It
takes energy, impulse, determination and faith to achieve even what we might
consider to be insignificant goals, on stage or in everyday life. What is essential,
however, is the process leading up to the realization of those objectives. Peter Brook put it this way: "Acting begins with a tine inner
movement so slight that it is almost completely invisible." It then
grows, turns into energy, energy into impulse, impulse into desire, desire into
determination; for achievement to take place we need faith, we need to believe
in our actions and in the possibility of success.
Is
that not also what happens in a love relationship? First an inner movement
appears. A message emerges in our most innermost self. It manifests itself in
the form of excitement, a surge of energy causes our heart to beat faster, an
impulse brings our hands to feel the warmth of her arm; if the impulse receives
a go-ahead signal the caress takes on more determination and becomes a hug, the
hug a kiss: both bodies become possessed with desire and believe in the need to
consummate the act of love.
Each
character an actor attempts to enliven has different levels of energy according
to the circumstance or persons with which he or she must interact. She is
seated gazing out the window. Suddenly she gets up, picks up the telephone
receiver and dials a number. What led her to do that? Had she been carrying on
an interior discussion concerning whether or not to call? Something caused her
to act with determination, although she might also have repressed her movement
stopping short of lifting the receiver.
In
real life we rarely plan our movements with the decisiveness with which an
actor organizes his actions. However, everything an actor does on stage is
considered by the spectator as purposeful. If the woman is looking out the
window, it must be for some reason; if she suddenly picks up the telephone
receiver, it certainly is because she has taken a decision.
The
beauty of the acting experience is the richness of meaning which the artists
puts into each action, the realization that each action is interconnected but
fundamentally different from the previous movement or the subsequent action.
Acting is about transcendence and is dialectical in nature. Every action is the
continuation and elaboration of a previous action which then gives way to yet
another and in the process of exploring these different stages the actor seeks
transcendence, transcendence based on the characteristics of the script he is
working on.
“A slight movement of the spine, a change
in the direction of a look, can tell something about the inner life of the
character and project his thoughts,” says Sonia Moore. Acting indeed is an
extremely complex process, as is life itself. An actor speaks not only with the
words he says but with the tension or relaxation of his body, with his silence,
with the tone of his voice, with the expression in his eyes, with the images
which surge in his mind, with the memories which flash in his consciousness
when he straightens his tie or examines his face in the mirror.
Yet
there is great generosity in acting. What is done on stage is not for the actor’s
stage companion; it is for the audience. Whatever the characteristics of the
play might be, the purpose is to allow the spectator to “participate” in his or
her own way in the actions, in the emotions, in the search for a solution to
the conflict and in the thought processes of the characters on stage. The actor’s
energy, impulses, determination, will power and belief are transmitted to the
viewers, who in turn re-elaborate them.