So... What is The Next Stage... for
YOU ??
(A note from Marcia
Kimmell, Creative Director of The Next Stage)
For Friends of The Next Stage and
People interested in the expansion of their own
personal, as well as group, creativity - -
I am an actor, director, acting coach and
teacher.
I am the director of The Next Stage, which is a
theater in San Francisco that
offers enlightening and light-hearted workshops in improvisation and
acting.
I love what I do passionately.
I have seen amazing transformations happen
to people as a
result of the work they have done with me.
In fact, I am one of the people who has
been affected, profoundly,
by this work. At The Next
Stage we enter into a safe space in
which we practice how to play like children.
As we progress, the play becomes
increasingly sophisticated.
Improvisation is also basic to the work I
do with professional actors,
directors and writers in traditional "scripted" plays and
film.
Over the 35 years I have been leading
groups of such a wide
variety of humans that I find it quite remarkable.
The common denominator for all of us is
"play."
It is built into being human that the way
we learn is throught play.
Our up-tight, puritanical society frowns
on adults "playing"
and discourages kids from their God-given right and ability to
learn
and create. This is tragic and my school is dedicated to giving
people
a place to come out and pick up where they left off as
children.
Our most creative work is done in the
spirit of play.
I have worked with 5 year old emotionally
disturbed children, as well
as geniuses. I've worked with elders and professional actors in
training
at the American Conservatory Theater.
Lately, I have been teaching film
directors at Film Arts Foundation.
Years ago I taught in the first Drama
Therapy Program on the West Coast
(now at California Institute for Integral Studies, CIIS).
Various school districts have hired me to
train classroom teachers in the use of drama and play as an
educational tool.
Whether I am working with highly motivated
and dedicated artists
or with new-comers who are terrified to get on stage, fearing they
will
"make a fool of themselves," I know how to gently guide people
through whatever blocks them from creative self-expression.
I have had the good fortune to have had
several master teachers
who were among the greatest innovators in theater of the
20th Century or I studied with their students.
The techniques I have learned and put
together in my own unique
way combine the Theater Games of Viola Spolin, mother of the
improvisational theater movement in the U.S., with whom
I studied for 3 and 1/2 years; as well as the Stanislavski System
of Psycho-physical Actions which is his later, post-"Method" work.
Both of these great innovators realized
that acting is the ability
to find moments improvisationally, as we do in life.
I studied the "System" with Phil Bennett,
here in San Francisco.
Phil was a protege of Sonia Moore, who studied with Stanislavski
and Vahktangoff at the end of his career.
Relatively few American theater artists
are well trained in this
way of working. Americans became enamoured with the "Method,"
even though Stanislavski evolved beyond it. Another influence
in my work is Joseph Chaikin of the Open Theater in New York.
With Murray Paskin and Tessa Loehwing I
learned the "Sound
and Movement Series" that is a spin-off of Spolin's famous
"Mirror Game."
The Sound and Movement Series" is the
basis for
Improvisational Story Theater and "Emotional Jazz" --
a transformation game that is like creating poetry
and flying with a partner.
Improvisational Story Theater work has
also led me to explore archetypes
from myths and fairy tales. We also develop our personal stories
as
heroic, mythical journeys.
When I work with actors and directors on
"scripted" monologues we learn
the Stanislavski System AND we also use Theater Games as the
rehearsal techniques they were originally designed to be.
The result is actors are able to come up
with choices that are brilliant
and surprising to them because they have been found in the moment
and are inspired.
I am writing all this to you because I
want to let you know that
I am currently putting together a new Theater Games Workshop
for total beginners.
It is a great opportunity for the serious
actor, as well as for the person who just wants a place to play and
learn about themselves in a light-hearted way.
People often have preconceptions about
what an "acting class" is like.
My class is so much fun and different from
any traditional acting class I have taken. We play games together. No
one has to get up and "act."
Theater Games help beginners, as well as
up-tight professionals,
get over the crippling self-consciousness while learning to be
focused and highly "conscious."
Anyone can do this. It is not about talent
or being a "good actor."
The new class will be on Tuesday nights,
7:30 - 10 PM. It will be held at my theater studio, The Next Stage, which is in
Trinity Episcopal Church
at Bush & Gough Streets in San Francisco.
The class is filling up. There is room for
3 or 4 more people.
Interested people can come to the first class and take it to
see if it is right for them.
I also have an Intermediate Group on Saturday
mornings, 10 - 12:30,
Performance Level
Improvisation on Thursday evenings, 7:30 -
10
and a class for Actors &
Directors in which I teach the
Stanislavski System and other improvisational techniques
through "Monologue Study."
The Next Stage is growing this year. We are starting a new
"Professional
Training Program" for people who have been working with me who
want
to learn to teach/coach Theater Games.
We will be offering different workshops
for Adults, for Kids and for
Kids & Adults
Together. It's a blast playing with kids. They
learn
from the adults and the adults learn from the kids.
We will also be available to various
groups and businesses to come in
and use improv Theater Games as a medium for teaching people to
work in creative, non-competitive teams.
Enough!
If you've gotten this far you are probably
interested enough to give me a call.
Lucky you!
You can reach me at: 415/826-6505.
If you tell another person about this
class and they end up taking it,
I will give you one session of
the workshop for free, as an incentive to
pass on the word to friends you know who would love this.
Looking forward to hearing from you
and playing!
Be well,
- Marcia Kimmell, director of
The Next Stage
email: sillyzen@aol.com

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