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97 results for “Makita”
Kung Fu Comedy Workshop -- Fighting and Falling with Style
I'll teach you to take a hit, sell a fall, and make the audience laugh while you're in pain. We use chairs, ladders, and tables as props -- everything in the room is a weapon and a punchline. Tip: Always show the whole body. Wide shots let the audience see the skill. Close-ups are for actors who can't fight.
Survival Kit (Roman Field Pack Recreation)
Recreation of what a Roman soldier carried: canteen, fire kit, rope, blade, dried rations pouch, wool blanket. 30 pounds of everything you need and nothing you don't. I will show you how to make camp with just this.
Defensive Strategy Masterclass -- Hold the Line
Classroom and field session on defensive warfare. Terrain selection, chokepoint exploitation, force multipliers. Case studies: Thermopylae, Masada, Rorke's Drift. Tip: The defender chooses the ground. The attacker pays the price. Make them pay dearly.
Plate Armor Fitting & Movement Training
15th century plate armor training. Move, fight, mount a horse, get up from the ground in 50 pounds of steel. Tip: Armor does not make you slow. Bad armor makes you slow. Good armor moves with you.
Shakespeare for Screen Actors -- Making the Bard Breathe
I directed and starred in Looking for Richard because Shakespeare terrified me -- and the only way past fear is through it. We work on verse-speaking, iambic pentameter as BREATH not math, and finding the modern man inside the Elizabethan language. Richard III is our text. Bring your courage.
Voice & Narration Workshop -- Making People Listen
I've narrated documentaries, audiobooks, and the voice of God himself. The secret? Slow down, breathe deeply, and mean every word. We work on resonance, pacing, and the art of reading text as if you're discovering it for the first time. Tip: Read the sentence silently first. Feel it. THEN say it aloud.
Natural Screen Acting Workshop -- No Makeup, No Tricks
I refused the Hollywood makeover. My eyebrows stayed thick, my name stayed Swedish, and the camera loved me anyway. I teach you to show up as yourself and let that be enough. We work on emotional transparency, natural movement, and the courage to be imperfect on camera. Tip: Beauty fades. Honesty doesn't.
Classic Hollywood Makeup Kit (1940s Natural Look)
The 1940s 'no makeup' look actually required extraordinary skill. Soft foundation, natural brow, minimal eye, rosy lip. This kit replicates the golden-age Hollywood look that Selznick's makeup artists created for me. Includes application guide.
Umbrella (Singin' in the Rain Replica, Full Size)
Full-size black umbrella, exact replica of the one from the most famous dance sequence in cinema history. Borrow it for your own rain dance, photo shoots, or just because it makes you happy. Tip: The rain was a mix of water and milk -- milk showed up better on camera.
Top Hat & Tails Costume Set (Screen-Quality Formal Wear)
White tie and tails, silk top hat, white gloves, patent leather shoes, and walking cane. The complete Fred Astaire look from Top Hat. Every piece is dance-functional -- the jacket moves with you, the shoes are flexible, the hat stays on during spins. Tip: Formal wear should make you stand straighter. If it doesn't, it doesn't fit.
Partner Dance Workshop -- The Art of Following
Everyone wants to learn to lead. Nobody teaches you to follow brilliantly. Following is interpretation in real time -- you feel the lead's intention through your frame and translate it into movement, often in reverse, often in heels. We work on frame, connection, and musical sensitivity. Tip: The best follower makes every leader feel like a genius.
Viking Seax Knife & Leather Tool Roll
Large seax knife (12-inch single-edge blade) and leather roll with fire steel, whetstone, and bone needles. The seax was tool, weapon, and eating knife in one. Every Norseman carried one. Mine has a pattern-welded blade -- the maker's signature in the steel.
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