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101 results for “bread”
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.
Monologue Coaching -- One Voice, Full Room
Audition monologue, film monologue, stage monologue -- each needs different calibration. I'll coach your piece line by line. We work on breath, beats, subtext, and the moment you stop performing and start LIVING the text. Tip: The best monologue sounds like a conversation with someone who isn't there.
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.
Opera Singing for Actors -- Voice as Instrument
I studied opera before acting. Vocal training teaches breath control, projection, and emotional range that transforms film performances. We warm up with scales, work on one aria, and apply the techniques to spoken text. You don't need to be a singer. You need to be a breather.
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.
Audition Preparation Coaching -- The 3-Minute Performance
You get three minutes to show them everything. I teach you to walk in prepared, grounded, and PRESENT. We work on your specific audition piece -- cold read or prepared. Tip: They've decided about you before you open your mouth. Own the room from the door.
Character Preparation Workshop -- Building From the Ground Up
For Malcolm X, I read every speech, visited every location, and fasted for three days. For Training Day, I rode with real narcotics officers. Preparation is the foundation. We build your character's backstory, physicality, and voice from scratch. Tip: Know ten times more about your character than the script reveals. The audience sees the iceberg tip, but they FEEL the mass beneath.
August Wilson Scene Study -- American Master
We work scenes from Fences, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, and The Piano Lesson. Wilson wrote the poetry of ordinary Black American life with the weight of Shakespeare. I direct these workshops personally. Bring the text memorized -- we're not here to read. We're here to LIVE.
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.
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.
Multilingual Acting Workshop -- Performing in Other Languages
I performed in Swedish, English, Italian, German, and French -- each language changes how you think, gesture, and breathe. We pick two languages and do the same scene in both. You'll discover that your character shifts when the language shifts. That's not a problem -- that's a gift.
Emotional Scene Work -- Crying, Laughing, Raging on Cue
In Casablanca, the tears were real -- I didn't know how the story ended. That uncertainty became the performance. I teach you to access genuine emotion without tricks, onions, or menthol. We work on sense memory, breath, and emotional preparation. Tip: Don't try to cry. Try to NOT cry. The struggle is what the camera captures.
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