[page 24]
James Forsythe
Brandon University
Spirituality and Actor Training
A Definition:
Spirituality:
1) Of the spirit or the soul 2) Of sacred things or matters. This definition
might also include words like Balance, Unity, Faith, and Courage.
As an actor I would be glad if my peers attributed any of those qualities
to either my work or me.
A Thesis:
This
paper intends to show that conservatory theatre teachers and acting
teachers in specific are using the techniques and ethos of Taoism, Zen
and First Nations spirituality in their studios. I will suggest what
they are 'borrowing' and why they are doing it, whether they are conscious
of this borrowing or not.
A Motivation:
I
currently teach Acting at Brandon University. I have been a student
of acting all my life. Through my teachers and my research I have come
into contact with Carnegie Melon, Cornell, Yale, Manchester Metropolitan,
The National Voice Intensive, The National Theatre School of Canada,
The Actor's Studio in London, The Odin Theatre, and the University's
of Alberta and Victoria to name a few. From a very young age I noticed
that teaching methodologies in the field of an artistic, creative endeavor
like the theatre are all basically trying to do the same thing: explain
the unexplainable. What is it that brings about creativity and how do
you make it consistent. My body and voice was trained to 'leap tall
buildings with a single bound' (if you'll permit a reference to a Canadian
hero). My mind was taught to analyze the psychological and sociological
motivations of a playwright and a character. But how do I put it together
to create the magic that I see when great actors transform before my
eyes on-stage?
[page
25] In 1990-91 three things happened to me. I started teaching
my own classes. I visited India. And I took a class in Meditation. Gradually
I began to investigate Eastern religions. I was drawn to Taoism especially
and I began to notice similarities in not only the exercises/practices
but also in the theory between the religious student and the actor in
training. What previously had been in the shadows of my consciousness
was becoming obvious.
Examples
of what I am talking about include Tai Chi, Alexander Technique, relaxation,
Breathing exercises, Sharing Circles and Creative Visualization. I hope
to prove that the main benefit of these techniques is at least fourfold:
1. Increased Self-Awareness.
2. A linking of mind and body.
3. The elimination of desire for success by focusing on process.
4. A greater sense of community.
I
propose to examine four areas of Studio work that I feel have a direct
connection to the spirituality of another culture. I like to call them
Breathing, The Swamp, Alexander, and Sharing Circles.
I will provide specific exercises, practitioners, and rationale.
Self-Awareness
Whether
it is Stansislavsky, Boleslavski, Joseph Chaikin or Michael Chekov most
teachers of Acting will agree that knowing yourself is an essential
part of the process. And part of this self-awareness has to focus on
what Stansislavski called "the inner creative mood," a synthesis
of mind, spirit and body. The spiritual training methods I am going
to describe contribute directly to the actors self awareness and are
therefore at the heart of their training. I propose that the connection
to spiritual training forms a natural 'bridge' from 'in' to 'out', from
the body to the mind.
[page
26] 1. Breathing
We
all have a body and a spirit that need to be receptive to themselves
and the stimuli of the moment to moment reality of the given circumstances
and style of the play. Joseph Chaikin calls this the presence of the
actor. He says in his book of that title:
The senses must be awake to what's happening and to what's being created,
transforming the space, always able to return to the quiet inner starting
point. That quiet inner place is always there, whether you are in
contact with it or not.(1)
This idea of a central core of stillness,
an area of calm in the storm of humanity is a common tenet in both Zen
and Taoism.
In
actor training the focus of the work on the craft of acting begins with
relaxation. The quiet allows students to listen to themselves and their
bodies. This marks the beginning of learning, of self-awareness. Actors
must come to know the life force that moves within them and as with
the spiritual student this awareness leads directly to the breath. The
goal for both is the same. With focused concentration on the breath
recognition occurs of "the living current" moving through
the body.(2) Whether we call this meditation, relaxation, or creative
visualisation, it forms the basis of most first year acting classes.
It also provides the clearest evidence of a link to spiritual practices
by placing the focus on the breath.
Dr.
Chang Chung-yuan in his book Creativity and Taoism describes
the breathing technique common to Taoist Yoga:
In Taoist breathing a slow, deep, rhythmic inhaling and exhaling is
a basic requirement in the early stages of training. When air is taken
in, it is to be sent as [page 27] deep
as the abdomen. It is for this reason that the kidney centre beneath
the navel is called the sea of breath.(3)
Zen breathing is very similar:
The stress is upon the out-breath, and its impulse from the belly
not the chest. This has the effect of shifting the body's centre of
gravity to the abdomen so that the whole posture has a sense of firmness,
of being part of the ground upon which one is sitting. The slow easy
breathing from the belly works upon the consciousness like bellows,
and gives it a still, bright clarity. . . The air is not actively
inhaled; it is just allowed to come, and then, when the lungs are
comfortably filled, it is allowed to go once more.(4)
David
Smukler, Canada's leading voice teacher is on the faculty of York University
and Head of the National Voice Intensive. His mantra to students follows
this pattern exactly as he tells them to, "let the cool air drop
in, turn warm inside and release out warm."(5)
The
following exercise is indicative of this technique and contains obvious
reflections back to Taoist and Zen breath exercises. They are excerpted
from David Smukler's vocal warm up:
Sitting on the floor . . . legs rounded in
front . . . establish breath flowing in sacrum and mid-brain before
releasing forwards . . . Close your eyes: Observe the sounds around
you. Think of past experiences. Observe your feelings. Permit the
breath to flow without control. . . Imagine that in your pelvis there
is a swamp of emotions. Allow one of those emotions down there to
find a touch of sound.(6)
[page 28] Smukler
believes that breathing this way allows the breath time to travel to
the belly that is, in Buddhism, the emotional centre of the body. In
this way the actor, who is true to the reality of the moment, need not
think about how the words will sound, he simply has to breathe. The
breath carries the messages into the body, receives an impulse from
the belly and then can flow up and out as speech. In Zen and Japanese
Culture Daisetz T. Suzuki says:
The Japanese often talk about 'asking the abdomen' or 'thinking with
the abdomen'. The head is detachable from the body, but the abdomen,
which includes the whole system of the viscera, symbolises the totality
of one's personality.(7)
2.
The Swamp
The
National Voice Intensive is, as its name suggests, a rigorous five-week
workshop bringing together forty-eight performers and a dozen of Canada's
premiere voice teachers. The central focus of the instruction is the
teaching of breathing. From the very beginning sessions David Smukler
and his staff instil the verbal and physical vocabulary necessary for
the student to understand viscerally the philosophy being discussed.
Through a series of exercises the lower belly is identified as the pivotal
source of all vocal work. He refers to it as "The Swamp."
That area of the body is sensitised by the employment of creative visualisation
while the muscles of the abdomen and lower back are stretched and strengthened
allowing the breath to descend into the belly and back ribs. A connection
is then established, first with sound and then with words (using Shakespearean
text as source material), between "The Swamp," breathing,
and speaking. At first I found this to be disconcerting if not frightening
because it removed my ability to engage my mind and my judgement in
the process of creating a performance. But with practice I surprised
myself by contacting a depth of emotion that I had previously been able
to engage only by chance. My observation of the progress of others and
myself convinced me that this freedom from prior control left the work
more honest and more human. It was as if the words presented themselves
to the speaker for the first time, the instant before they were spoken,
all because the impulse was removed from your mind to your lower abdomen.
[page
29] And while my sample pool is by no means exhaustive there
are Smukler trained or influenced voice teachers almost everywhere in
this country (of Canada). And I found exactly the same attitude at Manchester
Metropolitan University, Britain's largest University based conservatory
school of Acting. There, Patricia Roy echoed fellow voice teacher Smukler,
when she described her work to place the breath lower in the body to
contact the emotional chakra or centre, which she refers to not as "the
swamp" but as "mud." Whatever the terminology is being
invented there is an underlying teaching goal to marry the physiological
truth with metaphor. Roy said, "We have to constantly keep finding
new ways to redefine our messages."(8) The use of spiritual tools
is one way to provide some structure for that process. It provides a
methodology for observation without judgement and for the discovery
of mental clarity. She describes that clarity in terms of ". .
. a unity between mind, body, and breath."(9)
Smukler
summed up his thoughts in an interview:
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Teachers
use the spirituality of other cultures to form a framework for the
work because we have abandoned in this century any kind of real structure.
The majority of the world has moved away from an organized system
of belief. So they are without a structure to back up the events of
life. Because we have lost all structure we have this gaping hole
in us that was called spirituality. We look at the actor and we used
to have a very strong spiritual tradition in our theatre. Even in
the nonreligious theatre there were spiritual traditions. What has
happened in the twentieth century, (Margaret Mead and others have
talked about this), we have taken the arts and moved them out of the
society, we've separated them, made them culture.
Our
students come to us with wounds instead. They have all these experiences
and psychological awareness and no way to process it, no structure.
Whether one agrees or disagrees with the structure there are no structures
to rebel against. So the religion and spirituality of the mid-twentieth
century has become [page 30] psychology.
And that's not working. People are looking at all the things we investigated
in the twentieth century and are saying, 'They are not working, they're
not working." So you start looking at the other traditions, to
help us get some sense of what is going on.(10)
For Smukler, using the spirituality
of other cultures in his teaching comes out of the needs of his students
and their mutual search for a structure. It is this structure that provides
actors with the link between the psychological, the physical, and the
intuitive. |