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Ghost train-ing

Sun, 2 July 2006, 02:03 am
crgwllms6 posts in thread
The current poll overwhelmingly indicates that people believe training never ends - and yet how many, I wonder, seriously take the effort to improve their craft through training? I'm not including anyone in a school or training institution...this is a question for those theatre artists who have left their original training and are in the industry or performing in the community - What do you do to improve? I hear a lot of you defend yourselves saying 'You learn by experience'. This is a truism, but some of you are also deluding yourselves. If your experience is not challenging you; if the experience is simply repeating what you already know over and over; if the experience is actually an incidence of doing something badly....then all you are learning are bad habits and poor technique. Unfortunately, you also learn those by experience! That's not to say that you MUST go to a class or an institution. There are many skilled practitioners who have set out to train themselves...whether that means learning an instrument, studying performance by watching plays, practicing lines and learning monologues...etc, etc... Everyone has something to learn. That's obvious, and judging by the poll most of us know it. But how many people are aware of their own individual weaknesses, and are actively taking steps to improve? How many of us realize what exact steps we need to take to increase our skill and improve our own performance abilities? Who can sum up, in a single sentence, what particular habit or inability is holding them back from greater success? That's the first, and most important, step toward training. Cheers, Craig <8>-/======\-------

Though not an acting

Sun, 2 July 2006, 09:24 pm
Though not an acting training comment, this does add to the discussion: Learning puppetry, I find that I am buying more books on the subject, on a range of topics. But I'm also 'learning by doing' crossed with actual self-training. Last year I only really learnt how to knit. This was taken as a hobby, but is certainly now a skill that I can use in future shows. This week I made myself a puppet on an experimentation of an image I saw on the net. Neither of which are 'training' as such, but are extra-curricular hobbies that can be used as skills in shows. By actively giving myself time, space and materials, I can learn how to do new things without undertaking formal training. And it's not quite learning by experience, but learning from other people's patterns and ideas. And by doing this, hopefully I'll be able to make my own. The Prompt Copy Networking emerging theatre professionals www.thepromptcopy.com Sticky Apple Legs http://stickyapplelegs.artsblogs.com

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