Knowing lines _that_ well, to the point where they're "in your DNA", is pretty much what Anthony Hopkins does. And he's a bloody good actor if you ask me.
@@shanejupp8699 that is the problem when a good actor forgets lines. When you are really engaged with someone listening... I mean really listening. That can and does happen where the emotion you feel taking in is out of sync with the words you have to respond with. Good acting really is all about forgetting your lines to be present to the other person speaking to you. Then trusting you will find the words when the moment is natural to respond.
@@aeaf123 the way we learn is assigning the lines for smaller etude exercises we sit opposite one another the teacher says aloud our lines and we repeat with about three or four different stages to it. Then go through a clearing out process to forget everything we want know and need and enter a scene completely empty with no pre determined or rehearsed staging. Just being present and seeing what happens.it’s amazing what can evolve from it
Nor is acting “REacting,” as so many old pros insist. Acting is doing. Everything I have dealt with up to this point should lead to action. - Uta Hagen, a.co/fSKYK2J So I think what you’re saying is just a cliché that has been overheard for centuries.
I think this applies not only to acting, but all the conversations we have! Captured my atention, and I'm not an actor. Just a guy trying to improve my abilites to talk and connect with people!
THANK YOU!!!! The most important lesson for acting and Improv. Loved how he delivered this, with the pauses. I will remember this special share. Something about him grabs you in.
Great to have youtube these days you don't need to waste a lot of your money on classes, did not have this when I started out 25 years ago thank you john.
Sir John Windsor-Cunningham, that may have been the best film reel I have ever seen. I almost feel like I don't want another acting class. Watching this a few hundred times will suffice. British actors are much more involved, more present, more intimate, more interesting, more multi-layered and depthful as people, better listeners and hence much better than American artists. You sir are an incredible talent.
@@Madnessofdwing sometime's when acting, one has already predetermined how they're going to react to their opposite based on how the person thinks the opposite should act. However, that person should live in the moment and react naturally to what their opposite brings to the table. If that makes sense.
This man is quite amazing. As a voice actor getting back into it after almost a decade away, I am refreshing and adding to my skills (one can never know it all). I am mesmerized by John. Subscribed immediately. I want more! Thank you sir.
I watched this video a year ago and now i came back here because i suddenly figured out the psychology behind it : we have 2 thinking models: autopilot and actual thinking. they are called system 1 and system 2. most of our lives we think and live in autopilot. we barely use system 2 because it is extremely tiring, we use it in situations in which we never found ourselves before, or solving problems that are above our autopilot limit but it's not all to it--- having your subconsciousness engaged is also a key because otherwise you won't look authentically. subconsciousness is responsible for how we truly and actually feel. it can awake system 2. and it can also work other way around - by purposefully explaining to ourselves why we need to do something - it can awoke our excitement. (it also can happen as a background process which we don't realize) so basically when he wasn't listening he was using system 1 aka autopilot, but by hearing statements 'you are not listening to me' his curiosity or distress were provoked and it made him finally use system 2 to find out what actually his deal is (i hope it's helpful
Dear John. I am a musician, and I am applying the most powerful principle of this lesson to my musicianship. This may well be the best music lesson in the world too! Many thanks for sharing your wisdom.
Fantastic advice. I have always believed in becoming the character and my lines are not only learned, but are things that I (as the character) would actually say in a given situation. This sometimes means improvising, which some directors don't like, so I find other ways of improvising. Not to add words to the script, but to add body language. Now I will say, I have had no professional acting jobs as of this time, and hope to start an acting class soon. However, having always had a fascination with acting, I have done little things among friends. Sometimes acting characters they wrote themselves.
I’ve been acting for 4 years. I take classes, which are infinitely helpful. I have a wonderful teacher. And I inevitably find myself coming back and watching these videos. Just wonderful stuff. Thank you so much for sharing. ❤❤ I
Altariq Abraham This is really late, but essentially, he's saying to truly take in what the other person is saying and doing. To let them penetrate your conscious to where you are no longer worried about what you are saying or what you are doing in response. You are simply absorbing what they are giving, and then you respond back naturally and organically to what is govern to you. It's a hard thing to do...to really open yourself up to receive, and letting your attention away from yourself. It's a selfless attitude that I believe stems from genuinely being interested and sensitive to the world around you (:
@@AndresGarcia-kj3jq And also that you have to, most of the time, be hearing something like it was the first time you have ever heard it. To not get caught up in the lines and anticipate the words that you know are coming.
A lot of beginner actors will memorize the last few words of the other actor's lines and just use it as a cue to say their own line, not truly listen to the other character.
You made that story really vivid, and I think I only now understand the advice that some people give that listening is the most important element of acting. Thank you.
Yes it was a good story. You're right, listening is a precious art. Sounds like you found a great friend who also was a great teacher. I hope I can be aware of this when it happens. On another note, one evening while emotionally preparing for a scene on stage a fellow actor just as I was about to go on stage came up to me, took me by the shoulders, shook me and said, "Are you ready Pete?!" completely snapping me out of my preparation. Lesson learnt, I should have used that disruption to fuel rather than distinguish my anger for the scene, as the scene demanded a great deal of outward as well as inward anger. Thank you.
this video is him applying the technique that he's at the same time teaching. he creates a problem between 2 opposites (in this case listening and not listening) and resolves it at the complete end so you end up listening all the way.
I’m truly going to learn what listening is. - The crazy thing is that this was uploaded on my birthday 🙃👌🏽, so now I feel like it’s something that I definitely need to better myself in my acting.
And just when I thought the lesson couldn't get any better, it ends: you lean back, smile, and slap your knees. One couldn't get any more interesting AND good-looking then that
I am trying to develop the craft of fiction writing. In order for my dialogue to come off well, and for my characters to shine, I thought I might look to acting. A character drives the whole story. You could have a terrific plot, but if characters are poorly developed and not well represented, with dialogue portraying the emotion of the moment, the story is rubbish. Nobody will wish to read them. In any good story, the characters drive everything. And you've got to think, exactly how would character A say this to character B? I think the only solution is to act it out and see what happens. I thank you for your video, this advice of yours can apply to far more in life than just acting!
StonedPatriot Very cool that you have the open mind to do that! Ive met film directors who've never acted or taken an acting class and its just silly to me.
Jacob Childers Thank you. I have likewise taken to outlining my stories by using Acts and worrying about breaking it up into chapters later. This way I can lay out what happens. First I do so roughly, and later on I will expand those "Acts" by dropping scenes and inserting dialogue. Once I have all of that set out, it's time to sit down and write that first draft. I hope it helps my writing in this way. A friend of mine, who writes comics and dabbles in screenwriting introduced me to that method of writing and so I'm going to see if that doesn't improve my capabilities. I started looking at different ways to organize my writing after I wrote a novella and found that... It wasn't organized, or as rich as I had hoped it would be. I ended up scrapping around 17,000 words worth of fluff. The dialogue isn't very good, character development not so good, and I discovered I have been having a hard time seeing the world I created through my characters' eyes. This is because I didn't bother to sit down and make each character their own person, rather than just a mirror of myself.
StonedPa I've been writing for years and id be happy to help with the polishing of your art. start me out with a tiny plot, it could be random and ill show you the dialogue i can create for it
Good John! It is one of the very things I start with my actors. Listening. I love when they act like they're listening or anticipating dialogue thinking of the script not the story. I will say to them when you start to understand what your listening to then you are listening. So important. but naturally when we listen it is because we are trying to gain information or we are interested in what we are hearing. I think this should be the way and actor approaches his relationship work wirth in the body of the story/script. Thanks you for your story I will share this
+randall paul In my opinion there is one stap befóre "what you are listening to. I think, that Cunningham means that you must first know whý you are listening, and only áfter that whát you are listening to it.
I edit a lot and direct I have probably edited over 275 mini productions and god knows what but as an editor what I look for is the actor who can give me validation or importance to a piece of dialogue being delivered. I am constantly looking for that listening reaction shot. Another thing I concentrate heavily on is do my actors know the story at the very foundation of it all to cut this short.
Important advice from John Windsor-Cunningham. I’m a big believer in memorizing lines well, without any preconceived expression, so I can listen and react truthfully in the moment. The DIALOGMASTER PRO rehearsal app has been soooo helpful with the memorizing and rehearsing of lines. It’s making the preparation process much easier, so I don’t have to think about my lines, I can just focus on what the other characters are giving me to react to. Thanks for uploading this 🙏🏼
Thank you! Am one more person not in acting, but surely as already noted below this advise can be apllied anywhere. Knowing the technical stuff e.g. lines to speak, allows one to be himself, to be more engaged in the know.
Dear Mr. Windsor-Cunningham, Thank you for giving me this opportunity on YT to learn more. I have subscribed and will soak in your knowledge and experiences. Grateful.
I met the great Erick Avari a couple years ago and he told me of the importance of listening for actors. That's why I'm happy to have tajen the time to listen to this story as it enforces the exact same idea.
I like him, I don’t know him but I got this short film coming up, and this my first time and I’m truck driving. So I’m reading and dropping load’s. But the last few days I been watching this guy teach
Brilliant advice, thank you. I guess this is why I find Shakespeare monologues so hard. I have to imagine me listening to the audiences reactions to the words for it to sound authentic.
Totally agree with you John. have been in a situation like that where had just foucsed on memorising and delivering my lines but during time have learned the art of listening. I only enjoy acting while I'm listening and then reacting. Thanks John For Sharing This. It Is Really Helpful For New Actors!!!
So true, the art of good speaking is good listening. Listening with the brain and not with our ears it takes years of practice for many of us. I personally learned how to really listening through years at an big commercial airline call center and later while studying Meisner and applying it to scripts.
Listening isn’t the passive act of hearing, but an active response to what you heard, waiting to say your lines is not listening even if you fake hearing the words
This is wonderful. Thank you for sharing what you’ve learned that we need to learn. It would’ve been even better with apple pie to share … cherry pie, too. ❤️ Really listening to hear what someone is saying is hard in everyday life as well. ❤️ Sending love to open hearts and ears, from Mississippi
If it were upto me I'd have this man called Sir John Windsor-Cunningham. This one video of yours truly helped me 3 years ago, when I was given the chance of a lifetime to play lead in an indie film opposite some really seasoned actors. The sheer weight of it all was enormous, until I came across this gem of yours on youtube. Thank you, Sir John WIndsor-Cunningham
Perhaps the actor who forgot his lines could've responded to the non-listening actor with his deeply known lines. And thus then to prompt the non-listening actor into wakefulness.
Yes, great story. I'm not an actor but am trying to understand actors as I have to photograph them. And this helps a lot, so thanks. But talking of photography, a small well-meant tip: perhaps ask your cameraman to focus on your face rather than the books in the background.
Those books are 100% in focus.
😂
They are definitely listening
😂😂
Those books are perfectly in frame with no headspace 😄
Knowing lines _that_ well, to the point where they're "in your DNA", is pretty much what Anthony Hopkins does. And he's a bloody good actor if you ask me.
A regular everyday halfbird guy biggest problem actors have is forgetting the lines tho
@@shanejupp8699 that is the problem when a good actor forgets lines. When you are really engaged with someone listening... I mean really listening. That can and does happen where the emotion you feel taking in is out of sync with the words you have to respond with. Good acting really is all about forgetting your lines to be present to the other person speaking to you. Then trusting you will find the words when the moment is natural to respond.
@@aeaf123 the way we learn is assigning the lines for smaller etude exercises we sit opposite one another the teacher says aloud our lines and we repeat with about three or four different stages to it. Then go through a clearing out process to forget everything we want know and need and enter a scene completely empty with no pre determined or rehearsed staging. Just being present and seeing what happens.it’s amazing what can evolve from it
@@shanejupp8699 sounds like a really great effective exercise for sure!
Jon Lajoie!
Essentially, acting is all about reacting :)
Smol Bean824 You just said something that I did in my mind :D
Logically reacting so it is a natural doze of reacting )))
Nor is acting “REacting,” as so many old pros insist.
Acting is doing. Everything I have dealt with up to this point should lead to action.
- Uta Hagen, a.co/fSKYK2J
So I think what you’re saying is just a cliché that has been overheard for centuries.
That’s what my theatre director always says. Especially when working with ensemble reactions :)
What if u had first dialogue
Wow. You really know how to catch your audience.
that was not only a video, that was a performance
Thank you very mush sir
You make them feel that they're important, their thoughts and reacts to your actions
I think this applies not only to acting, but all the conversations we have! Captured my atention, and I'm not an actor. Just a guy trying to improve my abilites to talk and connect with people!
Alexander,
Yes indeed !
He teaches us acting as if it is real life.
Acting is real life, if your good enough.
@@VarleyET Acting is not real life. Have you ever heard of Integrity?
@@fredv6510 he said that 4 years ago dude. 😂
@@astronauttheoceangod2357 Okay?
Wow. Blown away simply by the personality that's expressed by the man in the video. It was soo interesting to watch...
This was recommended to me on my youtube page. I'm not a actor but I watched the video and just thought wow, that's wow.
THANK YOU!!!! The most important lesson for acting and Improv. Loved how he delivered this, with the pauses. I will remember this special share. Something about him grabs you in.
Oh my god and he even portrays a such a vivid picture, bravo.
I was listening for the fourth time John. Thank you!
The subtlety was not lost on me - thanks John :)
As my tutor always says "acting is reacting."
Great to have youtube these days you don't need to waste a lot of your money on classes, did not have this when I started out 25 years ago thank you john.
Brilliant. Thank you. Life Lesson for all of us, really.
And that is what we call 'being in the moment'. Thanks for the upload!
had the privilege to have received a lesson from John, was a lot of fun and I did in fact learn a thing or two about acting, great guy
He took this in so much he went on to do amazing work.
Sir John Windsor-Cunningham, that may have been the best film reel I have ever seen. I almost feel like I don't want another acting class. Watching this a few hundred times will suffice. British actors are much more involved, more present, more intimate, more interesting, more multi-layered and depthful as people, better listeners and hence much better than American artists. You sir are an incredible talent.
Great story ...... thanks for sharing it !
Thank you for this, when I’m acting I’m usually only focused on my next line and not what my scene partner is telling me, this was a great eye opener!
I think you can see it too as:
Don't fill in the person opposite you. Let the person fill in himself/herself.
Johan Leissner
you make sense totally !!!
What do you mean exactly
@@Madnessofdwing sometime's when acting, one has already predetermined how they're going to react to their opposite based on how the person thinks the opposite should act. However, that person should live in the moment and react naturally to what their opposite brings to the table. If that makes sense.
This man is quite amazing. As a voice actor getting back into it after almost a decade away, I am refreshing and adding to my skills (one can never know it all). I am mesmerized by John. Subscribed immediately. I want more! Thank you sir.
One of the best lessons ever! Learn the lines that well so you can be engaged and really listen and really react. Wonderful.
I watched this video a year ago and now i came back here because i suddenly figured out the psychology behind it :
we have 2 thinking models: autopilot and actual thinking. they are called system 1 and system 2.
most of our lives we think and live in autopilot. we barely use system 2 because it is extremely tiring, we use it in situations in which we never found ourselves before, or solving problems that are above our autopilot limit
but it's not all to it---
having your subconsciousness engaged is also a key because otherwise you won't look authentically. subconsciousness is responsible for how we truly and actually feel. it can awake system 2. and it can also work other way around - by purposefully explaining to ourselves why we need to do something - it can awoke our excitement. (it also can happen as a background process which we don't realize)
so basically when he wasn't listening he was using system 1 aka autopilot, but by hearing statements 'you are not listening to me' his curiosity or distress were provoked and it made him finally use system 2 to find out what actually his deal is
(i hope it's helpful
When he got serious about me listening to him I was observing him.
There is great value in this, not just for actors. Thank you John.
Dear John. I am a musician, and I am applying the most powerful principle of this lesson to my musicianship. This may well be the best music lesson in the world too! Many thanks for sharing your wisdom.
Fantastic advice. I have always believed in becoming the character and my lines are not only learned, but are things that I (as the character) would actually say in a given situation. This sometimes means improvising, which some directors don't like, so I find other ways of improvising. Not to add words to the script, but to add body language. Now I will say, I have had no professional acting jobs as of this time, and hope to start an acting class soon. However, having always had a fascination with acting, I have done little things among friends. Sometimes acting characters they wrote themselves.
Galen Alexander Deeds I need to know, how are you doing?
@@scribblehideout7504 How are *you* doing?!
Sounds like emotional attunement. The deepest gift we can give
Greatest advice ever.
I’ve been acting for 4 years. I take classes, which are infinitely helpful. I have a wonderful teacher. And I inevitably find myself coming back and watching these videos. Just wonderful stuff. Thank you so much for sharing. ❤❤ I
Brilliant advice, every word is true.
Thank You John for sharing..makes perfect sense!!! LISTENING!!!:)
what an epic story
"YOURE NOT LISTENING TO ME"
now i need to snap one off
I can't fully comprehend what he is truly saying. On the outside it seems like he is saying just listen but I feel there is something more.
Altariq Abraham
This is really late, but essentially, he's saying to truly take in what the other person is saying and doing. To let them penetrate your conscious to where you are no longer worried about what you are saying or what you are doing in response. You are simply absorbing what they are giving, and then you respond back naturally and organically to what is govern to you. It's a hard thing to do...to really open yourself up to receive, and letting your attention away from yourself. It's a selfless attitude that I believe stems from genuinely being interested and sensitive to the world around you (:
Andres Garcia you explained this video so well. Thanks
@@AndresGarcia-kj3jq And also that you have to, most of the time, be hearing something like it was the first time you have ever heard it. To not get caught up in the lines and anticipate the words that you know are coming.
A lot of beginner actors will memorize the last few words of the other actor's lines and just use it as a cue to say their own line, not truly listen to the other character.
So basically........just be yourself
Awesome. OMG...That's exactly what I needed, Thank You so Much!!! I totally get it!
You made that story really vivid, and I think I only now understand the advice that some people give that listening is the most important element of acting. Thank you.
Yes it was a good story. You're right, listening is a precious art. Sounds like you found a great friend who also was a great teacher. I hope I can be aware of this when it happens. On another note, one evening while emotionally preparing for a scene on stage a fellow actor just as I was about to go on stage came up to me, took me by the shoulders, shook me and said, "Are you ready Pete?!" completely snapping me out of my preparation. Lesson learnt, I should have used that disruption to fuel rather than distinguish my anger for the scene, as the scene demanded a great deal of outward as well as inward anger. Thank you.
this video is him applying the technique that he's at the same time teaching. he creates a problem between 2 opposites (in this case listening and not listening) and resolves it at the complete end so you end up listening all the way.
Very good, your acting just got better and better as you listened more and more
Meisner technique 101....Great Advise. Thank you
I’m truly going to learn what listening is.
-
The crazy thing is that this was uploaded on my birthday 🙃👌🏽, so now I feel like it’s something that I definitely need to better myself in my acting.
I totally agree with what was said and with the title of this clip.
Title justified ...i knew it but now i knew it more ..thanks a lot and the story was superb
pure gold
An old man, used to the sound of his voice and the natural warmth of his expressions to charm those whom he speaks to. Interesting fellow.
Thank you so much💯💯
I got what you saying😃 and I will apply to my skills. Thank you for your input
at the endish it gave me goosebumps awesome!
Thank you for sharing...
And just when I thought the lesson couldn't get any better, it ends: you lean back, smile, and slap your knees. One couldn't get any more interesting AND good-looking then that
I am trying to develop the craft of fiction writing. In order for my dialogue to come off well, and for my characters to shine, I thought I might look to acting. A character drives the whole story. You could have a terrific plot, but if characters are poorly developed and not well represented, with dialogue portraying the emotion of the moment, the story is rubbish. Nobody will wish to read them. In any good story, the characters drive everything. And you've got to think, exactly how would character A say this to character B? I think the only solution is to act it out and see what happens. I thank you for your video, this advice of yours can apply to far more in life than just acting!
StonedPatriot Very cool that you have the open mind to do that! Ive met film directors who've never acted or taken an acting class and its just silly to me.
Jacob Childers Thank you. I have likewise taken to outlining my stories by using Acts and worrying about breaking it up into chapters later. This way I can lay out what happens. First I do so roughly, and later on I will expand those "Acts" by dropping scenes and inserting dialogue. Once I have all of that set out, it's time to sit down and write that first draft. I hope it helps my writing in this way. A friend of mine, who writes comics and dabbles in screenwriting introduced me to that method of writing and so I'm going to see if that doesn't improve my capabilities.
I started looking at different ways to organize my writing after I wrote a novella and found that... It wasn't organized, or as rich as I had hoped it would be. I ended up scrapping around 17,000 words worth of fluff. The dialogue isn't very good, character development not so good, and I discovered I have been having a hard time seeing the world I created through my characters' eyes. This is because I didn't bother to sit down and make each character their own person, rather than just a mirror of myself.
+StonedPatriot Thanks so much for sharing. Good 'luck' with that.
This is an incredible insight!! thank you for this
StonedPa I've been writing for years and id be happy to help with the polishing of your art. start me out with a tiny plot, it could be random and ill show you the dialogue i can create for it
I caught this 2 years ago when it had only 12 views or so. It's an excellent clip, as wereare/ your other ones :)
Good John! It is one of the very things I start with my actors. Listening. I love when they act like they're listening or anticipating dialogue thinking of the script not the story. I will say to them when you start to understand what your listening to then you are listening. So important. but naturally when we listen it is because we are trying to gain information or we are interested in what we are hearing. I think this should be the way and actor approaches his relationship work wirth in the body of the story/script. Thanks you for your story I will share this
+randall paul
In my opinion there is one stap befóre "what you are listening to.
I think, that Cunningham means that you must first know whý you are listening, and only áfter that whát you are listening to it.
I edit a lot and direct I have probably edited over 275 mini productions and god knows what but as an editor what I look for is the actor who can give me validation or importance to a piece of dialogue being delivered. I am constantly looking for that listening reaction shot. Another thing I concentrate heavily on is do my actors know the story at the very foundation of it all to cut this short.
i would love example of good listening and bad listening
You are right. In other "entertainment-videos I would grab my phone and get bored. But you got me listening and had my attention
You're Awesome Sir.
Important advice from John Windsor-Cunningham. I’m a big believer in memorizing lines well, without any preconceived expression, so I can listen and react truthfully in the moment. The DIALOGMASTER PRO rehearsal app has been soooo helpful with the memorizing and rehearsing of lines.
It’s making the preparation process much easier, so I don’t have to think about my lines, I can just focus on what the other characters are giving me to react to.
Thanks for uploading this 🙏🏼
I appreciate your acting so much
I liked how I experienced this lesson. I heard it. I understood it. And then I experienced the truth of it. Nice.
Thank you! Am one more person not in acting, but surely as already noted below this advise can be apllied anywhere. Knowing the technical stuff e.g. lines to speak, allows one to be himself, to be more engaged in the know.
+Timur Boltaev
Being in character - in your case: being yourself - is only hélpt by 'knowing your lines', - in your case: trusting on your knowledge.
Wow..Thank you!!
radiating and receiving... that's all there is
Great story mate! Thanks for the lesson.
I don't know how, but just wow...
Ahhh i admire you so much! One-day i will give a shout out to you so loud that you would hear it from the other side of this planet
Dear Mr. Windsor-Cunningham,
Thank you for giving me this opportunity on YT to learn more. I have subscribed and will soak in your knowledge and experiences. Grateful.
Thank you!!! Quick and succinct. Excellent!!!
I met the great Erick Avari a couple years ago and he told me of the importance of listening for actors. That's why I'm happy to have tajen the time to listen to this story as it enforces the exact same idea.
Gorgeous man, I must say.
I like him, I don’t know him but I got this short film coming up, and this my first time and I’m truck driving. So I’m reading and dropping load’s. But the last few days I been watching this guy teach
Amazing technic! Will apply to my next audition.
Truly amazing and admirable. Thanks for being so helpful.
The most important lesson , ever given by someone.
Brilliant advice, thank you. I guess this is why I find Shakespeare monologues so hard. I have to imagine me listening to the audiences reactions to the words for it to sound authentic.
Someone else went over this concept in a different video and it's something I'm still processing. Feeding off the other players.
He's great...
I feel it's simpler than that... what we do in real life when we listen... we see images
BEASTLY ADVICE! THE BEST I HAVE EVER HEARD! THIS ADVICE WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE, IF PROPERLY PRACTISED NOT JUST FOR ACTING.
I feel like you are shouting at me
Lower your voice my moms asleep
Kevin Glynn you’re not listening
@@JP-ee8zr I was actually telling your mom.
Totally agree with you John. have been in a situation like that where had just foucsed on memorising and delivering my lines but during time have learned the art of listening. I only enjoy acting while I'm listening and then reacting. Thanks John For Sharing This. It Is Really Helpful For New Actors!!!
Yes you still look terrific man
So true, the art of good speaking is good listening. Listening with the brain and not with our ears it takes years of practice for many of us. I personally learned how to really listening through years at an big commercial airline call center and later while studying Meisner and applying it to scripts.
he looked deep inside my soul
Bravo Sir!Right on!
fantastic video very inspirational.
Great video, I'll take this and make it my own, thanks for helping me improve my passion.
Listening isn’t the passive act of hearing, but an active response to what you heard, waiting to say your lines is not listening even if you fake hearing the words
This is wonderful. Thank you for sharing what you’ve learned that we need to learn. It would’ve been even better with apple pie to share … cherry pie, too. ❤️ Really listening to hear what someone is saying is hard in everyday life as well. ❤️ Sending love to open hearts and ears, from Mississippi
i love this man.
Thanks for all your acting tips.
I still don't know what I want to be in life so I'm exploring everything!
Wow those automatics subs are absolutely perfectly accurate
thank you ! this is off topic but this guy could say anything and it would sound good
wow!!! thanks for this.
If it were upto me I'd have this man called Sir John Windsor-Cunningham. This one video of yours truly helped me 3 years ago, when I was given the chance of a lifetime to play lead in an indie film opposite some really seasoned actors. The sheer weight of it all was enormous, until I came across this gem of yours on youtube. Thank you, Sir John WIndsor-Cunningham
Thank you much!
How did I get here? I don't act (maybe one day), but this was certainly interesting!
So the actor who forgot his line’s didn’t know them in HIS DNA.
*lines
Perhaps the actor who forgot his lines could've responded to
the non-listening actor with his deeply known lines.
And thus then to prompt the non-listening actor into wakefulness.
Yes, great story. I'm not an actor but am trying to understand actors as I have to photograph them. And this helps a lot, so thanks. But talking of photography, a small well-meant tip: perhaps ask your cameraman to focus on your face rather than the books in the background.
Bravo !
This is actully what i am looking for