Stanislavsky Acting Мethodology

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2015
  • Actors can be dull as well as public appearances can be boring. Why does it happen? What should we do? As far back as 80 years ago Konstantin Stanislavsky found a solution. It was the Method. But few were those, who could explain its basics in a simple and clear way. We took a chance.
    As we see it, we managed to. The three core principles of the Method:
    1. Super-objective (Why do we need it all?)
    2. Action (Only struggling is of the interest)
    3. Belief in circumstances (reel of imaging) in a simple animated video.
    It is useful both for novice actors and for anyone who wants to perform eloquently in public.
    Written by - Andrey Skvortsov
    Editor - Valentine Teplyakov
    Animation - Stas Odintsov
    Music - Edward Gleyzer
    Voiceover - George Watts
    Producer - Gennady Kondratyev

Комментарии • 113

  • @berner
    @berner 6 лет назад +271

    The background music is too conflicting with the narrator

  • @wurnwurn436
    @wurnwurn436 5 лет назад +306

    This video is really good but the narrator makes me want to harm others.

    • @ThatHBDude
      @ThatHBDude 4 года назад +25

      r/rareinsults

    • @Infused-doge
      @Infused-doge 3 года назад +5

      I wanted to drown my dog that I don't have because of the narrators voice

    • @sharonspeer418
      @sharonspeer418 3 года назад +1

      That's funny!

    • @blaisenevill4571
      @blaisenevill4571 3 года назад

      R/relatablecommemts

    • @jimmyj6209
      @jimmyj6209 3 года назад +4

      Narrates a video on acting
      Can't articulate 3 points without it sounding unfinished

  • @stevenfrasier5718
    @stevenfrasier5718 5 лет назад +190

    Stanislavsky denounced "Emotional Memory" on his death bed. Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg had a big falling out because of it. Stanislavsky replaced the dangerous "Emotional Memory" with "Emotional Imagination" which is far more advanced. You must include death-bed proclamations when citing the body of a man's lifetime work.

    • @elitepro7487
      @elitepro7487 4 года назад +5

      steven frasier wheres your source fam

    • @BriaWalker-Rhoze
      @BriaWalker-Rhoze 4 года назад +13

      @@elitepro7487 If you study Adler and Strasberg's works and teachings, you'll know that they had a falling out. @steven frasier is correct. You can refer to the book ACTOR TRAINING edited by Alison Hodge about Active Analysis. You can also reference Dr. Sharon Carnicke's website (who was a student of Maria Knebel who was Stanislavsky's assistant during the last years of his life.) And you can reference James Thomas' book A DIRECTOR'S GUIDE TO STANISLAVSKY'S ACTIVE ANALYSIS. I hope that helps!

    • @stevenfrasier5718
      @stevenfrasier5718 3 года назад +7

      @@shinchan___4
      Actually, no... There is no such thing as "Stanislavski Method Acting". "Method Acting" is uniquely American. It's an adaptation loosely based on Stanislavski's work. It's psychologically damaging to the actor, causing neurosis--which is what Stella Adler fought against. Brando and Pacino are NOT Stanislavskian actors, and their careers drove them to insanity. "Method Acting" isn't even "acting" in a real sense. "The Method" is for producers; it's actually designed for people with charisma of personality, but little to nothing, in actual acting skills. REAL "Acting" died in the late 1800s to early 1900s. That's "Capitalism" for ya!--Lol...
      ~Steven of Montreal

    • @stevenfrasier5718
      @stevenfrasier5718 3 года назад +3

      @@BriaWalker-Rhoze
      Thank you Bria, I'm glad I'm not alone in this. Not many people know that Lee Strasberg was sadistic in his training methods, and a bad father to boot. He cared more about his cat than his own son. Stanislavski would have kicked his ass for the way he treated many of his students. The Actor's Studio is a Synagogue of Satan in the Acting World. The famous Method Actors of our culture equate to idolatry. (and btw., I'm not religious, just taking poetic license for descriptive purposes.)

    • @stevenfrasier5718
      @stevenfrasier5718 3 года назад +3

      @@shinchan___4
      "Emotional Memory" is merely one tiny aspect of Stanislavski's entire body of work, to which he dedicated his entire life. EM was meant as a last resort for actors who had the most difficulty in identifying with their characterization of a role. It's like eating a grape from a celebrated wine orchard, and then calling yourself a Vinter. A "Method Actor" is not the same as a "Stanislavskian Actor", even though EM is "LOOSELY" based on one mere aspect of his work. Plus, Stanislavski denounced EM when Stella Adler visited him in the hospital, but Strasberg was too stubborn and obstinate for updates--he only cared about maintaining his status that he had built up by that time. Stanislavskian Acting is not conducive to the "Star System" of America, because it's based on the "Ensemble System" that doesn't use the fame of a performer as a profitable commodity. "Character Acting" died long ago, now today everyone is taught NOT to act, which is why I said REAL acting is dead. Now it's all about being a "Celeb", not an "Actor" in the truest sense of the word. I've read ALL of Stanislavski's translated works, Strasberg's work AND Adler. Stella Adler is by far the most HONEST representative of Stanislavski, but Strasberg's "Actor's Studio" became an "Institution" for wannabe-stars. Lipton is an idol-worshipping puppet. True Acting will be resurrected after Christ's return--Lol...

  • @DH_Artist
    @DH_Artist 5 лет назад +34

    This video is more for public speakers than actors, but Stanislavski created the system SPECIFICALLY for actors....

  • @EZVideoStore
    @EZVideoStore 3 года назад +6

    This video is a fucking fever dream

  • @lindsayboyle9734
    @lindsayboyle9734 4 года назад +25

    honestly, idk y everyone be hating on this video, its got great animation and I find it helpful!

    • @MintiesPoopin
      @MintiesPoopin 3 года назад +6

      @@blaisenevill4571 no they’re correct if they still believe it now

    • @anakinskywalker213
      @anakinskywalker213 16 дней назад

      ​@@blaisenevill4571not only youre being a smart ass, even your objection is wrong

  • @JesseOptimist123
    @JesseOptimist123 7 лет назад +29

    I will always use this tool. Thank you Stanislavski.

  • @ScribblebytesWorldwide
    @ScribblebytesWorldwide 5 лет назад +50

    Wow, these comments are brutal! I think for a 5 minute video this was really well done. Obviously anyone with an interest in Stan. Will do more research. Civilians don't need to know more than this video presents.

    • @marilynstoddard6911
      @marilynstoddard6911 4 года назад +1

      agreed.

    • @blaisenevill4571
      @blaisenevill4571 3 года назад

      Who the hell are you William Shakespeare, shut the hell up

    • @----5139
      @----5139 2 года назад +6

      Lmao "civilians". Are actors now a full government thing or something? hahaha

  • @LethoHali
    @LethoHali 5 лет назад +8

    Awesome thank you! Clearly explained. Was totally in the dark.

  • @t.soares1125
    @t.soares1125 4 года назад +12

    Great and fun video. Keep it up. Except Stanislavski didn't create Method Acting. He never used this term. Stanislavski had a System. "Method" implies one way of doing things. "System" implies a flexible approach with various techniques available to suit the situation. Method Acting is an American invention and interpretation by Lee Strasberg (and others) primarily of Stanislavski's first book "An Actor Prepares." Two other books were published in English (3 total). He intended the first two books to be published in one volume (and I believe they were in Russia) but the publisher thought it would be best to split them up. Method Acting certainly encompasses the things mentioned in the video. It has produced some fabulous actors and amazing performances on screen. It is not without controversy though. Actors reliance on emotion memory (a technique where a detailed memory of a personal emotional experience is recalled and used in rehearsal or in performance) is not for everyone. Especially if someone has experienced trauma or a painful upbringing. In fact, Stanislavski's best student, and master of his technique, Michael Chekhov (often considered Russia's finest actor), abandoned emotion memory on the grounds that it was too destructive and limited the actor and character to his own life. Chekhov moved toward imagination and movement to ascend personal experience. Later in life, Stanislavski abandons emotion memory and also moves toward a method of physical action.

  • @laylacbenn
    @laylacbenn 2 года назад +3

    this video was really helpful for me, I have a really short attention span and it made sense for me

  • @lukaalbijanic4162
    @lukaalbijanic4162 5 лет назад +2

    Happy anniversary and all the best !!! ... :)

  • @blakedowns4233
    @blakedowns4233 5 лет назад +16

    The narrator's inflection is confusing. It's as if he's asking questions rather than stating the information confidently.

  • @dabble778
    @dabble778 5 лет назад +2

    Wonderful. Thank you .

  • @evegriffin8460
    @evegriffin8460 5 лет назад +2

    thank you for making this video

  • @Starchild719
    @Starchild719 5 лет назад +6

    While the approach to the Suspension of Disbelief was confused with Method Acting (a method Stanislavsky HATED, by the way), I really appreciated this as a refresher for my theatre final! Thanks!

    • @shinchan___4
      @shinchan___4 3 года назад

      It was confused with Lee strasberg technique yes but even Stanislavski technique is method acting watch vox video

  • @bernmalskitchen9710
    @bernmalskitchen9710 3 года назад +1

    THANK YOU SO MUCH

  • @lucyphan2680
    @lucyphan2680 2 года назад +1

    This is a great video! I think there is a lot of people who have to watch this video in Drama class =))

  • @willowrobinson7965
    @willowrobinson7965 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @matthewallen787
    @matthewallen787 Год назад

    This seems to be a corporate video for public speaking in general. It should probably be presented as 1. Know what you want your audience to take away from your speech. 2. Believe what you’re selling them so they’ll believe you. 3. Present possible conflicting arguments to make the journey to the conclusion more interesting.

  • @tian7328
    @tian7328 4 года назад +1

    I liked the Animation in this video.

  • @katieperkins04
    @katieperkins04 3 года назад +1

    It’s very helpful.

  • @Mattnova_116
    @Mattnova_116 Год назад

    Just watching this, made me understand A LOT more, and in FAR LESS time, than reading his, "An Actor Prepares" book.

  • @studiklubteaterbandung8365
    @studiklubteaterbandung8365 3 года назад

    impresif.thx

  • @santiagomendozaariza2790
    @santiagomendozaariza2790 5 лет назад +3

    happy birthday Konstantín

    • @judichristopher4604
      @judichristopher4604 2 года назад +1

      His name is Constantin Stanislavski .... NOT Konstantin Stanislavsky....

  • @burner121
    @burner121 2 года назад +1

    you should try donning the Stanislavsky method

  • @ThatHBDude
    @ThatHBDude 4 года назад +14

    Here's the video transcript for the people who can't understand his suicidal thought-inducing narration.
    It happens you come to the theatre. You watch the show, but there's nothing to watch! Boring! Or even worse;
    the actor as we say overacts; Yells, twitches, twirls. But he's empty inside, and the audience even feels sorry for you. Oh dear, why does it take you such great pains? Have a rest.
    And sometimes the actor seems to be simply voicing words. But the audience in the hall is crying. What's the secret? How does it happen? The answer was invented by Constantin Stanislavsky more than 80 years ago. He invented the method not for geniuses, but to ensure that any actor could act l'audibly. Actors have to know it. But the basics of the Stanislavsky method can be helpful for anyone performing in public. After all, it is the method that can make the speaker a charismatic one

  • @lukeashton7534
    @lukeashton7534 4 года назад

    This video just changed my life.

  • @filippoarlenghi6247
    @filippoarlenghi6247 5 лет назад +2

    What a graphic...woww

  • @naimathompson8501
    @naimathompson8501 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for the accessibility of the method for secondary age learners

  • @jeronimoaguilar
    @jeronimoaguilar 5 лет назад

    Man, tomorrow I have to film, and I am so fucking scared. But thank you, this helped.

  • @CharlesMatheny
    @CharlesMatheny Год назад

    It was the "Stanislavsky system" (good acting) and the Lee Strasberg "Method" ( dwell on past sensory circumstances similar to your character's).

  • @therealone6876
    @therealone6876 4 года назад +1

    Epic

  • @cocosekhu6516
    @cocosekhu6516 7 лет назад +1

    ❤️❤️❤️

  • @resart7042
    @resart7042 8 лет назад +8

    i like this Video :-), but could you PLEASE send me the source of your Informations? I can't find all three principles. :-( (sorry for my english) would be very very nice

    • @danwaffle56
      @danwaffle56 7 лет назад +4

      www.swgs.wilts.sch.uk/SWGSFiles/Subjects/Drama/Stanislavski%20Notes%202006%20-%207.pdf
      read this. its only 9 pages and sums up a lot of the system

  • @tombro8080
    @tombro8080 6 лет назад +3

    helped with homework

  • @ishikabinteshafiq8377
    @ishikabinteshafiq8377 2 года назад

    so it means Stanislavsky's acting methods are 3 in number!

  • @davidzhong
    @davidzhong 6 лет назад +1

    Lonely!!!

  • @wurnwurn436
    @wurnwurn436 5 лет назад +4

    Also I swear literally no one can spell his name right. it's constanin stanislavski you melts

    • @thecameron3996
      @thecameron3996 3 года назад

      Константи́н Серге́евич Станисла́вский

  • @RekzaFS
    @RekzaFS 6 лет назад +3

    2:59 larry david what are you doing here

  • @yarodmedina5716
    @yarodmedina5716 4 года назад

    What is my audience expected to do after my performance? someone answer this

  • @electricdreamer
    @electricdreamer 8 месяцев назад +1

    After this video. I totally NOT understand the system lol

  • @MikeGeorge392
    @MikeGeorge392 7 месяцев назад

    Is there a book that goes over Stanislavsky's technique?

  • @ArmorKingEmir
    @ArmorKingEmir 8 лет назад +56

    I didnt understand anything. I should read him in Russian.

    • @koekedozemie
      @koekedozemie 8 лет назад +15

      Really there's only two things to remember from Stanislavski. 1) The magic 'if': you need to be more than the character on stage, you need to be him offstage (think of the Godfather and Raging BUll where the main characters perfectly achieved this). You need to know who your character is. 2) You have to use your emotional memory: how can you fake a feeling that you never had? Dig in to your past and use your emotional memories to make your acting look more realistic.

    • @1IrishChap
      @1IrishChap 7 лет назад +1

      no

    • @mikeehrmantraut6061
      @mikeehrmantraut6061 7 лет назад +4

      he never said that remembering emotions is good. the emotion comes from the physical action.

    • @coral7298
      @coral7298 6 лет назад

      Kathy Vanhout, о, ну так понятнее, спасибо:)

    • @RoydPhang
      @RoydPhang 6 лет назад

      mee to

  • @ankitabaidya680
    @ankitabaidya680 5 месяцев назад

    Are these videos good for CUET?

  • @justjohns
    @justjohns 4 года назад +4

    This is so wrong. Stanislavski was never focused on what an audience was supposed to do after a performance.

  • @rmrglobalproductionsinc9554
    @rmrglobalproductionsinc9554 10 месяцев назад

    Oooh GOD THAT BELL RINGING AT THE BEGINNING. … the whole ROOM CRINGED …
    The rest not bad

  • @gooseman9796
    @gooseman9796 4 года назад +2

    Hi

  • @jimblejambles4585
    @jimblejambles4585 6 лет назад +1

    Great video but I surmise the view count would be much higher if it was titled "Become a Better Actor in 3 Easy Steps"

    • @jayantabhuyan124
      @jayantabhuyan124 6 лет назад

      Jimble Jambles
      Yes.applying this method recently in my local club I was thrown out because of non following of the direction.
      Jayanta. India

    • @jimblejambles4585
      @jimblejambles4585 6 лет назад

      Thank you my fellow non-englishman

  • @lorumonicromworldslayer4131
    @lorumonicromworldslayer4131 5 лет назад +1

    First idiot post : "I didn't understand that." Second: "What am i doing here?" (you know, on Earth in general which is a good question :/) Third post: "Why am i breathing? Maybe i should hold my breath", followed by the reply post by same user "Why am i turning blue? I don't understand what's happening! Doi*"

  • @hxza_bs1008
    @hxza_bs1008 3 года назад +1

    whos here for drama [ online school ]

  • @JT-od9hm
    @JT-od9hm 4 года назад +12

    the narrator's voice makes me feel incredibly uncomfortable

  • @Daniel-pt6sb
    @Daniel-pt6sb 4 года назад

    samuel turma 302

  • @artemidiylol8281
    @artemidiylol8281 Год назад

    Пацаны помогите вопросы по английскому составить на этот видос🥺🥺

  • @judichristopher4604
    @judichristopher4604 2 года назад +1

    NOTE:
    Constantin Stanislavski is the correct way to spell this...
    NOT Konstantin Stanislavsky ... WHO is that???

    • @alexshepherd1741
      @alexshepherd1741 Год назад

      And Wikipedia says Konstantin Stanislavski. So... which one of you should I trust?

  • @Shyperbe4
    @Shyperbe4 4 года назад +2

    BRUH

  • @shitmultiverse1404
    @shitmultiverse1404 3 года назад

    Why the narrator sounds like the True Facts one lmao

  • @milindjha9718
    @milindjha9718 Год назад

    Bro, first of all, it's the Stanislavsky system, not the Stanislavsky method. As far as I know, Stanislavsky wrote 3 books, 1 An. Actor Prepares 2. Building a character 3. Creating a Role.
    What you described is what is somewhat common in all of them. But you missed some critical points. What about taking inspiration from real-life events and using the 'what if ' technique to move closer to the character from your starting point. How about breaking the script into text(ahat's actually written) and sub-text(what the actor is supposed to deduce from the script). Sorry to say but incomplete video.

  • @queensaysan
    @queensaysan 4 года назад +3

    I personally think that the background music isn't very good. The narrators voice is annoying.

    • @ipenutbrudda8823
      @ipenutbrudda8823 3 года назад +1

      yeah it sucks

    • @korehais
      @korehais 3 года назад

      this is my personal opinion but the models are terrifying

  • @judichristopher4604
    @judichristopher4604 2 года назад +1

    If you are going to talk about a man
    At least Spell his name right....

  • @oliverbrown4489
    @oliverbrown4489 6 лет назад +3

    In soviet russia acting acts you

  • @gkrakbruh1140
    @gkrakbruh1140 3 года назад +1

    The narrator is impossible to understand he talks too much and too fast

  • @broadwaymusicals9478
    @broadwaymusicals9478 3 года назад +1

    Please do not use this in education; we educators have to undo wrong teaching such as this.

  • @hhhhhh359
    @hhhhhh359 4 года назад +3

    The voice is too irritating

  • @laurifinlandia
    @laurifinlandia 5 лет назад +3

    absolute rubbish.

  • @datkinson1635
    @datkinson1635 3 года назад +1

    this is the most indirect, but blunt piece of bad animation/"tutorializing" on RUclips . . .

  • @tugger
    @tugger Год назад +1

    The music is really god awful annoying Jesus