The New Actors Workshop

Last updated
The New Actors Workshop
Location
The New Actors Workshop
United States
Information
Type Private
Established1988
Founders George Morrison
Mike Nichols
Paul Sills
Website http://www.newactorsworkshop.com

The New Actors Workshop was a two-year acting conservatory in New York City founded by Master Teachers Mike Nichols, George Morrison and Paul Sills in 1988. The school offered a unique, dual-track curriculum combining Stanislavski-based technique with Viola Spolin Theater Games. The workshop stopped accepting students in 2010.

Contents

The founders

Sills, Morrison, and Nichols enjoyed a long association dating back to the 1950s at the University of Chicago. Their experience convinced them that there was a unique value for the actor in the double challenge of performance improvisation and Stanislavski-based training, and they founded The Workshop specifically to offer this powerful experience to a new generation of actors.

Performances

There were different types of performances throughout the year in which students participated.

Friday Night Improv

Students of the workshop played Spolin theatre games for an audience. These shows were free and open to the public.

Scene Nights

At the end of their first year, students performed for family and friends in a New Actors Workshop Scene Night.

Story Theatre

At the end of their second year, students went into a rehearsal period with a guest director. This production was most often a Story Theater show, a genre invented by Paul Sills in the 1960s. Guest directors included Paul Sills, Gene Hackman, Diane Paulus, Shira Piven, David Turner, Lester Thomas Shane, K Tanzer, Carol Sills

Notable alumni

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Improvisational theatre Theatrical genre featuring unscripted performance

Improvisational theatre, often called improvisation or improv, is the form of theatre, often comedy, in which most or all of what is performed is unplanned or unscripted: created spontaneously by the performers. In its purest form, the dialogue, action, story, and characters are created collaboratively by the players as the improvisation unfolds in present time, without use of an already prepared, written script.

Konstantin Stanislavski Russian and Soviet actor and theatre director

Konstantin Sergeyevich Stanislavski was a seminal Soviet and Russian theatre practitioner. He was widely recognized as an outstanding character actor and the many productions that he directed garnered him a reputation as one of the leading theatre directors of his generation. His principal fame and influence, however, rests on his 'system' of actor training, preparation, and rehearsal technique.

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Stanislavskis system System to train actors

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Actor Person who acts in a dramatic or comic production and works in film, television, theatre, or radio

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References

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