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ACTING

Viggo Mortensen on How He Became an Actor

January 12, 2017 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Viggo Mortensen

It didn’t occur to me to try acting it until I was, for an actor, relatively pretty old — 22 or 23. I was working selling tickets and popcorn in a revival movie theater and I was seeing movies from the ’30s to the ’80s and taking note of certain performances. I started to wonder, What was their trick?How do they affect me so strongly, transport me to places far from the movie house? I wanted to try it.

The first teacher I had was a man named Warren Robertson in New York City. He ran scene-study and exercise classes. I didn’t really know anything; I hadn’t had any kind of acting training so I didn’t even know what I was doing. I actually looked in the yellow pages and thought I would try out for a play. I found a listing that said Actors Repertory Theater — yeah, okay they must do lots of plays with actors! So I called them and I said “I want to try out. What’s the story you’re doing, should I prepare?”  They said, “Just come in Monday at 8 o’clock and bring two pieces.” I go, “Two pieces of what?” It’s a miracle they even let me come in. I cobbled together dialogue of a character from a story by Karen Blixen, the Danish writer Meryl Streep played in Out of Africa. And also, for some reason I prepared the lyrics to an Irish song. I performed those two texts and they said, “We will get back to you.” Then, a couple of days later they called and said, “Okay, you are accepted.” It turned out to be an audition for an acting school, not a play. So that’s how I got started.

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, VIGGO MORTENSEN

Felicity Jones on How She Finds Inspiration For Her Characters

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

 

For all her characters, Jones creates scrapbooks. “Pictures that I see that remind me of the person I’m playing, little bits of writing,” she describes of its contents. “As much as possible, I’m trying to understand who the characters are and why they’re making the decisions that they’re making.”

For Jyn, she also did something a little different, knowing that, coming from another galaxy, Jyn is a different character to most. As THR describes, “Before the six-month shoot outside London began in August 2015, she spent hours watching music videos, particularly those of Florence + the Machine.” “It became a very important part of finding her. She walks almost a bit like a caged animal. Her fight sequences become like dances,” Jones says.

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, CHARACTER, FELICITY JONES

12 Ways to Kick Ass at Improvisation

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

improv

  1. Establish the Location and Who You Are Early On without Spoon Feeding the Audience (being too obvious).
  2. Don’t Block Your Co-Actors.
  3. Be Adaptable.
  4. Don’t Ask Too Many Questions Or Give Too Many One Word Answers.
  5. Tell a Story.
  6. Be Specific.
  7. The Way To Make Yourself Look Good Is To Make Your Co-Actors Look Good.
  8. Cut To The Chase.
  9. Justify Each Word and Action.
  10. You Don’t Have To Be Funny.
  11. Go Line For Line.
  12. Listen Carefully, and with all your senses.

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, IMPROVISATION

Scarlett Johansson on Choosing Roles

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

 

Johansson notes what appealed to her about becoming Black Widow in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, saying, “I’ve always had the same principle for choosing roles, which is to try and make movies that I would pay to see. As I get older that’s meant different things. I’ve never been a superhero-comic fan exactly. I did Iron Man 2 because I loved what [the director Jon] Favreau did with Iron Man. It spoke to me as someone who was not a fan of that genre, and I saw a future in building a character with Marvel. The idea of doing a franchise was exciting — being able to play a character over many installments, the challenge of playing a character who had a built-in fan base, and trying to put my stamp on that character.”

She adds that most of the reasons why she chooses the roles that she does is because of the opportunities to do something new. She explains, “I look for projects with filmmakers who want to make things that give the audience a fresh experience… I’ve always been very competitive, and a part of that is pushing your boundaries — taking a risk, and being able to live with the loss that comes with taking a risk.”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, SCARLETT JOHANSSON

Andrew Garfield on What He Loves (and Hates) About Acting

December 30, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Andrew Garfield

When asked during the roundtable what his favorite and least favorite thing was about acting, Garfield actually offered the same response. He explains, “I just like knowing everything I can. I love the fact that I get to train for a year as a Jesuit priest and then train to be a cop and learn how to make a rocking chair. I want to know everything about everything, and that’s not possible and it won’t be possible. I’m not ever going to reach it. Neil Young has a recurring dream where he has the perfect melody — and he wakes up every time and can’t remember it. And that’s what it is for me. There’s something to aspire to always, there’s somewhere further to go. And the thing that I hate about acting is — well, everything I just said. (Laughter.) The longing is so fucking painful sometimes.”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, ANDREW GARFIELD

Watch a Young Carrie Fisher Audition for Star Wars

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

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, AUDITION, CARRIE FISHER, STAR WARS

Ben Mendelsohn on His ‘Rogue One’ Villain

December 28, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Ben Mendelson

Being in a film the size of Rogue One is quite a change for Mendelsohn, who admits he had a lot of trouble finding work in America earlier in his career. He says, “They came to me after Animal Kingdom — well, they sort of did. There was a bit of a lull until I got in a one-two punch with The Place Beyond the Pines and Killing Them Softly, and then they really came along. But I also had been coming here for about 20 years, trying to get something going on, and I could not get arrested, as they say.”

However, now that Mendelsohn is getting his work outside of his native country, he has to develop accents to portray non-Australian characters. But he welcomes the challenge, and says, “Ultimately, I’m really glad that I haven’t been able to. I believe that having to work on it more has made me better at what I do. Having to spend a lot of time making sure I’m not taking people out of Bloodline or film stuff, you need to put the work in. That has real benefits.”

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, BEN MENDELSOHN

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