Speaking ShakespeareSt. Martin's Publishing Group, 10. nov. 2015 - 368 sider In Speaking Shakespeare, Patsy Rodenburg tackles one of the most difficult acting jobs: speaking Shakespeare's words both as they were meant to be spoken and in an understandable and dramatic way. Rodenburg calls this "a simple manual to start the journey into the heart of Shakespeare," and that is what she gives us. With the same insight she displayed in The Actor Speaks, Rodenburg tackles the playing of all Shakespeare's characters. She uses dramatic resonance, breathing, and placement to show how an actor can bring Hamlet, Rosalind, Puck and other characters to life. This is one book every working actor must have. |
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Side 6
... hear it. You will need to be able to speak clearly and efficiently — the speech muscles have to respond to highly defined and defining language. Clarity will always be essential. Every syllable, vowel and consonant should be in your ...
... hear it. You will need to be able to speak clearly and efficiently — the speech muscles have to respond to highly defined and defining language. Clarity will always be essential. Every syllable, vowel and consonant should be in your ...
Side 7
... hear it. In the past, this kind of knowledge was part of the actor's basic repertoire. Today, it's a craft neglected in most training establishments. In repertory companies it used to be learned by osmosis, passed on by older actors to ...
... hear it. In the past, this kind of knowledge was part of the actor's basic repertoire. Today, it's a craft neglected in most training establishments. In repertory companies it used to be learned by osmosis, passed on by older actors to ...
Side 18
... hear in a theatre but not understand-all sound and fury, but no definition in the words. It splays out, unfocused, and can only express generalisations. Energy is produced in the bluff state, but it comes from the wrong source. The text ...
... hear in a theatre but not understand-all sound and fury, but no definition in the words. It splays out, unfocused, and can only express generalisations. Energy is produced in the bluff state, but it comes from the wrong source. The text ...
Side 23
... hears it is her mother, there is surely a heightening of her being. The text tells us that they don't often communicate with ease. It might only constitute a. small. change. initially,. but. as. the. scene. progresses. that. physical.
... hears it is her mother, there is surely a heightening of her being. The text tells us that they don't often communicate with ease. It might only constitute a. small. change. initially,. but. as. the. scene. progresses. that. physical.
Side 24
... hear my lord speak. Pray ye go; there's my key. If you do stir abroad, go arm'd. Edgar: Arm'd, brother! Edmund: Brother, I advise you to the best. I am no honest man if there be any Good meaning toward you. I have told You what I have ...
... hear my lord speak. Pray ye go; there's my key. If you do stir abroad, go arm'd. Edgar: Arm'd, brother! Edmund: Brother, I advise you to the best. I am no honest man if there be any Good meaning toward you. I have told You what I have ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
actor alliteration Antony audience Autolycus beat begin Benedick Berowne blank verse body breath character character's Claudio connected death Demetrius Desdemona doesn’t Edgar Edmund emotional energy exercise eyes Falstaff father feel fool forward givens Gloucester Goneril Hamlet hath hear heart Heightened Circumstances Helena Hermia human husband Iago Iago's iambic iambic pentameter imagination irony Isabella journey Juliet King King Lear Lady Macbeth language Lear Leontes listen look Lysander meaning mouth move murder muscles Oberon Olivia onomatopoeia open vowels Othello pain passion pause Phoebe physical play Posthumus prose Puck push realise rehearsal release reveal rhyming couplet rhythm Richard Romeo Rosalind scene Second Circle sense Shakespeare Shylock Silvius soliloquy sound speak speech stay stop structure syllables tension thee There’s thou thought Titania tongue understand Viola vocal voice vowels walk wife Winter's Tale word