, Jason
Alexander, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and
Michael Richards started out to be
likable. Early on, all was well in the
unlikable character/likable
performance world of The Thespian
Ten Commandments. That is, until
around the 6th season, when something
strange started happening to show.
The actor's starting breaking many of
the Commandments. Soon, they
became overly conscious of the camera.
The show itself was no longer a
Woody-Allen-esque sophisticated
half-hour film every week. It became
loud, obnoxious, literally
unbelievable, unwatchable and, at
times - and unfortunately - unfunny.
Clearly, the worst thing that could
happen to a comedy.
The main reason? Well, besides the
fact that the actors began to break
Commandment Number 2, Be it Don't Act,
by becoming way too conscious of the
camera, their performances became way
more unlikable than the unlikable
characters they were playing. As the
show went on, everyone was always
yelling all the time, screaming at the
top of their lungs - a stint that was
initiated by George's parents, played
by Jerry Stiller and Estelle Harris.
It worked okay for them, as recurring
characters. But to then have the
entire cast always yelling, every
week, all the time? Uh - no.
5. Speak Clearly Without A Big
Stick: Because this Commandment
has to do with pacing and being heard,
it's kind of a tributary conversation
to Commandment Number 3, Skim Milk
That Pause.
Basically, what we're talking about
here is: taking your time: Nothing
less, and nothing more. And I do mean
nothing is more annoying than watching
a film or TV show - and gosh forbid -
a stage play, and not being able to
hear or understand what the heck the
actors are saying.
For example, this happened an awful
lot on a show like Sabrina, the
Teenage-Witch. Listen - Melissa
Joan Hart was adorable in the role.
But she ran around that series,
slurring her words, talking a mile a
minute, and as much as I tried, I
couldn't understand one dang thing the
chick was saying.
So, as that great Disco Song of the
early '80s commands so well, "Baby,
you can do it, take your time, do it
right. You can do it, Baby. Do it
tonight!"
Well, you get the idea.
Herbie J Pilato is an
Actor, Writer, Producer, and Singer.
The author of several books on
pop-culture (including Bewitched
Forever and The Kung Fu Book of
Caine), Herbie J has appeared on
or helped to produce hundreds of radio
and TV shows, including E! True
Hollywood Stories on Bewitched
and David Carradine, A&E
Biographies of Elizabeth
Montgomery and Lee Majors, The
Learning Channel's Behind the Fame
specials on The Mary Tyler Moore
Show, The Bob Newhart Show,
LA Law and Hill Street Blues,
the Sci-Fi Channel's
short-lived but critically-acclaimed
Sciography series, as well as
several segments of Entertainment
Tonight and the special DVD
release of Kung Fu: The Complete
First Season. As an actor, Herbie
J has appeared on everything from
Highway to Heaven to The Golden
Girls to The Bold and the
Beautiful. And he's directed
mainstage productions of A Phoenix
Too Frequent, Leonard Malfi's
Birdbath, and Little Shop of
Horrors. Herbie J was
recently seen as a Cultural
Commentator for Bravo's
upcoming five-part mini-series, The
100 Greatest TV Characters of All-Time
(on which he also served as Producer),
and served as a Consultant on Nora
Ephron's Bewitched feature film
(starring the Oscar-winning Nicole
Kidman, and Will Ferrell, Shirley
MacLaine, and Michael Caine), while a
special ANNIVERSARY EDITION of
his book, BEWITCHED FOREVER, is
available now. To place your order for
this book, or to contact Herbie J for
any other applicable reason, please
feel free to email him at
hjpilato@aol.com or
his agent, Jennifer DeChiara (JennDeC@aol.com).
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