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The Actors Bookshelf
Patrick Harvey and Daniel A Stevens
8 episodes
1 week ago
Two moderately-not-infrequently employed actors go through the books their teachers assigned them to read in conservatory, in a digestible audio medium. Will they absorb the information this time round? Remains to be scene.
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Performing Arts
Arts
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All content for The Actors Bookshelf is the property of Patrick Harvey and Daniel A Stevens and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Two moderately-not-infrequently employed actors go through the books their teachers assigned them to read in conservatory, in a digestible audio medium. Will they absorb the information this time round? Remains to be scene.
Show more...
Performing Arts
Arts
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_episode/43811142/43811142-1759080362497-6bd4465e21898.jpg
Ep 3– Chapter 2 and 3 (The Method)
The Actors Bookshelf
1 hour 7 minutes 20 seconds
1 month ago
Ep 3– Chapter 2 and 3 (The Method)

We did it. We caught up the chapters with our episode numbers. We all lived happily ever after, in Moscow, with Trigorin, and the Cherry Orchard is continuing to bring us residual income. Huzzah.

This week Dan and Patrick talk about Chapters 2 and 3 of Isaac Butler's The Method: How the Twentieth Century Learned to Act. We'll cover some of the early productions of the Moscow Art Theatre (originally the Moscow Open Art Theatre), headaches, trials, tribulations, and successes, and the rudiments of what would become Stanislavski's "system" for actors. We also talk about a little play by Anton Chekhov that would place him among the titans of the dramatic canon like William Shakespeare, Lillian Hellman, and Tommy Wiseau.

Episode art is taken from the 1898 Moscow Art Theatre production of The Seagull, directed by Konstantin Stanislavski & Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. Pictured are an unknown performer as Yakov, Vasily Luzhsky as Sorin, Vsevolod Meyerhold as Treplev, Olga Knipper Chekhova as Arkadina, Konstantin Stanislavski as Trigorin, and Maria Alekseyeva as Masha.

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Follow The Actors Bookshelf on Twitter @actorsbookshelf and Bluesky @theactorsbookshelf

Follow Patrick on Instagram @dfwpadraig

Follow Dan on Instagram @the.other.dan.stevens

Questions? Comments? Email us at actorsbookshelfpod@gmail.com

The Actors Bookshelf
Two moderately-not-infrequently employed actors go through the books their teachers assigned them to read in conservatory, in a digestible audio medium. Will they absorb the information this time round? Remains to be scene.