Method--or Madness?: With an Introd. by Harold Clurman |
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Contents
Background | 3 |
The Method Itself | 23 |
Some Attitudes toward the Method | 51 |
Method Fetishes | 67 |
Truth in Acting | 87 |
Actors or Artists? | 105 |
The Method and Poetic Theatre | 123 |
Rehearsal Procedureand Summa | 139 |
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Common terms and phrases
acting Actor Prepares actress actual artist attitude audience beautiful Ben-Ami Brigadoon Building a Character called chart costume create curtain dance dancer director Duse elements emotion everything example feeling Félia Litvinne felt fetish Gene Lyons girl give going Group Theatre Hamlet happened Harold Clurman hear idea imagination important inner intention John Barrymore Laurette Taylor LECTURE Lewis listen look means ment Method actors Michael Chekhov Moissi mood Moscow Art Theatre moved movement Nina Koshetz Ophelia Othello Pauline Viardot performance person phony poetic theatre problem production psychological realistic rehearsal remember rhythm Sakini Salvini scene sense Shakespeare singing sound speaking specific speech stage Stanislavski Method Stanislavski system style talk technical technique tell tempo tempo-rhythm theatrical thing tion Tommaso Salvini true truth understand voice walking week whole play words