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radiantshadow
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bullet Topic: 2 Questions
    Posted: 3/30/06 at 10:55am
Hi, all!

I have two questions I could really use help with.

1. I need to help my actors with projection.  Do you know any good vocal warm-ups? My own repetoire is rather limited.

2.  How do you train for holding for laughs?  The show I'm currently directing is a comedy and will definitely be getting laughs, but I'm not sure how to direct for the holds.

Thanks for any help you can give me, and I'm glad to see the boards back up!
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Mike Polo
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bullet Posted: 3/30/06 at 11:18am

Radiant --

1. I try to teach the same breathing techniques singers use; use your diaphragm, make sure the belly goes in and out, not the chest.

2. You can't direct for it, because you never know where the laughs are going to come. Nothing more embarrising than to stand there waiting for a laugh that never comes. The best I've ever come up with is to tell them to hold for the laugh, then start talking again when laugh has peaked and is starting to come down... don't wait for it to be over, that kills the pacing. I also warn them about walking on the laugh... audiences will stop laughing. One other thing; make your dress rehearsal a family night (or members night)... but get a few people in to watch and (hopefully) laugh. I try to invite people I know who have good, hearty laughs. This is one of those things that you learn by doing... and by making mistakes.

Mike Polo
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POB14
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bullet Posted: 3/30/06 at 3:11pm

Mike is, of course, exactly right.

The thing to impress upon them is that the throat does not create volume.  Rookies always want to yell, tightening up their neck muscles.  This is a good way to end up whispering and drinking tea with honey all weekend. 

Have them lie down on the floor.  One hand on the stomach.  Then say, "Ha-ha-ha-ha."  They should be able to feel the diaphragm at work.

Then split them in half, one at each end of the auditorium.  Have the groups call to each other, as if they were Sweet Polly Purebread:  "Helloooooo-ooooooooo!"  RELAXED THROATS!  Call, don't shout.  Have them picture seeing their friends on the other side of the football field.  Call to them.  From the stomach.  Full breath.  Use as low a pitch as is comfortable, to keep from using the throat.

Do all this AFTER general vocal warmups; ma-me-mi-mo-mu, mmmm-aaaah, whatever you like to do to get the muscles loose and working.

Stay as far back during rehearsals as you can.  Consciously or unconsciously, they will play to you.

Good luck!

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bullet Posted: 4/25/06 at 4:24pm

For projection:  have two players stand opposite each other in the middle of room.  Make them have a conversation (in character or as themselves).  Have them take a step a part every 30 seconds are so, until they are at opposite ends of the room.  They will naturally project to hear each other.

For laughs:  I mark in my script the areas I feel most definitely should get a laugh, and by run throughs, I force myself to laugh there.  I also get the cast to believe the audience is another character and then react to them just as they would react to another player.  For some reason, telling them this really works.

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GoldCanyonLady
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bullet Posted: 4/26/06 at 8:51am
Originally posted by radiantshadow



2.  How do you train for holding for laughs?  The show I'm currently directing is a comedy and will definitely be getting laughs, but I'm not sure how to direct for the holds.



We just finished a very funny comedy and my cast did a super job of handling the laughs. During rehearsals I kept telling them to listen. Listen to what the actors are saying and listen to the audience. I reminded them of that game (I think it was called statue) from our childhood (we are all seniors) where we would spin around then freeze. I told them to listen for the laughs then FREEZE for a moment. Don't move, don't talk just freeze.
Barb
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bullet Posted: 4/28/06 at 6:29pm
I know this is began as a question about holding for laughs, but please re-read what Gold Canyon Lady said about listening.  This is, I believe, perhaps the most under-emphasized stage skill.  You can't act unless you participate in active listening.  This is how you stay involved in a scene when you are not speaking.  Know how they say it's easier to act when you are speaking then when you aren't?  That was said by someone not actively listening. 


Were you listening?  
Investigate. Imagine. Choose.
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theactordavid
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bullet Posted: 5/30/06 at 3:14pm
The tricky part about directing for laughs, as has been mentioned, is you never know what the audience will find funny.  I've seen some of the best "laugh lines" in a play barely get a ha-ha-ha, while the best laughs fell after either dry, set-up lines or lines I would have expected to be heard as seriously dramatic or emotionally deep.  You never know.  You try to put some "pacing" in where you don't expect laughs, and there they are, throwing your actors for a jog.  So you can't give every line a one-second silence to see if they laugh, but you can hope the ones you think are funny get one and listen for the rest.  And listening is key.

One other thought about listening: sometimes, no matter how many times in rehearsal an actor has said his/her lines correctly, come show time some words get dropped/changed/reversed and the following line needs to be changed the same way to make sense.  Even though actor B knows his next line, if actor A substitutes a different word at the end of his line, actor B may need to repeat that word and listening - not thinking of your next line - is the solution.


There are no small roles, only roles with a low line-load and minimal stage time.

http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com
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