ABSTRACT

Building a Character is one of the three volumes that make up Stanislavski’s The Acting Trilogy.

An Actor Prepares explores the inner preparation an actor must undergo in order to explore a role to the full. In this volume, Sir John Gielgud said, this great director “found time to explain a thousand things that have always troubled actors and fascinated students.”

Building a Character discusses the external techniques of acting: the use of the body, movement, diction, singing, expression, and control.

Creating a Role describes the preparation that precedes actual performance, with extensive discussions of Gogol’s The Inspector General and Shakespeare’s Othello. Sir Paul Scofield called Creating a Role “immeasurably important” for the actor.

These three volumes belong on any actor’s short shelf of essential books.

chapter |6 pages

Toward a Physical Characterization

chapter |12 pages

Dressing a Character

chapter |15 pages

Characters and Types

chapter |13 pages

Making the Body Expressive

chapter |26 pages

Plasticity of Motion

chapter |11 pages

Restraint and Control

chapter |30 pages

Diction and Singing

chapter |44 pages

Intonations and Pauses

chapter |27 pages

Accentuation: The Expressive Word

chapter |11 pages

Perspective in Character Building

chapter |45 pages

Tempo-Rhythm in Movement

chapter |24 pages

Speech Tempo-Rhythm

chapter |4 pages

Stage Charm

chapter |21 pages

Toward an Ethics for the Theatre

chapter |21 pages

Patterns of Accomplishment

chapter |16 pages

Some Conclusions on Acting