Kathryn Morgan discusses the face, how the arms and legs can help, and her tips to touch an audience.
DISCOVER YOUR REAL POTENTIAL
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube
Kathryn Morgan discusses the face, how the arms and legs can help, and her tips to touch an audience.
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Gosling says, “I do love movies but I love making them more. I’ve never found something professionally that engages me as much as that. You work with such a large group of people and it’s this constant problem solving process that gets you to this end, whatever that is. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t. It’s always a crapshoot.”
“It’s also nice when you know the people you’re working with,” he added when asked about Stone. “Most of the time, everyone’s a stranger. It’s fine. That’s your job to make it seem like you have a relationship. But it certainly makes it a lot easier when you have one. And you listen to the way that person says their line more closely. You watch the way they’re playing the scene because you know each other. You’re more engaged in the scene than you would be otherwise.”
“We’ve been asked to improvise a lot in the films that we’ve done together,” he went on to say. “I think even in our first audition we were asked to improvise. That just kind of connects actors in a way that just saying dialogue doesn’t do.”
During one of the funniest bits of La La Land, Stone’s character is auditioning for a small role in a film when the casting director takes a call as she’s doing her read. According to Gosling, this was a true story that actually happened to him. “Yeah, where I had to cry and this lady took a call in the middle of it. And then just told me to go on, “Pick up where I left off.” That was part of what was great about making this film was Damien encouraged us to bring our experiences to these characters.
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Maria Callas is the definition of an icon.
Perhaps the most renowned and influential opera singer of all time, she is revered not just for her otherworldly voice and dramatic flair but for her passion, beauty and innate sense of style. The fire and intensity of her personal life paralleled the dramatic roles she interpreted so passionately.
Working closely with the Fondaziono Proge Marzotto, the Italian arts trust who acquired the archive of Maria Callas in 2013; and Karl van Zoggel, head of the International Maria Callas Club, ROADS is delighted to present The Definitive Maria Callas: The Life of a Diva in Unseen Pictures. A lavish visual biography, the books showcases never-before-seen intimate letters, personal photographs and Callas’s private collection of recipes.
A comprehensive and joyous exploration of the life and work of Maria Callas, it is the perfect book for opera aficionados and casual admirers alike.
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MASTER CLASS FOR SINGERS
Heidi Brunner is collaborating with Giuseppe Ravì in order to find a natural connection between the voice and the body, to make singers improve their performance.
DATE: Jan 27, 2017
TIME: 10am-4pm
PLACE: KLAVIERgalerie, Kaiserstraße 10, 1070 Wien, Austria
HOSTED BY: Heidi Brunner and Giuseppe Ravì
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

“I hate the written word,” the choreographer Reggie Wilson said with an almost wicked edge, as he sat in his cozy kitchen in Brooklyn, drinking sweet tea on a recent blustery day. Then, acknowledging my confusion, he added, “Now breathe, breathe.”
This remark is doubly surprising, coming from a choreographer who routinely provides reading lists for the audience before his shows — his “Citizen” has its New York premiere on Wednesday night at the Brooklyn Academy of Music — and who has been described as a kind of cultural anthropologist working in dance. Mr. Wilson’s creations develop out of personal obsessions that lead to years of reading and research trips before he even sets foot in the studio.
The suggested reading list for “Citizen” includes Valerie Boyd’s biography of Zora Neale Hurston; a monograph on Mother Rebecca Jackson, an itinerant preacher who taught herself how to read through prayer and joined the Shakers; and a study of African-American culture during the Jazz Age, “The Practice of Diaspora.”
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