100 Hours

Jeff Raz, former director of the Clown Conservatory in San Francisco has said it takes 100 hours of practice to prepare one minute of performance.

If we apply the same math to creating an animated shot, and the shot is 10 seconds long, that would mean about 16 hours of practice. By practice, I mean 16 hours spent rehearsing, developing reference, or drawing before beginning to animate a shot.

Jeff points out that the 100 hours is before taking it in front of an audience for the first time, and that’s when the real development starts.   The valuable feedback starts then.  Animators can’t continue to develop the work, so their is more pressure to get it right.

Slava Polunin, part 2.

For some wonderful photos and more visit Academy of Fools.

This is from SLAVASNOWSHOW.COM

What Is My Kind of Theatre?
or
The Theatre I Love

– It is a kind of wedding cavalcade,
where I try to marry everyone to everyone;

– It is a theatre of ritual magic
and festive pageantry,
constructed on the basis of images and movements,
games and fantasies,
that are the common creation of the audience and the people of the theatre;

– It is a theatre which inexorably grows
from dreams and tales;

– It is a theatre of hopes and dreams,
full of longing and loneliness,
losses and disillusionment;

– It is a theatre which always changes,
which breaths spontaneous improvisation
and cares scrupulously for tradition;

– It is in the vein of contemporary
multi-layered synthesis,
on the boundary of life and art;

– It is a theatre that works in an epic-intimate alloy
of tragedy and comedy,
of absurdity and naivity,
of cruelty and gentleness;

– It is a theatre which escapes
definition and the unequivocal
understanding of its actions,
as from attempts
to usurp its freedom.

Slava Polunin

I found a translated interview with Polunin, and here are some excerpts.

As for my profession, here I started with the naïve things, a mere eccentric pantomime. My ideal was an early Chaplin. I took eccentricity very seriously and studied a theory of trick. When Buster Keaton worked at the film studio, he carried two suitcases of tricks with him – two actual suitcases with files of enlisted tricks, a real collection. I did the same. I even elaborated a theory: if a turn consists of 25 tricks, it can be considered classical. I worked at the rhythm, at the techniques; I elaborated a whole eccentric scale. But when I reached the top, I lost the interest: quantity didn’t provide quality. I could make people roll in the aisles, it didn’t take any effort, but I suddenly understood: laughter is not so important. I began doing only 5 tricks instead of 25, so the techniques did not go against the rhythm of personage’s character development. I concentrated on the personage, on his condition and thoughts. Thus eccentricity changed to poetical process.

If the crowd is moving in one direction, screaming, then, maybe, you should take an opposite direction and keep silence? We need to find the means to be heard and to be noticed, we need to make people want to listen to us. The circus has lost the poetic emotion; I’ve decided to bring it back.

At first I demanded my guys to be straight, slim, brawny, to do yoga, ballet dancing. But later it became clear that good-looking people do not fulfill their task; they rather broaden the precipice between the audience and us. We were in deep shit. And it was then that I forgot any former principles and began to take in the troupe the one-eyed, the cross-eyed, the ugly, the strange, the bold, the paunchy, as long as they delivered something nice to the performance. I’m joking, of course.

Slava will be voicing a character in the upcoming puppet film from Russia, GOFMANIADA

Slava Polunin, part 1.

I saw Slava Polunin on tour with Cirque Du Soleil several years ago. I was pleased to find an entire hour of his “Snow Show” on youtube. It’s awesome work.

The care put into every moment is clearly evident. Early on, he enters pulling a rope, and does several variations of just rope pulling. The odd timing of them is funny. All the motion is delicate and strong at the same time.

The climax is a blizzard blowing into the audience. He did that part in the Cirque du Soleil, and the effect was unforgettable.  A huge ending will be unforgettable to an audience.

I will follow up with more about Slava, but for now, watch the video.

Acting vs. Clowning


One of the purposes of this blog is differentiate comedic acting, clowning, from the acting of “legitimate” theatre. I have had a crazy curiosity about how physical comedians work, while I am completely indifferent to acting classes given by stage actors with lengthy resumes of dramatic work. The world of animated film spans the exact same territory as live action does, with short silly works that have no dialog to feature films with heartfelt performances.

Last year I saw the stage play of Moliere’s “Scapin” featuring the great Bill Irwin. While cleaning house, I found the program, and flipped through it. In the picture above, that is Bill Irwin on the left, and Geoff Hoyle on the right.  The program includes an interview by Dan Rubin. Here is a little bit that addresses just what I’m talking about.

HOW IS A CLOWN DIFFERENT FROM AN ACTOR?

Like a Supreme Court Justice, I know it when I see it. Some people operate at a magnitude of storytelling that is slightly different from that of a straight ahead actor who is serving a text. There’s just something about when a really terrific clown does something. It has a different depth of meaning. I hope to be able to do both, acting and clowning. I hope I haven’t lost either set of muscles – that I can be a complete team player actor one minute and something slightly different from that the next minute, depending on what’s called for.
How do you define who is an actor, and who is a clown? I don’t know except to say that the demands of the crafts are different in this way: usually clowning involves somehow acknowledging a live audience (or camera audience) somehow directly relating to them.

Charlie Chaplin did just that. He very much played to the audience/camera. Some people might say too much.  I would love to have some comments that bring up cartoon characters who also do that, playing to the camera.  Obviously Bugs Bunny and Daffy did it, were there others?

Avner the Eccentric

Avner the  Eccentric is the stage name of Avner Eisenberg.  He has been performing as a vaudevillian/clown for decades, and runs a notable course in eccentric acting at the Celebration Barn in Maine.  I just ran across some videos on youtube, and wanted to share them.  He has great timing, and a nice rhythm to his acts, the result of years of practice.

Here he is a bit younger.

More Avner info here.

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