Actors will often ask me whether or not they should enact a bit of stage business which is mentioned (or implied) in the script.
They
anxiously wonder if they should-
Get
up,
sit
down,
cross
to the door,
kiss
the bride,
show
the badge,
throw
the vase,
hold
the gunÉ
etc.
etcÉ.
If
youÕve ever wondered how much miming and/or movement you should do in an
audition, the answer is simple:
Just
ask yourself-
ÒAm
I doing it for them or for me?Ó
In other
words, if you are doing the movement in order to help
yourself to more deeply experience the scene, then do it!
However,
if you are doing the movement in order to show the casting director what the
scene ÒshouldÓ look like, then donÕt bother with it.
You must understand that your job at an audition is not to show them the scene, but instead, to selfishly enjoy your own experience in the world of those circumstances.
Therefore,
you should feel free to do as much as movement as you want to do, as long as
you are doing it in order more fully experience the scene.
In
other words, make sure you are doing it FOR YOURSELF.
HereÕs an example I like to use:
If
you are playing a character who is making a wedding toast, it would be helpful
to mime the glass in your hand and raise your arm as you excitedly announce,
ÒTo the bride and groom!Ó
However, there is no need to
repeatedly mime taking sips of your drink throughout the rest of the scene!
Miming
the toast will help you to experience what the character is experiencing at
that moment. (The movement will affect how you say the
line. ÉTry saying a toast without lifting your arm. ItÕs just isnÕt the same!)
On
the other hand, miming the sipping does little to affect your inner experience of
what the character is going through and/or feeling.
É
And you would look pretty silly.
Often,
a stage direction will ask you to do something that involves another person;
like shaking hands, hugging, kissing, or punching.
Do
not ever touch the reader! Not even a
handshake.
But
you can mime a handshake in the air in front of you if you would like.
Some
actors might say, ÒI would feel so silly doing that.Ó
But that statement is coming from fear. What they are actually thinking is - ÒIÕm afraid of looking silly.Ó
Ignore
fear. It is an illusion. Anything fear-based is.
The casting director
doesnÕt think it looks silly. He
knows that an audition is a different animal from the actual filmed
performance. They donÕt expect it
to look just the same.
They expect you to make
do with the circumstances at hand.
So,
if a scene calls for you to angrily push someone as you shout-
ÒGet
OUT, Jason!Ó
-then
I would suggest that you do the movement.
The
movement will affect how you say the line and it will demonstrate to them that
you understand the circumstances and are an actor who desires to have a full,
rich experience.
DonÕt
worry what it looks like. Just
forcefully push your arms out in the air in front of you, and have faith that
you are actually pushing someone.
The movement will also be beneficial to your emotional life. It will affect your physical being by making your heart beat faster.
I believe that much of what makes up emotions is physical.
For instance, ÒrageÓ is an acceleration of your heartbeat mixed with thoughts/feelings that cause anger.
Do yourself the favor of helping yourself with the movement. DonÕt worry or be concerned with what it looks like. It is for you, not them.
Many actors
feel embarrassment at the notion of miming an action.
They will
say, ÒI donÕt want to mime. IÕm an actor,
not a mime!Ó
YouÕre right! You are not there to be a mime.
No one expects you to lean on invisible counters or walk on invisible tightropes (but if you do, use an invisible umbrella, it helps with balance!)
No one is judging you on your miming skills, therefore you
donÕt need to do things Òfull outÓ.
You can mime an action Òjust enoughÓ so that you can reap the benefit of the action without looking like youÕre trying to be the next Marcel Marceau. (He was a famous French mime, for you youngsters!)
You
donÕt need to do an action full out in order to experience it. Therefore you can strike a balance.
For
instance, if the stage directions call for you to enthusiastically hug someone,
miming a Òjust enoughÓ version of that can help you feel that experience and will
therefore affect how the lines come out.
But
the movement neednÕt look exactly like a hug.
You neednÕt reach your arms waaaay out in front of you, and carefully close them upon some invisible person.
You
need only raise your shoulders, bend your arms, and tighten your body to
experience what that hug would feel like.
And that movement will positively affect how you say a line like,
ÒOh! ItÕs so good to see you!Ó
Try
this acting experiment:
With
feeling (but NO movement), say the line-
ÒItÕs
so good to see you!Ó
Now
try it again, but this time do the Òjust enoughÓ version where you tighten your
body-
ÒItÕs
so good to see you!Ó
IÕll
bet the second time was a lot easier and felt more deeply.
To
further illustrate this ÒbalanceÓ IÕm talking about:
If
the script has you running down a hall to catch up with someone, or crossing
the room to open a door, you need only take a couple of steps to get the feeling of
it.
ThatÕs the balance weÕre striving for; somewhere between Òfull outÓ and Ònot at allÓ.
Some
stage directions are just too awkward to try to mime.
If,
for instance, a script calls for a kiss, never mime it. Just look into the eyes of the reader
and have faith that you are kissing the person. Experience it internally. Let the rest of your body react to the
kiss.
The same is true for an elongated physical fight. No need to punch and kick the air for five minutes. Just have faith that you are involved in a fight. ItÕs enough to just experience the physical repercussions (or ÒresultsÓ) of the fight; i.e. heavy breathing and trying to catch your breath.
When
an actor is too shy and cautious to make interesting physical choices, I will
tell them, ÒSome
actress is going to come in and sit on the windowsill for her audition or jump
up onto the table.Ó
And when she does, the casting director will think-
ÒWhat a wonderfully audacious performer! What a free spirit!Ó
IÕm
certainly not suggesting that you do either. You can just as easily book a role
sitting in a chair the whole time.
But
I am
trying to make you see that the space is yours to do with what you like. I want you to feel free to do what you
want to do, and what will excite you.
One of the
first TV jobs I booked was to play a mall security guard in a sitcom
pilot.
In the scene, my character was involved in a gun fight. So, I crouched behind a chair, fired my ÒgunÓ, then jumped into the air, did a somersault and rolled behind a couch across the room.
I took a
risk, and it paid off with getting the job.
So, if I
can do that,
certainly you can stand up at some point!
Many
actors feel overwhelmed at auditions.
They have so much they are worrying about (the lines, their performance,
etc.) that they would rather play it safe and just sit in a chair, even while
the stage directions describe movement.
They
figure, ÒI have enough to worry about without adding movement!Ó
That
is not thinking from a place of abundance.
That
kind of thinking is coming from a place of scarcity and is not attractive
to the universe.
I
say do more than you think you can because Ð
The
universe always pays off to a joyful risk!
Actors
worry that they donÕt know the scene or the lines well enough to get involved
in some movement, but I guarantee that you will find that you know the lines
and the scene BETTER when you are daring and taking a risk.
The
reason being that when you take a risk, your heart rate goes up, which causes
you to be more connected to your higher power. That kind of excitement makes your consciousness expand;
your mind becomes sharper. You
become MORE than you think you are!
So
donÕt play small.
Believe
in yourself. You are capable of
great things!
No discussion on ÒmovementÓ would be complete without a warning about ÒpropsÓ.
Why a
ÒwarningÓ?
Because, for
the most part, they are a bad idea.
I believe
that actors most often want to have props in their audition when they fear that
they arenÕt enough.
That
certainly was my experience.
I remember
that I once brought cookies into my audition to eat during the scene. I just didnÕt feel that I was
interesting enough on my own. Boy,
did it backfire. The casting
director didnÕt care for the ÒchoiceÓ and I ended up feeling pretty foolish.
ThereÕs a
line between being playful and Òtrying too hardÓ.
Being
playful is selfish
and courageous.
Trying
too hard is needy and unattractive,
You will
have to find out for yourself where that line is. It may be in very different places for different actors.
Recently I was at an audition where the script mentioned that my character was eating cereal at the breakfast table with his wife and son.
Well, one
of the actors auditioning showed up with a bowl of cereal to eat during the
scene.
Maybe that could have worked if he had
some very funny bit of business planned, but the problem was the cereal had no
bearing on the scene.
The thrust
of the scene was about a father trying to help his son to be happy. I canÕt imagine that the cereal did
anything but distract everyone, including the actor.
Mind you, I
am not totally against props, but I think they are best when they are something
that isnÕt too out of place in the audition room.
For
instance, if an actress would like to use her purse, cell phone or pen for a
bit of ÒbusinessÓ; terrific!
So next
time you are trying to decide whether or not you are going to do a movement
that is suggested by the text, just ask yourself-
ÒAm I doing
it for them or for me?Ó
As
long as itÕs for your selfish enjoyment, GO FOR IT!