Shenandoah Magazine Fall 2013 | Page 19

The new program, poised to become one of the top realism programs in the country, is built on the strengths of its eclectic, innovative faculty and the conservatory’s long-standing reputation as one of the top musical theater programs in the country. The curriculum integrates the realism of the Meisner technique — considered the next generation model for method acting and the preferred technique for film and television — with video and new media technologies to prepare graduates to get good-paying jobs and build working careers as professional actors. In addition to learning the skills for authentic acting, students also gain the knowledge needed to self-produce and promote themselves. “We’re preparing professional actors to work — in live performance and across a wide range of media — as creative artists, not passively waiting around for the next job, but capable of creating their own art and their own opportunities,” said Ruscella. The Meisner Technique The Meisner technique is a behavior-based method, originally created and later refined by American theatre practitioner Sanford Meisner, who developed the approach after working with renowned acting coaches Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler at the Group Theatre. Meisner served as head of the acting program at New York City’s Neighborhood Playhouse founded in 1931. His approach taught that by reacting to the other people on stage, an actor's performance would be more honest and, therefore, more interesting for the audience. “When we tell a story, whether it’s onstage or in front of the camera, we’re hopefully expressing those apex moments of life, when we have our most profound experiences,” explained Ruscella. “For artists to convey that, they must learn to play themselves like an instrument, to know their chords — almost as if they were a trumpet. To play the notes well, they need to tap into an understanding of where to go to bring forth the truth of that experience.” This step-by-step method, which takes several years to learn, introduces a series of interdependent training exercises that build on one another and emphasize in-the-moment authenticity. Through communication with other actors, students learn to generate behavior that is real rather than a pretense. ‘Nuts and Bolts’ of the Program “When young artists come to study with us, we treat them like novices,” explained Ruscella. “We teach them how to breathe and speak, as if they never knew how to breathe