Talk:Acting: Difference between revisions
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imported>Stephen Ewen (Launt, see User_talk:Launt_Thompson#Boxes. ~~~~) |
imported>Pat Palmer (more lists of topics related to, or subordinate to, Acting) |
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Launt, see [[User_talk:Launt_Thompson#Boxes]]. —[[User:Stephen Ewen|Stephen Ewen]] [[User talk:Stephen Ewen|(Talk)]] 00:31, 24 August 2007 (CDT) | Launt, see [[User_talk:Launt_Thompson#Boxes]]. —[[User:Stephen Ewen|Stephen Ewen]] [[User talk:Stephen Ewen|(Talk)]] 00:31, 24 August 2007 (CDT) | ||
== some approaches to include == | |||
* method acting (per Stanislavsky) - famously used by Dustin Hoffman; made fun of during a cameo by (director) Sydney Pollack in the film Tootsie | |||
* Brechtian acting (has goals opposite to "method acting") - Mother Courage, for example, employed large captions to distract audience from believing in the characters being shown | |||
* improv (maybe, or maybe a different article, since it is not using a script); maybe belongs, at least in part, with comedy, but is not always comedic in its goals | |||
* theater vs. film acting | |||
* spying, disguises, con artists (in literature, for example) - i.e., The Scarlet Pimpernel is famous for wearing disguises and seeming to be someone else |
Latest revision as of 10:17, 11 August 2020
Launt, see User_talk:Launt_Thompson#Boxes. —Stephen Ewen (Talk) 00:31, 24 August 2007 (CDT)
some approaches to include
- method acting (per Stanislavsky) - famously used by Dustin Hoffman; made fun of during a cameo by (director) Sydney Pollack in the film Tootsie
- Brechtian acting (has goals opposite to "method acting") - Mother Courage, for example, employed large captions to distract audience from believing in the characters being shown
- improv (maybe, or maybe a different article, since it is not using a script); maybe belongs, at least in part, with comedy, but is not always comedic in its goals
- theater vs. film acting
- spying, disguises, con artists (in literature, for example) - i.e., The Scarlet Pimpernel is famous for wearing disguises and seeming to be someone else