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101 results for “intro”
Method Acting Intensive -- Becoming the Character
Two-hour session. We don't rehearse lines -- we build a life. Where did your character grow up? What does their kitchen smell like? What song makes them cry? Once you know that, the lines say themselves. Stella Adler's approach: imagination over memory. Tip: If you're thinking about acting, you're not acting.
Commanding the Room -- Presence and Dignity on Screen
I teach you to walk into a scene and own it without raising your voice or clenching your fist. Power isn't volume. It's stillness when everyone else is shouting. We work on posture, eye contact, and the silence between words. Tip: Before you say your first line, stand still for three seconds. Let the audience come to you.
Cold-Water Swimming Coaching -- Morning Discipline
I swam in the Long Island Sound every morning, year-round, into my nineties. Cold water wakes up everything -- your body, your mind, your courage. I'll teach you to breathe, to enter the water without flinching, and to find the joy in discomfort. Tip: The first thirty seconds are terrible. After that, you're alive.
Dramatic Intensity Workshop -- Eyes That Burn Through the Screen
I teach you to hold a close-up. Most actors blink, shift, fidget. Stop. Be STILL. Let the camera come to your eyes and STAY there. We do exercises in sustained intensity -- thirty seconds of pure emotion without a word. Tip: If you can't hold a close-up for ten seconds, you're not ready for film.
Method Research Intensive -- Becoming Someone Else
I don't start with the script. I start with the world. Where does the character live? What's in his pockets? What radio station does he listen to? We build a character from the ground up -- wardrobe, daily routine, voice, walk. Tip: Spend a day living as the character before you memorize a single line.
Character Wardrobe Kit (Taxi Driver Era)
Army surplus jacket, aviator sunglasses, boots, and the mohawk wig. Travis Bickle's wardrobe tells his whole story before he opens his mouth -- military discipline decaying into isolation. Tip: A character's clothes are their armor. Choose every piece deliberately.
Intensity Workshop -- The Quiet Before the Explosion
Michael Corleone is quiet for two hours before he pulls the trigger. Tony Montana never stops burning. I teach both -- controlled intensity and unleashed fire. We work on building emotional pressure in a scene until the release is inevitable. Tip: The explosion means nothing without the silence that precedes it.
Accent & Dialect Masterclass -- Rebuilding Your Voice
I don't do accents -- I rebuild the architecture of speech. Jaw placement, tongue position, breath pattern, rhythm. We start with the International Phonetic Alphabet, then move to a specific accent of your choice. By the end, you won't be imitating -- you'll be THINKING in that accent. Tip: Record native speakers and transcribe what you HEAR, not what the words say.
IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet) Training Kit
Flash cards, audio recordings, and workbook for mastering the International Phonetic Alphabet. This is the foundation of all dialect work. Once you can READ sound, you can reproduce any accent on earth. I use this system for every role. No exceptions.
Beekeeping Introduction -- The Hive Teaches Patience
I converted my 124-acre ranch in Mississippi into a bee sanctuary. Bees teach you more about community, discipline, and patience than any acting school. We suit up, inspect a hive, and I show you how to read a colony. Tip: Move slowly, breathe calmly. Bees sense anxiety.
Dance Cane (Bamboo, Performance Grade)
A performance-weight bamboo cane -- the same kind I used in Puttin' on the Ritz and Top Hat. A cane transforms a walk into a performance. We practice twirls, tosses, and the gentleman's lean. Lighter than it looks, stronger than you'd think.
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.
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