arts Movement exercises help identify with roles actors By JENNIFER EDWARDS Collegian Arts Writer Several weeks ago, three University theater profes sors were invited to share some of their skills and professional expertise at a series of workshops pre sented to Blackfriars find Center Stage in Rochester, N.Y. Jim Hoskins, Tom McNally and Barry Kur presented a two-day series of workshops dealing with movement, improvisation and voice and speech on Nov. 8 and 9. Blackfriars and Center Stage are two community theater groups housed in Rochester. Community the ater groups differ from other theater groups in that, for the most part, they are composed of volunteer work ers. They are a group of people with a common interest in theater who get together to perform. About a year ago, Kur, director of actor voice and speech training and head of the performance faculty at the University, was invited to do a workshop on stage dialects for these two groups. This year, he was asked to put together a comprehensive weekend of theater workshops. Movement, voice warm-up techniques and acting were the three areas chosen for presentation. “It is a basic actors training program,” Kur said. “They are the basic skills needed for getting the instrument in shape (body and voice) and then estab lishing a purpose for doing what you do on stage.” The series began on Saturday with a two-hour workshop on movement presented by Jim Hoskins. This seminar dealt with the body through focusing, breathing and basic movement exercises. “The pur pose of these are to release tension and to relax, so the body can become part of what they (the actors) are saying instead of a hindrance,” said Hoskins, director of theater movement training at the University; Movement focuses on how actions should grow out of a character. “As you build the character, the movement comes out. This is more consistent than affecting movement,” said Hoskins. In order to explain this concept, Hoskins used the idea of an actor portraying an old man. Instead of just pretending to walk like an old man, the actor realizes the limitations and physical restrictions of the body of an old person. It might hurt a little to walk fast, so the person walks slower and is hunched over because their center of gravity has shifted. By dealing with these restrictions, the actor learns what the character is really like The group at Blackfriars and Center Stage was interested in period movement, especially of the Medi eval, Renaissance, and Restoration eras. With this concept the actor must learn to sit, stand and walk in the elaborate, heavy and bulky costumes of these ages, Hoskins said. The Grinch: beloved author's self-portrait? CEDAR RAPIDS, lowa (AP) Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known to young readers as Dr. Seuss, says there’s one character in his books he most resembles “The Grinch.” The despicable figure in Geisel’s How The Grinch Stole Christmas takes away the presents, the trim "Red new The following records make up WPSU’s Top 20 for the week ending Dec. 10. Tonight at 8 p.m., 91.1 FM will present the Top 20 Countdown. 1. “Red Snake” A-Witness 2. “Gimmie, Gimmie, Gimmie (A Man After Midnight)” Leather Nun 3. “Smells Like Fiend 4. “Sacred Love” Bad Brains 5. “When The Fever Breaks” Wild Seeds 6. “Motorcycle Maniac” Angry Poles 7. “The Carney” Nick Cave 8. “Neita Grew Up” Sex Clark 5 mings and even the trees from the Whos in the mythical town of Who ville. Nevertheless, the town cele brates, bringing a change to the Grinch’s heart. Asked to explain his choice of who he resembles, Geisel smiled an un-Grinch-like grin: “Ask my wife.” Nick Cave Snake' heads music Top 20 9. “Crack Up” Big Black 10. “Don’t Go Away” Primitons 11. “Heads I Win” Tryfles 12. “The Jeweler” This Mortal Coil 13. “Beverly” Frightwig 14. “Johnny Thunderhead” tors 15. “I Want Everything” fathers Alien Sex 16. “51st State” Army 17. “Ask” 18. “Another Place” Mr. Mehta 19. “Real Good Time” Ruin 20. “Mary, Mary” Mr. T. Experi ence Three Later that day, Tom McNally presented a workshop called “Action in Acting.” “This was an improvisatio nal workshop centered on Stanislavski’s principles of connecting action and purpose,” said McNally, asso ciate professor and coordinator of the professional acting programs at the University. “We worked an awful lot on how the life of acting can spring from a clearly defined purpose.” One of the exercises McNally used in his program is called "Continuous Subtext.” “This is an actors’ game which requires the actor to find acting choices, which are based on what’s going on inside the person rather than just an exterior representation of a line reading,” he said. This game has three basic steps, McNally explained. The first step is finding an action what has to happen on stage. In order to do this, McNally said, the actor asks himself the following questions: What do I want? What’s in my way? What do I do to get what I want? The second step is to come up with a more personal subtext line to help the actor begin to focus on what to convey. As an example, McNally used the line “To be or not to be... ” from Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The subtext line for this might be, "I have to choose whether or not I’m going to kill myself right now or not.” The actor focuses on this subtext line and the actions and emotions it evokes. Step three in the game is to get those same actions and emotions from the subtext line into the textual line. Thus, the motions and the purpose for the actions come from within the actor. Kur finished up the weekend on Sunday morning with a two-hour workshop on voice warm-up techniques. “It dealt with what the actor needs to do before a perfor mance,” he said. “It’s to remind the actor of what’s accessible vocally.” The workshop focused on exercises in posture, breathing, resonance and tension release. “They do' these so that the hody is in good condition for the performing task,” Kur said. He also stressed that daily repetition of these exercises is an important part of an actor’s performing activity. After a while, the tensions won’t come back as quickly and the voice will be more easily conditioned and ready to undertake the perform ing task. By commissioning these three workshops, Blackfri ars and Center Stage have shown that they are more serious than the average community theater groups. “It’s not usual that a community theater takes an interest in training the actors in these basic skills (movement, acting and voice and speech),” said Kur. The groups are interested in improving the quality of community theater, he added. Jani- - God New Model Smiths Geisel appeared Monday night for a reading of his works at the Carnegie Building, where a travel ing exhibit of his works is housed. In his 60-year career, Geisel has authored more than 40 books, in cluding such favorites as The Cat in the Hat, Horton Hatches the Egg and Green Eggs and Ham. 1 Farewell: Mainstream at PSU should open eyes By NATALIE NICHOLS Collegian Arts Writer It’s the end-of-the-semester crunch once again, with one differ ence: it’s my last. I’m graduating (“say the secret word and win a hundred dollars”), and I just can’t wait. Before I go, however, I can’t resist a few parting shots, construc tive and destructive, about this hor rible place so affectionately called “dear old State” (make me vomit). Thank you very much to the Arts staff, and especially Pat and Jill and Jeff for being such swell eggs and such fun to work with. If not for Arts, this rag they call a newspaper would be unreadable. Thanks to everybody who reads the Arts page for giving us a reason to exist. I’m not sure how many of you there are out there you should write to us more often. Input and feedback are always helpful, especially for something as diversi fied as this page is! I can’t guar antee that what you like is what we want to write about. If enough peo ple are interested, however, your favorite art may get investigated more thoroughly. But be patient we have limited space and operate under oppression sometimes. For instance, did you know that there are some people here at the Daily Collegian who don’t even think there should be an Arts page??? The arts just aren’t impor tant to some of our fellow staffers. Yet the arts are the very record of a civilization, revealing much of its culture. Everything that appears on Rockin' sounds The Sharks, pictured below, will play tonight at the Scorpion, 232 W.Calder Way; while Pittsburgh’s ever popular Billy Price (the dude with the shades) and his Keystone Rhythm Band will perform at Gatsby's, 100 W. College Ave., tomorrow night. the Arts page is not a priceless piece of future wisdom, of course. But think about how boring this paper would be if it just-published stories about Penn State football and the Interfraternity Council get ting its feathers ruffled by the State College cops. Since the Arts page does exist, however, the next idea some people have here is that we should be more mainstream. Why not review and write about more “popular” bands, like those in the Top 40? A majority of people listen to and like these groups, so we’re told to give the people what they want. If we wanted the Arts page to look like Rolling Stone or Creem, we’d write about such “pop giants” as David Lee Roth' and Phil Collins. Obviously there is no value in being a duplicate of the mainstream art s/entertainment press. Because this is a college newspa per, those of us on the Arts staff have a unique opportunity to exper iment. There is so much happening in the “college” music scene, as well as in the alternative, under ground, or whatever-you-call-non mainstream music scene. We have no reason to write about Madonna’s latest exploits, since they are aptly chronicled elsewhere. Besides that, the people at this University desperately need their eyes opened to things like alterna tive music. The stuff the corpora tions are pumping into your brains is guaranteed to cause you to ac cept, even prefer, mediocrity. Sen timental slop like the Peter Cetera/Amy Grant duet, or Bruce Springsteen’s cover version of “War” just isn’t where it’s at, folks! Non-mainstream bands are only accepted by mainstream fans when these groups manage to get a song on the Top 40. People tend to reject these bands unfairly because they don’t have hits. But usually their quality is much better than your average hit-making band. At a recent R.E.M. concert, for example, opening band Camper Van Beethoven was booed by the audience. One of the most innova tive, intelligent and fun bands around was rejected by the fans of a band that was once just as obscure. But enough about music let’s talk about movies. X-rated films shown on campus have been a hot topic of debate for the past year or two. Here is a true example of giving the people what they want. Again and again and again. Within the last semester, I must admit, the porn movie titles have varied more than usual. When I wrote capsules for the Weekend pagej however, the same titles came up constantly: Debbie Does Dallas, Insatiable and the ever-pop ular Deep Throat. Is Deep Throat a classic or a tired old curio, rep resentative of how complacent this student body is? The question will remain unanswered, I’m sure, long after I’ve left. Of course, there are other movies besides porn flicks shown at the University. All kinds of films are shown each weekend, in much the same vein of giving people what they want, over and over again. The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1986 •H®si&ti ■ -. ~- t ‘- : “'' " ■ ■£*j How many times has Ferris Buel ler’s Day Off been here this semes ter? Name any John Hughes film (besides the latter) that has been here less than twice in one year. Showing the same movies all the time is just more evidence of how the students here are satisfied with the status quo. The sponsors don’t care that they show students the same old junk; and it seems few students care that they are given such a small selection of movies each semester. If anyone does care, however, get on the Penn State Cinemas’ case about it. Bug the Graduate Student Association and the Student Union Board, too, and all those folks who bring you, again and again, such tired old pieces of celluloid as St. Elmo’s Fire and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. As I prepare to get the stench of stagnated minds out of my nostrils once and for all, fervently hoping that I don’t have nightmares about being verbally attacked by patrioti cally rabid Marine Corps wanna bes, I’d like to thank some more people. Thanks to my parents, with out whom this experience would not have been possible; and my friends, whose help got me by more than once. To this University’s population at large I can only say, open your minds. You need to do it, believe me. Thank you, and goodbye. Natalie Nichols is a graduating (!) senior majoring in journalism and an arts writer for the Daily Colle gian. -"t <*» V. ' » ■i . ■Wi Filmmakers' exploitation of season runs gamut from tradition to gore By 808 THOMAS Associated Press Writer . HOLLYWOOD - From Dickens’ A Christmas Carol to the slasher movie Silent Night, Deadly Night, filmmak ers have long been fascinated with the yuictide season. The time-worn tale of Scrooge and Tiny Tim may well be the most recur rent of the Christmas movies. It ap peared in several versions during the silent film era, then MGM in 1938 produced A Christmas Carol with Reginald Owen as Scrooge. In 1951, the English did their own version with Alastair Sim as the legendary penny pincher (the British had done an undistinguished “Scrooge” in 1935). Albert Finney was unrecognizable in the title role of the 1970 Scrooge, which featured songs by Leslie Bri cusse. A recent version starring George C. Scott has become a tele vision perennial. A couple of years ago, the Walt Disney company en listed all of its cartoon stars for a featurette called Mickey’s Christmas Carol. At the other end of the scale was last year’s Silent . Night, Deadly Night, which depicted a Santa Claus impersonator as a mad killer. The uproar from outraged parents was so great that Tri-Star Pictures pulled out as distributor. Think of Christmas movies and you immediately remember songs. Fore most is White Christmas, sung by Bing Crosby in Holiday Inn in 1942. It I ... became Irving Berlin’s greatest hit and resulted in the 1954 White Christmas, starring Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and Vera- Ellen. “Silver Bells” was a little song Jay Evans and Ray Livingston wrote for Christmas sequences of a Bob Hope comedy The Lemon Drop Kid in 1951. It became the biggest seller for the song-writing team, who won Oscars for “Button and Bows,” “Mona Lisa” and “Que Sera Sera.” One of the many joys of Meet Me in St. Louis in 1944 was Judy Garland’s singing “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” Frank Capra’s unabashed senti ment often resulted in Christmas scenes, notably in Meet John Doe and It’s a Wonderful Life. The latter shows up regularly on holiday tele vision, partly because of its immense popularity, partly because its lapsed copyright allows any channel to carry it. Oddly, most films with “Christmas” in the title have fared poorly at the box office. The Christmas Tree, starring Wil liam Holden and Virna Lisi, was a 1969 bomb. Wrote critic Judith Crist: “There won’t be a dry eye or a full stomach in the house.” In 1944, Universal cast its biggest star, Deanna Durbin, in a grim melo drama with Gene Kelly, Christmas Holiday. Audiences voted over whelmingly for Deanna to return to musicals. Other misfires were Christmas Eve, the 1944 movie in which three wayward sons (George Raft, Ran dolph Scott, George Brent) return to their mother (Ann Harding) for the holiday and Christmas in July, a tame satire of the advertising indus try by Preston Sturges released in 1940. The producers of Superman thought they would have another box office bonanza with a big-budget San ta Claus: The Movie, starring David Huddleston in the title role and Dud ley Moore as chief elf. They thought wrong. The film was the turkey of 1985. The most successful film about Christmas has been George Seaton’s Miracle on 34th Street, starring Ed mund Gwenn as a department store Santa Claus who claims to be the real thing. The film, which also starred Maureen O’Hara, John Payne and a young Natalie Wood, has become a television perennial and has now been colorized much to the distress of many purists. This year Disney re-released for the holiday season the 1955 Lady and the Tramp, which- features a Christmas scene when puppies are born to the two leading characters. Other films featuring Christmas: The Holly and the Ivy (1952), The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958), The Bells of St. Mary’s (1945), The Man Who Came to Dinner (1941), Young at Heart (1954), The Apartment (1960), The Qlenn Miller Story (1954). The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dee. 10,1986 —1