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What’s It Like To Take a Ballet Class When You’re Blind?

August 2, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

blind

For most, ballet is a visual art form. The corps de ballet move together as if they are one body, reacting to each other to synchronize their movements and complement their positions on stage. So how can such an art form be accessible to blind and partially sighted people?

For over 25 years, the Royal Opera House’s Monday Moves project has been challenging that very presumption of the art form’s visual nature, with weekly ballet classes specifically for adults with sight impairment.

‘It was an experiment to see if visually impaired people could do ballet,’ explains Maggie, one of the founding members of Monday Moves.

Many of the participants had tried other dance classes in the past, but found them difficult to follow as they couldn’t see what the teacher was doing. At Monday Moves participants have a shared movement language in the form of ballet’s French terminology, enabling faster and more accurate responses to vocal instruction.

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Filed Under: BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, BLIND

Review: Does ‘Cats’ Have Nine Lives on Broadway?

August 2, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

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The overriding spirit of the revival appears to be the familiar motto: Don’t mess with success. Once again, the production is directed by Trevor Nunn, with sets and costumes by John Napier. Once again, a Broadway theater has been transformed into a grungy London junkyard, where trash piles up against the walls and spills out into the auditorium — albeit on a somewhat smaller scale. That levitating tire, as famous a set piece as a certain falling chandelier, presides once again at the back of the stage. (Apparently the license plate on the battered car, which reads “NAP 70,” is an in-joke indicating how many productions Mr. Napier has designed. Imagine how many leg warmers have been involved.)

The most significant nod to the intervening decades and changing tastes is the hiring of Andy Blankenbuehler — the Tony-winning choreographer of “Hamilton,” the newest now-and-forever musical (to borrow the marketing slogan from the first “Cats”) — to groom the original choreography by Gillian Lynne. (Ms. Lynne gave an interview to the website and newspaper The Stage in which she said she felt positively murderous at this betrayal.)

With its thread of a plot, about which feline will be chosen by the lord of the cat kingdom, Old Deuteronomy (an aptly august-acting Quentin Earl Darrington), to ascend to something called the “Heaviside Layer” on the night of the annual “Jellicle Ball,” “Cats” is basically a series of divertissements. The felines prance and romp and occasionally hiss at one another as they introduce themselves in songs that provide the show’s greatest allure, as well as its variety.

Mr. Lloyd Webber is a musical magpie who can compose soaring pseudo-classical music as smoothly as he can jaunty music-hall-style jingles or jazz-inflected rock songs. His dexterity as a composer has never been more vividly showcased as it was, and is, in “Cats.” (His “School of Rock,” with a zesty pop-rock score, is currently installed at the Winter Garden Theater, the original “Cats”-box.)

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Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, CATS, PERFORMANCE, THEATRE

In Comedies, If You Are Not Adding, You’re Probably Be Forgotten

August 1, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Rebel Wilson

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, QUOTES, REBEL WILSON

I Puritani ~ Bellini

August 1, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: I PURITANI, OPERA, OPERA SINGERS, VINCENZO BELLINI

How to Bring a Scene to Life and Captivate Your Audience

August 1, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

The-Wolf-of-Wall-Street

It’s up to you to BRING THE SCENE TO LIFE for it to be believable.

How do you do that?

You need to believe it yourself.

Research.

Read and re-read your script until you know every single detail and then research the hell out of your character. Find out what makes them tick, why they react in certain ways, what their beliefs are and what experiences have led up to this point.

Imagine.

If it’s not given to you by the script, imagine the rest. The more detailed you can make it, the better. Make strong choices.

Relax.

When you are relaxed, your creativity will open up and you’ll be more able to act on instinct.

Visualize.

Step into your character’s body and see the world through their eyes. As you prepare for your scene, visualize what is happening immediately beforehand- this will help you find the right energy, pace and feel of your scene.

Focus.

Focus on what is going on in your imaginary world, on the other characters and on what you (as your character) NEEDS.

Do not focus on whether or not your audience are enjoying it, and whether the director is happy with your performance or not.

Then…

Get lost in the world you have created in your imagination.

 

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Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, AUDIENCE

Watch 26-year-old Brad Pitt (Interview 1990)

July 29, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, BRAD PITT, INTERVIEW, VIDEO

Why Surprise Is The Secret of Theatrical Success

July 29, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Startlingly brilliant … Jesus Christ Superstar at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, in London. Photograph: Jane Hobson/Rex Shutterstock
Startlingly brilliant … Jesus Christ Superstar at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, in London. Photograph: Jane             Hobson/Rex Shutterstock

Surprise often comes with the shock of the new, partly because too much expectation about a show dulls the senses. I’m thinking of seeing the unknown Gregory Burke’s electrifying Gagarin Way, or stumbling across 1927’s Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea at Edinburgh in 2007, or watching Jonathan Harvey’s Beautiful Thing at London’s Bush theatre in 1993. There’s an exhilaration in being part of an audience that has seen something really special, something that most of the world still doesn’t know about. After seeing Black Watch in 2006, I recall how the audience could hardly contain their excitement as they left the Traverse in Edinburgh. Complete strangers were beaming at each other.

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Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, MUSICALS, THEATRE

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