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12 - The art of acting

from Part IV - What?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

David Wiles
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway, University of London
Christine Dymkowski
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway, University of London
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Summary

‘an awareness of history. . .’

How can we construct a history of the art of acting? Acting is an evanescent art form that leaves few visual traces behind, while the creative work leading up to a performance is soon effaced from memory. What approach should we adopt in order to trace the evolution of the actor’s art? Should we study key dates, or should we instead concentrate on the talent of particular actors whose art assumed a distinctive form?

The history of performance can be written in different ways, depending on which of these two approaches is chosen. In the first, the sum total of past events generates a developmental sequence that today we dismiss as a utopian vision – merely the reflection of the researcher’s selective gaze upon moments that have been privileged over other moments. In the second approach, focusing on individual artists and their performance skills, the picture seems to disintegrate, since an impressionistic overview, brought into close-up, cannot capture the overall reality of an art.

Beyond this fundamental question about how to create the history of the actor’s art lies a much more crucial question – one that arises in critical discourse and in acting schools – concerning the very necessity of this history. Can a better understanding of history really shed light on the present of a theatre characterised by its urgent need to get on with the show, to illuminate the text, or to stage a collective work? These questions are fundamental to any historical inquiry. They are questions that the historians of the ‘Annales’ School addressed by creating a history of ideas and attitudes rather than a history of facts and events, a history that places events in their contexts and geographic settings and, crucially, examines the bearing these events have on the present. In what follows, my thoughts will be guided by the responses of three directors to the question ‘What place do you accord to history?’ These directors are Jacques Delcuvellerie, Jerzy Grotowski and Antoine Vitez.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

Delcuvellerie, Jacques, who mentions the necessity for the actor to have such an ‘intelligence historique’ in his Le Jardinier. . . (. . .et avec lui la vie d’un homme): le Groupov et la formation de l’acteur (Liège: Cahiers Groupov no. 2, 1997), p. 22
Barba, E., ‘L’essence du théâtre’, in Féral, J. (ed.), Les chemins de l’acteur: former pour jouer (Montréal: Québec Amérique, 2001), pp. 21–60, p. 31.Google Scholar
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Fumaroli, M., ‘Grotowski ou le passeur de frontières’, in Alternatives Théâtrales, 70–1 (2001), 11–18, p. 12Google Scholar
Vitez, A., ‘Une entente’, in Théâtre/Public, 64–5 (1985), 25–8, 26Google Scholar
Cole, T. and Chinoy, H. Krich in their anthology Actors on Acting: The Theories, Techniques, and Practices of the World’s Great Actors, Told in Their Own Words (New York: Crown, 1970)Google Scholar
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Cole, Toby, and Chinoy, Helen Krich. Actors on Acting: The Theories, Techniques, and Practices of the World’s Great Actors, Told in their Own Words (New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks, [1970] 1995).Google Scholar
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Hodge, Alison, ed. Twentieth-Century Actor Training (London: Routledge, 2000).
Richards, Thomas. Heart of Practice (London: Routledge, 2008).Google Scholar

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