252 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

252 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

252 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Time and Performer Training addresses the importance and centrality of time and temporality to the practices, processes and conceptual thinking of performer training. Notions of time are embedded in almost every aspect of performer training, and so contributors to this book look at: age/aging and children in the training context how training impacts over a lifetime the duration of... Read more

List of figures

List of tables

List of Contributors

Acknowledgments

 

Section I: (Re)Introducing time

1. Foreword: embodied time by Anne Bogart.

2. Introduction: expansive temporalities of performer training by Konstantinos Thomaidis, with Mark Evans and Libby Worth.

 

Section II: About time: narratives of time

3. Lecoq: training, time and temporality by Mark Evans.

4. Premodern training: a provocation by David Wiles.

5. Time in noh theatre performance and training: conversations with Udaka Tatsushige by Diego Pellecchia.

6. A materialist feminist perspective on time in actor training: the commodity of illusion by Evi Stamatiou.

 

Section III: On time: temporalizing time through technique

7. The ecology of a sense of good timing by Darren Tunstall.

8. Gathering ghosts: Lecoq’s twenty movements as a technique to mark time by Jenny Swingler

9. Adavu: drilling through time by Mark Hamilton

10. RSVP and the timely experience by Gyllian Raby

 

Section IV: Over time: age, duration, longevity

11. Formative trainings in Carnatic vocal music: a three-way conversation through time by Tim Jones

12. Change, continuity and repetition: married to the Balinese Mask by Tiffany Strawson

13. The feeling of time by Jennifer Jackson

14. The dance of opposition: repetition, legacy and difference in Third Theatre training by Jane Turner and Patrick Campbell

 

Section V: Out of time: beyond presence and the present

15. Bridging monuments: on repetition, time and articulated knowledge at The Bridge of Winds group by Adriana La Selva

16. The always-not-yet / always-already of voice perception: training towards vocal presence by Konstantinos Thomaidis

17. Rehearsing (inter)disciplinarity: training, production practice, and the 10,000-hour problem by Laura Vorwerg

18. Beyond the ‘time capsule’: recreating Korean narrative temporalities in pansori singing by Chan E. Park

 

Section VI: From time to times: expansive temporalities

19. Simultaneity and asynchronicity in performer training: a case study of Massive Open Online Courses as training tools by Jonathan Pitches

20. Festival time by Kate Craddock

21. Time, friendship and ‘collective intimacy’: the point of view of a co-devisor from within Little Bulb Theatre by Eugénie Pastor

22. Time moves: temporal experiences in current London-based training for traditional clog and rapper sword dances by Libby Worth

 

Index

Biography

MARK EVANS is Professor of Theatre Training at Coventry University. He trained with Jacques Lecoq in Paris and has published widely on performer training and physical theatre, including: Movement Training for the Modern Actor (2009), The Routledge Companion to Jacques Lecoq (2016) and Performance, Movement and the Body (2019).

KONSTANTINOS THOMAIDIS is Lecturer in Drama, Theatre & Performance at the University of Exeter and the Artistic Director of AdriftPM. He is founding co-editor of the Journal of Interdisciplinary Voice Studies and the Routledge Voice Studies series. His latest book is Theatre & Voice (2017).

LIBBY WORTH is Reader in Contemporary Performance at Royal Holloway. She trained with Anna Halprin and in the Feldenkrais Method. She is co-editor of the journal Theatre, Dance and Performance Training and her most recent book is Jasmin Vardimon’s Dance Theatre: Movement, Memory and Metaphor (2017).

"Time and Performer Training offers an engaging exploration of diverse ways in which matters of time affect how performers train. This richly informative book offers a well-woven tapestry of practices that hinge on how time is viewed, felt, and fashioned in a broad array of training practices. The editors of this collection of essays took a deliberately wide approach to a topic that depends on a diversity of cultural traditions, personal preferences, methodological stances, and disciplinary contexts."

Luis Arata, Review for KronoScope