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El. knyga: Science and the Stanislavsky Tradition of Acting

(Leeds University, UK)
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Providing new insight into the well-known tradition of acting, Science and the Stanislavsky Tradition of Acting is the first book to contextualise the Stanislavsky tradition with reference to parallel developments in science. Rooted in practice, it presents an alternative perspective based on philosophy, physics, romantic science and theories of industrial management.

Working from historical and archive material, as well as practical sources, Jonathan Pitches traces an evolutionary journey of actor training from the roots of the Russian tradition, Konstantin Stanislavsky, to the contemporary Muscovite director, Anatoly Vasiliev. The book explores two key developments that emerge from Stanislavsky’s system – one linear, rational and empirical, while the other is fluid,organic and intuitive. The otherwise highly contrasting acting theories of Vsevolod Meyerhold (biomechanics) and Lee Strasberg (the Method) are dealt with under the banner of the rational or Newtonian paradigm; Michael Chekov’s acting technique and the little known ideas of Anatoly Vasiliev form the centrepiece of the other Romantic, organic strain of practice.

Science and the Stanislavsky Tradition of Acting opens up the theatre laboratories of five major practitioners in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and scrutinises their acting methodologies from a scientific perspective.

List of illustrations ix
Acknowledgements x
Introduction: science and Stanislaysky — the evolution of a tradition 1(8)
PART I The roots of the tradition 9(42)
1 A System for the world? Newtonianism in Stanislaysky's science of acting
11(40)
PART II The Newtonian branch 51(76)
2 The theatricality reflex: the place of Pavlov and Taylor in Meyerhold's biomechanics
53(33)
3 The System, psychology and the US: Richard Boleslaysky and Lee Strasberg
86(41)
PART III The Romantic branch 127(71)
4 A delicate empiricism: Romantic science and the Michael Chekhov technique
129(37)
5 The laboratory as sanctuary: the theatre of Anatoly Vasiliev
166(32)
Epilogue: genetic modification and the backbone of tradition 198(3)
Notes 201(9)
Bibliography 210(10)
Index 220


Manchester Metropolitan University, UK