The Actor and the TextVirgin, 1992 - 303 páginas Cicely Berry, Voice Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, is world-famous for her voice teaching. The Actor and the Text is her classic book, distilled from years of working with actors of the highest calibre. Building on the specific exercises covered in her first book, Voice and the Actor, Cicely Berry relates the practicality of voice production to the challenges of a different text. And by getting inside the words we use - whether those of Shakespeare or our contemporaries - she shows how to release their energy and excitement for an audience. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 22
Página 73
... rhyme , which leads us to just that point . 2b : Rhyme . There is nothing difficult about this : we simply have to be alert to it and use it , we have to allow it its artificiality . I think perhaps the important thing to realize is ...
... rhyme , which leads us to just that point . 2b : Rhyme . There is nothing difficult about this : we simply have to be alert to it and use it , we have to allow it its artificiality . I think perhaps the important thing to realize is ...
Página 77
... rhyme and enjoy using it : for we must remember that pleasure in rhyme is a very basic instinct , which has nothing to do with class or education , simply with a delight in the turning of a word , as in children's rhymes , music - hall ...
... rhyme and enjoy using it : for we must remember that pleasure in rhyme is a very basic instinct , which has nothing to do with class or education , simply with a delight in the turning of a word , as in children's rhymes , music - hall ...
Página 78
... rhymes which occur within one line ; these are often quite subtle , and just have to be listened for . And now to the last variation : 2C : Final rhyming couplets . These are not the same as rhyme within a scene , for they are used ...
... rhymes which occur within one line ; these are often quite subtle , and just have to be listened for . And now to the last variation : 2C : Final rhyming couplets . These are not the same as rhyme within a scene , for they are used ...
Contenido
by Trevor Nunn | 8 |
Structures Energy Imagery and Sound | 14 |
Shakespeare | 40 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
actor antithesis Antony Antony and Cleopatra audience aware Barnardo become beginning breath Caesar caesura character consonants Coriolanus Cressida Delroy dialogue Dingo doth emotional energy exercises feel give Hamlet happens hath hear heightened Hermia Iago iambic pentameter imagery important Julius Caesar Karn keep King Lear language Leontes listen look Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth meaning mememe metre mind Mogg move movement naturalistic night notice open vowels Othello ourselves particularly passage patterns perhaps person phrase physical piece of text play poetic possible reason rehearsal rhyme rhythm Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet Rosalind round scene sense Shakespeare sing soliloquy sonnet sound space speak the text speech stress style syllables talking texture thee Theseus thing thou Troilus Troilus and Cressida verse voice vowels weight whole Winter's Tale words writing
Referencias a este libro
Script Analysis for Actors, Directors, and Designers James Michael Thomas Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
A Companion to Shakespeare and Performance Barbara Hodgdon,W. B. Worthen Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |