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Adding Style to Substance: the American Actor Finds a Voice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2009

Abstract

Slowly, the focus of creative and critical interest in American theatre has shifted from Broadway ‘product’ to the work presented by the non-profit theatres of the regional centres – work which has not only continued and developed the native naturalistic tradition, but embraced the best of the world repertoire, past and present. Method acting, adapted from Stanislavski to produce a distinctive but limited school of interiorized performance, proved inadequate to meet the increased demands of this range of work; and in this essay John Harrop examines the process by which university and conservatory training has come to accept that ‘style’ is not a sort of applied veneer, but a matter of finding the appropriate response to the linguistic and physical requirements of any play. Presently Head of the Professional Training Programme for the BFA in Drama at the University of California, Santa Barbara, John Harrop is himself a professional actor on the regional theatre circuit. An advisory editor of NTQ, and a frequent contributor to the old Theatre Quarterly, he is also the author (with Robert Cohen) of Creative Play Direction and (with Sabin Epstein) of Acting with Style.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985

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References

Notes and References

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2. Ibid., p. vi.

3. Ibid., p. vii.

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6. Lesley Hunt, interview with the author, 25 September 1984.

7. Ibid.

8. Ibid.

9. Ibid.

10. Houseman, Final Dress p. 31.

11. Hewitt, Theatre USA, p. 457.

12. John Gassner, quoted by Hewitt, Theatre USA, p. 458.

13. Hewitt, Theatre USA, p. 486.

14. Or even earlier if one takes into account the Cleveland Playhouse which was established in 1916 as part of the Little Theatre movement arising from the New Stagecraft impetus. It went professional in 1921 and survived the depressed years of American theatre to lay claim to be America's oldest regional theatre. In fact, however, of the more than 160 professional regional theatres in existence today, all but eighteen have been developed since 1960.

15. Ziegler, Joseph Wesley, Regional Theatre (New York: Da Capo Press, 1977), p. 88.Google Scholar

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17. Ibid., p. 20. Novick quotes a survey of productions in 33 regional theatres in the 1967–68 season and shows 17 Shakespeare, 13 Shaw, 11 Molière, 10 Albee, and 6 each of Brecht, Chekhov, and Pirandello.

18. Variety, 9 March 1966, p. 4.

19. Zelda Fichandler, quoted by Novick, Beyond Broadway, p. 10.

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24. The earliest established department of drama in the country, where Ben Iden Payne had taught Angus Bowmer and from which, in the 1960s, such significant artists of the regional theatre as William Ball and René Auberjonois graduated.

25. Hethmon, Robert, Strasberg at the Actors' Studio (New York: Viking Press, 1965).Google Scholar

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35. After ‘sputnik’ was launched in 1957, a tremendous amount of money and energy was put into American higher education to ‘keep up with the Russians’. Some of this trickled down to the performing arts and was given further impetus by the ‘cultural’ energy of the Kennedy Administration. As a result, by 1970 many theatre departments had splendid physical facilities, quite the equal of a regional theatre. This fact was noted by Denis, Michel St. in his Training for the Theatre (New York: Theatre Arts Books, 1982), p. 65.Google Scholar

36. The years between 1967 and 1973 saw the establishment of university programmes in Dallas, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and New York, among other places. Most departments that have made significant reputations are associated with major metropolitan centres and have close working relationships with regional theatres.

37. St. Denis, Training for the Theatre, p. 70.

38. New York Times, 20 June 1967, p. 33.

39. Houseman, John, ‘Commencement Address’, quoted by Speers, Susan in An Evaluative Examination of the Development and Achievement of the Acting Company, unpublished dissertation, University of California at Santa Barbara, 1982, p. 32.Google Scholar

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41. Ibid., p. 66.

42. Denis, Michel St., ‘Stanislavski And Shakespeare’, Tulane Drama Review, IX (Fall 1964), p. 81.Google Scholar

43. Ibid.

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46. See, for example, Margot Harley, Administrator of the Julliard Acting School, quoted by Speers in Evaluative Examination, p. 59.

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48. Exercises for unlocking spinal flow of physical and mental energy, originated by F. Mathias Alexander, an Australian actor, and now in common use in actor training.

49. St. Denis, Training for the Theatre, p. 170.

50. St. Denis, Rediscovery of Style, p. 92.

51. St. Denis, Training for the Theatre, p. 149.

52. Houseman, Final Dress, p. 352.

53. Ibid., p. 345.

54. Hunt, interview.

55. Goodwin, Peter Hall's Diaries, p. 476.

56. It must be said here that a rash of programmes developed in the 1970s as BFA and MFA degrees in performance became academically acceptable, but that not all programmes had the same standards as the Julliard School, were staffed at the same professional level, or had stringent entry requirements. In fact many were not as ‘professional’ as they advertised themselves to be, and did not equip their students for entry to Equity companies. This is not, however, to deny the workof the best programmes – it is simply one of the unfortunate aspects of a capitalistic society in which, if one ‘product’ succeeds, dozens of imitators crop up with a similar ‘name brand’. Education does not escape the syndrome.

57. Gister, Earle, quoted by Lowry, W. McNeil in The Performing Arts and American Society (New York: Prentice-Hall, 1978), p. 136.Google Scholar

58. The members are: American Conservatory Theatre; Boston University; Carnegie-Mellon University (formerly Carnegie Institute of Technology); Julliard School; New York University; North Carolina School of the Arts; Southern Methodist University;State University of New York at Purchase; Temple University; University of California at San Diego; University of Washington; Yale School of Drama.

59. Earle Gister in a circular letter to the Members of the League of Professional Theatre Training Programs, 1983.

60. Paul Hostetler in a circular letter to Members of the League of Professional Theatre Training Programs, 1983, kindly made available to the author.

61. Hunt, interview.

62. Ibid.

63. Henson Keyes, interview with the author, 27 September 1984.

64. Ibid.

65. Ibid.

66. Kux, Bill, quoted by Dunning, Jennifer, New York Times Magazine, 2 10 1983, p. 72.Google Scholar

67. Kline, Kevin, quoted by Freedman, Samuel, New York Times, 18 12 1983, sec. 2, p. 8.Google Scholar

68. Dunning, New York Times, op. cit.

69. Freedman, New York Times, op. cit. It is almost invidious to single out names from amongst this new generation, but mention of Hurlyburly brings to mind Sigourney Weaver, a Yale graduate, working with William Hurt in the production and also well known for such film work as Ghostbusters. Jane Alexander who played the lead in The Great White Hope at Arena Stage, Washington DC, on Broadway and in the film version, is of the same generation. Alexander still works at the American Shakespeare Festival and has recently made Testament for American Public Television. Stacy Keach, recently very successful as the TV version of Mickey Spillane's detective hero, Mike Hammer, is also a graduate of the new training programmes, who has played Hamlet in New York and Stanley Kowalski in the regions. This kind of career would have been unimaginable twelve years ago.

70. Keyes, interview.

71. New York Times, 23 September 1984, sec. H, p. 4. The star syndrome was such that in 1971, when the author was teaching at a Southern California university, the student director of a one-act play announced her cast as ‘starring…’.

72. Stern, Gary, ‘A Nice Place to Live’, American Theatre, I, 4 (0708 1984), p. 19.Google Scholar

73. Fichandler, Zelda, ‘Theatres or Institutions’, Theatre 3 (New York: International Theatre Institute, 1970), p. 20.Google Scholar

74. American Conservatory Theatre, Professional Training Program Prospectus, 1984, p. 3.

75. Hunt, interview.

76. Dunning, New York Times, op. cit., p. 36.