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ACTING

Woody Harrelson on Choosing Projects

April 7, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Woody Harrelson

Harrelson recently starred in big-budget films like The Hunger Games and will also appear in the upcoming Star Wars Han Solo spinoff movie. When asked why he decided to star in a smaller, more modestly-budgeted movie like Wilson, Harrelson answered that he makes decisions based on who is yelling “Action!” He responds, “Well, I’m really more or less in the habit of … Having had some experiences where I was just like, That was stupid that I did that movie, I learned one thing — the most important thing is the director. The second most important thing? The director. [Laughs.] The third most important thing? The director.” He claims that he signed up for Wilson because he enjoyed the previous film directed by Craig Johnson, The Skeleton Twins.

Even though Harrelson has been actor for several decades, he claims there are still several skills he is trying to master. For example — effective dramatic pauses. He explains, “I remember hearing this thing that … I think it was Brando who said [does Marlon Brando impression], ‘Just because I say action doesn’t mean I have to do anything.’ That statement really hit me. Brando’s ability to just say, This is me in action. Not rushing. I wouldn’t say it’s one of my strengths, but I do think it’s something I’d like to be able to just … working with Hailee Steinfeld [in The Edge of Seventeen] — she’s a very young actress but I think she’s super fucking talented and I love how she can just take a long time before she [long pause] does anything. It’s something I want to learn. By the way, you still want to try and make your performance compelling. You don’t want it to be full of the most boring pauses… There’s so much to nonverbal communication that I have yet to really understand as an actor, and maybe as a person. Just like the beats between the lines of a poem having so much import. The times where you’re saying nothing, but there’s that something going on that makes it compelling. That, to me, is pretty interesting.”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, WOODY HARRELSON

7 Truths About Supporting Yourself As An Actor

April 6, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

  1. There is no right or wrong way to support yourself as an actor.
  2. Acting is a business, and you need to support it.
  3. You need to support yourself too.
  4. You and your business are two separate entities.
  5. Cultivate a thriving income stream, not a survival job.
  6. The best kind of income for actors is steady/flexible income.
  7. Have patience and create a long-term plan.

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, ADVICE

Selena Gomez Answers 73 Random Questions While Walking Around Her Airy Los Angeles Home

April 6, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, SELENA GOMEZ

Chris Evans on How Characters Mirror the Audience

April 5, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Chris Evans on gifted

One of those roles is starring in 2017’s Gifted, in which he plays an uncle to a genius seven year-old named Frank Adler. In an interview with Esquire, Evans speaks about what he learned from Julianne Moore about what the audience seeks in movie characters, and why audience members could identify with his Gifted character more easily than Captain America.

Evans says, “With Steve Rogers, even though you’re on a giant movie with a huge budget and strange costumes, you’re still on a hunt for the truth of the character… With Adler, it’s nice to play someone relatable. I think Julianne Moore said, ‘The audience doesn’t come to see you; they come to see themselves.’ Adler is someone you can hold up as a mirror for someone in the audience. They’ll be able to far more easily identify with Frank Adler than Steve Rogers.”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, CHRIS EVANS

Christina Ricci on Why it’s So Hard to Cast Her

April 4, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Christina Ricci

Unfortunately, like many actresses over thirty Ricci has had difficulty landing substantive, high-profile roles in the last decade. She believes part of that results from the youthful roles she is commonly associated with as a former child actor, saying, “I think until this I haven’t really been viewed as a romantic lead. And I think in some ways the image I presented of myself throughout the years has caused people to have a hard time casting me… One of the things that has actually been hard for me, in terms of being cast in things, is that I am very youthful seeming. The way that I speak, the way that I act — it’s very young. … And I also tend to speak like a teenager. I just have a very teenaged thing, which I’m trying to overcome. You’re very easily dismissed if you’re a small woman who looks young and then talks like an idiot, or a teenager. It’s not a good look. … I say ‘like’ a lot and ‘you know’ a lot and all these things and I’m trying to fight them.”

However, Ricci is quick to add that she doesn’t regret being a child actor — although she cautions parents about the lifestyle. She explains, “I don’t regret having started so young because I’m in such a great place and I’ve been so incredibly lucky in my life. But having gone through it, I can objectively say I don’t think children should be making life decisions. … I think it’s very difficult for children to contextualize fame. And if there’s no reference, there’s no life experience, they can’t necessarily contextualize achievement. So then there’s no barometer. If the first exposure to society is crazy fame and awards, where does a child put that? It becomes something that isn’t special. So what comes after that?”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, AUDITION, CHRISTINA RICCI

How to Stand Out As an Actor

March 31, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

 

Journaling.

Examples:

  • What do I need to let go of to move forwards?
  • What are my values?
  • Who is important to me?
  • What do I love about myself?
  • Where do I want to be in 5 years’ time?
  • What makes me really feel alive?

Meditate.

Spend time on your own.

Make time to just be.

Once you figure out who you truly are:

Do the things that you were born to do.

 

That is what will make you stand out.

That is what will make you memorable.

That is what will make you more likely to be cast in the roles that were made for YOU (and they are out there).

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS

‘Beauty and the Beast’ Star Luke Evans

March 30, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

What fans might not be aware of, is that Evans started out in theater, and didn’t land his first film role until he hit 30. Since then, he’s concentrated on acting in straight roles only, which is a shame, since now we’ve heard him in Beauty and the Beast we want to hear him in every musical going. But Evans only got the role because of his previous work on stage, in particular, his role in Piaf, at London’s Donmar Warehouse.

“It was actually a casting director who was casting out of London and she knew that I sang,” Evans tells THR. “She had seen me in a musical I did called Piaf in London in the Donmar Warehouse and so she was very aware, many, many years ago that I could sing. She knew that I hadn’t sung since I started doing movies, and then this came up. She waited for the right time to bring me in to meet [director] Bill [Condon]. It all clicked, it all fell into place.

There has been offers in the last few years, but they didn’t seem to be the right job and so I didn’t pursue them. It took a couple of goes by my agents to get me in for Beauty and the Beast because I hadn’t really watched the animated movie for a very long time and I had forgotten how great the journey of Gaston is. You see all the colors of the character, from the loveable rogue to the buffoon to the jealous, revengeful sort of monster that he becomes by the end of the movie. So, it actually took me sitting down and watching the cartoon with my godchildren which made me realize how brilliant the role was and that I totally should do it.”

Evans doesn’t make light of the amazing opportunity he was granted, either. He knows Gaston is a wonderful role, and is grateful he landed the chance to portray him on screen:

“If there’s one thing I’m comfortable doing in this life it’s singing. It’s like therapy to me. I’ll sing to anybody at any time, at anything, I will just sing. I love to sing. It was a joy for me to finally get to do it on the big screen in such a wonderful vehicle as Beauty and the Beast, playing this character with those songs. It was magic.”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, LUKE EVANS, SINGING

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