Friday, August 17, 2012

Presidential Election Thoughts

I think this presidential race is going to be a close one, it's going to be a close, dirty, angry race, but i do believe Obama will pull through.

I think the first and most basic reason is that at the end of the day Obama is more likable than Romney. Romney may be trying to make Obama look bad, but both Obama AND Romney are making Romney look bad.  Romney is a millionaire, the first presidential candidate to have overseas bank accounts, he won'r release his tax returns.

This doesn't mean Obama is some kind of paragon of presidency.  He has his failings, and there are programs and laws he had suggested that have been shut down, and he has said things that allowed for extremely negative interpretation.

But nothing Obama has done is above and beyond what a typical president would not succede in accomplishing.  I don't believe the dissatisfaction of Obama's presidency is strong enough to convince people to vote against their own interests.  It's not as strong as the sentiment against Bush, its just disillusionment that Obama is not as awesome as his strongest supporters said he'd be.

Given the fact that sitting presidents are rarely voted out of office (only 10 out of 38), and Obama certainly hasen't made anything worse, i do not believe the Obama hate is strong enough to un-seat him.

Unless Romney gets caught volunteering in a soup kitchen in Detroit handing out 100 dollar bills, (which he wont do), or Obama get caught banging an intern (which I hope he wont do either), i believe it will be close, but Obama's got it.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Actors: Rivers and Freight Trains

In my experience acting in and around New York City, i have come across many actors.  I'd say that  most of these actors fall into two basic types.

Rivers and Freight Trains.

River actors are like what the name implies, they move in largely the same direction, following the path laid out for them.  Whenever something is in the river, that usually isn't there, say a boat, a swimmer, or a rock, the river moves around it and it's flow adjusts to whatever is necessary to flow around the obstacle.

River actors are masters of spontaneity, no matter what happens on stage, a late entrance, a missed/jumped line, or a technical failure, these actors can adjust, adapt, and move on.

Freight Train actors are the opposite.  Freight Trains travel along an established track, going at the exact speed thats allowed by the track.  The train may stop from time to time, to let off passengers or take on cargo, however the start and end of the trains route do not change.  Freight trains also take really long to slow down, and a really long time to accelerate.

Freight Train actors are masters of consistency.  These actors have a practiced and rehearsed performance, they know what they're going to do, when they are going to do it, and everything in between.

So which are you?

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Are you a Bricklayer or a Paintballer?

I'm not a person who like to make generalizations.

That being said.  I think most actors can fall into more or less two different methods of work durring rehearsal.

Paintballers and Bricklayers.

Bricklayers, spend many hours constructing (preparation) bricks (their playable choices) and will bring the bricks over to the worksite (rehearsal) and lays the brick with cement, but will let someone else do the brushing with the foxtail (the director)

Paintballers are the more chaotic of the two.  Paintballers come to rehearsal with a paintball gun (preparation), some paintballs (their playable choices), and an infinite row of canvases (rehearsal).  The Paintballer simply shoots the living crap out of the canvas and asks what the art critic (the director) what thinks.


the thing is that both these approaches lead to the same thing.  A practiced and well prepared performance.

So are you a bricklayer of a Paintballer?

Thursday, June 7, 2012

A milestone!

Today i signed a W4 for an acting job. While i've been paid to act before, this is the first time I am officially declaring a portion of my yearly income as an actor.

I consider this one the first significant milestones of my career in Acting.  Often a lot of actors will consider themselves a professional once they get paid, but i find that criteria a little off target, because i've been paid to be an actor plenty of times, however it was usually a payment of maybe a hundred bucks or so; more of a 'Hey thanks for doing this, we can't pay you a real wage but here's some dough for transportation/drinking money."

Some background information, i'm spending the summer out in Massachusetts with the Plymouth Players, a Shakespeare company in residence at the Plymouth Plantation, a museum dedicated to educating people about the lives of the original Mayflower Colonists.

So i guess the next three months of blog entries (because i update sooooo regularly) will be focused on my experience out here in Plymouth/Cape Cod, and the joys of preparing two of Shakespeares plays in repertory.

More to come!