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Constantin Stanislavski
OccupationTheatre director · Actor ·
Theatre theorist
Literary movementNaturalism · Psychological realism · Socialist realism · Symbolism
Notable worksFounder of the Moscow Art Theatre
An Actor's Work
My Life in Art
SpouseMaria Petrovna Perevostchikova
(stage name: Maria Liliana)

Constantin Sergeyevich Stanislavski (Russian: Константин Серге́евич Станиславский) (17 January [O.S. 5 January] 1863 – 7 August, 1938), was a Russian actor and theatre director.[1] His innovative contribution to modern European and American realistic acting has remained at the core of mainstream western performance training for much of the last century. Building on the directorially-unified aesthetic and ensemble playing of the Meiningen company and the naturalistic staging of Antoine and the independent theatre movement, Stanislavski organized his realistic techniques into a coherent and usable 'system'.[2] Thanks to its promotion and development by acting teachers who were former students and the many translations of his theoretical writings, Stanislavski's system acquired an unprecedented ability to cross cultural boundaries and developed an international reach, dominating debates about acting in the West. That many of the precepts of his 'system' seem to be common sense and self-evident testifies to its hegemonic success. Actors frequently employ his basic concepts without knowing they do so.

Stanislavski treated theatre-making as a serious endeavour, requiring dedication, discipline and integrity, and the work of the actor as an artistic undertaking. Throughout his life, he subjected his own acting to a process of rigorous artistic self-analysis and reflection. His 'system' resulted from a persistent struggle to remove the blocks he encountered. His development of a theorized praxis—in which practice is used as a mode of inquiry and theory as a catalyst for creative development—identifies him as the first great theatre practitioner.

Stanislavski's work was as important to the development of socialist realism in the USSR as it was to that of psychological realism in the United States.[3] Many actors routinely identify his 'system' with the American Method, although the latter's exclusively psychological techniques contrast sharply with Stanislavski's multivariant, holistic and psychophysical approach, which explores character and action both from the 'inside out' and the 'outside in'.[4] Stanislavski's work draws on a wide range of influences and ideas, including his study of the modernist and avant-garde developments of his time (naturalism, symbolism and Meyerhold's constructivism), Russian formalism, Yoga, Pavlovian behaviourist psychology, James-Lange (via Ribot) psychophysiology and the aesthetics of Pushkin, Gogol, and Tolstoy. He described his approach as 'spiritual Realism'.

Biography

Family background

Stanislavski had a privileged youth, growing up in one of the richest families in Russia, the Alekseievs;[5] he was born Constantin Sergeievich Alexeiev—"Stanislavski" was a stage name that he adopted in 1884 in order to keep his performance activities secret from his parents.[6] The prospect of becoming a professional actor was taboo for someone of his social class; actors had an even lower social status in Russia than in the rest of Europe, having only recently been serfs and the property of the nobility.[7] The Alexeievs were a prosperous, bourgeois family, whose factories manufactured gold and silver braiding for military decorations and uniforms.[8] Up until the communist revolution in 1917, Stanislavski often used his inherited wealth to fund his theatrical experiments in acting and directing.[9] His family's discouragement meant that he appeared only as an amateur onstage and as a director until he was thirty three.[9]

As a child, Stanislavski was exposed to the rich cultural life of his family;[10] his interests included the circus, the ballet, and puppetry.[11] His father, Sergei Vladimirovich Alekseiev, was elected head of the merchant class in Moscow (one of the most important and influential positions in the city) in 1877; that same year, he had a fully-equipped theatre on his estate at Liubimovka built for the entertainment of his family and friends, providing a forum for Stanislavski's adolescent theatrical impulses.[12] Stanislavski started, after his début performance there, what would become a life-long series of notebooks filled with critical observations on his acting, aphorisms, and problems.[13] It was from this habit of self-analysis and critique that Stanislavski's 'system' later emerged.[14] The family's second theatre was added in 1881 to their mansion at Red Gates, on Sadovaia Street in Moscow (where Stanislavski lived from 1863 to 1903); their house became a focus for the artistic and cultural life of the city.[15] Stanislavski chose not to attend university, preferring to work in the family business.[16]

Early influences

Increasingly interested in "living the part," Stanislavski experimented with the ability to maintain a characterization in real life, disguising himself as a tramp or drunk and visiting the railway station, or disguising himself as a fortune-telling gypsy; he extended the experiment to the rest of the cast of a short comedy in which he performed in 1883, and as late as 1900 he amused holiday-makers in Yalta by taking a walk each morning "in character".[17] In 1884, he began vocal training under Fiodor Komissarzhevski, a professor at the Conservatoire and leading tenor of the Bolshoi (and father of the famous actress Vera Komissarzhevskaya), with whom he also explored the co-ordination of voice and body.[18] Together they devised exercises in moving and sitting stationary "rhythmically", which anticipated Stanislavski's later use of physical rhythm when teaching his system to opera singers.[19] Komissarzhevski provided one of the models (the other was Stanislavski himself) for the character of Tortsov in his actor's manual An Actor's Work (1938).[20] A year later, in 1885, Stanislavski briefly studied at the Moscow Theatre School, where students were encouraged to mimic the theatrical tricks and conventions of their tutors.[21] Disappointed by this approach, he left after little more than two weeks.[21]

Instead, Stanislavski devoted particular attention to the performances of the Maly Theatre, the home of psychological realism in Russia.[22] Psychological realism had been developed here by Alexander Pushkin, Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Shchepkin.[23] In 1823, Pushkin had concluded that what united the diverse classical authors—Shakespeare, Racine, Corneille and Calderón—was their common concern for truth of character and situation, understood as credible behaviour in believable circumstances:[24]

Stanislavski as the Knight in The Society of Art and Literature's 1888 production of Alexander Pushkin's The Miserly Knight.

Gogol, meanwhile, campaigned against overblown, effect-seeking acting.[26] In an article of 1846, he advises a modest, dignified mode of comic performance in which the actor seeks to grasp "what is dominant in the role" and considers "the character's main concern, which consumes his life, the constant object of his thought, the 'bee in his bonnet'."[27] This inner desire forms the "heart of the role," to which the "tiny quirks and tiny external details" are added as embellishment.[27] The Maly soon became known as the House of Shchepkin, the father of Russian realistic acting who, in 1848, promoted the idea of an "actor of feeling."[28] This actor would "become the character" and identify with their thoughts and feelings: he would "walk, talk, think, feel, cry, laugh as the author wants him to."[29] A copy of Shchepkin's Memoirs of a Serf-Actor, in which the actor describes his struggle to achieve a naturalness of style, was heavily-annotated by Stanislavski.[29] Shchepkin's student, Glikeriya Fedotova, was Stanislavski's teacher (she was responsible for instilling the rejection of inspiration as the basis of the actor's art, along with the stress on the importance of training and discipline, and the practice of responsive interaction with other actors that Stanislavski came to call "communication").[30] Shchepkin's legacy included the emphasis on a disciplined, ensemble approach, the importance of extensive rehearsals, and the use of careful observation, self-knowledge, imagination and emotion as the cornerstones of the craft.[31]

As well as the artists of the Maly company, performances given by foreign star actors—who would often come to Moscow during Lent (when Russian actors were prohibited from appearing)—also influenced Stanislavski.[32] The effortless, emotive and clear playing of the Italian actor Ernesto Rossi, who performed major Shakespearean tragic protagonists in Moscow in 1877, particularly impressed Stanislavski.[32] So too did Tommaso Salvini's 1882 performance of Othello.[33] Years later, Stanislavski wrote that Salvini was the "finest representative" of the art of experiencing approach to acting.[34]

The Society of Art and Literature

Stanislavski with his soon-to-be wife Maria Lilina, playing Ferdinand and Louise in The Society of Art and Literature's production of Schiller's Intrigue and Love in 1889.

By the age of twenty-five, Stanislavski was well-known as an amateur actor.[35] He made a proposal to Fyodor Sollogub and Aleksandr Fedotov (a theatre director and estranged husband of Glikeriya Fedotova) to establish a society that would unite amateur and professional actors and artists.[36] The profits from his family's factory were particularly high in 1887-1888; Stanislavski decided to use the surplus 25,000-30,000 roubles to form the Society of Art and Literature, for which he had the Ginzburg House on Tverskaia Street converted into a luxurious clubhouse with its own large stage and exhibition rooms.[37] Fedotov became head of the dramatic section, Komissarzhevski was the head of the operatic and musical section, while Sollogub was appointed head of the graphic arts section; the drama and opera sections each had a school.[38] To research the curriculum of the society's drama school, Stanislavski spent the summer of 1888 studying the classes and performances of the Comédie-Française in Paris.[39] The society's school was to offer classes in dramatic art, the history of costume, make-up, drama, Russian literature, aesthetics, fencing and dancing.[40] The school opened on 8 October 1888 while the society itself was officially inaugurated on 3 November with a ceremony attended by Anton Chekhov.[41] Under the auspices of the society, Stanislavski performed in plays by Molière, Schiller, Pushkin, and Ostrovsky, as well as gaining his first experiences as a director.[42] With the guidance of Fedotov and Sollogub, Stanislavski finally abandoned the operatic conventions and theatrical clichés in his acting that he had mimicked from other actors' performances.[43] He also became interested in the aesthetic theories of Vissarion Belinski.[44] From Belinski he took his conception of the role of the artist, on which he based a moral justification for his desire to perform that accorded with his family's sense of social responsibility and ethics.[45] At this time Stanislavski warned in his diary:[46]

On 5 July 1889, Stanislavski married Lilina (the stage name of Maria Petrovna Perevostchikova), with whom he had just performed in Intrigue and Love.[47] Their first child, Xenia, died of pneumonia in May 1890 less than two months after she was born.[48] Their second daughter, Kira, was born on 21 July 1891.[49] In January 1893, Stanislavski's father died.[50] Their son Igor was born 14 September 1894.[51]

When you play a good man,
try to find out where he is bad,
and when you play a villain,
try to find where he is good.
Stanislavski, 1889.

In 1889 in the society's production of Aleksey Pisemsky's historical play Men Above The Law, Stanislavski discovered his "principle of opposites," as expressed in his aphoristic advice to the actor: "When you play a good man, try to find out where he is bad, and when you play a villain, try to find where he is good."[52] Stanislavski insisted that the actors learnt their parts thoroughly, almost entirely removing the prompter from the society's productions.[53]

Stanislavski described his production of Leo Tolstoy's The Fruits of Enlightenment in February 1891 as his first fully-independent directorial work.[54] His directorial methods at this time were closely modeled on the disciplined, autocratic approach of Ludwig Chronegk, the director of the Meiningen Ensemble, whose productions of Julius Caesar, The Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night, as well as a number of plays by Schiller, Stanislavski had studied enthusiastically during their second visit to Moscow in 1890.[55] The Ensemble's general approach included historical accuracy in set, props and costumes and complex crowd effects achieved through a tightly-drilled rehearsal process.[56] Its use of off-stage sound to produce the illusion of a reality beyond the visible stage particularly impressed Stanislavski.[57] Their productions demonstrated a model for artistic achievement with relatively unskilled actors that Stanislavski was to adopt for the early part of his career as a director.[57] By means of a rigid and detailed control of the mise-en-scène, including the strict choreography of the actors' every gesture, in Stanislavski's words "the inner kernel of the play was revealed by itself."[58] Whereas the Ensemble's effects tended toward the grandiose, however, Stanislavski introduced lyrical elaborations through the mise-en-scène that dramatised more mundane and ordinary elements of life, in keeping with Belinski's ideas about the "poetry of the real":[59]

Stanislavski as Othello in 1896.

Writing years later in his autobiography My Life in Art (1925), Stanislavski described Chronegk's approach as one in which the director is "forced to work without the help of the actor."[60] Jean Benedetti suggests that Stanislavski's task at this stage was to unite the realistic tradition of the creative actor inherited from Shchepkin and Gogol with the director-centered, organically unified naturalistic aesthetic of the Ensemble's approach.[61]

It was at this time that Stanislavski first met Leo Tolstoy, who delivered, over dinner, a sermon on vegetarianism.[62] Tolstoy re-wrote the fourth act of his The Power of Darkness along the lines of Stanislavski's suggestions in 1896.[63] Tolstoy was another important influence on the development of Stanislavski's thought; his What Is Art? (1898) promoted immediate intelligibility and transparency as an aesthetic principle.[64] On the eve of creating the Moscow Art Theatre, Stanislavski wrote of the importance of simplicity, directness and accessibility in art.[65]

From 1894 onwards, as part of his painstaking rehearsals for Karl Gutzkow's melodrama Uriel Acosta and Shakespeare's Othello, Stanislavski began to assemble detailed prompt-books that included a directorial commentary on the entire play and from which not even the smallest detail was allowed to deviate in rehearsals.[66] Stanislavski's Othello (1896) made a strong impression on the twenty-two year old Vsevolod Meyerhold, who was later to work with him before becoming an important director and theatre practitioner in his own right.[67] "The task of our generation," Stanislavski wrote at this time, is "to liberate art from outmoded tradition, from tired cliché and to give greater freedom to imagination and creative ability."[68]

The Moscow Art Theatre

See also: The MAT production of The Seagull and The MAT production of Hamlet

In 1896 Stanislavski discussed with Nikolai Efros his ideas for a scheme to establish a network of touring theatre companies that would bring high-quality drama to the surrounding area of selected towns.[69] He proposed to call them "open" or "accessible" theatres, in a bid to avoid alarming the authorities with their connection to the dangerously democratizing "popular theatre" movement that was spreading across Europe, spearheaded by Romain Rolland.[70] In February 1897 Stanislavski joined Anton Chekhov, whom he had met on 15 February at a literary-musical evening, in an open public discussion on the creation of a popular theatre that was reported in the press.[71] At this time he also helped to organise the first all-Russian conference on the theatre, whose keynote speaker, Yevtikhiy Karpov, urged the creation of a "Russian people's theatre."[72]

It was Stanislavski's historic meeting with Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko on 22 June 1897, however, that would create what was called initially the "Moscow Public-Accessible Theatre" but which came to be known as the Moscow Art Theatre (MAT).[73] Their eighteen-hour discussion—lasting from lunch at 2pm in a private room in the Slavic Bazaar restaurant to 8am the following morning over breakfast at Stanislavski's family estate at Liubimovka—has acquired a legendary status in the history of theatre.[74] Nemirovich was a successful playwright (whose work was performed by the Maly and whose play The Worth of Life had beaten Chekhov's The Seagull to win the Griboyedov prize, much to the author's dismay), critic, theatre director and acting teacher at the Philharmonic school (where he taught Vsevolod Meyerhold and Olga Knipper), who was also committed to the idea of a popular theatre.[75] Their abilities complemented one another: Nemirovich needed Stanislavski's directorial talent for creating vivid stage images and selecting significant details, while Stanislavski needed Nemirovich's talent for dramatic and literary analysis, his professional expertise and his ability to manage a theatre.[76] Stanislavski later compared their discussions to the Treaty of Versailles, their scope was so wide-ranging; they agreed on the conventional practices they wished to abandon and, on the basis of the working method they found they had in common, they worked out the policy of their new theatre.[77] Together they would forge a professional company with an ensemble ethos that discouraged individual vantiy, selecting actors from Nemirovich's class at the Philharmonic school and Stanislavski's amateur Society of Art and Literature group, along with other professional actors; they would create a realistic theatre of international renown, with popular prices for seats, whose organically-unified aesthetic would bring together the techniques of the Meiningen Ensemble and those of André Antoine's Théâtre Libre (which Stanislavski had seen during trips to Paris).[78] Responsibility was to be shared between them on the basis of their individual strengths, with Stanislavski overseeing production and Nemirovich in charge of the repertoire and literary decisions; each had a veto.[79]

Given that Stanislavski's family's assets amounted to some 8 million roubles at the time, Nemirovich assumed initially that Stanislavski would fund the theatre as a privately-owned business, but Stanislavski insisted on a limited, joint stock company.[80] Stanislavski would only ever invest an initial 10,000 roubles in the MAT.[81] To raise the rest of the theatre's 28,000 roubles launch capital, Nemirovich persuaded some of the directors of the Philharmonic Society to contribute, members of the board of the Society of Art and Literature also invested, but the theatre's principal shareholder was to be Savva Timofeievich Morozov, who invested 10,000 roubles.[82] The company had 13 shareholders, who signed an agreement on 10 April 1898.[83] With an annual salary of 4,200 roubles each, Stanislavski and Nemirovich were to represent the interests of the acting company in the business, though with the aim of transferring control to the actors eventually.[83] The company consisted of 39 actors, 23 men and 16 women, 30% of whom came from Nemirovich's Phiharmonic class and 35% of whom came with Stanislavski from the Society of Art and Literature, with a total staff numbering 323.[84] Viktor Simov, whom Stanislavski had met in 1896, was engaged as the company's principal designer.[85]

At Pushkino in 1898, Vsevolod Meyerhold prepares for his role as Konstantin to Stanislavski's Trigorin in the MAT production of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull.

For want of suitable rehearsal space in Moscow, the company met in Pushkino, isolated 50 miles from the city.[86] In his opening speech on the first day of rehearsals, 14 June 1898, Stanislavski stressed the "social character" of their collective undertaking: "We are striving to create the first rational, moral, and public-accessible theatre," he said, "and we dedicate our lives to this high goal."[87] In an atmosphere more like a university than a theatre, as Stanislavski described it, the company was introduced to his working method of extensive reading and research and detailed rehearsals in which the action was defined at the table before being explored physically.[88] Throughout June and July the company rehearsed productions of Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, Sophocles' Antigone, Hauptmann's Hannele, Pisemsky's Men Above The Law, Lenz's The Tutor and Alexei Tolstoy's Tsar Fiodor Ioannovich.[89] It was at these rehearsals that Stanislavski's life-long relationship with Vsevolod Meyerhold began; by the end of June, Meyerhold was so impressed with Stanislavski's directorial skills that he declared him a genius.[88] On his death-bed Stanislavski was to declare Meyerhold to be "my sole heir in the theatre—here or anywhere else."[90]

Anton Chekhov's The Seagull was performed. Initially Chekhov did not grant Danchenko's request to perform the play because he wanted a more experienced troupe to perform it. Stanislavski beautified and innovated Chekov's script, and it created shock in the audiences. According to The Stanislavski Technique: Russia, by Mel Gordon, "his detailed realism transformed the most commonplace scene into an orchestrated display of minute effects... something modern had been born." The MAT had created what became known as psychological realism. Psychological realism embodied hidden conflicts within relationships, which exposed that which is so embedded in everyday life. Chekhov never liked the rendition of his play, but the rest of the audience, and the rest of the world, started to like the work of the MAT. It was then that the MAT became known as the House of Chekhov as they produced Chekhov's melancholic plays (though the playwright himself always insisted they were comedies) like Uncle Vanya, Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard. The MAT became a venerable institution and opened up classes in dance, voice and fencing. During the Russo-Japanese War, the group traveled to Germany and Eastern Europe, where they were so admired that one German playwright called them "artistic divinities." Parades were made in their honor, as the Europeans never saw such brilliant theatre. Upon returning to Russia, Stanislavski fell into an artistic crisis, where his acting and directing became erratic, as he professed his lack of fulfillment and inspiration. He went to Finland with his wife to vacation, and came back to give birth to his acting system that would change what it means to be an actor.The company under the direction of Stanislavski only toured the United States once in 1922-1923. Although they performed in Russian, the verisimilitude of the acting and the ensemble work impressed all who saw them, particularly a number of young actors starting their careers in the commercial theater in New York, among them Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg. When two former members of the company, Boleslavsky and Ouspenskaya, began teaching the System at the American Laboratory Theater these performers jumped at the chance to study.

Improving the article

  • Founding principles. Name change. Initial success of the theatre. The Seagull emblem. Chekhov and the Art Theatre. Relationship with Meyerhold. Gorky. An Enemy of the People and political theatre. Crisis and the self-reflexive habit. 10th anniversary Shclepkin affirmed. Studios. the Symbolist experiments. A Month in the Country and shift in directorial approach achieved. Craig (aesthetics, directorial approach, significance).

Benedetti offers a vivid portrait of the poor quality of mainstream theatrical practice in Russia at the time:

Further development

  • early Naturalism and MAT
  • Chekhov
  • system developed
  • USA tours
  • method of physical action
  • canonization and hagiography

Stanislavski's 'system'

Stanislavski's 'system' focused on the development of artistic truth onstage by teaching actors to "live the part" during performance. Despite being primarily known in The United States for Realism, Stanislavski developed the system to be applied to all forms of theater, directing and producing melodrama, vaudeville, opera, etc. In order to create an ensemble of actors all working together as an artistic unit, he began organizing a series of studios in which young actors were trained in his system. At the First Studio of MAT, actors were instructed to use their own memories in order to naturally express emotions. Stanislavski soon observed that some of the actors using or abusing Emotional Memory were given to hysteria. Although he never disavowed Emotional Memory as an essential tool in the actor's kit, he began searching for less draining ways of accessing emotion, eventually emphasizing the actor's use of imagination and belief in the given circumstances of the text rather than her/his private and often painful memories.

Stanislavski's 'system' is a systematic approach to training actors. This system is at some point different from but not a rejection of what he states earlier in affective memory. At the beginning, Stanislavski proposed that actors study and experience subjective emotions and feelings and manifest them to audiences by physical and vocal means - Theatre language. While his System focused on creating truthful emotions and then embodying these, he later worked on The Method of Physical Actions. This was developed at the Opera Dramatic Studio from the early 30s, and worked like Emotion Memory in reverse. The focus was on the physical actions inspiring truthful emotion, and involved improvisation and discussion. The focus remained on reaching the subconscious through the conscious.

Stanislavski survived the Russian Revolution of 1905 and the Russian Revolution of 1917, with Lenin apparently intervening to protect him. In 1918, Stanislavski established the First Studio as a school for young actors and wrote several works: those available in English translation include: An Actor Prepares, Building a Character, Creating a Role, and the autobiography My Life in Art.

Stanislavski always thought of his system as if it were a table of contents for a large book which dealt with all aspects of acting. His final work, now known as The Method of Physical Actions (see Stanislavski's 'system'), is in no way a rejection of his early interest in sense and affective memory. At no time did he ever reject the notion of emotion memory; he simply found other means of accessing emotion, among them the absolute belief in given circumstances; the exercise of the imagination; and the use of physical action.

The main techniques of the 'system' include Units, Objectives, Given Circumstances, the Through Line and Emotional Memory. "Emotional memory" was an idea taken from Ribot, which was originally called "affective memory". Stanislavski felt that the name "emotional memory" was more accurate for the actor.[citation needed]

Legacy

A portrait of Constantin Stanislavski by Valentin Serov.

Stanislavski had different pupils during each of the phases of discovering and experimenting with a Universal System of acting. One such student, Richard Boleslavsky, founded the American Laboratory Theatre in 1925. One of Boleslavsky's students, Lee Strasberg, went on to co-found the Group Theatre (1931-1940) with Harold Clurman and Cheryl Crawford, the first American acting company to put Stanislavski's first discoveries into theatrical practice. Boleslavsky had been in Stanislavski's class when experimenting with Affective Memory. Stanislavski's theory later evolved to rely on Physical Action inducing feelings and emotions. Another of Stanislavski's students, Sanford Meisner, was an actor at The Group Theater who went on to teach at New York City's Neighborhood Playhouse where he developed what came to be known as the Meisner Technique.

Among the actors who have employed Stanislavski's System in some form are Jack Garfein, Jack Nicholson, Marilyn Monroe, James Dean, Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, Harvey Keitel, Steve McQueen, Paul Newman, Warren Beatty, Robert Duvall, Johnny Depp, Gregory Peck, Sidney Poitier, Jessica Lange, William Hurt, Dustin Hoffman, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Gene Hackman, Kevin Spacey, Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave, Benicio del Toro, Mark Ruffalo, Vincent D'Onofrio, Kate Winslet, Adrien Brody, Denzel Washington, Elizabeth Taylor, Hilary Swank, Anthony Hopkins, John Alexander and Sean Penn.

Sir John Gielgud said, "This director found time to explain a thousand things that have always troubled actors and fascinated students." Gielgud is also quoted as saying, "Stanislavski's now famous book is a contribution to the Theatre and its students all over the world."

Stanislavski's goal was to find a universally applicable approach that could be of service to all actors. Yet he said of his System, "Create your own method. Don't depend slavishly on mine. Make up something that will work for you! But keep breaking traditions, I beg you."

Stanislavski's aim was to have all of his characters performed as "truthfully" as possible, relying on full commitment to objectives and physical actions, rather than artificial reproduction of emotion.

Fictional references

Mikhail Bulgakov satirized Stanislavski through the character Ivan Vasilievich in his novel Black Snow (also called "The Theatrical Novel"). (It is no coincidence that Ivan Vasilievich was the name and patronymic of the notorious sixteenth-century czar Ivan the Terrible.) In Bulgakov's novel, Ivan Vasilievich is portrayed as a great actor, but his famous acting "method" is held up as a farce, in fact often hindering actors' performances through ridiculous exercises. Bulgakov's cutting portrait of Ivan Vasilievich likely reflects his frustrating experiences with Stanislavski during the latter's eventually aborted production of Bulgakov's play A Cabal of Hypocrites in 1930–1936. While this depiction of Stanislavski is in stark contrast to most other descriptions, including those of Westerners who had met him, it should be noted that Bulgakov and Stanislavski were otherwise good friends.

Significant students

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The introduction to this article draws on the introductions and overviews in the following commentaries: Banham (1998), Benedetti (1989), Carnicke (1998), Counsell (1996), Innes (2000), Milling and Ley (2001).
  2. ^ Stanislavski began developing a 'grammar' of acting in 1906; his initial choice to call it his System struck him as too dogmatic, so he preferred to write it as his 'system' (without the capital letter and in inverted commas), in order to indicate the provisional nature of the results of his investigations. Modern scholarship follows that practice. See Benedetti (1999, 169).
  3. ^ Milling and Ley (2001, 2) and Carnicke (1998).
  4. ^ Not only actors are subject to this confusion; Lee Strasberg's obituary in The New York Times credited Stanislavski with the invention of the Method: "Mr. Strasberg adapted it to the American theatre, imposing his refinements, but always crediting Stanislavsky as his source" (Quoted by Carnicke 1998, 9). Carnicke argues that this "robs Strasberg of the originality in his thinking, while simultaneously obscuring Stanislavsky's ideas" (1997, 9).
  5. ^ "If, in the United States one could be 'rich as Rockefeller,' in Moscow the corresponding expression was, and is, 'rich as Alekseiev'" (Benedetti 1999, 3). See also Carnicke (2000, 11) and Magarshack (1950, 1). Margarshack indicates that at this time "the life of the rich Moscow merchant was indistinguishable from the life of the Moscow nobility" (1950, 3).
  6. ^ Benedetti (1999, 24) and Carnicke (2000, 11). Benedetti explains that Stanislavski "inherited" his stage name from another amateur, Dr Mako:

    "a friend at Luibimovka, and an admirer, as he had been as a boy, of the ballerina Stanislavskaia. It was a safe name to adopt. Of Polish origin, it suggested humble status and was unlikely to be associated with one of Moscow's most eminent bourgeois families."

    Magarshack gives the amateur actor's name as Markov (1950, 19).
  7. ^ Benedetti (1999, 21) and Carnicke (2000, 11).
  8. ^ Magarshack (1950, 1).
  9. ^ a b Carnicke (2000, 11).
  10. ^ "The children were taken to the theatre and concerts almost as soon as they could walk" (Benedetti 1999, 10).
  11. ^ Benedetti (1999, 6-11) and Magarshack (1950, 9-11, 27-28).
  12. ^ Benedetti (1999, 13) and Carnicke (2000, 11).
  13. ^ Benedetti (1999, 14) and Magarshack (1950, 21-22).
  14. ^ Magarshack (1950, 21).
  15. ^ Benedetti (1999, 18) and Magarshack (1950, 31-32, 77).
  16. ^ Benedetti (1999, 18) and Magarshack (1950, 26).
  17. ^ Benedetti (1999, 18-19) and Magarshack (1950, 25, 33-34).
  18. ^ Benedetti (1999, 19-20) and Magarshack (1950, 49-50).
  19. ^ Magarshack (1950, 50).
  20. ^ Benedetti (2008, xxi).
  21. ^ a b Benedetti (1999, 21).
  22. ^ Benedetti (1999, 14-17).
  23. ^ Benedetti (2005, 100).
  24. ^ Benedetti (1999, 14-15) and (2005, 100).
  25. ^ Benedetti (1999, 15). Benedetti offers an alternative translation of Pushkin's aphorism in his The Art of the Actor: "Authenticity of the passions, sentiments that seem true in the proposed circumstances, that is what our intelligence requires of the writer" (2005, 100).
  26. ^ Benedetti (2005, 100-101).
  27. ^ a b Benedetti (2005, 101).
  28. ^ Benedetti (1999, 16) and Banham (1998, 985).
  29. ^ a b Benedetti (1999, 16)
  30. ^ Banham (1998, 985) and Magarshack (1950, 51-52).
  31. ^ Banham (1998, 985).
  32. ^ a b Benedetti (1999, 17).
  33. ^ Benedetti (1999, 18).
  34. ^ Stanislavski (1938, 19).
  35. ^ Magarshack (1950, 52).
  36. ^ Magarshack (1950, 55-56).
  37. ^ Benedetti (1999, 27). Benedetti writes that as a result of the profitability of the family factory, Stanislavski "suddenly found himself with 25,000-30,000 roubles more than he expected"; he continues: "he decided to spend it all on an ambitious scheme". Worrall, however, offers a more modest figure for Stanislavski's initial financial investment in the Society: "With his first year’s dividend of 1,020 roubles he established, together with Komissarzhevskiy and Fedotov, the Society of Art and Literature" (1996, 24).
  38. ^ Magarshack (1950, 56).
  39. ^ Benedetti (1999, 29-30) and Worrall (1996, 25).
  40. ^ Worrall (1996, 25).
  41. ^ Benedetti (1999, 30).
  42. ^ Benedetti (1999, 30-40) and Worrall (1996, 24).
  43. ^ Magarshack (1950, 64).
  44. ^ Benedetti (1999, 35-37).
  45. ^ Benedetti (1999, 35-36).
  46. ^ Magarshack (1950, 61-62).
  47. ^ Benedetti (1999, 37) and Magarshack (1950, 54). Worrall writes, apparently in error, that they married in June (1996, 26).
  48. ^ Benedetti (1999, 42).
  49. ^ Benedetti (1999, 43).
  50. ^ Magarshack (1950, 81).
  51. ^ Benedetti (1999, 47).
  52. ^ Worrall (1996, 27), Benedetti (1999, 39) and Magarshack (1950, 67-68).
  53. ^ Magarshack (1950, 75-76).
  54. ^ Worrall (1996, 27). See also Magarshack (1950, 78-80) and Benedetti (1999, 42-43).
  55. ^ Benedetti (1999, 40-43), Magarshack (1950, 70-74) and Worrall (1996, 28-29).
  56. ^ Benedetti (1999, 40-41).
  57. ^ a b Benedetti (1999, 41).
  58. ^ Magarshack (1950, 80) and Benedetti (1999, 48).
  59. ^ Benedetti (1999, 35-36, 44); the following quotation is from Benedetti (1999, 44 and 50-51).
  60. ^ Magarshack (1950, 73).
  61. ^ Benedetti (1999, 42).
  62. ^ Magarshack (1950, 82-85). They first met on 29 October 1893. See Benedetti (1999, 46).
  63. ^ Magarshack (1950, 84-85).
  64. ^ Benedetti (1999, 46).
  65. ^ Benedetti (1999, 54).
  66. ^ Worrall (1996, 28-29), Magarshack (1950, 86-90) and Benedetti (1999, 47).
  67. ^ Benedetti (1999, 52).
  68. ^ Benedetti (1999, 55).
  69. ^ Benedetti (1999, 56). Nikolai Efimovich Efros (1867–1923), the Moscow Art Theatre's first literary manager.
  70. ^ Benedetti (1999, 56), Bradby and McCormick (1978, 11-44), and Worrall (1996, 15).
  71. ^ Benedetti (1999, 59).
  72. ^ Benedetti (1999, 59) and Worrall (1996, 35).
  73. ^ Benedetti (1999, 59) and Worrall (1996, 43).
  74. ^ Benedetti (1999, 61) and Worrall (1996, 64).
  75. ^ Benedetti (1989, 16) and (1999, 59-60).
  76. ^ Benedetti (1999, 60-61).
  77. ^ Benedetti (1989, 16).
  78. ^ Benedetti (1989, 18) and (1999, 61-62).
  79. ^ Benedetti (1989, 17) and (1999, 61).
  80. ^ Benedetti (1999, 62-63) and Worrall (1996, 37-38).
  81. ^ Benedetti (1999, 63).
  82. ^ Benedetti (1999, 64) and Worrall (1996, 38-40).
  83. ^ a b Worrall (1996, 40).
  84. ^ Worrall (1996, 43-44).
  85. ^ Benedetti (1999, 67) and Braun (1982, 61).
  86. ^ Benedetti (1999, 68-69).
  87. ^ Worrall (1996, 45) and Benedetti (1999, 68).
  88. ^ a b Benedetti (1999, 70).
  89. ^ Worrall (1996, 46-47).
  90. ^ Rudnitsky (1981, xv).
  91. ^ Benedetti (1989, 5).

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