Some Actors Are Famous For Being Famous

May 28th, 2010

Paris Hilton is one of America’s most famous women today. 

She is most well known for her frequent appearances on television, including shows of her own such as Fox’s hit reality series ‘The Simple Life’, and for her reputation as a partier.  An actor, model, singer and heiress to the Hilton Hotel fortune, Paris Hilton has become a household name throughout America.

Parish Whitney Hilton was born on February 17, 1981 in New York City to Richard and Kathy Hilton.  She is the oldest of four children, next in line being her younger sister Nicky, followed by her brothers Barron and Conrad. 

Paris Hilton grew up living in a few different affluent homes, including one in the Hamptons, one in Beverley Hills, and a suite in Manhattan’s Waldorf-Asotria Hotel.  She attended a high school in New York but eventually dropped out, going on to earn her GED instead. 

Opting not to go on to college, Paris instead began working as a fashion model for Catherine Maladrino and Marc Bouer in an advertising campaign for an Italian label.  She also had several brief appearances in movies, such as Zoolander and The Cat in the Hat.

Though already a well-known name, it was a sex video staring her and her friend Rick Salomon that really began Paris’s rise to the celebrity status she holds today.  The video leaked out onto the Internet and Paris Hilton’s fame skyrocketed. 

Salomon went on to release the video on DVD, only to be sued by Paris shortly thereafter.  The suit was resolved with Paris receiving a substantial cash settlement and a portion of the DVD’s profits.    

Her newly found fame landed her a number of supporting parts in movies, commercials, and television shows including the aforementioned ‘The Simple Life’ series shown on Fox. 

 Her fame has also found her rising criticism, and she was even negatively parodied on a ‘South Park’ episode.  Her status as a celebrity and her effect as a role model for American girls is an almost controversial issue all on its own; she is widely discussed on tabloids and in magazines, and more than likely will be for some time to come.

In spite of criticism, or perhaps because of it, Paris Hilton is a popular icon in America today.  She has her own line of jewelry, her own record label, and is releasing her first album shortly. 

Now styling herself as an entrepreneur, only time will tell if her business ventures meet with as much success as her acting and modeling career has.

Actors Must Convey Emotion Through Their Acting Mechanics

May 11th, 2010

Henry Fonda’s polarity is exemplified by his equal effectiveness in portrayals of laughable comedy and emotional depth. Tallulah Bankhead’s dramatic power and comedic punch proclaim her polarity. 

There are two reasons an actor must have polarity, or opposites, in his emotional scale, even when playing a role that does not call for obvious contrasts of emotional expression.
Polarity is the basis of dramatic conflict.  The skillful use of contrasting extremes in the emotional scale enables an actor to project these extremes with authority while not actually experiencing them himself. 

It is not an actor’s function to “feel” per se, but to make his audiences feel that which he wants transmitted to them. He can show anger without being angry.

He can depict love without being in love with his leading lady.  He can portray pride without being in love with himself.  To clinch the argument, an actor need not die to play a death scene convincingly. By using his well-developed and thoroughly trained poles of feeling, he can play on the emotions of his audiences and make them feel they have seen someone die.
What does balance mean in this context? 

By balance I mean the ability to equalize and to compensate. By offsetting one factor against another, an actor establishes equality and achieves symmetry, or balanced form. Through symmetry he gains poise.  Balance is a key word to poise for an actor.
Perfect balance between the desire to express and the ability to express contributes to poise. This balance between the desire and the ability to express any given idea or emotion can be achieved by correct knowledge and use of technical tools.

You should know that the late, internationally famed authority, Constantine Stanislavsky, in his book An Actor Prepares, points out the necessity for an unusually well trained and responsive vocal and physical apparatus.  The vocal and physical requirements are either suggested or actually dictated, of course, by the mind. 

So there you have a restatement of my declaration that acting must be based on three primary elements.

The VOICE, the BODY, and the MIND.

This is an unchangeable fact for you to remember always.  Thorough training of voice, body and mind requires work. Start this training by meeting your first problems with enthusiasm and vitality.
What are those first problems?
They’re really quite simple things like how to stand and sit and walk how to exercise your face and eyes.

What has all this to do with acting?

It has a great deal to do with acting.  If you’re physical apparatus is flexible, alert and well enough controlled to obey the commands of your mind, your body will be able to do its part in projecting thoughts and emotions with or without dialogue.  Basic parts that add up to the sum total of the science underlying the art of acting the technique.
Craftsmanship mechanics know-how is what acting is all about.