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/s with sive music liscus­ rded in h creative was finally different ough to {usic in the 3) bt Fever Rock (2003) the Blues . Rain (1952) ionaire (2008) ~twork (2010) 009) 977) 1m (1980) 'Wdown ve(2010) ;5) ce Odyssey Ie (2005) THE IMPORTANCE OF ACTING When we consider going to a movie, the first question we usually ask has to do not with the director or the cinematographer but with the actors: Who's in it? This is a natural question, because the art of the actor is so clearly visible. The actor's work commands most of our attention, overshadowing the considerable contributions of the writer, director, cinematographer, editor, and composer of the score. As George Kernodle puts it, it is the star that draws the crowds. The audience may be amused, thrilled, or deeply moved by the story, fascinated by new plot devices, property gadgets, and camera angles, charmed by backgrounds that are exotic, or captivated by those that are familiar and real, but it is the people on the screen, and especially the faces, that command the center of attention. I Because we naturally respond to film's most human ingredient, the actor's contribu­ tion is extremely important. Yet despite our tendency to focus attention on the actor, there is general agreement among critics and directors that the actor's role in film should be a subordinate one, one of many important elements contributing to a greater aes­ thetic whole, the film itself. As Alfred Hitchcock states it, "Film work hasn't much need for the virtuoso actor who gets his effects and climaxes himself, who plays directly to the audience with the force of his talent and personality. The screen actor has got to be much more plastic; he has to submit himself to be used by the director and the camera.,,2 THE GOAL OF THE ACTOR The ultimate goal of any actor should be to make us believe completely in the reality of the character. If this goal is to be achieved, actors must either develop or be blessed with several talents. First of all, they must be able to project sincerity, truthfulness, and naturalness in such a way that we are never aware that they are acting a part. In a sense, good film acting must seem not to be acting at all. Sometimes actors achieve a certain naturalness through tricks and gimmicks. Knowing that Ratso Rizzo, the character that Dustin Hoffman plays in Midnigbt Cowboy, had a distinct limp, a fellow actor advised Hoffman on how to make the limp consistent: "Once you get the limp right, why don't you put rocks in your shoe? You'll never have to think about limping. It will be there; you won't have to worry about it." Actors use similar tricks to create a trademark for their charac­ ters and to keep the characters consistent. But good acting demands much more than gimmicks. To project the sincerity that a really deep, complex, and demand­ ing role requires, actors must be willing to draw on the deepest and most personal qualities of their inner being. As director Mark Rydell (a former actor himself) says, "I find that acting is one of the bravest professions of all. An actor has to rem,lin vulnerable.... I suspect that any time you see a great performance, it's because some actor has been courageous enough to allow you to peek at a very personal, . prIvate secret 0 fh'IS. ,,3 274 CHAPTER 10 Actors mus into human nat inner thoughts, ability to expres tures, or facial e and to the situ~ maintain the illu beginning to end that they can see Veteran actor an, ultimate goal in should sit there a actor there." So, r see the actor, neve BECOMING 1 If an actor's goal j person on the SCI as this new char; actors prepare for well-rounded, bel approach . Actor E two approaches: The English for and it starts to Sl out. You begin w behavior. In otherwo: where the limp c before they can d Cliff Robertson all facets of his chal of preparation allo~ formance in Charly, "going with the inst character for seven y Joanne Woodw: Rochel, and The Effic outside approach to always have to know Martha Graham, so n movements from my you move like that-: to do not )This is a tor's work butions of \s George )f deeply Imera are familiar nmand the ·'s conrribu­ ~ is general should be a greater aes­ hasn't much f, who plays . The screen ~ used by the )letely in the .er develop or •ject sincerity, that they are at all. lnd gimmicks. 1S in Midnight " to make the rocks in your won't have to : their charac­ :is much more , and demand­ most personal r himself) says, has to remain ce, it's because very personal, Actors must also possess the intelligence, imagination, sensitivity, and insight into human nature necessary to fully understand the characters they play-their inner thoughts, motivations, and emotions. Furthermore, actors must have the ability to express these things convincingly through voice, body movements, ges­ tures, or facial expressions, so the qualities seem true to the characters portrayed and to the situation in which the characters find themselves. And actors must maintain the illusion of reality in their characters with complete consistency from beginning to end. It is also important for actors to keep their egos under control, so that they can see their roles in proper perspective to the dramatic work as a whole. Veteran actor and Oscar winner Michael Caine offers this definition of the actor's ultimate goal in playing a movie role: "If I'm really doing my job correctly you should sit there and say, "I'm i1lvolved with this person, and have no idea there's an actor there." So, really, I'm trying to defeat myself the entire time. You should never see the act01; never see the wheels going."4 BECOMING THE CHARACTER If an actor's goal is to obscure his or her own personali ty and to become another person on the screen, the actor must learn to behave reflexively and naturally as this new character. Although there are many subtle variations in the way actors prepare for roles, they generally choose one of two techniques to develop well-rounded, believable characterizations: the inside approach or the outside approach. Actor Edward James Olmos describes the most basic elements of the two approaches: The English fonn of study teaches you to go from the outside in. You do the behavior and it starts to seep inside. The Stanislavski method teaches you to go from the inside out. You begin with the feeling and memory, and those feelings begin to affect your behavior. In other words, some people will turn around and get a limp and then figure out where the limp came from. Other people have to figure out why they have to limp before they can do the limp.s Cliff Robertson, an Academy Award winner, believes that he must understand all facets of his character's personality and thought processes. This inside method of preparation allows him to think and respond naturally in the role. For his per­ formance in Charly, however, he used no immediate rehearsal; instead, he just tried "going with the instrument," in a process of "osmosis," because he had studied his character for seven years. 6 Joanne Woodward, honored for her work in The Th"ee Faces of Eve, Rachel, Rochel, and The Effect of Gamma Rays on Ma1l-i1l-the-Moon Marigolds, describes her outside approach to character development: "Mine is an odd way to work.... I always have to know what a character looks like because to me, having studied with Martha Graham, so much that goes on inside is reflected outside .... I took Rachel's movements from my child, Nell. She's very pigeon-toed .... And somehow, when you move like that-all sorts of things happen to you inside."? In his book about acting for fihn, Michael Caine advises that: "When becom­ ing a character, you have to steal. ... You can even steal from other actors' charac­ terizations; but if you do, only steal from the best.... Because what you're seeing them do, they stole."s No matter what their methods of preparation, actors who attempt to submerge their own personalities and become a character deserve respect for their efforts, according to director Elia Kazan: The beautiful and the terrible thing about actors is that when they work they are com­ pletely exposed; you have to appreciate that if you direct them. They are being criti­ cally observed not only for their emotions, their technique, and their intelligence, but for their legs, their breasts, their carriage, their double chins, and so on. Their whole being is opened to scrutiny. . .. How can you feel anything but gratitude for creatures so vulnerable and so naked?9 DIFFERENCES BETWEEN FILM ACTING AND STAGE ACTING Acting for motion pictures and acting for the stage have in common the goals, traits, and skills described above, yet there are important differences in the acting techniques required for the two media (Figure 10.1). The primary difference results from the rel­ ative distance between the performer and the spectator. When acting in the theater, actors must always be sure that every member of the audience can see and hear them distinctly. Thus, stage actors must constantly project the voice, make gestures that are obvious and clear, and generally move and speak so they can be clearly heard and seen by the most remote observer. This is no problem in a small, intimate theater, but the larger the theater and the more distant the spectator in the last row, the farther the actor's voice must be projected and the broader the gestures must be. As actors make these adjustments, the depth and reality of the performance suffer, because louder tones and wider gestures lead to generalized form and stylization. The finer, subtler shades of intonation are lost as the distance between actor and audience increases. The problem of reaching a remote spectator does not exist in fihns, for the viewer is in the best possible location for hearing and seeing the actor. Because of the mobility of the recording microphone, a fihn actor may speak softly, or even whisper, with full confidence that the audience will hear every word and perceive every subtle tone of voice. The same holds true for facial expression, gesture, and body movement, for in close-ups even the subtlest facial expressions are clearly vis­ ible to the most remote spectator. The mobility of the camera further assures the actor that the audience will view the scene from the most effective angle. Thus film acting can be, and in fact must be, more subtle and restrained than stage acting. Henry Fonda learned this lesson when director Victor Fleming accused him of "mugging" while fihning a scene for Fonda's first movie, The Farmer Takes a Wife· Fonda had played the role on Broadway, and Fleming explained the problem to him in tenns he clearly understood: "You're playing the farmer the way you did in the the­ ater. You're playing to the back row of the orchestra and the rear row of the balcony. That's stage technique." The understated Fonda style, using as little facial mobility as possible, began at that moment and served the actor well in almost a hundred films: "1 just pulled it right back to reality because that lens and that microphone are 276 CHAPTER 10 doing all thf need any me ActorR dominate th movies. Stag This is • actor must I microphone complete sin or phony g~ or out of cha actors either uine persona self-consciou as much on r Another tinuous bits ; the next, as i.J ill proper seq acting style f, required to SF have difficult: earlier, a prob .en becom­ )rs' charac­ ,u're seeing o submerge heir effortS, bey are COffi­ leing criti­ Jigence, but 'heir whole 'or creatures e goals, traits, ng techniques ;; from the rel­ in the theater, and hear them ~tures that are heard and seen neater, but the the farther the I\s actors make ecause louder Ie finer, subtler :e increases. I films, for the tor. Because of softly, or even d and perceive n, gesture, and are clearly vis­ her assures the Ilgle. Thus film :tage acting. accused him of er Takes a Wife. )[oblem to him ~ did in the the­ , of the balcony. : facial mobility nost a hundred microphone are FIGURE 10.1 Stage vs. Film Acting Many performers seem equally adept at satisfying the separate demands of acting for the theater and working in movies. For example, Patrick Stewart can broadly command the stage as Puck in a production of A Midsummer Nights Dream, left, and also offer the cinematic nuances of Jean-Luc Picard in the Star Trek franchise, right. doing all the projection you need. No sense in using too much voice, and you don't need any more expression on your face than you'd use in everyday life."IO Actor Robert Shaw put it this way: "Here's the difference: On stage, you have to dominate the audience. You don't have to think the way you do when you're in the movies. Stage acting is the art of domination. Movie acting is the art of seduction."ll This is not to say that film acting is less difficult than stage acting. The film actor must be etttremely careful in every gesture and word, for the camera and microphone are unforgiving and cruelly revealing, especially in close-ups. Because complete sincerity, naturalness, and restraint are all-important, a single false move or phony gesture or a line delivered without conviction, with too much conviction, or out of character will shatter the illusion of reality. Thus, the most successful film actors either possess or can project, with seeming ease and naturalness, a truly gen­ uine personality, and they somehow appear to be completely themselves without self-consciousness or a sense of strain. This rare quality generally seems to depend as much on natural talent as on disciplined study and training. Another difficulty faces film actors because they perform their roles in discon­ tinuous bits and pieces, rather than in a continuous flow with one scene following the next, as in theater. Only later, in the cutting room, are the fragments assembled in proper sequence. For this reason, assuming the proper frame of mind, mood, and acting style for each segment of the film becomes a problem. For example, actors required to speak in a dialect far removed from their own natural speech patterns may have difficulty capturing the dialect exactly as they did in a scene filmed two weeks earlier, a problem they would not have in a continuous stage performance. But a clear Acting 2n FIGURE 10.2 Corporeal Stances Body language speaks volumes about the characters and their relationships in these scenes picturing Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepbum in The African Queen (left) and Zekeria Ebrahimi and Ahmad Khan Mahmoodzada in The Kite Runner (right), advantage also arises from this difference. The performance of the film actor can be made more nearly perfect than can that of the stage actor, for the film editor and direc­ tor can choose the best and most convincing performance from several takes of the same sequence. That way, the film becomes a continuous series of best performances. Another disadvantage in film acting is that the actors have no direct link with the audience as stage actors do and therefore must act for an imagined audience. Film actors cannot draw on audience reaction for inspiration. Whatever inspiration they receive must come from the director, the crew, and the fact that their work will have more permanence than that of the stage actor. Film is also for the most part a more physical medium than theater-that is, film actors must use more nonverbal communication than stage actors have to use. Julian Fast discusses this aspect of film acting in his book Body Language: "Good actors must all be experts in the use of body language. A process of elimination guarantees that qnly those with an excellent command of the grammar and vocab­ ulary get to be successful.,,12 According to critic Jack Kroll, "Actors who have a genius for this sleight of body are surrogates for the rest of us who are trapped in our own selves. To create a new human being is to recr'eate the very idea of human­ ity, to refresh that idea for us who grow stale in our mortality" (Figure 10.2).13 The grammar and vocabulary of body language include a vast array of nonverbal communication techniques, but the motion picture is perhaps unique in its empha­ sis on the eloquence of the human face. Although the face and facial expressions play a part in other storytelling media, such as novels and plays, in film the face becomes a medium of communication in its own right. Magnified on the screen, the human face with its infinite variety of expressions can convey depth ,and subtlety of emotion that cannot be approached through purely rational or verbal means (Figure 10.3). As Hungarian film critic and theorist Bela Balazs so aptly states, "What happens on the face and in facial expressions is a spiritual experience which is rendered immediately visible without the intermediary of words" 14 (Figure 10.4). 278 CHAPTER 10 \ FIGURE 10.3 stars, Sandra B and feelings of r' ~ i } __ III; /ii~ FIGURE 10.4 S mentally challen$ touching scene ~ The humal wide range of e and forehead. 1 between film a( acting. The re~ Inguage ir lrey ::i Khan ,r can be ld direc­ es of the mances. link with mdience. spiration .York will -that is, to use. e "Good ruination ld vocab­ 10 have a rapped in ,fhuman­ 1.2).0 nonverbal ts empha­ ;sions play e becomes he human )femotion ·e lOJ).As ,ens on the l111ediately FIGURE 10.3 The Actor's Face The immensely popular movie The Blind Side allows its stars, Sandra Bullock and Quinton Aaron, clearly to reveal in their faces the inner thoughts and feelings of their characters. ve FIGURE 10.4 Sustained Expression In I Am Sam, Sean Penn convincingly portrays a mentally challenged character by maintaining a "simple" look throughout the film, as in this touching scene with his film daughter (Dakota Fanning). The human face is a marvelously complex structure, capable of transmitting a wide range of emotions through slight changes ill mouth, eyes, eyelids, eyebrows, and forehead. This expressiveness helps to explaill another important difference between film acting and stage a"\ting: the film's emphasis on reacting rather than acting. The reaction shot achieves its considerable dramatic impact through a . I Acting 279 by the an( slO ext Cor Th un; FIGURE 10.5 The Reaction Shot Actor Kevin Zegers, playing the son of Bree, Felicity Huffman's preoperative transsexual character in Transamerica, spends much of his time during a road trip with his newly discovered parent registering silent facial reactions to her many questions and instructions. me clo, mo por rno close-up of the character most affected by the dialogue or action. The actor's face, ",ithin the brief moment that it is on the screen, must register clearly yet subtly and without the aid of dialogue the appropriate emotional reaction (Figure 10.5). Some of the most powerful moments in film are built around such "facial acting." Michael Caine elaborates: "(I]n a movie, you cannot get away with just doing a star performance-moving and talking all the time. People become bored with you .... [Y]ou have to play according to the reactions of someone else to what you're doing. One of the things I'm known for in movies is not acting but reacting.,,15 The stage actor's facial reactions, in contrast, are seldom if ever quite so impor­ tant to a play's dramatic power. But even in reaction shots the film actor is often assisted by the nature of the medium, for in film much of the powerful and expressive quality of the human face is created by the context in which it appears, and the meanings of many expressions are determined by skillful editing. Thus, the actor's face may not be so beautifully expressive as the visual context makes it appear. This phenomenon was demon­ strated in an experiment conducted in the early 1920s by the young Russian painter Lev Kuleshov and film director V I. Pudovkin: We took from some film or other several close-ups of the well-known Russian actor Mosjukhin. We chose close-ups which were static and which did not express any feeling at all-quiet close-ups. We joined these close-ups, which were all similar, with other bits of film in three different combinations. In the first combination the close-up of Mosjukhin was immediately followed by a shot of soup standing on a table. It was obvious and certain that Mosjukhin was looking at this soup. In the second combination the face of Mosjukhin was joined to shots showing a coffin in which lay 282 CHAPTER 10 ges sna WI ord cru, On acti gua res( for psy. dOD and is b pan are actc whc or i nan ann first 1 a dead woman. In the third the close-up was followed by a shot of a tittle girl playing with a fwmy toy bear. When we showed the ,t hree combinations to an audience which had not been let into the secret, the result was terrific. The pubtic raved about the acting of the artist. They pointed out the heavy pensiveness of the mood over the forgotten soup, were touched and moved by the deep sorrow with which he looked on the dead woman, and admired the light, happy smile with which he surveyed the girl at play. But we knew in all three cases the face was exactly the same. 16 'ree, Felicity i his time ctions to her le actor's face, irly yet subtly (Figure 10.5). 'facial acting." st doing a star :1 with you .. , . t you're doing. ,,\5 luite so impor­ e nature of the :he human face my expressions e so beautifully JO was demon­ Russian painter Russian actor :xpress any all similar, nbination the illding on a table. 1 the second fin in which lay This experiment is not cited to prove that film acting is only an illusion created by editing. But it does show that we are eager to respond to faces, whether or not those faces are really projecting what we think we see. Film actors must also be able to communicate more with bodily movements and gestures than stage actors. Because the stage actor's chief instrument of expres­ sion is the voice, his or her movements are mainly an accompaniment to or an extension of what is said. In film, however, physical movement and gesture may communicate effectively without dialogue (see Flashback: "Silent Acting Evolves: The Subtleties of Exaggeration" in this chapter). The magnification of the human image on the screen enables the actor to cOlmnunicate with extremely subtle move­ ments. A slight shrug of the shoulders, the nervous trembling of a hand viewed in close-up, or the visible tensing of the muscles and tendons in the neck may be much more important than anything said. A classic example of the power of body language in film acting is Jack Palance's portrayal of the gunfighter WIlson in Shane, a role he parodies in both City Slickers movies. Palance plays WIlson as the personification of evil. Every movement, every gesture is slow, deliberate, yet tense, so we get the feeling that WIlson is a rattle­ snake, moving slowly and sensuously but always ready to strike in a split second. When WIlson slowly perfonns the ritual of putting on his black leather gloves in order to practice his profession, Palance makes us sense with horror Wilson's cold, cruel indifference to human life. Film acting also differs from stage acting in that it requires two kinds of acting. One is the kind required for the action/adventure film. We can refer to it as action acting. This type of acting requires a great deal in the way of reactions, body lan­ guage, physical exertion, and special skills, but it does not draw on the deepest resources of the actor's intelligence and feelings. In contrast, dramatic acting calls for sustained, intense dialogue with another person and requires an emotional and psychological depth seldom called for in action acting. Action acting is the art of doing. Dramatic acting involves feeling, thinking, and communicating emotions and thoughts. Action acting is on the surface, with 'little nuance. Dramatic acting is beneath the surface and full of subtlety. Each type of acting requires its own particular gift or talent. Some actors can do both, but most are better suited for one or the other and are usually cast accordingly. Clint Eastwood, for example, is essentially an action actor, and Robert De Niro is a dramatic actor (Figure 10.6). Director Sergio Leone, who has directed both, describes them: "Robert De Niro throws himself into this or that role, putting on a personality the way someone else might put on his coat, naturally and with elegance, while Clint Eastwood throws himself into a suit of armor and lowers the visor with a rusty clang .... Bobby first of all, is an actor. Clint first of all, is a star. Bobby suffers, Clint yawnsY II II FIGURE 10.6 Action and Dramatic Acting Although, like Clint Eastwood Will Smith has sometimes ventured into drama (Six Degrees of Separation, Seven Pounds) with success, he has become best known as an action actor (pictured above in I Am Legend). Robert De Niro (shown in Raging Buln (right) has consistently been one of our finest dramatic actors . With uneven results, both critically and commercially, all three actors have also starred in comedies. Although Eastwood, as he has aged, has carved some deeper lines into his "block of granite" with work like Unforgiven, Million Dollar Baby, Gran Torino, and Hereafte7; Leone's description of Eastwood as an actor remains valid today. Although fihn acting and stage acting have the same basic goals, fihn acting utilizes fundamentally different techniques to achieve them. TYPES OF ACTORS Besides classifyIDg actors as action and dramatic actors, we can consider how the roles they play relate to their own personalities. In A Primer for Playgoers, Edward A. Wright and Lenthiel H. Downs identify three types of actors: impersonators, interpreters and commentators, and personality actors. IS Impersonators Impersonators are actors who have the talent to leave their real personality behind and to assume the personality of a character with whom they may have few char­ acteristics in common. Such actors can completely submerge themselves in a role, altering their personal, physical, and vocal characteristics to such a degree that they seem to become the character. We lose sight of the impersonator's real identity. The roles such actors can perform are almost unlimited. Interpreters and Commentators Interpreters and commentators play characters closely resembling themselves in personality and physical appearance, and they interpret these parts dramatically with­ out wholly losing their own identity. Although they may slightly alter themselves to fit the role, they do not attempt to radically change their individual personality traits, physical characteristics, or voice qualities. They choose instead to color or interpret \ 284 CHAPTER 10 the role by filtering it through their own best qualities, modifying it to fit their own inherent abilities. The end result is an effective compromise between actor and role, between the real and the assumed identity. The compromise adds a unique creative dimension to the character being portrayed, for in their delivery of the lines these actors reveal something of their own thoughts and feelings about the character, but they do so without ever falling out of character. Thus, these actors may simultane­ ously comment on and interpret the role. Although the range of roles such actors can play is not as wide as that open to impersonators, it is still relatively broad. If they are cast wisely within this range, they can bring something new and fresh to each role they play, in addition to their own best and most attractive qualities. Personality Actors les ventured action actor me of our starred in nes into his Torino, and day. , film acting l Actors whose primary talent is to be themselves and nothing more are personality actors. They project the essential qualities of sincerity, truthfulness, and natural­ ness, and they generally possess some dynamic and magnetic mass appeal because of a striking appearance, a physical or vocal idiosyncrasy, or some other special quality strongly communicated to us on film. These actors, however popular, are incapable of assUIIllng any variety in the roles they play, for they cannot project sincerity and naturalness when they attempt to move outside their own basic personality. Thus, either they must fit exactly the roles in which they are cast, or the roles must be tailored to fit their personality. THE STAR SYSTEM ider how the rpeTS, Edward Ipersonators, nality behind ave few char­ lves in a role, ~ee that they real identity. themselves in natically with­ themselves to ·sonality traits, :>r or interpret In the past, many personality actors and some interpreter and commentator actors were exploited in what became known as the star system, an approach to filmmaking based on the assumption that the average movie-goer is interested more in personalities than in great stories or, for that matter, in film art. The stars were, of course, actors with great mass appeal. The big studios did everything in their power to preserve the qualities of the stars that appealed to the public, and they created films around the image of the star personality. Often a star's pres­ ence in a film was the main guarantee of financial success, and such films became nothing more than a suitable package in which to display and market the attrac­ tive wares of the actors, who had only to project the charm of their personalities (Figure 10.7). For some directors, the star system offered certain clear advantages. John Ford and Frank Capra, for example, used the star system as a myth-making apparatus, building their films around such stars as John Wayne, Barbara Stanwyck, Jean Arthur, Henry Fonda, James Stewart, and Gary Cooper. These actors projected fairly consistent personalities and embraced a constant set ofvalues in each film they did. They came into each new Ford or Capra film trailing clouds of associations and reverberating strong echoes of earlier parts. By surrounding these stars with their stock company of top-notch secondary actors-also in predictable roles echoing earlier parts-Ford and Capra were, in a sense, using pre-established symbols for the values they wanted their characters to represent, and the mythic worlds of their films could rest on the shoulders of actors who already had mythic dimensions. Acting 285 FIGURE 10.7 The Studio Star System Although the 1944 film noir classic Double Indemnity became another triumph for director Billy Wilder, the movie was also clearly a star-system vehicle for the immensely popular Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray. The fact that so many stars trailed these clouds of associations influenced Steven Spielberg's 1975 casting of Jaws: I didn't pursue that idea of getting stars, because I think it's really important when you're watching a movie that you don't sit there and say, "Oh, look who's in this picture. What was his last picture, wasn't that a good one? Didn't you just love her in such and such . .. ?" . . . . I had two producers who ... agreed that we should not go after the half-million-dollar players, but should get good people who would be good actors in the right part and would be semianonyrnous. 19 There was some general agreement with Spielberg's thinking throughout the industry. During the 1960s and 1970s producers began to turn to lesser-known actors who had the range and flexibility to play a variety of roles and who, of course, demanded less money than established stars. Blockbuster hits such as 2001, The Graduate, Taxi DriVe1; and Jaws were successful without the presence of top box-office stars. A new era began with a small galaxy of gifted actors who promised not the repetition of tested and tried personalities but the guarantee of high-level performances in fresh and exciting roles (people like Dustin Hoffman, Robert De Niro,]odie Foster, Meryl Streep, Robert Duvall, and Glenn Close). Much of the success of this new galaxy depends on the actors' skill in choosing the films in which they appear. No longer under studio contract and forced to accept roles assigned by studio moguls, the modem star is often part of a deal package that may include a director and screenwriter who are all clients of the same agent. In many respects, the talent agency has usurped some of the power of the big studios in determining what films are made and who stars in them-and enormOUS salaries are once again in vogue. Although the star system has changed greatly over the last half century, it is cer­ tainly not dead. The personality cults that spring up periodically around charismatic actors provide ample evidence to the contrary. We will always be attracted to famil­ iar faces and personalities, for we seem to have a psychological need for the familiar, the predictable, and the comfortable. In addition, as Sidney Lumet suggests, 286 CHAPTER 10 There's a mysterious alchemy between star and audience. Sometimes it's based on the physical beauty or sex appeal of the star. But I don't believe that it's ever just one thing. Surely there were other women as attractive as 1Viarilyn Monroe or men as handsome as Cary Grant (though not many). AI Pacino tries to suit his look to the characters-a beard here, long hair there-but somehow it's the way his eyes express an enormous rage, even in tender moments, that enthralls me and everyone else. I think that every star evokes a sense of danger, something unmanageable. Perhaps each person in the audience feels that he or she is the one who can manage, tame, satisfy the bigger-than­ life quality that a star has. Clint Eastwood isn't really the same as you or me, is he? Or Michelle Pfeiffer, or Sean Connery, or you name them. I don't really know what makes a star. But the persona that jumps out at you is certainly a most important element. 2o CASTING )llS influenced ,rtantwhen )'S in this ust love her in hould not go vould be good throughout the o lesser-known es and who, of ts such as 2001 , )resence of top ; who promised ~e of high-level l1an, Robert De kill in choosing : and forced to . part of a deal !nts of the same lower of the big -and enormous entury, it is cer­ !lnd charismatic racted to famil­ for the familiar, suggests, Steven Spielberg has observed, "Sometimes the best thing I can do is cast the movie well. If you cast well then half the battle is already won .... ,,11 Indeed, acting skills aside, the casting of actors in roles that are right for them is an extremely important consideration. If their physical characteristics, facial fea­ tures, voice qualities, or the total personality they naturally project is not suited to the character, their performance will probably not be convincing. Alec Guinness or Peter Sellers, despite their great ability as impersonators, could not have effectively played the roles assigned to John Wayne, for example, nor could Burt Lancaster have been very effective in roles played by Woody Allen. Less extreme problems in casting can be solved by sheer genius or camera tricks. For example, in the film Buy on a Dolphin, Alan Ladd, who measured 5 feet 6 inches, was cast opposite Sophia Loren, who towered over him at 5 feet 9 inches. But in a scene that showed them walking side by side, Ladd seemed at least as tall as or slightly taller than Loren. What the camera didn't show was that Loren was actually walking in a shallow trench especially dug for the purpose (Figure 10.8). When the male lead is to be something other than the traditional macho hero, relative size does not seem so important. No effort was made to conceal that Dudley Moore was shorter than Mary Tyler Moore in Six Weeks. Traditionally, when the story has been a comedy, the romantic male lead could be shorter than his leading lady, as was apparent in the pair­ ing of Gwyneth Paltrow and Jack Black in Shallow Hal. And in Mike Nichols's film version of Who'sAfraid ojVi1'ginia Woolf? the character named Honey (Sandy Dennis) is repeatedly referred to as "slim-hipped" despite visual evidence to the contrary. The discrepancy is obscured by Dennis's acting; she projects a psychological type of slim­ hippedness that is more convincing than the physical sembla.nce of it. It is also extremely important that the cast of any film be viewed as a team, not as a hodgepodge of separate individuals, for each actor appears on the screen not alone but in interaction with the other actors. Therefore some thought has to be given to the way they will look on the screen with each other. When cast­ ing two male leads such as Robert Redford and Paul Newman, for example, the casting director makes sure that they have certain oontrasting features so that they stand out clearly from each other. Actors of the same sex are cast with the idea of contrasting their coloring, builds, heights, and voice qualities. If these differences are not apparent, they can be created through such artificial means as costuming, hairstyle, and facial hair (clean-shaven, mustaches, or beards). Acting 287 FIGURE 10.8 The Height of Casting Challenges Because Sophia Loren was three inches taller than Alan Ladd, she was photographed standing a step below him in this scene from the romantic drama Boyan a Dolphin (top left). In The Station Agent (below). Patricia Clarkson actually towered over her diminutive, but quietly forceful, co-star Peter Dinklage (left, seen with the more conventionally tall and handsome Bobby Cannavale}-but audi­ ences were nevertheless convinced of the genuine attraction between their two complex characters in this drama . Director Stanley Kubrick cast the (then) real-life, tali/not-so-tall couple Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise in Eyes Wide Shut (top right). 288 CHAPTER 10 J II FIGURE 10.9 Ensemble Acting In some films, four or more well-known actors may be cast in roles of almost equal importance, and none of them actually dominates the movie . In director Nicole Holofcener's Please Give, the large cast i'n cludes Catherine Keener and Oliver Platt (right). han Alan n a Dolphin ietly forceful, -but audi­ 1 this drama. in Eyes The actors must also project, either naturally or through their skill as actors, significantly different personality traits so that they can effectively playoff each other as separate and distinct personalities. This is especially important in ensemble acting, a performance by a group of actors whose roles are of equal importance; no member of the group has a starring role or dominates the others. Many modern films, such as The Big Chill, The Right Stuff, Reality Bites, Friends With Money, and Please Give, feature ensemble acting (Figure 10.9). One of the most difficult jobs in casting is finding combinations of actors with chemistry between them-preferably a chemistry so powerful that the audience wants to see them together again in another film. Most important in Hollywood productions is what is known as the he/she chemistry. Spencer Tracy was paired with a bevy of actresses (Lana Turner, Hedy Lamarr, Jean Harlow, and Deborah Kerr) before he was cast with Katharine Hepburn to form a winning team that could be repeated for success after success (Figure 10.10). The James StewartlJune Allyson combination also proved very successful. The Woody AllenlDiane Keaton team worked well (perhaps better than the Woody Allen/Mia Farrow combination). The simple truth, however, is that real he/she chemistry is very rare, and few com­ binations in recent years have been strong enough to endure very long. Physical characteristics and natural personality traits are especially important when members of the audience are likely to have clear mental images of the char­ acter before they see the movie, as in films about familiar historical figures or films based on popular novels. We often have a difficult time believing in actors who violate our preconceived notions of such characters, and even outstanding perfor­ mances seldom overcome this handicap. Acting 289 s ( ( } t ti FIGURE 10.10 He/She Chemistry Studios are constantly searching for the perfect couple, so that they can be played opposite each other in film after film. So far, few modern teams have enjoyed the success experienced by Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy (top left, in Adam's Rib), or Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor (top right, in Taming of the Shrew) . One possibility: Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem (bottom right, in Vicky Cristina Barcelona). h h tl E d Vl n [( fr w Financial considerations also play an important part in casting. A well-known actor may be the perfect choice for a starring role but may be too high priced for a film with a limited budget. Or an actor may have commitments that prevent her or him from taking the part. Thus, casting becomes a matter of selecting the best available talent within the limits of the film's budget and shooting schedule. For actors who have an established and loyal following, producers may take a chance and cast them in a role at odds with their established image, hoping that they will automatically draw their special fans. Thus, Mary Tyler Moore was cast as the cold mother in Ordinary People, Robin Williams in The WorldAccording to Garp, Dead Poets Society, and Insomnia, Steve Martin in Pennies From Heaven and Parent­ hood, Jim Carrey in The Truman Show, and Charlize Theron in Monster. Billy WIlder's methods of casting were perhaps unique because WIlder wrote many of the stories he directed, but he does provide an excellent example of the impor­ tance of casting. Instead of selecting a cast to fit an existing story, Wilder often started with a story idea alone and then proceeded to select and sign up his cast. Only after the actors he wanted agreed to do the film did the actual writing of the script begin. As WIlder put it, "What good is it to have a magnificent dramatic concept for which you must have Sir Laurence Olivier and Audrey Hepburn if they're not available?"~2 Casting Problems Casting a feature film is often a more difficult matter than just visualizing the right actor for the part and signing him or her to a contract. German director Werner Herzog's experiences with casting Fitzcarmldo are certainly not typical, but they 290 CHAPTER 10 R af w R, ce an w: an Ill" ca: th, VI( Ty a I im sar SlJ( th~ Illa If t · A well-known high priced for hat prevent her leering the best chedule. lucers may take 1ge, hoping that oore was cast as ccording to Garp, :ven and Parent­ ster. ;e Wuder wrote Jle of the impor­ der often started cast. ()uly after the script begin. Incept for which lot available?,,12 alizing the right :lirector Werner ypical, but they do illustrate a variety of problems that can occur on almost any production. Jack Nicholson had originally expressed interest in playing the lead, but then lost interest. Later, Warren ()ates agreed to play the title role. However, ()ates, who had never signed a contract, backed out four weeks before shooting was to begin because he didn't relish spending three months in a remote jungle location. After a two-month delay, with Jason Robards replacing ()ates, and Mick Jagger in a supporting role, shooting finally got under way. Six weeks later Robards came down with amoebic dysentery and flew home. Shortly after that, MickJagger had to drop out to honor other commitments. Unable to find a suitable replacement for Jagger, Herzog wrote his character out of the script. Production was then suspended for two months while the director searched for a new leading man. Although Klaus Kinski (subsequently the subject of Herzog's documentary My Best Fiend) was not an ideal choice because he could not project the warmth and charm of the obsessed Irishman, Herzog hired him for the part because further delay would certainly have killed the project. Fate seems to playa hand in casting, for actors often become stars in roles that were turned down by others. Robert Redford got the part of the Sundance Kid only after Marlon Brando, Steve McQueen, and Warren Beatty had turned it down. During a very brief period, Montgomery Clift turned down four roles that virtually made stars of the actors who finally played the parts: the WIlliam Holden role in Sunset Boulevard, the James Dean role in East of Eden, the Paul Newman role in Somebody Up There Likes Me, and the Marlon Brando role in On the Water­ front. Gene Hackman was offered the part of the father in Ordin01'Y People and wanted to do it, but he could not work out the kind of financial deal he wanted. Richard Dreyfuss was originally set to play Joe Gideon in All That Jazz, but he was afraid of the dancing the role would require and was used to working with directors who allowed the actor more freedom than Bob Fosse allowed. So the role went to Roy Scheider. Although the names on the marquee are usually important factors in the suc­ cess of a .film, there are exceptions. Midnight Express is one. The film did not have any name stars, and the director, Alan Parker, had made only one film, so his name was not a household word either. Yet the film succeeded because its great intensity and excellent performances from relatively unknown actors stimulated audience interest. Likewise, Steven Soderbergh directed sex, lies, & videotape with a starless cast long before he became famous himself with Erin Brockovich and Traffic-and then returned to a completely starless cast in such independent, shot-on-digital­ video features as Bubble (Figure 10.11). he Typecasting Trap Typecasting consigns an actor to a narrow range of almost identical roles. It is a natural result of two situations. First, the studios have a great deal of money invested in every film they do. Thus, they naturally want to cast an actor in the Sllme kind of role that was successful before, in the hope of repeating the earlier success. Second, if an actor repeats a similar role two or three times, the qualities clut the actor projected in the role may take on mythic proportions, and the actor may become a figure on whom movie-goers hang their fantasies (Figure 10.12). If this happens, the movie-going audience not only expects, but demands, that the Acting 291 care sens Lon that SisS) Her Bruc such a cha recO] ture FIGURE 10.11 The Starless Cast Occasionally, a movie can attract considerable attention even when all of the actors are completely unknown . An extreme example of this phenomenon involves Bubble, an independent film that director Steven Soderbergh created as part of his experimentation with conventional motion picture distribution patterns. The film, shot inexpensively on digital video, was released almost simultaneously on the screens of Mark Cuban's Landmark Theatre chain, on pay-per-view cable, and on sale in the DVD format. Its "stars," real-life citizens of the small town that served as the location for the movie's shooting (Debbie Doebereiner, Misty Wilkins, and Dustin James Ashley), had never acted in films before. Del' canp to pr, playiJ kind, and s imag( Gake play t fectly of the has th Grad'll the POI Spider, M accorc DeNi played right- ~ ity to t As FIGURE 10.12 Typecasting In choosing actors for the four lead "senior" roles in Space Cowboys, director Clint Eastwood and casting director Phyllis Huffman obviously took full advantage of the personality types that Eastwood, Donald Sutherland, James Gamer, and Tommy Lee Jones, had respectively projected steadily in their roles as younger, popular actors. who is strengl can pIa limited I think you kn, you wil Al role be repeated again and again, with only slight variations. To the fans, anything else is a betrayal, a personal affront to those who have developed what to them is a very personal relationship with a fictional character on the silver screen. There is a real danger that an actor who is too convincing in an early role will be typecast for the rest of his or her career. For example, Sissy Spacek, early in her 292 CHAPTER 10 actors, to beco them to into an' they chi 'able 'ple of :lerbergh Ition ultaneously " and on sale the location > Ashley), had ~s in Space y took full arner, and popular actors. ~ns, anything It to them is a en. early role will k, early in her career, projected a fairly consistent screen image: a young, innocent, intelligent, sensitive, but somewhat unsophisticated small-town or country girl. She played Loretta Lynn so convincingly in Coal Mine7''s Daughte7' that people actually believe that Sissy Spacek is that character, "just plain folks," in real life. But the fact is that Sissy Spacek is an extremely versatile actress capable of playing practically any pan. Her Oscar-nominated mature performance in In the Bedmom shows her versatility. Roben De Niro created such a strong impression with his Georgia farm-boy Bruce in Bang the Drum Slowly that people were saying how sad it was that he had such a strong Georgia accent, for he'd be limited to roles that called for that kind of a character. De Niro, now well known for his meticulous research, had taken a tape recorder to Georgia to study the speech patterns of the residents so he could cap­ ture the dialect of the character he was cast to play. By carefully choosing his roles, De Niro has completely broken the typecasting trap. He has shown not only that he can playa variety of roles but that he can alter himself both mentally and physically to project entirely different qualities in each pan he plays. In Bang the Drum Slowly, playing the second-rate big-league catcher with Hodgkin's disease, he projects a kind of fragile quality, a small man among giants. In The Deer Hunte7; he stands tall and strong, a quiet, confident leader among men. In Rnging Bull, he changes his image within the film itself, playing a young, trim, perfectly conditioned fighter Oake La Motta) in the beginning and then ballooning his weight sixty pounds to play the middle-aged La Motta at the film's end. His transformations are so per­ fectly executed and his character is so completely transformed that we lose sight of the fact that we're seeing the same actor in all three roles. Dustin Hoffman too has this rare ability, as seen in his portrayal of extremely different characters in The Graduate, Midnight Cowboy, Tootsie, Rnin Man, Billy Bathgate, I. Huckabees, and Meet the Pockers, as does Ralph Fiennes in Schindle7''s List, Quiz Show, The English Patimt, Spider, The Constant Garden", and The White Countess. (Figure 10.13). Many actors are wary of falling into the typecasting trap and plan their careers accordingly, doing everything possible to avoid the dangers. Gary Busey, who like De Niro has altered his weight and his appearance greatly in some of the roles he's played, expresses his philosophy this way: "My idea is to look for roles that make right-angle turns from one film to the next. I try to bring a freshness and spontane­ ity to each pan and scene I play."n As far as casting is concerned, there are often disadvantages for the male actor who is too handsome or the female actor who is exceptionally beautiful, because the strength of their attractiveness cuts down somewhat on the number of roles they can play. Actor Paul Newman, in midcareer, said that his ability to choose roles was limited by the expectations of the audience: "When I first started working in films, I think the audience allowed me greater leeway to experiment.... It's too bad ... if you know that by your very presence ... the image that audiences have created for you will work against whatever you bring to the film."24 A limited group of fine leading actors might be called "the ordinary people," actors who have everyday kinds of faces. Such actors seldom have the star quality to become fantasy objects or matinee idols, but their special gift of blandness frees them to become actors of great range and flexibility. Chameleonlike, they can blend into any surroundings, and they seem convincing and natural in almost any pan they choose to play. Actors such as Gene Hackman, Roben Duvall, Jane Alexander, I' Acting 293 FIGURE 10.13 The Actor as Chameleon Without even the aid of special makeup, Ralph Fiennes transforms himself from the brutal SS officer Amon Goeth in Schindler's List (top left) into the gentle blind American diplomat and (later) club owner Todd Jackson in The White Countess (shown, top right, with Natasha Richardson). Similarly, Oscar-winner Angelina Jolie moves convincingly from her sexy, dangerous spy-wife character in Mr. and Mrs. Smith (bottom left, with Brad Pitt) to the austere, distraught mother in Changeling (bottom right). Ben Kingsley, Laura Linney, and Ed Harris have perhaps a wider range of roles open to them simply because they are not stereotypical1y glamorous Hollywood stars (Figure 10.14). Although they are very attractive in their own ways, an everyman or everywoman quality to their appearance prevents them from becoming typecast. Gene Hackman, who never worries about the fact that he is seldom recognized in public, doesn't really want to be a star: "1 like to be thought of as an actor. It could be conceived as some kind of a cop-out, 1 guess. But I'm afraid that if 1 start to become a star, I'll lose contact with the normal guys 1 play best."25 Supporting Players The casting process does not begin and end with the selection of stars for the leading roles. Almost as important as the leading players in any production are the supporting players. Although they may not provide the box-office draw of the big names, the supporting players may be even less interchangeable from movie to movie than the major stars. For example, George Raft was originally chosen to play Sam Spade, the "hero" in The Maltese Fako1l, and it is fairly easy to imagine him in the role. But could anyone other than Peter Lorre play the idiosyncratic secondary role ofJoel Cairo? 294 CHAPTER 10 -.­ .~ £.'/ . . ~'~ ''#' · 1;;~r;,.I. ,. ~~ .,.,.. \! ~ 1 ". ' J,~ , \ ~ FIGURE 10.14 Ordinary People The extraordinary talent concealed behind these rather ordinary faces helps give such performers as Laura Linney (right, in The Savages) and Ed Harris (left, in Pollock) greater acting flexibility than more glamorous stars would have in the same roles. es transforms ,rican diplomat ison). Similarly, and Mrs. Smith :: of roles open )llywood stars , an everyman ming typecast. recognized in actor. It could at if I start to f stars for the iuction are the raw of the big rom movie to chosen to play magine him in atic secondary Supporting players do exactly that-support the major roles. The major stars playoff them, as friends, adversaries, employers, employees, leaders, or even foils (contrasting characters that serve to clearly define the personality of the main character). Supporting players make the stars shine brighter, sharper, and more clearly, providing a sounding board that both helps to bring out all the dimensions of the star's character and makes the most important facets stand out in bold relief. But supporting players often do much more. Sometimes they create characters that are brilliant in their own right. Although their glow may be less radiant than that of the star players they support, the supporting players often create, usually with (but often without) the star, some of the most memorable moments in film. Consider the contributions of Gene Hackman, Estelle Parsons, Dub Taylor, Gene Wilder, and Michael]. Pollard to Bonnie and Clyde; Hattie McDaniel and Butterfly McQueen to Gone With the Wind; Thomas Mitchell to M1: Smith Goes to Washington and Stagecoach; Sterling Hayden and Slim Pickens to D1: Stmngelove; Ben Johnson to The Last Picture Show; Strother Martin to True Grit, Butch Cassidy and the Sun­ dance Kid, and Cool Hand Luke; Thelma Ritter to practically anything; Lucille Ben­ son to Slaughterhouse Five and Silver Streak; Paul Dooley to Popeye (as Wimpy) and to Breaking Away (as the father); Scatrnan Crothers to Silve1' Streak, The Shining, and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; John Goodman to EVe1ybody's All-Ame1-ican, Sea ofLove, Always, RIlising Arizona, and The Big Lebowski; Martin Landau to Tucker, Crimes and Misdemeanors, and Ed Wood; and Steve Buscemi to Fargo and many other independent films. These great perfonnances highlight how important a contribu­ tion supporting actors make to the overall quality of any film (Figure 10.15). With the possible exception of Macaulay Culkin, Haley Joel Osment, Dakota Fanning, and Saoirse Ronan, the modern film has not had child stars of the mag­ nitude of Shirley Temple, Judy Garland, Mickey Rooney, or later, Tatum O'Neal and Jodie Foster. Children still make important contributions in supporting roles and often steal the show from the starring actors. Most of these young actors seem to have a gift for projecting the naturalness and sincerity so essential for film act­ ing. Remarkable perfonnances by child actors in films like Alice Doesn't Live Here Acting 295 FIGURE 10.' 5 Supporting Players By interacting with the stars playing leading roles and each other, supporting players help define the most important aspects of the stars' characters and in the process may create some of the most memorable moments in film . Pictured here are Amy Ryan (as the irresponsible mother in Gone Baby Gone) (right) and Hal Holbrook (as a grandfather-figure for Emile Hirsch in Into the Wild). (Both of these note-worthy films, incidentally, were directed by famous actors-Ben Affleck and Sean Penn, respectively.) Anymore, Paper Moon, E. T The Extra- Terrestrial, Sleepless in Seattle, The Black StIll/icm, Witness, Cinema Paradiso, Forrest Gump, The Piano, Jerry Maguire, The Sixth Sense, Ponette, The Butcher Boy, War ofthe Worlds (2005), and Finding Neverland indicate the quality that can be achieved with careful casting (Figure 10.16). Special Casting Challenges An unusual kind of casting problem exists when a film must follow a character throughout many years of his or her life. If only two periods are featured-in youth and in maturity, for example-
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Running head: THOUGHTS ON THE IMPORTANCE OF ACTING

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Thoughts On the Importance of Acting
I agree with the writer that there is a lot more to acting than just putting much attention to
actors. The ultimate goal of t...


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