Actor and User talk:Evil Monkey/Archive 3: Difference between pages

(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
m autodisambig
 
Evil Monkey (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
Line 1:
{{User talk:Evil Monkey/template}}
{{otheruses}}
 
[[Image:ActorsOffSetLaughing.jpg|thumb|right|Actors in period costume sharing a joke whilst waiting between takes during ___location filming.]]
An '''actor''' is a person who [[acting|acts]], or plays a role in an artistic production. The term commonly refers to someone working in [[film|movies]], [[television]], live [[Theater|theatre]], or [[radio programming|radio]], and can occasionally denote a street entertainer. Besides playing dramatic roles, actors may also sing or dance or work only on radio or as a [[voice artist]]. A female actor is an '''actress''', although an increasingly large group prefer the term "actor" because of its gender-neutrality.
 
See: [[List of male movie actors]], [[List of female movie actors (A-K)]] and [[List of female movie actors (L-Z)]], [[List of male theater actors]] and [[List of female theater actors]]
 
For information on the artistic craft, see [[acting]]
 
However, the word ''actor'' can be used in more general terms - for example in the analysis of [[policy]], an interested person, party, group or an organization is often known as an actor.
 
==History==
The first recorded case of an actor performing took place in [[530s BC|534 B.C.]] (probably on [[November 23]]rd, though the changes in calendar over the years make it hard to determine exactly) when the [[Greece|Greek]] performer [[Thespis]] stepped on to the stage at the ''Theatre Dionysus'' and became the first person to speak words as a character in a play. The machinations of storytelling were immediately revolutionized. Prior to Thespis' act, stories were told in [[song]] and dance and in third person narrative, but no one had assumed the role of a character in a story. In reverence to Thespis, actors are formally referred to as ''thespians''. Theatrical [[myth]] to this day maintains that Thespis exists as a mischievous spirit, and disasters in the theatre are sometimes blamed on his ghostly intervention.
 
==Term==
In the past, the term "actor" was restricted to men. Women did not begin performing commonly until the 17th century. When they did the term "actress" was used. In the ancient and [[middle ages|medieval world]], it was considered disgraceful for a woman to go on the stage, and this belief continued right up until the [[17th century]], when in [[Venice]] it was broken. In the time of [[William Shakespeare]], women's roles were played by men or boys, though there is some evidence to suggest that women disguised as men also (illegally) performed.
 
Today, the term "actor" is often used to refer to both men and women, as some consider the term "actress" to be [[sexist]]. However, the term ''actress'' also remains in common use.
 
An actor usually plays a [[fictional character]]. In the case of a true story (or a fictional story that involves a real person) an actor may play a real person (or a fictional version of the same), possibly him- or herself.
 
''See also:'' [[gender-specific job title]], [[non-sexist language]]
 
==Actresses in male roles==
Women actors sometimes play the roles of [[prepubescent]] boys, because in some regards a woman has a closer resemblance to a boy than does a man. The role of [[Peter Pan]], for example, is traditionally played by a woman. The tradition of the [[principal boy]] in [[pantomime]] may be compared. An adult playing a child occurs more in theater than in film. The exception to this is voice actors in [[animated]] films, where boys are generally voiced by women. [[Opera]] has several '[[pants role]]s' traditionally sung by women, usually [[mezzo-soprano]]s. Examples are ''Hansel'' in [[Hansel und Gretel]], and ''Cherubino'' in [[The Marriage of Figaro]].
 
[[Mary Pickford]] played the part of [[Little Lord Fauntleroy]] in the first film version of the book. [[Linda Hunt]] won an [[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress]] in ''[[The Year of Living Dangerously]]'', in which she played the part of a man.
 
Having an actor play the opposite sex for comic effect is also a long standing tradition in comic theatre and film. Most of Shakespeare's comedies include instances of cross dressing, and both [[Dustin Hoffman]] and [[Robin Williams]] appeared in hit comedy films where they were required to play most scenes dressed as men dressed as women. A better example would probably be [[Divine (Glen Milstead)|Divine]] in all of his roles.
 
==Techniques of acting==
Actors employ a variety of techniques that are learnt through training and experience. Some of these are:
 
#The rigorous use of the voice to communicate a character's lines and express emotion. This is achieved through attention to diction and projection through correct breathing and articulation. It is also achieved through the tone and emphasis that an actor puts on words
#Physicalisation of a role in order to create a believable character for the audience and to use the acting space appropriately and correctly
#Use of gesture to complement the voice, interact with other actors and to bring emphasis to the words in a play, as well as having symbolic meaning
 
==Acting awards==
* [[Academy Award|Academy Awards]] ("Oscars")(movies)
* [[Golden Globe Awards]] (movies)
* [[Emmy Awards]] (television)
* [[BAFTA|British Academy of Film and Television Arts Award]] (movies)
 
* [[Tony Awards]] (theater)
* [[European Theatre Awards]] (theatre)
* [[Laurence Olivier Awards]] (theatre)
 
==See also==
* [[Movie star]]
* [[Stunt work]]
 
==Suggested reading==
* ''Letters to a Young Actor'' by Robert Brustein (Basic Books, 0465008062, 2005).
 
[[Category:Actors|*]]
[[Category:Entertainment occupations]]
 
[[bg:Актьор]]
[[ca:Actor]]
[[de:Schauspieler]]
[[es:Actor]]
[[fr:Acteur]]
[[it:Attore]]
[[lt:Aktorius]]
[[nl:Acteur]]
[[ja:俳優]]
[[nn:Skodespelar]]
[[pl:Aktor]]
[[ru:Актёр]]
[[sv:Skådespelare]]
[[zh:演員]]