The art of acting

Stella Adler

Book - 2000

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Applause c2000.
Language
English
Main Author
Stella Adler (-)
Other Authors
Howard Kissel (-)
Physical Description
271 p., 8 p. of plates : ill. ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781557833730
  • Preface
  • Class 1. First Steps On Stage
  • Class 2. The World of the Stage Isn't Your World
  • Class 3. Acting Is Doing
  • Class 4. The Actor Needs to Be Strong
  • Class 5. Developing the Imagination
  • Class 6. Making the World of the Play Your Own
  • Class 7. Getting Hold of Acting's Controls
  • Class 8. Learning Actions
  • Class 9. Making Actions Doable
  • Class 10. Building a Vocabulary of Actions
  • Class 11. Instant and Inner Justifications
  • Class 12. Complicating Actions
  • Class 13. Giving Actions Size
  • Class 14. Understanding the Text
  • Class 15. Character Elements
  • Class 16. Dressing the Part
  • Class 17. Learning a Character's Rhythm
  • Class 18. Actors Are Aristocrats
  • Class 19. Making the Costume Real
  • Class 20. The Actor Is a Warrior
  • Class 21. Stanislavski and the New Realistic Drama
  • Class 22. Portraying Class On Stage
  • Afterword
Review by Booklist Review

When Adler died in 1992, the theater lost a great teacher, whose depth of experience alone made her invaluable. Daughter of one of the greats of Yiddish theater, Jacob Adler, she studied with Stanislavski, was a founder of the Group Theater and appeared in many of its seminal productions, married the brilliant critic Harold Clurman (they later divorced), and after the Group Theater folded, founded an acting school that rivaled Lee Strasberg's. But she never wrote a book about her theories and techniques. This collection, culled from sound recordings of her at work, at least re-creates the feel of her classes. Editor Kissel deserves great credit for shaping what could have been a chaotic collage of pronouncements into a coherent whole. The book's 22 lively chapters detail Adler's techniques for preparing her students for a life on the stage. Theater aficionados will appreciate Adler's discussion of modern plays and her belief that acting is a rare, privileged profession, and young actors will benefit from the many acting exercises sprinkled throughout the text. --Jack Helbig

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

This second collection of Adler's papers precedes the material found in the previous collection (Stella Adler on Ibsen, Strindberg and Chekov, LJ 4/15/99), ending as she begins text analysis. Here Kissel (David Merrick) has taken tapes, transcriptions, notebooks, and other sources to reconstruct an acting course in 22 lessons. What results is Adler at her strongest. Coming from a theatrical family and having studied with Stanislavsky, she became an old-fashioned autocratic teacher determined to pass on the best that she knows. She was certainly the best of her generation. The lessons are graduated from very basic matters to quite complex issues of textual analysis and decorum. Though mostly monologs, they include enough exercises and student responses to get the flavor of Adler's work. Some themes run through these classes: American culture is bankrupt, Lee Strasberg got Stanislavsky wrong, and class and its formality must be learned in order to do major plays through the realist period. This is required reading for anyone interested in theater practice.DThomas E. Luddy, Salem State Coll., MA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.