Respect for Acting: Expanded Version
By Uta Hagen and Haskel Frankel
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About this ebook
The classic book on acting, in an attractive updated edition
Since its original publication in 1973, Uta Hagen's Respect for Acting has remained a durable classic and a must-read for all students of acting. As an acting instructor at the Herbert Berghof Studio, Hagen helped to develop the talents of world-class actors like Robert DeNiro, Matthew Broderick, Gene Wilder, Amanda Peet, Austin Pendleton, Whoopi Goldberg, and more. In this book, Hagen offers an indispensable account of the techniques that professionals use to elevate their acting to an art form. This updated edition illuminates Hagen's original text with a new foreword written by Katie Finneran, retaining the David Hyde Pierce foreword, along with added background on HB Studio—one of the original New York performing arts training and practice spaces—and an excerpt from Hagen's autobiography SOURCES.
In working through this book, actors will learn physical, verbal, and emotional practice that empower them to connect their own self-concept to the characters they play. Specific, detailed exercises help actors learn to address a range of problems actors face, like maintaining immediacy and relevance, and developing the dimensions of a role over a long performance run. Respect for Acting is a book for actors and audiences who understand the need for truth in the creative process.
- Discover the acting book that has shaped professional theater performances for decades
- Learn the history and background of Herbert Berghof Studio, one of New York's foremost acting schools
- Practice the craft of acting with concrete exercises and instruction on technique
- Delve into the deep questions that arise when actors truly inhabit the lives of their characters
Actors at all levels of their craft will love this stunning updated version of the essential Respect for Acting.
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Reviews for Respect for Acting
54 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A highly regarded treatise on acting methodology
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The classic- "and still Champeen!"- of all acting guides. Required reading (literally, for me as an undergrad student) for anyone in the business. Teaches you how to deconstruct and reconstruct your entire part while keeping your head in the game. Exercise, anecdotes and sage advice all contained within.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In the early 1980's I was fortunate enough to participate in a master class with Uta Hagen and watch her perform in a one woman show afterwards.This text is terrific for actors. To this day when working on a role, I still draw from Ms. Hagen's work.For those who want to gain perspective I would also highly recommend reading Sir Laurence Olivier's writing about acting. (Ms. Hagen was NOT a fan of Sir Larry.)You will get two polar approaches to the craft which IMO are both exemplary methods to developing a character.
Book preview
Respect for Acting - Uta Hagen
Table of Contents
Cover
Praise for Respect for Acting
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Editor's Note by Jesse Feiler
Foreword by Katie Finneran
Foreword by David Hyde Pierce
Acknowledgments
PART ONE: The Actor
Introduction
1 Concept
2 Identity
3 Substitution
4 Emotional Memory
5 Sense Memory
6 The Five Senses
7 Thinking
8 Walking and Talking
9 Improvisation
10 Reality
Note
PART TWO: The Object Exercises
Introduction
The Ten Object Exercises
11 The Basic Object Exercise
12 Three Entrances
13 Immediacy
14 The Fourth Wall
15 Endowment
16 Talking to Yourself
17 Outdoors
Part One
Part Two
18 Conditioning Forces
19 History
20 Character Action
PART THREE: The Play and the Role
Introduction
21 First Contact with the Play
22 The Character
23 Circumstances
24 Relationship
Age
25 The Objective
26 The Obstacle
27 The Action
28 The Rehearsal
29 Practical Problems
Performer's Nerves
How Do I Get a Job?
Auditions
Do You Think I Have Talent?
How Can I Work Correctly in Summer Stock?
Should I Stick It Out in the Theater?
What about the Pacing? The Rhythm? The Tempo?
Do You Think I Was Overacting?
How Do I Stay Fresh in a Long Run?
How Do I Work with a Replacement in the Cast?
How Do I Talk to the Audience?
Accents and Dialects
Dressing the Part—the Costume and Makeup
Moral Standards
30 Communication
31 Style
Epilogue
The Studio Story by Uta Hagen
Preface
The Studio Story
Searching for a Home
The Money Chase
Construction at 120 Bank Street
Growth
Adding 124 Bank Street … and 122
Birth of HB Playwrights Foundation
Address to the Austrian Academy
Sources by Uta Hagen
About Uta Hagen
About Haskel Frankel
Index
End User License Agreement
Praise for Respect for Acting
Uta Hagen changed my life. She changed the lives of thousands and thousands of other people as well. To have Uta's books, and to be able to look through them at the drop of a hat, keeps me going and keeps me inspired to keep going.
—AUSTIN PENDLETON
"I read Respect for Acting frequently. As a remembrance of my time with Uta and to keep myself challenged and humble. It should be utilized by every acting student and professional."
—VICTOR SLEZAK
"I was extraordinarily privileged to work with Uta Hagen in the Circle in the Square's production of George Bernard Shaw's play You Never Can Tell. Her book, Respect for Acting, is a must‐read for any actor at any age. She was committed to revealing the truth, and we are the beneficiaries of her brilliant observations."
—VICTOR GARBER
"Uta Hagen and Respect for Acting have profoundly influenced nearly every actor alive today and yet to come in film, television and stage with this unmatchable, impeccably specific process developed from her life's work as the definitive ‘actor's actor' and is timeless and invaluable for all beginning and working actors truly interested in the highest level of acting."
—TED BRUNETTI
"Uta Hagen's Respect for Acting is simply the bible for any acting student serious about their craft. Even as a professional, I refer to it time and again for the basics. It is a touchstone."
—LAILA ROBINS
I held onto this book for dear life throughout my twenties, and still thumb through it when I need a tune up. If I lose my car keys and I'm frantically turning my house upside down trying to find them I look up at the heavens and hope she's having a good laugh.
—AMANDA PEET
Photo depicts coverpage of a book titled, Uta Hagen Respect for Acting.Respect for Acting was first published in 1973 with the cover above. This edition reprints the original chapters without alteration, and adds a new foreword and several appendices.
respect for acting
expanded edition
uta hagen
with haskel frankel
Wiley LogoCopyright © 1973 by Uta Hagen. All rights reserved.
Foreword copyright © 2008 by David Hyde Pierce.
Foreword copyright © 2023 by Katie Finneran.
Sources copyright (c) 1983 by Uta Hagen
Sources copyright (c) 2019 by Uta Hagen Trust
The Studio Story
copyright (c) 1995 by Uta Hagen
The Studio Story: 1945–1969
copyright (c) 2019 by the Uta Hagen Trust
Preface to The Studio Story: 1945–1969
copyright (c) 2019 by Edith Meeks
Address to Austrian Academy
copyright (c) 1980 by Herbert Berghof
Address to the Austrian Academy
copyright (c) 2019 by the Uta Hagen Trust
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Library of Congress Control Number:
Names: Hagen, Uta, 1919‐2004, author. | Frankel, Haskel, author.
Title: Respect for acting / Uta Hagen ; with Haskel Frankel.
Description: Expanded edition. | [San Francisco, CA] : Jossey‐Bass, 2023. | Includes index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2022060472 (print) | LCCN 2022060473 (ebook) | ISBN 9781119913573 (hardback) | ISBN 9781119913580 (adobe pdf) | ISBN 9781119913597 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Acting.
Classification: LCC PN2061 .H28 2023 (print) | LCC PN2061 (ebook) | DDC 792.02/8—dc22/eng/20230113
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022060472
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022060473
Cover Design: Wiley
Cover Image: © Jack Mitchell
To Herbertwho revealed and clarified andhas always set me a soaring example
Editor's Note
by Jesse Feiler
Respect for Acting was first published in 1973 and republished in 2008 with a foreword by David Hyde Pierce. This expanded edition publishes Uta Hagen's original text and the Pierce foreword without alteration and includes a new foreword by Katie Finneran.
Additional material complements the wise instruction within Respect for Acting and deepens our understanding of Uta Hagen's work and philosophy.
The Studio Story
by Uta Hagen and Address to the Austrian Academy
by Uta's husband Herbert Berghof illuminate the history of HB Studio, founded in 1945 by Berghof as a home for actors who wanted to learn and practice their art in service to their community.
An excerpt from Uta's lyrical memoir Sources provides a glimpse of the eighteen‐year‐old actor embarking on the career that would inspire actors at every stage of their craft in countries throughout the world.
All three pieces are reprinted here with thanks to the Uta Hagen Trust.
Jesse Feiler
New York City, February 2023
Foreword
by Katie Finneran
Be the cat, Katie.
And with that, Uta Hagen lit her cigarette, smiled, and walked away. Standing in her Bank Street acting studio and feeling too shy to question her, I stood there, puzzled, in the cloud of smoke she'd left behind. I was opening in a Broadway show (that had nothing to do with cats, never even mentions cats) and her advice to me on how to tackle my nerves was Be the cat.
I have always wanted to be an actor. This fact has never wavered. From an early age, I studied at many performing arts programs and devoured loads of acting books from Boleslavsky to Meisner. I found the instructions, stories, and methods fascinating, yet elusive.
Then when I was 15, my acting teacher gave me a copy of Respect for Acting and something clicked. As I read this book, the intangible idea of acting
slowly came into focus. Straightforward, applicable exercises unveiled a comprehensive and authentic way of working. I began to understand what makes an actor compelling, what they are doing with their bodies, and how their actions inform their behavior. Most importantly, Respect for Acting gave me a language through which to speak about acting as a craft. This has been my acting road map—the one I've used for more than 30 years.
When I was 19, I left a prestigious university and moved to New York City hoping to study with Uta Hagen in person. Doing my best to calm my unbearable anxiety, I auditioned for her with a monologue by Bertolt Brecht. Receiving my acceptance letter a week later was one of the most significant events of my life.
I'll never forget my first class. A childlike giddiness pervaded the room. Every student buzzed with anticipation, simultaneously thrilled and terrified of what was to come.
Ms. Hagen was a formidable teacher. Her passion for understanding human behavior, especially her own, taught us to be astute observers. When she critiqued our exercises or scene work, everything that came out of her mouth was a revelation. She could transform the performance of a student with clear instruction that was simple to understand and implement.
Over the 12 years I studied with her, I never ceased to be amazed by how generous, how egoless she was. She would comfort us by saying, There are no mistakes you're making here in class that I haven't made on stage a thousand times.
And this is key: The exercises she created all came directly from challenges she encountered as a celebrated actress.
Through relentless investigation, she found tangible solutions to these problems and shared them with us in this book. Speaking of generosity, I want to mention that she only charged $8 a class and reluctantly raised the price to $12—where it remained until she retired.
So, back to that cat.
As it is with most lessons taught by master teachers, it wasn't until years later that I fully understood Be the cat.
There's an old theatre adage: Never work with children or animals.
The logic behind this advice: if there is an animal on stage, say a cat, the audience won't be able to look at anything else. Why? No matter how good the play (or the actors in it), a cat's behavior is unpredictable and deliciously spontaneous. It's undeniably exhilarating to watch on stage. The audience thinks, The actors are doing what they rehearsed, but what about that cat? What's that cat gonna do next?
Uta Hagen herself said, I refuse to let the cat win!
She knew that if an actor worked to clarify all aspects of a character, understood the space and immediate circumstances, had clear desires and intentions, and created a living breathing human being then they had a chance to be as free, as unpredictable, and as riveting as a cat. She urges you to clarify what makes animals and children impossible to ignore and to harness that quality for yourself.
I'm a better actor for having had the honor of studying with Ms. Hagen in person, but I can truly say that my entire foundation as an actor is firmly based upon this book.
My wish for you as an actor is that this book clicks
for you, as it did for me. That it encourages you to develop every skill you can. Learn how to prepare. Observe your own behavior. Be curious about those who are different from you. Appreciate how you change in new circumstances and how different people bring out surprising aspects of your character.
Become an excellent instrument and learn how to tell a story with your whole being. Be unrelenting. Be brave. Be the cat.
Foreword
by David Hyde Pierce
I had the life‐changing experience of acting with Uta Hagen in a two‐person play a few years before she passed away. I was excited to be working with this legendary actor and teacher, but also daunted by the prospect of being the only other person on stage with her, so I re‐read her books, both to prepare for my role and to prepare for her.
Well, nothing could prepare you for Ms. Hagen. When we met she was in her early eighties and still a force to be reckoned with. She was demure, passionate, charming, ferocious, tireless, and theatrical. As a student of her writing, that was the biggest surprise for me—everything she did was real, and grounded, and deeply human, but she had an extravagance of gesture, a physical and vocal lyricism that had its roots in an earlier era.
She really did practice what she preached about the physical life of a character. She insisted that we have the actual set‐pieces and props, even kitchen appliances, in the rehearsal room. No cardboard mock‐ups for her—I want to have opened and closed that refrigerator door a hundred times before I set foot on the stage,
she said. All through rehearsals we used a cruddy old plastic take‐out container to hold the cookies she'd serve me in act II. On the day we moved into the theater, the designer had replaced it with a fantastic metal cookie tin which was in every detail exactly the sort of thing the character would have had in her kitchen. Ms. Hagen took one look at it, called it a name, and hurled it into the wings. We used the plastic cookie container for the run of the show.
Her obsession with these details was neither frivolous nor selfish. She was a generous actor, the reality she created for herself on stage was contagious, and acting with her you felt both safe and free. I remember a scene in which I had a speech about losing my mother to Alzheimer's disease. I felt the speech needed to be emotionally full, and because my own mom had passed away, and I'd lost family to Alzheimer's, I never had to use substitutions—the emotion was always there for me. But one night as I began the speech I sensed that the emotion wasn't coming. I might have panicked, or tried to force it or fake it, but sitting there talking to Uta I didn't want or need to be false. I thought of her advice not to try and pinpoint when or how emotion will come (emotional memory, page 51, item 2), I knew she would accept whatever I gave her, and I went on to the end of the speech, dry as a bone. Then I stood, began my next line (something innocuous like Would you like a glass of water?
), and came completely undone. As we were walking off stage after the scene, she turned to me with a twinkle in her eye and said, That was interesting.
You should know that Ms. Hagen disowned Respect for Acting. After she wrote it, she traveled around the country visiting various acting classes and was horrified by what she saw. What are they doing?
she'd ask the teacher. Your exercises
was the proud response. So Ms. Hagen wrote another book, Challenge for the Actor, which is more detailed and perhaps clearer, and should certainly be read as a companion to this. She hoped it would replace Respect for Acting, but it hasn't, and I think the reason this book endures is that it captures her first, generous, undiluted impulse to guide and nurture the artists she loved.
In this book, you will hear Ms. Hagen's voice and catch a glimpse of who she was. She wanted us actors to have so much respect for ourselves and our work that we would never settle for the easy, the superficial, or the cheap. In fact, she wanted us never to settle, period, to keep on endlessly exploring, digging deeper and aiming higher, in our scenes, in our plays, in our careers. Respect for Acting is not a long book, and with any luck, it will take you the rest of your life to read it.
Acknowledgments
I want to thank Dr. Jacques Palaci who helped me with his scientist's knowledge in many areas in which I need further enlightenment and understanding about human motivation, behavior, and psychological problems.
PART ONE
The Actor
Introduction
We all have passionate beliefs and opinions about the art of acting. My own are new only insofar as they have crystallized for me. I have spent most of my life in the theater and know that the learning process in art is never over. The possibilities for growth are limitless.
I used to accept opinions such as: You're just born to be an actor
; Actors don't really know what they're doing on stage
; Acting is just instinct—it can't be taught.
During the short period when I, too, believed such statements, like anyone else who thinks that way, I had no respect for acting.
Many people, including some working actors, who express such beliefs may admire the fact that an actor has a trained voice and body, but they believe that any further training can come only from actually performing before an audience. I find this akin to the sink‐or‐swim method of introducing a child to water. Children do drown and not all actors develop by their mere physical presence on a stage. A talented young pianist, skillful at improvisation or playing by ear, might be a temporary sensation in a night club or on television, but he knows better than to attempt a Beethoven piano concerto. The pianist's fingers just won't make it. A pop
singer with an untrained voice may have a similar success, but not with a Bach cantata. The singer would rip his vocal chords. An untrained dancer has no hope of performing in Giselle. The dancer would tear tendons. In their attempt they will also ruin the concerto, the cantata, and Giselle for themselves because, if they eventually are ready, they will only remember their early mistakes. But a young actor will unthinkingly plunge into Hamlet if he has the chance. He must learn that, until he's ready, he is doing the same destructive thing to himself and the role.
More than in the other performing arts the lack of respect for acting seems to spring from the fact that every layman considers himself a valid critic. While no lay audience discusses the bowing arm or stroke of the violinist or the palette or brush technique of the painter, or the tension which may create a poor entre‐chat, they will all be willing to give formulas to the actor. The aunts and agents of the actor drop in backstage and offer advice: I think you didn't cry enough.
I think your ‘Camille’ should use more rouge.
Don't you think you should gasp a little more?
And the actor listens to them, compounding the felonious notion that no craft or skill or art is needed in acting.
A few geniuses have made their way in this sink‐or‐swim world, but they were geniuses. They intuitively found a way of work which they themselves were possibly at a loss to define. But even though we can't all be so endowed, we can develop a higher level of performing than the one which has resulted from the hit‐or‐miss customs of the past.
Laurette Taylor became a kind of ideal for me when I saw her play Mrs. Midget in Outward Bound. Her work seemed to defy analysis. I went to see her again and again as Mrs. Midget and later as Amanda in The Glass Menagerie. Each time, I went to study and to learn, and each time I felt I had learned nothing because she simply caught me up in her spontaneity to the point of eliminating my own objectivity. Years later, I was excited to read the biography Laurette by her daughter Marguerite Courtney, and to learn that already at the turn of the century, her mother had found a way of breaking down her roles in a way which closely paralleled the principles in which I had come to believe. Laurette Taylor began her work by constructing the background of the character she was going to play. She worked for identification with this background until she believed herself to be the character, in the given circumstances, with the given relationships. Her work didn't stop until, in her own words, she was wearing the pants
of the character! She spent rehearsals in exploring place, watching the other