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Mark Allen
导演, 编剧, 作曲家
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Acting: Fear

Acting:  Fear

This could apply to public speaking or life in general, but I'm only going to be talking about fear as it applies to acting here.

People express their fear in different ways - some people get louder, overcompensating for their fear.  Some get very small and shy - some get frozen.  Generally though, none of these people are totally aware of what they are doing and if they do become aware - it just makes them do it more.  All they are aware of is that they're afraid.

So - fear when acting is bad, but how do you get rid of it?

When I was in high school I was given some dating advice.  "If you're nervous, it means your thinking about yourself to much.  To overcome that - think about the person your with.  Give all your attention and energy to them.  They'll appreciate it and it will take the pressure of you."

Not only was that good dating advice - it's great acting advice.  You really can't go wrong when acting to put your attention on the people your in a scene with.  If you're alone - you give it to the audience.  If you're alone on film - you give it to the crew.

Fear is like a ring of fire surrounding the "zone" you want to be in for your performance.  There are many many reasons you might be afraid of going to that zone.  But you know what?  None of them matter, because there will ALWAYS be that ring of fire surrounding it.  And it seems very intimidating from the outside - but when you past through it quickly - you realize how thin that wall really is.  What happens, though, is that the moment people start to feel fear - they stop.  They don't want to move forward - so they just sit in the flame.  

I've met people in life who never seemed to have ever thought to wait in the burning flame - but most people need to learn to move through it.

Once through it - you're in the zone.  It's a comfortable place to be.

So - you're waiting for an audition to come up that  you really want.   You might be thinking a thousand things - "If I could only get this, I could stop waitressing - my father would be proud - I wouldn't feel guilty for pursuing acting - I would feel good about myself" - I could go on and on with that list.  And all of that is NOT something you should be thinking about.  Why?  Because you are basically on a date and just thinking about yourself.  Think about the people your performing to and with.  Give them everything.

When you stay with the person in the scene - it gives them someone to perform to.  Feel them.  Empathize with them.  Don't judge them - even if they are ruining the audition - give them everything you have and believe them - listen to them - feel them... you know what you're not doing right now - being afraid!  'Cause you're totally focused on making a connection with this person.  And when you are connecting with them - you are present for them... and that is why they say great actors have presence.

That ring of fear might always be there - you just won't care.  You'll jump through that in a moment.  And you'll be experienced enough to know that if for some reason you do start to feel the burn, you know what to do - stop thinking about yourself and put your focus on your partner or audience.  Practice does help.  Improv classes are a fantastic place to begin because in a good class you have no choice but to move through the fear barrier many times a class.

Okay - now go be incredible.

17 年多 前 0 赞s  25 评论s  0 shares
Terence
Some of the best moments when you are acting is when you are not speaking. Listening is so important I think. Good points!
17 年多 ago
Photo 22991
haha i was thinking of how this will apply to my wedding photoshoot tmr. Guess i'd try to connect with the camera/photographer.
17 年多 ago
Photo 22998
Carmellarose - as wintersun says here, it takes practice. One thought for you. Fear is totally psychological - especially fear like this. Because YOU KNOW you'll be okay when you're up on stage. You are not going to instantly get harmed or injured just by standing on the stage.. Your security on that stage is just as much as when you were waiting to get on stage. There is absolutely no realistic increase in danger. The only thing that is creating a problem is your mind playing tricks on you. So - here's a way to play some tricks back. Might be worth a shot - but don't dismiss it as "psychological bubaloo" because... you're already suffereing from psychological bubaloo, so we're just fighitng fire with fire. - - You are definitely standing "in the fire" - just reading your description I can imagine that tense feeling with your heart pounding too hard causing your brain to freeze up some. First off - don't feel bad about it because it's totally totally a natural phenomenon. What you are experience is the same thing everyone experiences, but you're just not leeting yourself move past it. The next time you have a public speaking event - try these two things. First - When you start to feel any nervousness prior to taking the stage, visualize that outside of your body as as a ring of fire or energy around the stage. If it is shakiness or your heart pounding - don't think of it inside your body - just put your focus ont obuilding this wall of fire around the podium. Really visualize it strongly. Throw All the fear energy out of you into that ring. Then, when it's time for you to actually go up. Just walk through that wall quickly - just pass through it. Literally quickly - get to that podium fast. Then... when you first turn and look at everyone there - see in them people who need to be healed. Gaunt, ill, however it looks to you - even if you can't see their faces (if on stage with lights) - but if you can see them - know that every single one of them wants to be healed by you... and the way you do that is by emitting all the positive energy you have inside you out to them. And as you do this it pushes through and blows away that wall of fire and reaches your audience... one by one. That light from your body connecting with these people is the only thing that matters as you deliver your presentation. Let me know how that works for you.
17 年多 ago
Photo 23398
dating analogy is funny and true! insightful info, mark, thx
17 年多 ago
Photo 22998
By doing the kata (or whatever it is called in wushu) so many times, you probably had also ritualized it to some degree - you were really focused on the moment and the intentions. I think actors who do year long stage runs - even roles with tremendous emotional range and emotion get into that ritualization process. It's not a question of "can i do this tonight?" They just go there and do it and surrender themselves over to the performance.
17 年多 ago
Kenjilui 15 blog profile
The Chinese translation is totally illegible.. even the title "acting" is mistranslated. I suggest you should just remove it... other than that, a nice article on acting..
17 年多 ago
Photo 22998
claw - is the google translation jibberish? If it is I want to remove it. I wouldn't want to mislead.
17 年多 ago
Photo 22998
claw and kantorates - thanks for the tip on the translation. I thought it probably wouldn't work but it was suggested, so I thought I'd try it.
17 年多 ago

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english
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Los Angeles, United States
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April 13, 2007