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'To be or, or...
um... line!'
[press
release]
Research
puts actors' memory on center stage
"How
do you learn all those lines?" It is the question most asked of actors
and their art. The ability to remember and effortlessly deliver large
quantities of dialogue verbatim amazes non-thespians.
Most
people imagine that learning a script involves hours, days, and even
months of rote memorization. But actors seldom work that way; in fact,
they often don't consciously try to memorize lines at all.
And
they seldom consider memorization as defining what they do.
What gives actors their seemingly effortless memory capabilities? Could
acting teach us something about memory and cognition, and could acting
principles help those with memory problems?
These are the questions that cognitive psychologist Helga Noice
(Elmhurst College) and her husband, cognitive researcher, actor, and
director Tony Noice (Indiana State University) have set out to answer
in nearly two decades of psychological studies of actors.
The
Noices have not only described a learning principle that can be taught
to non-actors but they have also tested acting-based interventions to
counter cognitive decline in older people. They review their research
in the February issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science.
According to the researchers, the secret of actors' memories is, well,
acting. An actor acquires lines readily by focusing not on the words of
the script, but on those words' meaning -- the moment-to-moment
motivations of the character saying them -- as well as on the physical
and emotional dimensions of their performance.
To get inside the character, an actor will break a script down into a
series of logically connected "beats" or intentions. Good actors don't
think about their lines, but feel their character's intention in
reaction to what the other actors do, causing their lines to come
spontaneously and naturally.
The
researchers quote the great British actor Michael Caine: "You must be
able to stand there not thinking of that line. You take it off the
other actor's face."
The key, the researchers have found, is a process called active
experiencing, which they say uses "all physical, mental, and emotional
channels to communicate the meaning of material to another person."
It is
a principle that can be applied off-stage as well as on. For example,
students who studied material by imagining conveying its meaning to
somebody else who needed the information showed higher retention than
those who tried to memorize the material by rote.
The active-experiencing principle was also found to be effective
against cognitive decline in old age. A group of older adults who
received a four-week course in acting showed significantly improved
word-recall and problem-solving abilities compared to both a group that
received a visual-arts course and a control group.
The
gains persisted four months afterward, as did a significant improvement
in the seniors' perceived quality of life.
Some of the Noices' findings confirm those of other researchers on
memory. Memory is heavily reliant on emotion, action, and perception.
In their work with actors, the Noices' have found, for example, that
memory is aided by physical movement.
In one
study, lines learned while making an appropriate motion -- e.g.,
walking across a stage -- were more readily remembered by actors later
than were lines unaccompanied by action. The physical motion didn't
need to be repeated at the time of recall.
===
article
source
Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the
Association for Psychological Science (previously the American
Psychological Society), publishes concise reviews spanning all of
scientific psychology and its applications.
> related book: The
Nature of Expertise in Professional Acting: A Cognitive View - by
Tony Noice, Helga Noice
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