Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 304 pages
- Published by: Smith & Kraus; 2 Rev Exp edition June 1, 2005
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1575254220
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1575254227
-
Book Dimensions:
8.4 x 5.4 x 0.6 inches
- Weighs: 13.6 ounces
Product Review
". . .excellent basic guide for anyone who likes to get behind the scenes, be it the actor who performs. . ." --
THE SHAKESPEARE NEWSLETTER"By book's end, students can reasonably be expected to be comfortable and confident with Shakespeare's demands. . . . " --
THEATRE JOURNAL
Product Description
Acting in Shakespeare helps actors at all levels develop the skills they need to perform in Shakespearean plays. Lessons proceed in carefully graduated steps from simple, single lines to short speeches to more difficult, sophisticated scenes. A wealth of historical information and insightful descriptions of Shakespearean times and players bring Shakespeares work within the actors reach.
Abundant exercises build gradually in difficulty, giving student actors confidence that they can act in Shakespeare. Exercises are appropriate not only for use in the classroom but also for independent study.
Actors often find Shakespearean language and customs unusual and intimidating. Acting in Shakespeare relates Shakespearean acting to real-life, contemporary situations and common acting theory, helping actors realize that performing Shakespeare is well within their grasp.
"Acting in Shakespeare is difficult. . . . His verse is not the language of our everyday American speech; the costumes in which he visualized his characters are not the clothing of everyday American life. Playing Shakespeare may mean living in a very different world from the one we normally inhabit." Robert Cohen, from the Preface
" By books end, students can reasonably be expected to be comfortable and confident with Shakespeares demands. . . . [His] chapter on physicalizing Shakespeare contains a number of stimulating exercises (Cohens strength as an acting teacher). . . . Cohen helps students apply his lessons: I cant imagine a group of students not being enthralled by Cohens ingenious concept. . . . Acting in Shakespeare is so readily accessible and full of such "do-able" exercises that it should be a staple of period style classes for years to come." theatre journal