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The Director's Eye: A Comprehensive Textbook for Directors and Actors

The Director's Eye: A Comprehensive Textbook for Directors and Actors

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The finest text for directing and acting available.
Review: I've read Clurman and Brook but no text has the depth and breadth of John Ahart's "The Director's Eye". Look at how he advises directors and actors on the ways in which rehearsals become far more productive; the ways scenes become much more dynamic. I am especially impressed with Ahart's methods of rehearsing actors, how to balance structure with freedom, how to create an environment where the play "inevitably happens". This text offers ideas I've never seen anywhere else and not only does "The Director's Eye" present theory; it equally demonstrates how to impliment techniques of rehearsing actors, staging scenes, creating a working ensemble. People may think that they know these concepts; however, I strongly advocate reading this text. It will shake up many conventions that work against the immediate theatrical experience. Just one example is the way Ahart advises having actors memorize their lines - a seemingly banal task few have investigated. Ahart argues that it is often here that acting dies, in the methods actors use to retain their lines. The text is also a practical guidebook offering examples of directing such as working with comedy, scoring the play, creating rehearsal units, and progressing through rehearsals.

I plan to recommend "The Director's Eye" to every other teacher of directing and acting that I know!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The finest text for directing and acting available.
Review: I've read Clurman and Brook but no text has the depth and breadth of John Ahart's "The Director's Eye". Look at how he advises directors and actors on the ways in which rehearsals become far more productive; the ways scenes become much more dynamic. I am especially impressed with Ahart's methods of rehearsing actors, how to balance structure with freedom, how to create an environment where the play "inevitably happens". This text offers ideas I've never seen anywhere else and not only does "The Director's Eye" present theory; it equally demonstrates how to impliment techniques of rehearsing actors, staging scenes, creating a working ensemble. People may think that they know these concepts; however, I strongly advocate reading this text. It will shake up many conventions that work against the immediate theatrical experience. Just one example is the way Ahart advises having actors memorize their lines - a seemingly banal task few have investigated. Ahart argues that it is often here that acting dies, in the methods actors use to retain their lines. The text is also a practical guidebook offering examples of directing such as working with comedy, scoring the play, creating rehearsal units, and progressing through rehearsals.

I plan to recommend "The Director's Eye" to every other teacher of directing and acting that I know!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The finest text for directing and acting available.
Review: I've read Clurman and Brook but no text has the depth and breadth of John Ahart's "The Director's Eye". Look at how he advises directors and actors on the ways in which rehearsals become far more productive; the ways scenes become much more dynamic. I am especially impressed with Ahart's methods of rehearsing actors, how to balance structure with freedom, how to create an environment where the play "inevitably happens". This text offers ideas I've never seen anywhere else and not only does "The Director's Eye" present theory; it equally demonstrates how to impliment techniques of rehearsing actors, staging scenes, creating a working ensemble. People may think that they know these concepts; however, I strongly advocate reading this text. It will shake up many conventions that work against the immediate theatrical experience. Just one example is the way Ahart advises having actors memorize their lines - a seemingly banal task few have investigated. Ahart argues that it is often here that acting dies, in the methods actors use to retain their lines. The text is also a practical guidebook offering examples of directing such as working with comedy, scoring the play, creating rehearsal units, and progressing through rehearsals.

I plan to recommend "The Director's Eye" to every other teacher of directing and acting that I know!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A 'must' for aspiring directors
Review: John Ahart's The Director's Eye is a comprehensive text for directors and actors is intended for student audiences, but contains practical information which represents a half-century of experience in teaching and directing, containing over thirty chapters on everything from imparting the style and content of a play to the special challenges of comedy and other formats. A 'must' for aspiring directors.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Director's Eye - It's a Keeper
Review: The Director's Eye, announced as a comprehensive textbook for directors and actors, is that and so much more. John Ahart's creation is a book of rare breadth and depth. Broad in its application, in the very universality that is the theatre and life. Deep in its impact, in the way it takes us to the core of our experience and ourselves.

Emerging directors and actors will find Ahart's original and well thought-out approach to directing and acting invaluable as they prepare for, deepen their relationship with, and celebrate the works they engage. Gentle but purposeful instruction, ample provision for incremental practice, and reliance on the discrimination of the authentic audience, whether the audience of one or many, make this effort an extraordinary contribution to the field of theatre.

For those of us who find our vocation outside of theatre, The Director's Eye is an unexpected treasure. Pithy comments, artfully constructed analogies, and rare insights are found at every turn of the page. With grace and perceptiveness John Ahart writes about directing but teaches leadership.

The author himself signals the importance of this work beyond the world of the play. In the preface he tells us that learning to direct . . . "demands continuous learning about ways to nurture the evolution of a collectively created world." What is leadership if not the nurturing of "a collectively created world?"

The seven parts of the book each have a message for leaders. Part One helps us define the role of the leader and pay attention to what is important. Part Two emphasizes the value of preparing for the result we envision. Its six chapters help us enter the moment, harness the power of our mindset, appreciate the impact of words, find models to shape our action, build on the potential of our space, and enhance time through the potency of choice. Part Three invites us to let "the work" shape its own process and result. Part Four calls our assumptions into question and uses the tool of collaboration to unify our work. Part Five takes communication to a new level by recognizing the essential nature of deeply connected relationships. Part Six causes us to look anew at common resources and take advantage of what we have previously failed to notice. Finally, Part Seven helps us make sense of the whole. It warns us not to be defined by our resources. It inveigles us to stay true to our core purpose. It sets us free to pursue our own vision.

All of us, whether company CEO or leader in a more subtle arena, will find this book to be a friend on the leadership journey. It is filled with opportunities to help ourselves, our families, and our organizations find satisfying purpose in what we do together, create the culture we want to be a part of, and deliver what we choose at a level that pleases us and our "audience."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Through the Director's Eye a World Envisioned
Review: The Director's Eye, announced as a comprehensive textbook for directors and actors, is that and so much more. John Ahart's creation is a book of rare breadth and depth. Broad in its application, in the very universality that is the theatre and life. Deep in its impact, in the way it takes us to the core of our experience and ourselves.

Emerging directors and actors will find Ahart's original and well thought-out approach to directing and acting invaluable as they prepare for, deepen their relationship with, and celebrate the works they engage. Gentle but purposeful instruction, ample provision for incremental practice, and reliance on the discrimination of the authentic audience, whether the audience of one or many, make this effort an extraordinary contribution to the field of theatre.

For those of us who find our vocation outside of theatre, The Director's Eye is an unexpected treasure. Pithy comments, artfully constructed analogies, and rare insights are found at every turn of the page. With grace and perceptiveness John Ahart writes about directing but teaches leadership.

The author himself signals the importance of this work beyond the world of the play. In the preface he tells us that learning to direct . . . "demands continuous learning about ways to nurture the evolution of a collectively created world." What is leadership if not the nurturing of "a collectively created world?"

The seven parts of the book each have a message for leaders. Part One helps us define the role of the leader and pay attention to what is important. Part Two emphasizes the value of preparing for the result we envision. Its six chapters help us enter the moment, harness the power of our mindset, appreciate the impact of words, find models to shape our action, build on the potential of our space, and enhance time through the potency of choice. Part Three invites us to let "the work" shape its own process and result. Part Four calls our assumptions into question and uses the tool of collaboration to unify our work. Part Five takes communication to a new level by recognizing the essential nature of deeply connected relationships. Part Six causes us to look anew at common resources and take advantage of what we have previously failed to notice. Finally, Part Seven helps us make sense of the whole. It warns us not to be defined by our resources. It inveigles us to stay true to our core purpose. It sets us free to pursue our own vision.

All of us, whether company CEO or leader in a more subtle arena, will find this book to be a friend on the leadership journey. It is filled with opportunities to help ourselves, our families, and our organizations find satisfying purpose in what we do together, create the culture we want to be a part of, and deliver what we choose at a level that pleases us and our "audience."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Director's Eye - It's a Keeper
Review: This is one of those books that I keep coming back to, re-reading a passage or chapter, setting it down, and then coming back to it, again and again.

It isn't just for theatre directors; it's for actors in film, television, and theatre, and anyone else in the arts who longs to build meaning into their work.

As an actor in Hollywood, I can say that productions out here seem to get mired in the technical trappings--the lights, the camera angles, sightlines, continuity, cheating this out, coverage, blah blah. But where the hell is the connection between the actors? Between the director and the actor? Between the actor and himself? What is the dramatic action? And most of all, why the hell are we doing this, anyway? Does this mean anything to any of us? Where's the humanity in this piece? What's our personal connection to this material?

The messages in this book are universal and practical. Someone said when I moved to LA, "You need to find your voice." This book is the Start button.


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