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by Maggie Flanigan
The Meisner summer acting program at the Maggie Flanigan Studio introduces actors to the Meisner technique. In this studio interview, Erica talks about what she thought it meant to train as an actor before she started the six-week intensive.
I thought that I was going to do six weeks and be a star for sure. I thought I was going to nail it in six weeks. I didn’t realize that it requires a lifetime of crafting and work. I definitely thought that acting was a lot of self-generating behavior. At the studio, they call it pushing. When you are pushing, you’re pushing like you want something to happen that isn’t coming from your partner or from the circumstance. I thought it was just going to give me the tools to make myself cry. I don’t know.
“What do you need to be an actor?” I had no idea.
Erica PeredniaStudent, Summer Acting Program
It was so hard that I didn’t come back for three years. I didn’t really realize, I didn’t know anything about acting at all when I came here. So you should come here too if you don’t know anything about acting. What I am saying is that I just didn’t know how hard it was going to be. I had no idea. I nearly cried for six weeks straight because it was so hard and so challenging. I have just never been challenged like that by like a teacher in my life. I just never got into anything so challenging in my entire life as acting. It’s so hard, it’s mind-blowing to me.
I think that’s why I’m still here. While I want to be an actor because I’ll just never nail it. You nailed it and then you mess up again the next day like it doesn’t matter. You have got to just climb the mountain like it is infinite. You just keep climbing it, just in terms of having a career as an actor. There are no plateaus, and that’s so interesting to me. It’s like the same thing as the school. Once you break through something there’s another challenge just like ahead of you. I don’t know if exciting is the right word. It’s just I’m never going to get bored here.
I learned that I was not ready to pursue a career in acting. At the time I really wasn’t ready to confront myself, or where I fit in society or what I thought about myself, and what my blocks were. There were the things that I was afraid to live out. I just didn’t have the courage. I think I learned that it just takes a lot of courage. For me, at that time I couldn’t bring myself to keep showing up at that level. Now that I’m back things are different, I’m a little older. I’m sober. It’s the truth.
At that time it was just a huge life lesson for me. Even just to see through the six weeks, I wanted to quit every single day and just getting through that I felt like I had so much. It gave me so much self-esteem that I just accomplished during six weeks here. It’s weird because I didn’t act in-between. I took three years off. Being back now even at that time, it was still such a significant experience for me. I just learned so much by failing, and I’m learning it again now.
It’s humbling, it’s like eye-opening, it’s insightful. It’s so hard but it’s so worth it. I can’t really think of anything better to be spending my time doing.
Charlie will say that he has an inviolate sense of truth, and he does. I think that he just sees right through people, straight to their core. I think he just sees other people’s truths before they do, or before they even maybe like understand it. Sometimes it’s like underneath anger is like pain. For me, I was having a hard time giving myself permission to be angry. Now I’m having a hard time giving myself permission to be in pain. Charlie sees all of this before it happens. He’s really hard on people. He’s really hard on people about being prepared and doing their best.
If you bring your second best to Charlie, he is just going to ask you, why you’re okay with your second best. He just holds the mirror right at your face. He’ll just push you to be the best you can be or the best you want to be. I think that’s what he is really about. How bad do you want it? He’s a straight shooter. He asks really direct questions. He forces you to give really direct answers. It is a fast track how to learn anything. I think he’s great.
Learn more about the summer acting programs and the Meisner Summer Intensive at the Maggie Flanigan Studio by visiting the Summer Acting Program page on the studio website (http://www.maggieflaniganstudio.com/) or by calling the studio directly at (917) 789-1599.
The post The True Challenge of the Summer Intensive appeared first on Meisner Acting - The Maggie Flanigan Studio New York NY - 917-789-1599.
The Meisner summer acting program at the Maggie Flanigan Studio introduces actors to the Meisner technique. In this studio interview, Erica talks about what she thought it meant to train as an actor before she started the six-week intensive. [caption id="attachment_9883" align="aligncenter" width="800"] Summer Acting Programs - Maggie Flanigan Studio New York[/caption]
The preceding post The True Challenge of the Summer Intensive is republished from NYC Acting Classes
The Meisner Summer Acting Program a the Maggie Flanigan Studio is a six-week training program centered on the Meisner Technique. In this video, Charlie Sandlan discusses concentration, which is an important building block of Meisner training. [caption id="attachment_9842" align="aligncenter" width="800"] Charlie Sandlan - Summer Acting Program - Maggie Flanigan Studio[/caption]
Art is not intellectual. It comes from the heart, the imagination, and the primitive unconscious. We are primarily self-absorbed creatures, self-reflective, insecure, with a deep need for approval and validation. An artist must work incredibly hard to keep these human tendencies from sabotaging their creative freedom. For actors immersed in serious acting training, particularly the Meisner Technique, addressing these issues begins immediately, challenging students to get the attention off of themselves. Bad actors wait for their cues, worried about how they look and sound, and not present in the moment. Placement of concentration for the actor is the very first thing a student actor in a Meisner training program learns to do. When an actor has the ability to make the other people on camera or on stage more important than themselves and possesses the ability to truly listen and hear for the first time, then spontaneity is possible.
When placement of concentration for an actor becomes second nature, it is a big first step in creating a truthful reality. An important principle in acting is that I don’t do anything unless the other person makes me do it. It is also talked about as the pinch and ouch. A good reality is possible when the ouch is consistently in direct proportion to the pinch. A really good actor knows that they are not important. This requires a real willingness to let go of the need to be good, the need to show anything, and the need to be interesting. On its face, this advice seems counter to what an actor wants. Of course, we want to be good, we want to be vivid, we want to be interesting. Ultimately, this comes down to the ability to craft well, to do the homework, make interesting choices, implant them deep within, and then you must have the skill set which allows you to trust in your work, put your concentration on the other actor, go from unanticipated moment to unanticipated moment, and respond spontaneously, trusting that all the hard work will be revealed in vivid, clear behavior. Concentration is the first building block of an actor’s craft. If you want to develop this and other fundamental skills, get trained. Even a well-respected Six-Week Meisner Summer Intensive will immediately address how to make concentration something second nature. [caption id="attachment_9843" align="aligncenter" width="800"] The Best Summer Acting Program - Maggie Flanigan Studio - Call 917-789-1599[/caption]The above blog post Concentration and the Meisner Technique See more on: Acting Studio New York NY
The Meisner Summer Acting Program a the Maggie Flanigan Studio is a six-week training program centered on the Meisner Technique. In this video, Charlie Sandlan discusses concentration, which is an important building block of Meisner training.
Any serious actor has a sincere wish to be free and spontaneous in the imaginary world. Out of their head, responding in the moment, malleable to the nuances of human behavior. It does take two to three years to train professionally, and the Meisner Technique begins immediately to address the core fundamentals that make this possible. The key to real freedom in acting starts with an actor’s placement of concentration. It is fundamental to the actor’s craft.
Charlie SandlanExecutive Director, Head of Acting
Art is not intellectual. It comes from the heart, the imagination, and the primitive unconscious. We are primarily self-absorbed creatures, self-reflective, insecure, with a deep need for approval and validation. An artist must work incredibly hard to keep these human tendencies from sabotaging their creative freedom. For actors immersed in serious acting training, particularly the Meisner Technique, addressing these issues begins immediately, challenging students to get the attention off of themselves. Bad actors wait for their cues, worried about how they look and sound, and not present in the moment. Placement of concentration for the actor is the very first thing a student actor in a Meisner training program learns to do. When an actor has the ability to make the other people on camera or on stage more important than themselves and possesses the ability to truly listen and hear for the first time, then spontaneity is possible.
When placement of concentration for an actor becomes second nature, it is a big first step in creating a truthful reality. An important principle in acting is that I don’t do anything unless the other person makes me do it. It is also talked about as the pinch and ouch. A good reality is possible when the ouch is consistently in direct proportion to the pinch. A really good actor knows that they are not important. This requires a real willingness to let go of the need to be good, the need to show anything, and the need to be interesting. On its face, this advice seems counter to what an actor wants. Of course, we want to be good, we want to be vivid, we want to be interesting. Ultimately, this comes down to the ability to craft well, to do the homework, make interesting choices, implant them deep within, and then you must have the skill set which allows you to trust in your work, put your concentration on the other actor, go from unanticipated moment to unanticipated moment, and respond spontaneously, trusting that all the hard work will be revealed in vivid, clear behavior.
Concentration is the first building block of an actor’s craft. If you want to develop this and other fundamental skills, get trained. Even a well-respected Six-Week Meisner Summer Intensive will immediately address how to make concentration something second nature.
To learn more about the Maggie Flanigan Studio and the Meisner based training in the summer acting classes, visit the studio website or contact the acting studio by calling 917-789-1599.
The post Concentration and the Meisner Technique appeared first on Meisner Acting - The Maggie Flanigan Studio New York NY - 917-789-1599.