I know directing isn't on this list, but directing a play is the most comfortable I think I've ever felt anytime anywhere in the world. I haven't directed anything in over 3 years and I'm FREAKING OUT.Ruby Willmann wrote:...do you perfer teaching/performing/coaching?
I've coached only a handful of times and they've all been good experiences for me. I love to laugh and I get private shows where afterward I can tell people what I saw. I'm also trying to avoid the whole 'do a scene here are notes' coaching and instead finding trends of performance and offering new options. So that's up there too.
Teaching is something I'm pretty good at. I come from a family of teachers (both my parents and 3 of my 4 grandparents). I'm good at expressing my ideas and giving examples/analogies. I also like to encourage people and also find ways to comfortably but effectively give criticism. Those skills carry over into my directing and coaching as well.
I have to perform or else I feel like I'm not home. It might be my least favorite out of the four categories. I still love it though.
I also like being directed, coached, and taught by good people so I can get better at all four.
No, but I've been performing since I was a kid, so they wouldn't let me direct or teach NO MATTER HOW MUCH I STOMPED MY FEET AND HELD MY BREATH!!!Ruby Willmann wrote:And has your answer always been that?
Directing was transcendent and changed everything.
Part of the reason why I do so much more improv than I do acting/directing is the ease of putting on an improv show. At it's simplest, a bunch of people run on stage, the lights are up, you get a suggestion, then you do a show for 20 minutes, and then the lights go down. You SHOULD rehearse and find a troupe and take classes and workshops and see shows, but you don't HAVE to. The shows you are in will most likely suck though.Ruby Willmann wrote:Or did you also experience a complete shift in your priorities pertaining to improv?
Acting in a play requires rehearsals, costuming, lines, strict performance dates, tech/HELL week and a multitude of other factors. Directing requires choosing a play, finding a space, finding a stage manager, costumer, scene designer, lighting designer etc., and all that comes before you even get to casting the show. THEN you have to do all tech work while running rehearsals (with the help of an awesome stage manager) and basically doing/attending all the things the actor does above. All shows don't need or use all those positions (damn budgets) but it's still A LOT of work to get a show on stage.
So... all that leads to how improv has shifted my priorities away from theatre, not by being more satisfying but by being hundreds of times easier to do!