"Acting" Essays and Research Papers

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    [insert name and address] January 29th‚ 2013 Paul Anderson The Acting Company PO Box 898 New York NY 10108-0898 Re: Actress position Dear Mr. Anderson‚ Having achieved many goals in my career path‚ I am interested in applying for an actress position at The Acting Company. I came across the thrilling new production of “Gone with the Wind” and I would be happy to audition for the role of Scarlett O’ Hara. I am currently enrolled in the theatre arts programs at Houston Community

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    Method Acting

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    The History of Method Acting According to the Oxford Dictionary‚ “Method acting is a technique in which an actor aspires to complete emotional identification with a part” (Oxford Dictionary‚ 2014). Method acting began based off a system by the director Constantin Stanislavski. This system was created approximately a hundred years ago when Stanislavski wanted actors to start representing realistic human emotions on stage (Bilgrave‚ 2004). During this time many people believed that great actors just

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    relationship between the audience and the actor must be separated. An actor’s state of “always...being worshipped...spoils him.” This means that the confidence gained in the constant wave of affection from audiences only produces impure results. In serious acting‚ to create true art‚ the actor must be separated from the praise and the reward of performance. In art‚ there is no goal other than to perform to a theme. In his book‚ An Actor Prepares‚ Stanislavski describes his own process in becoming Othello in

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    of the acting that matters. -Lucius Annaeus Seneca Technical and method acting are the two types of acting that we have discussed in class. Technical acting focus on an actor’s ability to play a part‚ while method acting is when the actor literally plays the part until the movie is over; even if the camera has stopped rolling. Both forms are considered to be acting‚ and both forms have created many masterpieces‚ such as James Stewart in “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” for classical acting‚ and Daniel

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    he changed his stage name to Konstantin Stanislavski. He was founder of the first acting “system”‚ co-founder of the Moscow Theatre (1897)‚ and a renowned practitioner of the naturalist school of thought. In 1987 he also met Russian playwright‚ Anton Chekov. Stanislavski’s process of character development‚ the "Stanislavski Method"‚ was the means for method acting. It was‚ and still is‚ the most influential acting system on the modern stage and screen. After enrolling at Moscow’s Drama School‚ he

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    almost of complete opposites. Stanislavski was born in 1863 to a wealthy family who loved amateur theatricals. In 1898 he met Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko and they founded the Moscow Art Theatre. Stanislavski’s work is centred on the notion that acting should be a total lifelike expression of what is being imitated. With regards to the role of the theatre‚ and of it audience‚ Stanislavski viewed theatre as a means of artistically expressing things‚ and that the audience’s role was to ’look in’

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    Stanislavsky’s most significant contribution to theatre was his system of acting‚ which became the most persuasive influence on acting during the Twentieth Century. In 1912 he established the Moscow Art Theatre’s First Studio to explore his system of acting through training and performances by young actors. Stanislavsky’s system consisted of five basic assumptions about acting. The first basic assumption about acting is that an actor’s body and voice must be trained and flexible so they can

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    Method Acting and 1950’s American Politics and Culture Throughout the twentieth century‚ method acting had been experimented with and practiced in the United States. The method had derived from Stanislavski’s "system" at the Moscow Art Theatre and was then given its own identity by method pioneers in the Group Theatre‚ Lee Strasberg‚ Stella Adler and Elia Kazan. Through the early 1900’s‚ the method had begun to gain recognition in American theatre‚ but swiftly attained considerable prominence on

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    1905 and was raised in Brooklyn‚ New York. In 1923 Meisner graduated from‚ what is now known today as Juilliard School he then attended The Damrosch Institute of Music. Meisner’s definition of acting is “the ability to live truthfully under the given imaginary circumstances.” Meisner was upset with method acting due to the recklessness of it‚ he found that it lead to emotional distress. Meisner created what is now known as “The Meisner Technique” when he was working with Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg

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    Long-Acting Beta-Agonist

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    A) Long-acting beta agonist: Beta-agonists (Beta2-agonists) are the medications that affect smooth muscles surrounding airways.1 In an irritated state of lung‚ muscles around the airways are constricted; these kinds of drugs can influence these muscles and make them relaxed‚ which brings about widening of airway and leads to comfortable breath (“easier breathing”1).1 They are categorized into two subtypes according to their duration time of action‚ including long-acting and short-acting. They can

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