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Great insight! I’m also from a fiction background and wrote a play about 2 years ago. It was one of the most frustrating experiences of my life, but also one of the most worthwhile once I saw it performed. I found myself having to constantly remember what Chekov said about the pistol hanging on the wall. I wish you luck!
Also, posting the teenage pics of yourself might be the bravest thing you’ve done since leaving academia to make porn. I cringe at the thought of myself as a teen.
Thanks LAJ! It’s so crazy. Where was your play performed?
It was performed twice at the Bowery Poetry Room in NYC. AND Taylor Mead was there doing some readings, which only made me more nervous. The play (Divine Intervention) was basically a conversation between myself and Divine, and takes place in heaven (a dive bar). I’ve recently died and am filling Divine in on the things she’s missed in the last 20 years. Taylor loved it, and I ended up talking to him for most of the night about Taylor Mead’s Ass, cupcakes, and porn.
Hey Connor!
Loved the post… I majored in theatre and acted for a few years professionally out here in the Bay Area, but left whoring myself for Academia… 😉
I wanted to say, though, that your bit about “action” is just the slightest bit off… at least, from an actor’s standpoint (it may be different to a playwright)… as an actor approaching a role, you have differing “Objectives”… you have a “Super-Objective” (what do you want out of life), and each of your other objectives FEED that objective.
Keeping that objective in mind, you choose “tactics” or “actions” to obtain those objectives. Normally, there is something blocking your attainment of your objective by way of that action (an “obstacle”) and you must shift objectives (forming a “beat”) to attempt to overcome the obstacle.
The dance between shifting actions on both sides of the objective provides drama.
The steady and timely flow of beats provides music.
Not sure if that was unnecessary, insulting, or self-righteous, or (“god” save me) helpful… but I’d love to talk to you more about this endeavour!
Also, if you ever want to hear it read out loud, I’ve done my fair share of staged or table readings… 🙂
Hey bud, the only thing close to insulting in your post is that my name is ConnEr, not ConnOr, just like it says in the big letters at the top of the page.
Besides that, I’m definitely interested in what you have to say as a performer. It’s a different world for playwrights – you don’t think like the actor at all. That’s the actor’s job. The term “action” is appropriate when playwriting. To address the rest – “action” is the term for the character’s wants and needs, “conflict” in playwriting substitutes nicely for “obstacle” and “event” is whether or not the want is attained or not.
I’m not sure I feel comfortable with the “objective/super-objective” etc approach to acting. I think my advice (as if I were qualified) to an actor would be the same as David Mamet’s (detailed in his excellent True and False) – I wrote the lines on the page. You get up on stage and read what I wrote.
It sounds too simple, but after reading Mamet’s explanation, I feel comfortable with it.
Haha! Sorry about that! 🙂 Like I said, from our side of the desk we look at the script differently, so I wasn’t sure if it was appropriate. I’m glad you were interested enough to slog through it, though!
As for Mamet… I agree 100%, however, T&F is a very misleading book. It’s brilliant and extremely liberating (I remember almost crying the first time I read it), but it reads very differently after years of training and ridiculous exercises and all that… the Mametonian approach to acting theory holds its greatest value when the actor already has the formal “Method” training for those rough spots. I looked as Mamet as releasing the actor from the imaginary shackles of “the method” by reminding us that the characters can only be us and we can only BE them by being us. However, the method is of inestimable utility to the actor presented with a scene that does not read as “natural” for them (eg. classical works where you’re speaking in Verse and debating the merits of action or inaction against your uncle who killed your father and married your mother, or experimental works where you are given stage directions like “SKINHEADgirl slowly turns into a star, bright and glowing, a neon girl, a constellation in a sky full of stars. She lights up the dark, flickers, and then burns out. Darkness.” The latter from Iizuka’s “Polaroid Stories” which is BRILLIANT).
The whole time I wrote my last comment I was thinking “he’s gonna’ bring up T&F to refute me ’cause this is so method based…” Haha. 🙂
I have all these things I am trying to flesh out to respond to this but they aren’t gelling. So I just wanted to say I think it’s a really great post and I can relate to it in a lot of ways, despite my lack of being a playwright. Thanks for sharing it.
Thanks for reading it!
hey.im just a passenger.
Im gonna be here around i promise.
hope you guys have good.
i love your post very much, bud.
Hey Conner,
What increasable insight. I am glad I found your blog. This is definitely a site I will look forward to updates.
[…] + Conner Habib is working on a full-length play. […]
Hey, Conner!
It’s amazing that you not only write these deep, interesting blogs, but also have the time and brain power to make a play! I hope I get a chance to see it, I’m sure it will be great and moving. I always found it amazing, that a play, being of what was mentioned in this blog, involves characters and drama. That drama and certain characters interests us, affects us, and eventually we have a mindset on how to view something. I like your look of this world so I’m sure I’ll enjoy the play!
Thanks for writing another awesome post man!
I hadn’t read a line of text that I had to reread because I needed to remember it until moments ago when I melted after drawing these words into my breathing mind: “Flat without the contours of imagination, we begin in poverty and end in reward.” Someone with a very rare gift created that string of thought. I’m amazed, and affected. Thank you.
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