Wednesday, January 22, 2014

-23.4-

Recently I've been addicted to this online drawing site Iscribble. The site allows one to draw and or chat with others in real-time.

This is a painting I made that I'm pretty proud of. Iscribble's controls are simple (aka it doesn't have an undo button), and this is mostly on one layer.

-22.4-

I realized that I haven't finished my reflection on the acting workshop with James III, yet, so I will do so in two separate posts. One will be for the purely Shakespeare acting, the other will be for the improv workshop.
Shakespeare:
We moved on from Sonnets to small scenes. The actors that were in the musical did their scenes from The Taming of the Shrew, and the rest of us did small scenes or monologues from The Tempest.
Before all that, we did an interesting exercise on "O's." I think doing the warm ups was my favorite part of the workshop, but this was my favorite exercise.
For the exercise, we got a card with an emotion on it. We had to say "O" with that emotion, while the others guessed what we were acting out. I liked it a lot, because you could say "O" with such emotion that you could probably hold a conversation with someone just by saying "O!"
A similar exercise was when we said a line from a Shakespeare play in different ways. We all got a line, then James told us how we should say it ("Say it like there's a baby in the room, and if you wake it up, it will never stop crying!") I enjoyed both warm-ups. It was fun to really put yourself into your emotions.
Back to the Shakespeare. The people in the musical worked on a Shakespeare scene, and I was put into one of the Tempest scenes with Emily and Lex. We read through a couple times, and got the general part, since James explained it to us beforehand, but some details of the scene confused us (What is a moon-calf?)
Finally, we both presented. I tried really hard to let go, and I was happy that the others watching us got the plot (a success)!
Overall, it was an enjoyable workshop. I felt even closer to the "actors" in STAC, and I learned that sometimes you need to let go and focus on the feelings behind the words instead of the actual words themselves.

Friday, January 3, 2014

-21.4-

I was watching the new episode of Sherlock, and the sequence of Sherlock trying to identify a face (especially this shot) reminded me of Kontroll.

Maybe the director was influenced by Kontroll?