The Stage Actor s Handbook

The Stage Actor s Handbook
Author: Michael Kostroff,Julie Garnyé
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 165
Release: 2022-07-13
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781538160442

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The Stage Actor’s Handbook is an invaluable guide to theatre’s traditions, protocols, etiquette, and best practices for current and aspiring performers. Spanning from first rehearsal to final curtain, it details the well-established, often-unwritten rules of theatre and includes insights from a host of well-known stage actors.

The Back Stage Actor s Handbook

The Back Stage Actor s Handbook
Author: Sherry Eaker
Publsiher: Backstage Books
Total Pages: 430
Release: 2004
Genre: Acting
ISBN: UOM:39015060113498

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An indispensable reference for actors, singers, and dancers, The Back Stage Actor's Handbook has been totally updated to guide tomorrow's performing artist to success.

The Actor s Survival Handbook

The Actor s Survival Handbook
Author: Patrick Tucker,Christine Ozanne
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2014-03-18
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781135470425

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Worried about short rehearsal time? Think that fluffing your lines will be the end of your career? Are you afraid you'll be typecast? Is there such a thing as acting too much? How should a stage actor adjust performance for a camera? And how should an actor behave backstage? The Actor's Survival Handbook gives you answers to all these questions and many more. Written with verve and humor, this utterly essential tool speaks to every actor's deepest concerns. Drawing upon their years of experience on stage, backstage, and with the camera, Patrick Tucker and Christine Ozanne offer forthright advice on topics from breathing to props, commitment to learning lines, audience response to simply landing the job in the first place. The book is rich with examples - both technical and inspirational. And because a director and an actor won't always agree, the two writers sometimes even offer alternative responses to a dilemma, giving the reader both an actor's take and a director's take on a particular point. Like Patrick Tucker's Secrets of Screen Acting, this new book is written with wit and passion, conveying the authors' powerful conviction that success is within every actor's grasp.

The Back Stage Guide to Casting Directors

The Back Stage Guide to Casting Directors
Author: Hettie Lynne Hurtes
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 212
Release: 1998
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0823088065

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In updated profiles, the most influential American casting directors reveal their methods of selecting actors for stage, screen, TV, and commercial jobs. This close look at how actors are chosen is an invaluable guide for thousands who depend on casting directors for career opportunities. Includes list of casting directors, contact information, and tips.

A Practical Handbook for the Actor

A Practical Handbook for the Actor
Author: Melissa Bruder,Lee Michael Cohn,Madeleine Olnek,Nathaniel Pollack,Robert Previto,Scott Zigler
Publsiher: Vintage
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2012-04-25
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780307499134

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This simple and essential book about the craft of acting describes a technique developed and refined by the authors, all of them young actors, in their work with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Mamet, actor W. H. Macy, and director Gregory Mosher. A Practical Handbook for the Actor is written for any actor who has ever experienced the frustrations of acting classes that lacked clarity and objectivity, and that failed to provide a dependable set of tools. An actor's job, the authors state, is to "find a way to live truthfully under the imaginary circumstances of the play." The ways in which an actor can attain that truth form the substance of this eloquent book.

Act

Act
Author: David Rotenberg
Publsiher: ECW Press
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2021-04-20
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781773057293

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A lively, conversational textbook dedicated to the art of acting from a master teacher. Act: The Modern Actor’s Handbook is the result of 30 years of one of North America’s most renowned acting teachers teaching some of the world's most talented screen actors. This is a full tour through the concepts at the heart of Rotenberg’s techniques: states of being, primaries and secondaries, images that you elaborate up or distill down, modifiers, actions and beats, and more. Although his methods loosely draw on the great acting teachers like Hagen and Meisner back to Stanislavski, he teaches new techniques suited to the best of today’s screen actors. This is a major new work in the actor’s library and will be pulled off the shelf time and again to find that key into a scene, to prepare for an audition, or to find that right technique to make the art come alive again.

Working Backstage

Working Backstage
Author: Christin Essin
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2021-09-20
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780472054961

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Places backstage workers in the spotlight to acknowledge their essential roles in creating Broadway magic

Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination

Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination
Author: Thomas Bogar
Publsiher: Regnery Publishing
Total Pages: 402
Release: 2013-11-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781621570837

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April 14, 1865. A famous actor pulls a trigger in the presidential balcony, leaps to the stage and escapes, as the president lies fatally wounded. In the panic that follows, forty-six terrified people scatter in and around Ford’s Theater as soldiers take up stations by the doors and the audience surges into the streets chanting, “Burn the place down!” This is the untold story of Lincoln’s assassination: the forty-six stage hands, actors, and theater workers on hand for the bewildering events in the theater that night, and what each of them witnessed in the chaos-streaked hours before John Wilkes Booth was discovered to be the culprit. In Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination, historian Thomas A. Bogar delves into previously unpublished sources to tell the story of Lincoln’s assassination from behind the curtain, and the tale is shocking. Police rounded up and arrested dozens of innocent people, wasting time that allowed the real culprit to get further away. Some closely connected to John Wilkes Booth were not even questioned, while innocent witnesses were relentlessly pursued. Booth was more connected with the production than you might have known—learn how he knew each member of the cast and crew, which was a hotbed of secessionist resentment. Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination also tells the story of what happened to each of these witnesses to history, after the investigation was over—how each one lived their lives after seeing one of America’s greatest presidents shot dead without warning. Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination is an exquisitely detailed look at this famous event from an entirely new angle. It is must reading for anyone fascinated with the saga of Lincoln’s life and the Civil War era.