Acting The Spoken Word.


by Brittney Dunn

"Who, What, Why, When, Where, How"

Did you ever have a friend ask: "What was that again?" as you finished telling him something? Then you repeated exactly what you had said—this time stress¬ing certain key words for emphasis,

and giving them a special connotation to bring out a particular significance beyond their literal

and obvious meaning.

Audiences can't ask, "What was that again?"

Actors have to use stress and connotation as tools of interpretation. These tools can answer every

possible question that the speech prompts in the mind of the listener. Every sentence has several words in it which might give the answer to specific questions.

For instance, take the line, "This is Helen Hayes speaking to you."

There are at least seven questions you could answer in this simple remark.

Read the line, accenting, or stressing, the first word, "this."

"This is Helen Hayes speaking to you."

You have answered the question "Who?"

Read the line again, stressing the second word, "is."

"This is Helen Hayes speaking to you."

You have not only established, but emphasized the identity of the speaker.

Accent the word "Helen" and you know which member of the Hayes family is speaking. If you accent the word "Hayes," you stress which particular Helen is speaking. Not Helen Smith,

not Helen Jones, but Helen Hayes.

Stress the word "speaking" and that answers the question of what Helen Hayes is doing. Accent the word "to" and it's clear that she's talking directly to you.

By accenting the word "you," there is no doubt to whom Helen Hayes is talking. The variety of meanings you can acquire by the ability to stress and give special connotation to

any word in a line gives the line authority, vitality and color.

In the first line of the "quality of mercy" speech, Portia says: "The quality of mercy is not

strain'd."

Helen Hayes would be able to answer all these parenthetical questions in that single phrase: (The what?) ... The quality ... (of what?) ... of mercy .. . (is not what?) ... is not strain'd. By answering those three questions in that one phrase, its reading gains much more color, or

vividness, than it would have if the actor thought of it as answering only one question. Practice the "quality of mercy" speech, answering each of the following parenthetical questions.

If you conscientiously practice answering these "who, what, why, when, where, how" questions, you

will develop word flexi¬bility and be able to get more out of the scenes.

About the Author

Addicted to acting? Me too! Tap into an ever-growing source of Free articles, resources, and insider career tips. Visit my site at http://www.nycacting.com

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