Workshop for Actors at Max Reinhardt Seminar (MDW)
DATE: November 24-25, 2017
PLACE:
Max Reinhardt Seminar
University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna – MDW (Austria)
HOSTED BY: Giuseppe Ravì, Founder and Master Coach of Respiro e Movimento®
WORKSHOP:
Respiro e Movimento® is pleased to announce a Workshop for Actors at Max Reinhardt Seminar, University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna.
Actors will have the opportunity to work with Giuseppe Ravì, Master Coach and expert in restoring the natural balance and harmony in the human body. The main objective of his workshop is for artists to achieve a deeper connection with themselves.
They will become aware of unnecessary muscular tensions which prohibit the overall ease required in acting.
The result is clear: an overall freedom and strengthening of the essential body movements which enable the artist to physically surpass obstacles which may seem impossible. Actors will learn how to overcome useless contractions and muscle memory, allowing them to feel more centered and act in a more natural, light, free and efficient way.
Check out the testimonials here.
Interview: Andrew James Johnson, Composer and Pianist

That’s a tough question to answer! I would say success means an ability to play the kind of music you like most of all as often as possible! If you can get paid on top of that you’re getting even closer. In my experience, it’s not always the best players or composers that achieve the most success. There’s so much more involved, so many other qualities. It’s so much more than just being able to play all of the right notes in the right order! Success is as subjective just as life itself. I’ve been on both sides of the fence in my career as a musician and it’s one of the most demanding, exhausting and sometimes frustrating industries to work in. Passion and patience are the two big qualities you need, plus a very thick skin. But truthfully I could never do anything other than compose and play the piano. Either one is amazing but both at the same time? Now that’s what I call success!
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Helen Mirren to Teach Her First Online Course on Acting
John Carroll Lynch on Playing Complicated People

Lynch admits he’s used to being asked to play creepy characters, and explains how each actor needs to discover how he or she fits in not only today’s acting scene, but how he or she would’ve been perceived in previous generations. He says, “I seem to be asked to play complicated people. I bring a certain level of menace. The weather changes from sunny to cloudy to stormy with me, and the storms are dangerous. If you want to figure out where you fit in the acting ecosystem, you look at where you would have fit into the generation that came before you. For a while, I thought I was George Kennedy, Karl Malden. American Horror Story’s Twisty the Clown took me to a place where I had to reconsider that. I might actually be Boris Karloff. I guess I’m thinking a lot about death lately.”
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What Made Freddie Mercury the Greatest Vocalist in Rock History?
How Do You Train a Donkey to Be a Met Opera Performer?

In many Met productions, the world’s finest singers share the spotlight with an assortment of four-legged co-stars. In the opening months of the 2017–2018 season alone, three sheep, a horse, and a chivalric donkey grace the Met stage. All five animal actors—and almost all of the Met’s theatrical critters—are provided by All-Tame Animals, a New York–based animal talent agency owned by Nancy Novograd, whose staff put their performers through vigorous training. The All-Tame team prepares the animals by acclimating them to crowds and loud noises, playing music in their stalls, and painting their stall entrances to look like the Met’s brightly striped stage doors. After a few performances, Novograd says, “They even know their music! They doze in the dark behind the scenes, and then when they hear their music, they pick their heads up and get ready.”
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