Creating a Role
Creating a Role is theatre actor/director Constantin Stanislavski's third and final book on his method for learning the art of acting. It was first published in Russian in 1957; Theatre Art Books published an English-language edition, translated by Elizabeth Reynolds Hapgood, in 1961.
|  | |
| Author | Konstantin Stanislavski | 
|---|---|
| Translator | Elizabeth Reynolds Hapgood | 
| Country | Soviet Union | 
| Language | Russian | 
| Subject | Acting | 
| Published | 
 | 
| Media type | |
| Preceded by | Building a Character | 
In the two preceding installments, An Actor Prepares (1936) and Building a Character (1948), Stanislavski describes ways in which an actor imagines the lived experience of their character, and then expresses that inner life and persona through speech and movement. Creating a Role applies these principles to rehearsal, in which the actor improves their understanding of the role, and how it fits the script.[1]
Contents
    
Part I: Griboyedov's Woe from Wit
- The Period of Study
- The Period of Emotional Experience
- The Period of Physical Embodiment
Part II: Shakespeare's Othello
- First Acquaintance
- Creating the Physical Life of a Role
- Analysis
- Checking Work Done and Summing Up
Part III: Gogol's The Inspector General
- From Physical Actions to Living Image
Appendices
- Supplement to Creating a Role
- Improvisations on Othello
See also
    
    
References
    
- Stanislavski, Constantin; Gillett, John (2013). "Preface to the Bloomsbury Revelations Edition". Creating a Role. Bloomsbury. pp. viiāviii. ISBN 978-1-78093-691-8. OCLC 821702510.