Acting : Why you must respect youself as an actor by Marysia Trembecka

Marysia Trembecka

Why you must respect youself as an actor

Two weeks ago I was on a six day location shoot in Farnham playing another yummy mummy but with a lovely drug habit to fuel her obsessive nature and get her through living with her family. The best part of the whole project as that my husband in the short was played by Paul Clayton., a very experienced actor who spent five years at the RSC, and known for Ali G, Peep Show, and is currently in Hollyoaks.) I always find I learn something new on every shoot. Paul reminded me that in the midst of us actors trying to be as helpful as possible to the film crew, constantly pushing ourselves to give them what they need to make the project as great as possible in the tiny time frame, that with less experienced crew and directors on these low budget short film projects, we also need to honour ourselves as actors. That speaking up when absolutely vital by saying ‘If you want the very best from me as this character then …” can be a hugely positive thing for the film as a whole, especially when someone such as Paul with many decades of acting and television experience speaks. Due to the lack of rehearsals you get on a film set, compared to the time theatre takes to embed the characters, the text and the blocking, the actor’s instinct to look or respond a certain way can be all a scene needs. Sometimes student directors and crew can be so focused on getting the shot and time drives them that they shoot such long scenes from one angle that it is extremely difficult to keep all the continuity in your head and there is no one on hand to help. Then the actor spends the time in later close ups worrying re continuity rather than the truth of her character. No one wants to be known as a pushy actor or demanding actress but we all learn from each other and directors do not get to watch other directors work in the way actors and crew get to learn from each other. NOTE I just filmed a great commercial yesterday with a multi award winning director Joanna Bailey and an incredibly experienced crew and I was not about to stop the fast process with demands or suggestions. However don’t be afraid of one’s own worth and instincts on a set as an actor. You are hired for the instincts you brought to the audition so trust them, take the director’s notes as quickly and fully as you can and be as helpful and open as possible. As an actor, you are not a supporting artiste, you have training and instincts and they want you to use it. I was at a talk with Lucinda Syson the casting director a week ago and she spoke of getting a call from Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity director amongst many other great films) mid him shooting ‘Children Of Men’. There was a shot when there was news shown on a television screen and the reactions of the people watching it had to show the gravity and import of this information without any dialogue. However the supporting artistes did not give Alfonso what he needed, ‘I need six actors’ he said. Even though the six quickly found actors had no lines, it was their response that told the story. Sometimes low budget filmmakers in their rush to get certain scenes in the can will forget or not yet have fully learnt about the artistry of an actor, what we can bring, the sheer power of a single look. You can have a great script and fabulous looking set but the film does not come alive until the actors walk, talk and respond physically and emotionally to their circumstances and to the other characters. In October last year I was one of the actors asked to do table reads at the London Screenwriters Festival, where certain scripts had been chosen to have professional actors and director work on it for 45 minutes. The experienced TV directors for the most part would happily edit away the script, cutting lines in front of the initially horrified but later appreciative screenwriters: showing how the actors’and the director’s instincts, the director’s blocking and cutting certain lines to tell the story better make for a better and truer storytelling of the screenwriters intentions. So working with Paul reminded me that I am hired for my instincts, my abilities to tell the character’s story my way and to honour that within reasonable limits and how each director likes to work. What have been your experiences on this? Do you feel as an actor more or less respected on big or small budget productions or less able to trust your instincts? A longer version of this is on my site http://loveyourcreativity.com/2014/02/20/respecting-your-own-instincts-a...

JerryDean Raymond Smith

Thanks for sharing!

Carolyn McDonald

Good one! Thank you!

Talia Price

This was really inspiring.

Rick Burtt

Great article Marysia. I find that as an actor, portraying a character out of yourself is your job, how that character is perceived, is the director's job. There can be many ways your instincts can bring a story, but there should only be one story, the one the screenwriter is telling with a script. it is the director's duty to the script to mold you the actor to move the story forward. "the film does not come alive until the actors walk, talk and respond physically and emotionally to their circumstances and to the other characters" Put simply, it is the directors job to direct. To tell you the actor what he understands the story to be, how he would like you to bring your character to its truest form. Actors should have confidence in there ability to change up any role, by using their training and instincts. I as an actor love a director that knows what he wants from the actors, and makes sure all on the set know that also. The whole process of the storytelling becomes fun, when everyone is on the same page. I could not agree more with you and urge all actors to let the director know that you want, and gladly accept their direction, then let loose that "sheer power of a single look"

Talia Price

@Rick Burtt I agree with you.

Russell Buchanan

Working in China as an actor has it's ups and more downs than in the west for foreign actors. Sometimes you are given high respect and praise just for doing your job, sometimes you do a very good job and soon as it's done you are used toilet paper, I just do my job well, I know if I'vse played well or not given the time frame and information given. Mostly they just throw you into the deep end with little notice and lines given to you on the day. Respect is to be earned, and that goes for both sides of the camera.

Marysia Trembecka

Thanks for all the feedback and glad you all enjoyed it. I was just at a workshop where the director said "for acting performance is your drug, for a director directing is their drug', so absolutely the director loves actors bringing them something and then they love to play be it in an audition or on set.

Marysia Trembecka

Russell Buchanan, yes I can imagine that such cultural differences in praise etc can be difficult, although I have had directors be very clear that I am doing a great job and others who didnt give me any positive feedback just notes to action. I had to assume I was doing a good job when they re-hired me for another project but I would never have known otherwise!!

Other topics in Acting:

register for stage 32 Register / Log In