This course is intended to build upon the previous work of Acting I. It will explore and expand upon the craft of acting through practical experience and studio activities. Its purpose is to deepen students’ understanding of acting techniques. A primary goal of this course is to introduce a variety of techniques, increasing a student actor’s toolset. The class will emphasize two essential elements actors face: scene study and character/physical theatre work.
This course is a lower-division core requirement for undergraduate theatre performance majors with equivalent courses at all four-year institutions in Utah and elsewhere. It fills a major requirement for theatre arts majors and otherwise satisfies elective credit criteria.
Through scene study, this class introduces students to methods of analyzing written play scripts from various genres and styles, and to encourage better understanding of the importance of objective, place, circumstances, relationship, and all the elements that collectively determine the play’s meaning. Scene study establishes the director/performer dialogue. Students will focus on truth in action, and adherence to the given circumstancesThis course’s primary avenue into character work will be through physical theatre practices such as the psychophysical work of Michael Chekhov, Anne Bogart’s Viewpoints, Laban movement studies, in addition to the work of Uta Hagan, internal monologue transcription and other variations on Stanislavski work.The ultimate purpose of the class is to aid all actors the ability to see the world through a different person's eyes. Content for scene work is encouraged to explore playwright's from various backgrounds.