An Actor's Freedom. University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. James Taylor Odom University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

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University of Arkansas, Fayetteville ScholarWorks@UARK Theses and Dissertations 5-2015 An Actor's Freedom James Taylor Odom University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd Part of the Acting Commons, and the Performance Studies Commons Recommended Citation Odom, James Taylor, "An Actor's Freedom" (2015). Theses and Dissertations. 1067. http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/1067 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact scholar@uark.edu.

An Actor s Freedom

An Actor s Freedom A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Fine Arts in Drama by James Taylor Odom Brenau University Bachelor of Arts in Theatre 2012 May 2015 University of Arkansas This thesis is approved for recommendation to the Graduate Council. Jenny McKnight, M.F.A. Thesis Director Amy Herzberg, M.F.A. Committee Member Michael Landman, M.F.A. Committee Member

ABSTRACT This thesis is an exploration and reflection on the discovery of an actor s freedom following an intense, three year study of the craft. It contains my statement of artistry, documentation of my thesis project and performance, as well as my future professional development materials.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Special thanks to: Amy Herzberg, for helping me discover the courage to access and reveal my heart. Michael Landman, for helping me discover my body s relationship to heart, space, objects, and others. Kate Frank, for providing me with methods that allow me the release of unwanted physical tension. Mavourneen Dwyer, for nurturing my voice through breath and text, to discover its freedom. Bob Ford, for guiding me through Meisner where I discovered the freedom in honesty. Gail Leftwich, for coaching me through styles of dance, where I discovered the freedom to make dance my own. Jenny McKnight, for helping me to discover the freedom of living on camera. TheatreSquared, for being an artistic home, where I explored the freedom of professional experience. Jim Hammond, for being my life-long coach of artistry and dear friend. My family, for their encouragement, investment, and love. Stefanie, for always seeing and expecting excellence in me, where I have often doubted it.

DEDICATION This is dedicated to: My father: An entertainer of such magnitude. Thank you for the gift of laughter, song, and lyric. You were my biggest fan and sometimes my biggest foe. We celebrated through the cheers and found forgiveness through the tears. I remember some of your very last words, I m proud of you and I love you. Let these words in here be an echo back to you: my dad, the dreamer.

TABLE OF CONTENTS I. STATEMENT OF ARTISTRY... 1 II. KIN PRODUCTION PROGRAM... 4 III. IV. KIN PRODUCTION PHOTOGRAPHS..10 THE FOREIGNER PRODUCTION PROGRAM 13 V. WEBSITE LINK. 19 VI. HEADSHOT AND RESUME... 20 VII. WORKS CITED... 22 VIII. APPENDIX A: PROOF OF PERMISSION... 23

STATEMENT OF ARTISTRY The truth will set you free (John 8:32). It s interesting that this text that the world has heard time and time again, could be a source of inspiration as if it were just spoken to me for the first time. Truth brings freedom to those who so desperately need it. As an artist I have always struggled to be free of myself, my best and worst critic. I have been desperate for that abandonment. These last 3 years have been a journey and discovery of freedom through truth and an understanding of my heart, body, and voice. I have been performing in front of people my whole life. When I was young I performed for my family and anyone that I encountered. I would put on voices, play Sherlock Holmes, or run around the house believing I was in some other circumstance. I began acting on stage when I was 14 and I ve never stopped. All the while, I never realized that I was disguising myself. I became void of my own person, to put on something else. In college I became familiar with the saying Acting is living truthfully under imaginary circumstances. I was aware of this definition but I didn t grasp what it meant for me. It wasn t until I met Amy Herzberg that I heard that without the use of your heart, you ll be a heartless character. The idea of using my heart seemed so antithetical to everything I thought I knew about acting. I always heard acting was disappearing into the character or to wear the mask of another. So I asked myself, if acting is living truthfully under imaginary circumstances, is masking myself honest? It took exploration in scene work to answer that question. I discovered that using my own heart, and revealing the biggest truth about me in my work was a recipe for successful acting. The access of my heart made me feel alive and free in a way that I had never experienced before. I could be confident about my work because my job was being done. I m 1

telling the truth. The only truth I can tell, is the truth I know. Here s where it becomes tricky though: Acting is living truthfully under imaginary circumstances. I can t just reveal the truth of James. It s the truth of me in someone else s experience. I discovered I had to find what was true for me and make it compatible for the character I was playing. As soon as I understood that the reveal of my heart was what I must do as an actor, I became so unsure of what to do with my body. I was so afraid that this choice or that choice of movement might not be telling the truth. Can I have a large, expansive physicality and it be honest? So for a while my choices were small and close to the vest and I became frustrated. In discovering freedom through the truth of my heart, my body became entrapped in a state of boring and weak physicality. I had no confidence to explore the space, objects in the room, and the other people within the scene. It wasn t until Michael Landman allowed me to see that there is truth to both large movement and small movement as well as fast tempos and slow tempos. There is truth in that as long as it is born out of the need of the character. There is nothing too much or too little, as long as it is in line with what the character wants. Viewpoints is a technique of acting in movement that Michael Landman taught as a course where I could explore the vast world of movement and gesture. It is there that I was able to comprehend the freedom of movement and discover the strength that it gives an actor on stage. The voice is one of the hardest parts of acting for me. I love to color my voice with style, character and description. The problem is that I am in control of my voice and it s unable to be free like my heart and body. When I am in control of it, I am usually unable to give the truth. I indicate and describe instead of living. That s the other key to the definition: Acting is living truthfully under imaginary circumstances. How do I live? Well it involves the freedom of heart and body as well as voice. If my heart is enough for the character, then surely my voice is more 2

than enough for the character. There lies the discovery of the power of the actor s voice. His or her own voice is powerful when it is released and there are no holds and the actor is out of control. It s interesting to take these things apart to look at heart, body and voice. With each one, I can assess my growth and discovery of freedom. However, in the end, the last truth is that they all are reciprocal. What that means is that one informs the other. When I free my voice, my heart becomes free. When I free my heart, my body becomes free. When I am free on stage, I am not worried about my best or worst critic. I am living truthfully and there is nothing to worry about. I can now enter the professional world with complete abandon and not second guess my work. I will always strive to uphold the power of freedom as an actor and encourage other actors that their heart, voice and body is more than enough. 3

KIN PRODUCTION PROGRAM Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 4

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 5

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 6

Program courtesy of UARK THEATRE 7

Program courtesy of UARK THEATRE 8

Program courtesy of UARK THEATRE 9

KIN PRODUCTION PHOTOGRAPHS Photo Courtesy of UARK THEATRE (Pictured from left, James Taylor Odom and Lupe Campos) 10

Photo Courtesy of UARK THEATRE (Pictured from left, James Taylor Odom and Lupe Campos) 11

Photo Courtesy of UARK THEATRE (Pictured above James Taylor Odom) 12

FOREIGNER PRODUCTION PROGRAM Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 13

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 14

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 15

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 16

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 17

Program Courtesy of UARK THEATRE 18

WEBSITE LINK http://jamestaylorodom.com 19

HEADSHOT AND RESUME Photo reprinted with permission from photographer, Jen Odom. (Pictured above: James Taylor Odom) 20

Photo Courtesy of Jen Odom (Pictured above: James Taylor Odom) 21

WORKS CITED Odom, Jen. James Taylor Odom. 2015. Headshot. Personal Collection. 22

APPENDIX A.1 Email Correspondence with Jen Odom 23

APPENDIX A.2 Department of Theatre Publicity Release Memo 24