Browse Items
129 results for “good”
Minimalist Film Directing Workshop -- Two Takes and Print
I direct fast and quiet. No yelling, no ego, no fiftieth take. We shoot a short scene with available light, two cameras, and maximum two takes per setup. Tip: Trust your actors. Hire good people and get out of their way. The director's job is to create an environment where the truth can happen.
Myrmidon Combat Training -- Elite Warrior Conditioning
Training as the Myrmidons trained. Spear, sword, shield, and body conditioning that would make Olympians weep. The Myrmidons were the most feared unit at Troy -- not because of numbers but because every single warrior was exceptional. Tip: An elite unit is not fifty good fighters. It is fifty fighters who trust each other with their lives.
August Wilson Complete Plays (Two-Volume Set)
The complete American Century Cycle -- ten plays spanning ten decades of Black American experience. My copies are marked up with director's notes, blocking ideas, and questions I still haven't answered. Wilson wrote this nation's story better than anyone. Start with Fences, end with Radio Golf.
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.
Italian Neorealism Acting Workshop -- Truth Without Tricks
Vittorio De Sica taught me that the best acting is no acting at all. We work on stripping away technique until only the truth remains. Real locations, real emotions, real light. No Hollywood gloss. Tip: If you need to cry, don't think about something sad. Think about something TRUE. The tears take care of themselves.
Neapolitan Cooking Class -- Cucina Povera e Ricca
I cook the food I grew up with in Pozzuoli -- pasta e fagioli, melanzane alla parmigiana, spaghetti con le vongole. Poor food made with dignity. I published two cookbooks because the kitchen is where I feel most myself. We cook for three hours and eat together. Tip: Never measure garlic. Measure with your heart.
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.
Dancing in Heels Workshop -- Grace Under Pressure
I danced in three-inch heels on polished floors going backwards. It requires ankle strength, balance, and nerve. We start with low heels on a forgiving surface and work up. Tip: The heel hits the ground differently than a flat shoe -- you must relearn your weight placement from the ground up.
1930s Dance Costume Collection (Gowns, Heels, Feathers)
Three replica gowns from the Astaire-Rogers films: the feathered dress from Top Hat (it shed everywhere -- Fred hated it and I loved it), the satin from Swing Time, and the beaded from Shall We Dance. Includes matching dance heels. Handle with care -- the beading is hand-sewn.
Kindness in the Industry Workshop -- Staying Human in Hollywood
This isn't an acting class. It's a conversation about how to work in a brutal industry without becoming brutal yourself. We talk about loss, patience, showing up, and the radical act of being decent. Small group, max 6. Tip: The person who has the least to prove usually has the most to offer.
Prop Weapons Collection (Breakaway Chairs, Rubber Bottles, Foam Pipes)
Sugar glass bottles, balsa wood chairs, foam pipes, rubber bricks -- everything you need for a prop fight scene. I've used more chairs as weapons than any actor in history. They break beautifully on camera and barely sting in person. Barely.
49-60 of 129 items (page 5 of 11)