page 195: " (...) Brecht never ceases to make demands on them and to help them. For example, he demonstrates to them way of walking on stage-the walk of weariness, of sensuality, of vanity, of injured pride. In that way he gives the actor a basis to work on, for the manner of walking reveals the attitude. How does an overworked woman hold her shoulders, when life has already given her too much to bear? Brecht makes the poor woman's arms hang lower through too much carrying, her shoulders droop, her stomach protrude. Or he sends for cheap steel-rimmed spectacles to make the eyes look tired. The mouth may also be held a little open, to indicate difficulty in breathing."
Quotations from any book and author I am interested in, from any language or any country... Nothing else.
Showing posts with label Alemania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alemania. Show all posts
Saturday, June 19, 2010
"Living for Brecht" by Ruth Berlau (Page 195)
Labels:
Acting,
Actuación,
Alemania,
Brecht,
Caminando en escena,
Germany,
Ruth Berlau,
Walking on stage
Thursday, June 17, 2010
"Living for Brecht" by Ruth Berlau (Page 192-193)
Page 192-193: "I could say that in rehearsal Brecht begins by "alienating" his own play. He appears to be familiar with no single word of his text, and with each rereading he discovers it anew. (...) Certainly he has no wish to stick obstinately to what is written on the page; what he wants is to see and hear what actors using the text can show him. When a sentence or even a whole scene has been thoroughly examined in this way, it can come as no surprise to learn that up to the very last rehearsal. Brecht is always making changes in is plays. He conducts rehearsals in sections, initially treating each matter entirely for its own sake. Someone knowing the play as a whole might the say to him, "The third scene explains what has already been indicated in the first scene. So how can the actor throw away his line in the first scene so lightly?" Brecht will listen, then laugh and replay, "Is that so? That's good. Well, we shall see." It might really become necessary to make changes in the first scene while we are already working on the third, but now we know why. In this way, rehearsals remain constantly productive. Nothing is ever glossed over; everything is checked and rechecked again and again."
Labels:
Alemania,
Berliner Ensemble,
Brecht,
Dirección de escena,
Germany,
Ruth Berlau,
Stage Direction
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
"Living for Brecht" by Ruth Berlau (Page 192)
Page 192: "In his theoretical works Brecht has written about alienation (Verfremdung) and alienation effects. Many believe this to be a very complicated affair, but in fact it is very simple. A statement is "alienated" by being made to appear strange, and therefore striking. Things that are so general, so everyday, so usual that they are no longer noticed-since one knows them too well-are presented as remarkable and worthy of attention. In this way facts, procedures, and conventional forms of behavior are made more transparent. Curiosity is aroused about what lies behind them: What is it exactly, and why is it so? Brecht induces the attitude of an explorer who has come on something remarkable."
Labels:
Acting,
Actuación,
Alemania,
Alienation,
Berliner Ensemble,
Brecht,
Distanciamiento brechtiano,
Germany,
Ruth Berlau
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