Secrets of Acting Shakespeare isn't a book that gently instructs. It's a passionate, yes-you-can designed to prove that anybody can act Shakespeare. By explaining how Elizabethan actors had only their own lines and not entire playscripts, Patrick Tucker shows how much these plays work by ear. Secrets of Acting Shakespeare is a book for actors trained and amateur, as well as for anyone curious about how the Elizabethan theater worked.
This is an ideal resource for filmmaking students and early career directors to refer to when encountering a problem, as well as all those screen enthusiasts, actors and writers, who want to know what directors actually do.
In this new edition, Patrick Tucker retains the engaging style and useful structure of the first edition while addressing significant changes in current technology, ensuring that this volume will remain an indispensable resource for ...
Peter Brook is the most consistently innovative director in Western theatre. In these three essays he returns to the concept of his first book The Empty Space and examines what that means for the life of a production.
Don Weingust places this work on Folio performance possibility within current understandings about Shakespearean text, describing ways in which these challenging theories about acting often align quite nicely with the work of the theories' ...
Players of Shakespeare: Essays in Shakespearean Performance by Twelve Players with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ... Shakespeare's Advice to the Players. 2nd ed. London: Oberon Books, 2009.
The authors brings Shakespeare down to earth for students, actors, and directors, offering a concise and often irreverent guide to the Bard's secrets, language, plays, characters, and acting techniques. Original.
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.
2 Alexander Schmidt's Shakespeare Lexicon and Quotation Dictionary cites only one example of “you” as indefinite pronoun in Shakespeare: in Act 2, Scene 1, of The Merry Wives of Windsor. 3 See Neil Freeman's The Applause First Folio, ...
Tucker's book, Secrets of Acting Shakespeare: The Original Approach—less a manifesto than a set of documents and anecdotes about productions by his theatre group, the Original Shakespeare Company—includes numerous examples of actors ...
In Performing Shakespeare, Unrehearsed: A Practical Guide to Acting and Directing Spontaneous Shakespeare, each chapter is devoted to a specific guideline, demonstrating through examples how it can be applied to pieces of text from ...