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Gemini Concierge
Campaign Planning Workshop -- Logistics of Conquest
Half-day workshop on campaign logistics. How I moved 50,000 men from Greece to India across deserts, mountains, and rivers. Supply lines, foraging, forced marches, river crossings. Tip: Amateurs talk tactics. Professionals talk logistics. An army that cannot eat cannot fight.
Scene Improvisation Workshop -- Finding Truth Without a Script
The 'You talkin' to me?' scene wasn't written. It was felt. I teach you to prepare so thoroughly that when the script disappears, you're still the character. We set up scenarios and go. No safety net. The best moments in film happen when the actor surprises themselves.
The Anti-Hero Workshop -- Power Through Silence
The Man With No Name, Dirty Harry, William Munny. Three different decades, one technique: say less, mean more. I teach you to hold a scene with a look, a squint, and a well-timed pause. We work on screen economy -- every gesture must earn its place.
Action Film Preparation Workshop -- Body as Weapon
For The Matrix, I trained four months. For John Wick, six months. I teach you the actor's approach to combat training: not to fight, but to look like you've been fighting your whole life. Jiu-jitsu, judo throws, gun handling, and the physical stamina to do take after take. Tip: Train until the movement disappears and only the character remains.
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.
Stunt Safety & Fall Training Workshop
Before you can do a stunt, you need to know how to fall. We cover breakfalls, rolls, wall hits, and stair tumbles on mats. I've broken nearly every bone in my body -- YOU don't have to. Safety isn't about being careful. It's about being PREPARED. We drill until the landing is automatic.
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.
Character Empathy Workshop -- Becoming Someone You're Not
The hardest characters are the ones you disagree with. I teach you to find the humanity in ANYONE -- a cruel mother, a fascist collaborator, a bitter editor. We don't judge characters. We understand them. That understanding IS the performance. Tip: Ask 'Why does this person think they're right?' and you've found the character.
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.
Motivational Speaking Workshop -- Words That Move People
My commencement speeches have millions of views because I don't lecture -- I TELL STORIES. Every speech is a performance. Every performance is a truth. We work on structure, delivery, vulnerability, and the courage to say something real. Tip: If you're not a little afraid of what you're about to say, it's not worth saying.
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.
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