登陆注册
15692800000025

第25章 HENRY BRODRIBB IRVING(2)

"Does she need to have her voice trained, and about what age do people generally commence to go on the stage?" The first part of this question as to voice training touches on the value of an Academy of Acting. Of the value--the practical value--of such an institution rightly conducted there can be no doubt. That acting cannot be taught is a well-worn maxim and perhaps a true one; but acting can be disciplined; the ebullient, sometimes eccentric and disordered manifestations of budding talent may be modified by the art of the teacher; those rudiments, which many so often acquire painfully in the course of rehearsal, the pupils who leave an academy should be masters of and so save much time and trouble to those whose business it is to produce plays. The want of any means of training the beginner, of coping at all with the floods of men and women, fit and unfit, who are ever clamouring at the doors of the theatre, has been a long-crying and much-felt grievance. The establishment of this academy should go far to remove what has been by no means an unjust reproach to our theatrical system. As to the age at which a person should begin a theatrical career, I do not think there is any actor or actress who would not say that it is impossible to begin too early--at least, as early as a police magistrate will allow. That art is long and life short applies quite as truthfully to the actor's as to any other art, and as the years go on there must be many who regret that they did not sooner decide to follow a calling which seems to carry one all too quickly through the flight of time.

TEMPTATIONS ON THE STAGE

My correspondent also asks me a question which I shall answer very briefly, but which it is as well should be answered; She writes, "Are there many temptations for a girl on the stage, and need she necessarily fall into them?" Of course there are such temptations on the stage, as there must be in any calling in which men and women are brought into contact on a footing of equality; perhaps these temptations are somewhat intensified in the theatre. At the same time, I would venture to say from my own experience of that branch of theatrical business with which I have been connected--and in such matters one can only speak from personal experience--that any woman yielding to these temptations has only herself to blame, that any well-brought-up, sensible girl will, and can, avoid them altogether, and that I should not make these temptations a ground for dissuading any young woman in whom I might be interested from joining our calling. To say, as a writer once said, that it was impossible for a girl to succeed on the stage without impaired morals, is a statement as untrue as to say that no man can succeed as a lawyer unless he be a rogue, a doctor unless he be a quack, a parson unless be be a hypocrite.

To all who intend to become actors and actresses, my first word of advice would be--Respect this calling you have chosen to pursue. You will often in your experience hear it, see it in print, slighted and contemned. There are many reasons for this. Religious prejudice, fostered by the traditions of a by no means obsolete Puritanism, is one; the envy of those who, forgetting the disadvantages, the difficulties, the uncertainty of the actor's life, see only the glare of popular adulation, the glitter of the comparatively large salaries paid to a few of us--such unreasoning envy as this is another; and the want of sympathy of some writers with the art itself, who, unable to pray with Goethe and Voltaire, remain to scoff with Jeremy Collier, is a third. There are causes from without that will always keep alive a certain measure of hostility towards the player. As long as the public, in Hazlitt's words, feel more respect for John Kemble in a plain coat than the Lord Chancellor on the Woolsack, so long will this public regard for the actor provoke the resentment of those whose achievements in art appeal less immediately, less strikingly, to their audience. But if they would only pause to consider, surely they might lay to their souls the unction that the immediate reward of the actor in his lifetime is merely nature's compensation to him for the comparative oblivion of his achievements when he has ceased to be.

Imagine for one moment Shakespeare and Garrick contemplating at the present moment from the heights the spectacle of their fame. Who would grudge the actor the few years of fervid admiration he was privileged to enjoy, some one hundred and fifty years ago, as compared with the centuries of living glory that have fallen to the great poet?

Sometimes you may hear your calling sneered at by those who pursue it.

There are few professions that are not similarly girded at by some of their own members, either from disappointment or some ingrained discontent. When you hear such detraction, fix your thoughts not on the paltry accidents of your art, such as the use of cosmetics and other little infirmities of its practice, things that are obvious marks for the cheap sneer, but look rather to what that art is capable of in its highest forms, to what is the essence of the actor's achievement, what he can do and has done to win the genuine admiration and respect of those whose admiration and respect have been worth the having.

ACTING IS A GREAT ART

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 带刀皇后

    带刀皇后

    新婚之夜,夫婿一家惨遭杀害。命悬一线的时候,得一男子相救。从此,她进入一个完全陌生的世界。外有金兵追杀,内有贰臣谋反。一路上,她腰系钢刀,护君护身……
  • 仰山论丛(2012卷)

    仰山论丛(2012卷)

    本书汇集了浙江财经大学东方学院教职员工在教学研究、教学改革和其他相关专业领域方面的研究论文,主要涉及独立学院经管类应用型人才培养模式、专业建设、教学方法改革、实习基地建设,以及财经、人文、工商管理等学科领域的有关研究成果。
  • 高冷男神独宠萌系小喵

    高冷男神独宠萌系小喵

    喂,前面那个男生,源大神回过头:“有事,”“没事,听说,你很高冷,没关系,姐,能感化你”源大神。。。。。
  • 早安,老公大人

    早安,老公大人

    迫于家里和领导的双重压力,他需要一个合适的人选做妻子。为了应付新郎突然反悔的尴尬婚礼场面,她需要一个男人扮演临时丈夫。说好分床分房间,为什么他会出现在她的被窝一旁说“早安”?!各取所需的婚姻,她信奉相敬如“冰”,他则坚持“日”久生情。情未动,身先行——如果你不爱我,我可以陪你练到爱为止。
  • 在瓦洛兰的那些岁月

    在瓦洛兰的那些岁月

    传说英雄联盟是个巨大地阴谋,这个组织控制着几乎所有的力量,掌控者许许多多不为人知的技术,还有拥有者无数的狂热拥护者!!!
  • 钦定宪法大纲

    钦定宪法大纲

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 腹黑公子傲娇妻

    腹黑公子傲娇妻

    百年一度的飞鹤节大试开典礼上,他仰望着千里花台上幻蝶般的高贵身影,说了一句震惊世界的话,似喃喃自语,又似是对爱人最美丽的宣言。然后,他成功了……
  • 暮拾晨妆

    暮拾晨妆

    暮拾晨妆女主:辛璃从小与他一起长大,儿时甚熟,年岁过后却渐行渐远。他玩他的音乐,而她随家里人移民,大学学习法律,辅修美术。她受国内杂志邀请,请她回国画一期封面图。而这时候,她见到了他。他有女友在身旁,一腔热血,一腔激情。而她好像被生活变得有些迟钝,她爱那些带有点平静的生活。从玫瑰园走过去教学楼上课,一晚上在自习室看书,就这样的生活。可他的热情,点燃了她的热情。就这样慢慢地,慢慢地,阴差阳错,她与他在一起。她温柔却不懦弱,而他一贯的洒脱与坚毅。于是,故事开始了。
  • 甜宠101℃:老婆,不准躲!

    甜宠101℃:老婆,不准躲!

    在外人眼里,程靖修这只伏地魔的段数级别已经爆表了,他没有把柄,没有弱点,杀伐果断,不留情面,他的下属把他当神一样崇拜。但是在叶倾城眼里,画风类似这样——某天,她觉得程boss抽烟太厉害,勒令他禁烟,并在他口袋里装了枣片。他去参加经济峰会,半路发消息给她:“想抽烟。”“吃枣片!”“太丢份了!不过如果你今晚喂饱我,我可以考虑!”倾城咬牙:“行!”于是第二天各大新闻的头版都是他一脸淡漠吃枣片的画面,倾城笑岔气,程boss你真是太可爱了!【一言以蔽之——一个隐世BOSS的宠妻史!】
  • 绝版电影

    绝版电影

    《绝版电影》是慢热型小说,采用倒叙式开头,将读者带入绝版电影的青春世界,人生本就是一场绝版的电影、青春本就充斥着热血。且看主人公,顺境时谈笑风生、独领风骚;逆境时,看他山人自有算计………