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Index
Cover Title Page Dedication Contents Foreword Preface ONE: Acting
1: Film and Stage—Two Sides of the Same Coin 2: The Development of Film-Acting Styles 3: The Approach 4: Acting Defined 5: Listening/Sensing 6: The Character 7: Focus and Concentration 8: Energy 9: The Emotions 10: Spontaneity
TWO: Working on the Role
11: Preparation 12: Facts and Conditions 13: Imagination 14: Learn the Role—Not the Lines Station Break
THREE: Tools
15: Rhythm and Change 16: Dynamics 17: Movement 18: The Need 19: Selectivity 20: Personalization 21: Animate and Inanimate Object Images 22: The Nonsense: Exercise—Unorthodoxy 23: Comedy and Drama from the Actor’s Point of View 24: Cold Reading and Auditions 25: Working with the Director 26: Working from the Outside In—Or Not 27: In a Nutshell
FOUR: The Machinery of Film and Tape
28: Day One on the Set 29: The Motion Picture Studio and the Soundstage 30: Some Specifics of Film 31: Shooting a Scene 32: The Television Studio 33: The Multiple-Camera Show 34: Stunts
FIVE: The Film/Tape Career
35: Beginning Your Career 36: Film and Television Unions for Actors 37: The Star 38: Exercises for Acting for the Camera
Epilogue Index Acknowledgments About the Author Praise for: Acting for the Camera Theater-Trained Actors Copyright About the Publisher
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