Film Acting vs. Theater Acting
Movies and Film
Director's Cut
Film historians agree that it was D. W. Grffith who first
experimented on a large scale with a mode of acting that would suit the cinema
rather than the theater. Recognizing that theatrical acting—with its
exaggerated gestures, its over-the-top facial expressions, and its stilted body
movements—often looked ridiculous on film, Griffith put his company of actors
and actresses through weeks of meticulous drills and exercises to show them how
to alter their skills and adapt them to the new medium.
With the advent of film in the early twentieth century, and
in particular with the introduction of sound in the late '20s, there was a need
for a new kind of acting style from that which had dominated the stage and the
theater for centuries. Thus was born the art of film acting, a demanding and
innovative discipline that has now been around for almost a century. Here are
four of the main differences between stage and film acting:
Unlike the theater actor, who gets to develop a character
during the course of a two- or three-hour performance, the film actor lacks
continuity, forcing him or her to come to all the scenes (often shot in reverse
order in which they'll ultimately appear) with a character already fully
developed.
Since film captures even the smallest gesture and magnifies
it 20 or 30 times, cinema demands a less flamboyant and stylized bodily
performance from the actor than does the theater.
The stage is more friendly to the unattractive, the overweight,
and the flawed, while film—despite the advantages of makeup, lighting, soft
focus, etc.—is relentlessly cruel to any sign of imperfection in the actor or
actress.
The performance of emotion is the most difficult aspect of
film acting to master: While the theater actor can use exaggerated gestures and
exclamations to express emotion, the film actor must rely on subtle facial
ticks, quivers, and tiny lifts of the eyebrow to create a believable character.
In short, film demands a fundamentally different kind of
performance work from its actors than does the stage; as D. W. Griffith himself
put it, the stage actor projects an emotion or a character to an audience,
whereas a film actor must in some way embody and perform these emotions in as
true and believable a way as possible. Though some have made the
theater-to-cinema transition quite successfully (Olivier, Glenn Close, and
Julie Andrews, for instance), others have not, and there are many examples of
silent stars who fell off the movie planet after sound was introduced. They
just weren't able to compete with the bell-voiced theater actors who instantly
flooded the studios.
Source : infoplease.com
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