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In Character: Actors Acting Directed and Photographed by HowardSCHATZ
March 17 - April 29
artist's reception: Friday, March 17 from 7 - 10pm
artist's lecture:
March 16th 2006 at 7:00PM
hosted by the College
for Creative Studies
@ the Wendell Anderson Jr.
Auditorium
201 E. Kirby, Detroit
(admission free)
regular hours: 12-6pm Thursday through Saturday MONA is located at 7 N. Saginaw, Pontiac tel: 248-210-7560 web: detroitmona.com email: detroitmona@aol.com
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IN CHARACTER by Roger Ebert
One of the most famous experiments in the history of the movies was conducted by Lev Kuleshov of Russia in the early 1920s. He wanted to prove that audiences did not see each shot separately but rather added them up to produce an effect. He photographed a bowl of soup, an attractive girl, a teddy bear, and the coffin of a child. They Then he matched each image with identical shots of an actor named Mozhukhin. Audiences said the actor’s face reflected hunger, lust, tenderness, and sorrow.
This experiment is always interpreted as proving that the actor was not acting – that the audience, inspired by the effect of montage, brought the emotion to the screen. I disagree. Mozhukhin was by definition acting even if he wasn’t consciously doing anything, because the mechanism of the film was providing the audience with the effect of emotion – and the effect, not the means by which it is created, is the point of acting.
What the experiment did not ask was, what happens next? The simpleminded response to Kuleshov was that he proved acting did not matter, that montage was everything. But an actor cannot go emotionless throughout a film, cannot always exhibit a poker face (although Jean Gabin, in movies like Pépé le Moko and Touchez Pas au Grisbi, came close). There are speeches to make, longer scenes to negotiate, subtler emotions than hunger or lust. Kuleshov’s simple montages were level one, and while they prove something basic, they leave everything else to speculation. They ignore the need for actors to carry emotion far greater distances. As I read In Character and experienced the photographs by Howard Schatz, I began to understand how some of that distance is traveled.
This is a wonderful book for reasons beyond its obvious appeal. It is not just actors “making faces,” but actors extending themselves into imaginary situations as if, for a moment, they are real. To journey through the book and see familiar faces was to realize how much, during a career of looking at movies, I have come to love actors, to appreciate the gifts they bring. First I looked at the pictures. I tried to guess the emotions, and while in a broad sense I was always right – love does not look like terror – I found that when I read the suggestions scenarios, dialogue and emotions directed by Schatz, I noticed greater exactness of detail. Was this because I had been nudged by the prose or was it really there? I paused at Robert Loggia (p. 227)
(“You are a veteran
in an overconfident suspect’s alibi after a six-hour interrogation”). The first detail I noticed was the smile; not a happy smile, but one with a certain weary contentment. After reading the instruction, I looked more carefully at the eyes, and I found knowledge in them; he had just seen something that changed everything. Acting was happening.
You can see that over and over again in this book. These actors know what they’re doing (a few overdo it, but you can decide that for yourselves). And they are playing to the medium: they know they are in closeup for a still camera, and they try to modulate the emotion for the medium and the distance. In their comments, which are often revealing and filled with lore, they speak again and again of the differences between their media.
Maybe the Native Americans were right, and the camera steals the soul. Certainly Howard Schatz has looked deeply into the actors in this book, and they have deeply looked back. There is something curiously intimate about what actors do on these pages. As a reader, I began to feel like the mirror in their dressing room. I wasn’t looking at them. They were looking at themselves.
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