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Workshop Targets
Every actor in a workshop can choose to work on their own aspect of acting that they want to explore:

Closeups
Q: Why are actors terrified of closeups? A: Because the audience might see them acting. But you're not supposed to be acting. This acting exercise is all about being truthful in a tight closeup, and trusting that if you focus on feeling your emotions, they will show on your face.

Eye Contact
Actors explore how not making eye contact is almost always more realistic and more interesting than locking eyes with a scene partner.

Throwing It Away
Has a casting director ever told you to just "throw it away?" Actors are given sides in which their character swiftly rattles off a mouthful of dialogue (expository information to further the story, fast-paced comedy speeches, etc.) This challenges you to trust that the story is told by the words you are saying, not by the way you say them.

Intensity
Fighting, confronting, challenging... shouting, screaming, crying... we actors love to cut loose with over-the-top emotions. But do you look natural and truthful on-camera? Or do you just look over-the-top?

Nothing to Say
This is a solo exercise in which an actor plays out a scenario containing no dialogue whatsoever. Their character performs a lengthy ordinary task, then incorporates an emotional "turn" in the scenario. This night is about letting go of the responsibility of being entertaining, and just being truthful.

Hitting Marks
Scenes are played standing to allow actors to practice both entering the shot and hitting their marks, and also keeping still during their scene partner's over-the-shoulder shot.

Working Hands-Free
Scenes are played standing and actors are not allowed to use their hands for any emphasis, gesturing, etc. It's all about relaxing physically and realizing that the focus on your character's face becomes stronger, and your character becomes stronger, too.

Overlapping Dialogue
In real life conversations, people start speaking before the other person has finished, but in film, you can only do that in a master shot, or else the editor can't use the shot. Actors practice the awkward cinematic necessity of abruptly stopping their lines in mid-sentence, as if interrupted.

Blinking
Blinking during a closeup, or moving your eyes at all, can make your character seem weak, nervous, and even downight psychotic. Actors explore how even the slightest eye movement can completely change their performance.

Auditioning Night
This is the only target that has its own special night. All actors in attendance participate. From big speeches to under-5's, actors audition on camera several times, then compare how their fellow actors performed the same material. This night is about exercising your auditioning muscle, and exploring tips and tricks to make you look your best on playback.

Environment
The more real your environment is to you, the more real you will be in the scene you're playing. Actors are given multiple locations for the same scene in order to imagine the new setting and explore how their character's behavior in the new setting alters their performance.


Mumbo-Jumbo
Actors receive sides containing the kind of dialogue mumbo-jumbo that they are expected to rattle off effortlessly in legal dramas, medical dramas, forensic procedural dramas, etc.

Villainy
Mean bosses, cranky neighbors, vicious criminals... actors portray villainous characters, and explore how avoiding the obvious choices can actually make your "heavy" more powerful, intimidating, and downright frightening.

Comedy
This exercise is about cutting loose with outrageous comedy material, and then exploring how the same scene can be funny in an entirely different way when one aims for realism.

Special Tactics
Actors tackle all kinds of technical performance challenges, such as being drunk, developmentally disabled, out of breath, getting shot, etc.

Listening
When another actor is speaking, are you truly listening to them, or are you trying to convince the audience that you're listening to them? Explore the most fundamental element of acting.

Steadicam Work
Discovering that a scene will be shot with a mobile camera can be unsettling for actors. In this exercise, on-camera scenes are played out with realistic action and physical relationships between the characters, with the camera following the actors as they move. How does your performance change if you don't know where the camera is going to be?


...and more new targets
all the time!


MAY
Calendar is subject to change.
Actors holding reservations will be notified.

Sun
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thur
Fri
Sat

1


2

Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm

3

4
5


6
7


8
9

Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm


10
11
12

13
14
15


16

Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm


17
18
19
20
21
22
23

Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm


24


25
26
27
28
29
30

Workshop

Underground
Theater

7:30 pm

31



Do you want the workshop schedule emailed to you each month?

JUNE
Calendar is subject to change.
Actors holding reservations will be notified.

Sun
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thur
Fri
Sat

     
1
2
3
4
5
6

Workshop

Underground
Theater

7:30 pm



7
8
9
10
11
12
13

Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm



14
15
16
17
18
10
20

Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm



21
22
23
24
25
26
27


Workshop
Underground
Theater

7:30 pm



28
20
30