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Konstantin Stanislavski
OccupationActor
Theatre director
Theatre theorist
Literary movementNaturalism
Symbolism
Psychological realism
Socialist realism
Notable worksFounder of the MAT
Stanislavski's 'system'
An Actor's Work
An Actor's Work on a Role
My Life in Art
SpouseMaria Petrovna Perevostchikova
(stage name: Maria Liliana)

The biography of Konstantin Stanislavski, the seminal Russian theatre practitioner, straddles two centuries, a world war, and political and artistic revolutions.[2] During his life, he was awarded the Order of the Red Banner and the Order of Lenin and was one of the first to be granted the title of People's Artist of the USSR.[3] He was widely recognised as an outstanding character actor and the many productions that he directed garnered a reputation as one of the leading directors of his generation.[4] His principal fame and influence, however, rests on his 'system' of actor training, preparation, and rehearsal technique.[5] Stanislavski (his stage name) performed and directed as an amateur until the age of 33, when he co-founded the world-famous Moscow Art Theatre (MAT) company with Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, following a legendary 18-hour discussion.[6] Its influential tours of Europe (1906) and the US (1923-4) and its landmark productions of The Seagull (1898) and Hamlet (1911-12) established his reputation and opened new possibilities for the art of the theatre.[7] By means of the MAT, Stanislavski was instrumental in promoting the new Russian drama of his day—principally the work of Anton Chekhov, Maxim Gorky, and Mikhail Bulgakov—to audiences in Moscow and around the world; he also staged acclaimed productions of a wide range of classical Russian and European plays.[8] He collaborated with the director and designer Edward Gordon Craig and was formative in the development of several other major practitioners, including Vsevolod Meyerhold (whom Stanislavski considered his "sole heir in the theatre"), Yevgeny Vakhtangov, and Michael Chekhov. In 1928, at the MAT's 30-year anniversary celebrations, a massive heart attack on-stage put an end to his acting career (though he waited until the curtain fell before seeking medical assistance).[9] He continued to direct, teach, and write about acting until his death a few weeks before the publication of the first volume of his life's great work, the acting manual An Actor's Work (1938).[10]

Throughout his life, Stanislavski subjected his acting and direction to a process of rigorous artistic self-analysis and reflection.[11] His 'system' of acting developed out of his persistent efforts to remove the blocks that he encountered in his performances, beginning with a major crisis in 1906.[12] He produced his early work using an external, director-centred technique that strove for an organic unity of all its elements—in each production he planned the interpretation of every role, blocking, and the mise en scène in detail in advance.[13] He also introduced a period of discussion and detailed analysis of the play by the cast into the production process.[14] Despite the success that this approach brought, particularly with his Naturalistic stagings of the plays of Chekhov and Gorky, Stanislavski remained dissatisfied.[15] Both his struggles with Chekhov's drama (out of which his notion of subtext emerged) and his experiments with Symbolism encouraged a greater attention to "inner action" and a more intensive investigation of the actor's process.[16] He began to develop the more actor-centred techniques of "psychological realism" and his focus shifted from his productions to rehearsal process and pedagogy.[17] He pioneered the use of theatre studios as a laboratory in which to innovate actor training and to experiment with new forms of theatre.[18] Building on the director-centred, unified aesthetic and disciplined, ensemble approach of the Meiningen company, the actor-centred realism of the Maly, and the Naturalistic staging of Antoine and the independent theatre movement, Stanislavski organised his techniques into a coherent, systematic methodology.[19]

The 'system' cultivates what Stanislavski calls the "art of experiencing" (to which he contrasts the "art of representation").[20] It mobilises the actor's conscious thought and will in order to activate other, less-controllable psychological processes—such as emotional experience and subconscious behaviour—sympathetically and indirectly.[21] In rehearsal, the actor searches for inner motives to justify action and the definition of what the character seeks to achieve at any given moment (a "task").[22] Later, Stanislavski further elaborated the 'system' with a more physically orientated rehearsal process known as the "Method of Physical Action".[23] Minimising at-the-table discussions, he now encouraged an "active analysis," in which the sequence of dramatic situations are improvised.[24] "The best analysis of a play," Stanislavski argued, "is to act it in the given circumstances".[25] Just as the First Studio, led by his assistant and close friend Leopold Sulerzhitsky, had provided the forum in which he developed his initial ideas for the 'system' during the 1910s, he hoped to secure his final legacy by opening another studio in 1935, in which the Method of Physical Action would be taught.[26] The Opera-Dramatic Studio embodied the most complete implementation of the training exercises described in his manuals.[27] Meanwhile, the transmission of his earlier work via the students of the First Studio was revolutionising acting in the West.[28] With the arrival of Socialist realism in the USSR, the MAT and Stanislavski's 'system' were enthroned as exemplary models.[29]

Stanislavski wrote that "there is nothing more tedious than an actor's biography" and that "actors should be banned from talking about themselves".[30] At the request of a US publisher, however, he reluctantly agreed to write his autobiography, My Life in Art (first published in English in 1924 and in a revised, Russian-language edition in 1926), though its account of his artistic development is not always accurate.[31] Two English-language biographies have been published: David Magarshack's Stanislavsky: A Life (1950) and Jean Benedetti's Stanislavski: His Life and Art (1988, revised and expanded 1999).[32]

Family background and early influences[edit]

Stanislavski had a privileged youth, growing up in one of the richest families in Russia, the Alekseievs.[33] He was born Konstantin Sergeievich Alexeiev—"Stanislavski" was a stage name that he adopted in 1884 to keep his performance activities secret from his parents.[34] Up until the communist revolution in 1917, Stanislavski often used his inherited wealth to fund his experiments in acting and directing.[35] His family's discouragement meant that he appeared only as an amateur until he was thirty three.[36]

As a child, Stanislavski developed an interest in the circus, the ballet, and puppetry.[37] Later, his family's two private theatres provided a forum for his theatrical impulses.[38] After his début performance at one in 1877, he started what would become a life-long series of notebooks filled with critical observations on his acting, aphorisms, and problems—it was from this habit of self-analysis and critique that Stanislavski's 'system' later emerged.[39] Stanislavski chose not to attend university, preferring to work in the family business.[40]

Increasingly interested in "experiencing the role," Stanislavski experimented with maintaining a characterisation in real life.[41] In 1884, he began vocal training under Fyodor Komissarzhevsky, with whom he also explored the co-ordination of body and voice.[42] A year later, Stanislavski briefly studied at the Moscow Theatre School but, disappointed with its approach, he left after little more than two weeks.[43] Instead, he devoted particular attention to the performances of the Maly Theatre, the home of Russian psychological realism (as developed in the 19th century by Alexander Pushkin, Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Shchepkin).[44] Shchepkin's legacy included a disciplined, ensemble approach, extensive rehearsals, and the use of careful observation, self-knowledge, imagination and emotion as the cornerstones of the craft.[45] Stanislavski called the Maly his 'university'.[46] One of Shchepkin's students, Glikeriya Fedotova, taught Stanislavski; she instilled in him the rejection of inspiration as the basis of the actor's art, stressed the importance of training and discipline, and encouraged the practice of responsive interaction with other actors that Stanislavski came to call "communication".[47] As well as the artists of the Maly, performances given by foreign stars influenced Stanislavski.[48] The effortless, emotive, and clear playing of the Italian Ernesto Rossi, who performed major Shakespearean tragic protagonists in Moscow in 1877, particularly impressed him.[49] So too did Tommaso Salvini's 1882 performance of Othello.[50]

Amateur work as an actor and director[edit]

By now well-known as an amateur actor, at the age of twenty-five Stanslavski co-founded a Society of Art and Literature.[51] Under its auspices, he performed in plays by Molière, Schiller, Pushkin, and Ostrovsky, as well as gaining his first experiences as a director.[52] He became interested in the aesthetic theories of Vissarion Belinsky, from whom he took his conception of the role of the artist.[53]

Stanislavski with his soon-to-be wife Maria Lilina in Schiller's Intrigue and Love in 1889.

On 5 July [O.S. 23 June] 1889, Stanislavski married Maria Lilina (the stage name of Maria Petrovna Perevostchikova).[1][54] Their first child, Xenia, died of pneumonia in May 1890 less than two months after she was born.[55] Their second daughter, Kira, was born on 2 August [O.S. 21 July] 1891.[56] In January 1893, Stanislavski's father died.[57] Their son Igor was born on 26 September [O.S. 14 September] 1894.[58]

In 1893 Stanislavski first met the great realist novelist and playwright Leo Tolstoy, who became another important influence on him.[59] The MAT would be his response to Tolstoy's demand for simplicity, directness and accessibility in art.[60] He described his production of Tolstoy's The Fruits of Enlightenment in February 1891 as his first fully independent directorial work.[61]

Stanislavski as Othello in 1896.

Stanislavski's directorial methods at this time were closely modelled on the disciplined, autocratic approach of Ludwig Chronegk, the director of the Meiningen Ensemble.[62] In My Life in Art (1924), Stanislavski described this approach as one in which the director is "forced to work without the help of the actor".[63] From 1894 onwards, Stanislavski began to assemble detailed prompt-books that included a directorial commentary on the entire play and from which not even the smallest detail was allowed to deviate.[64] Whereas the Ensemble's effects tended toward the grandiose, however, Stanislavski introduced lyrical elaborations through the mise en scène that dramatised more mundane and ordinary elements of life, in keeping with Belinsky's ideas about the "poetry of the real".[65] By means of his rigid and detailed control of all theatrical elements, including the strict choreography of the actors' every gesture, in Stanislavski's words "the inner kernel of the play was revealed by itself".[66] Analysing the Society's production of Othello (1896), Jean Benedetti observes that:

Stanislavski uses the theatre and its technical possibilities as an instrument of expression, a language, in its own right. The dramatic meaning is in the staging itself. [...] He went through the whole play in a completely different way, not relying on the text as such, with quotes from important speeches, not providing a 'literary' explanation, but speaking in terms of the play's dynamic, its action, the thoughts and feelings of the protagonists, the world in which they lived. His account flowed uninterruptedly from moment to moment.[67]

He argues that Stanislavski's task at this stage was to unite the realistic tradition of the creative actor inherited from Shchepkin and Gogol with the director-centred, organically unified Naturalistic aesthetic of the Meiningen approach.[55] That synthesis would emerge eventually, but only in the wake of Stanislavski's directorial struggles with symbolist theatre and an artistic crisis in his work as an actor. "The task of our generation," Stanislavski wrote as he was about to found the Moscow Art Theatre and begin his professional life in the theatre, is "to liberate art from outmoded tradition, from tired cliché and to give greater freedom to imagination and creative ability".[68]

Creation of the Moscow Art Theatre[edit]

Stanislavski's historic meeting with Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko on 4 July [O.S. 22 June] 1897 led to the creation of what was called initially the "Moscow Public-Accessible Theatre," but which came to be known as the Moscow Art Theatre (MAT).[69] Their eighteen-hour-long discussion has acquired a legendary status in the history of theatre.[70]


Nemirovich was a successful playwright, critic, theatre director, and acting teacher at the Philharmonic school who, like Stanislavski, was committed to the idea of a popular theatre.[71] Their abilities complemented one another: Stanislavski brought his directorial talent for creating vivid stage images and selecting significant details; Nemirovich, his talent for dramatic and literary analysis, his professional expertise, and his ability to manage a theatre.[72] Stanislavski later compared their discussions to the Treaty of Versailles, their scope was so wide-ranging; they agreed on the conventional practices they wished to abandon and, on the basis of the working method they found they had in common, defined the policy of their new theatre.[73]

Stanislavski and Nemirovich planned a professional company with an ensemble ethos that discouraged individual vanity; they would create a realistic theatre of international renown, with popular prices for seats, whose organically unified aesthetic would bring together the techniques of the Meiningen Ensemble and those of André Antoine's Théâtre Libre (which Stanislavski had seen during trips to Paris).[74] Nemirovich assumed that Stanislavski would fund the theatre as a privately owned business, but Stanislavski insisted on a limited, joint stock company.[75] Viktor Simov, whom Stanislavski had met in 1896, was engaged as the company's principal designer.[76]

Vsevolod Meyerhold prepares for his role as Konstantin to Stanislavski's Trigorin in the MAT's 1898 production of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull.

In his opening speech on the first day of rehearsals, 26 June [O.S. 14 June] 1898, Stanislavski stressed the "social character" of their collective undertaking.[77] In an atmosphere more like a university than a theatre, as Stanislavski described it, the company was introduced to his working method of extensive reading and research and detailed rehearsals in which the action was defined at the table before being explored physically.[78] It was at these rehearsals that Stanislavski's life-long relationship with Vsevolod Meyerhold began; by the end of June, Meyerhold was so impressed with Stanislavski's directorial skills that he declared him a genius.[79]

Naturalism at the MAT[edit]

The lasting significance of Stanislavski's early work at the MAT lies in its development of a Naturalistic performance mode.[80] In 1898, Stanislavski co-directed with Nemirovich the first of his productions of the work of Anton Chekhov.[81] The MAT production of The Seagull was a crucial milestone for the fledgling company that has been described as "one of the greatest events in the history of Russian theatre and one of the greatest new developments in the history of world drama".[82] Despite its 80 hours of rehearsal—a considerable length by the standards of the conventional practice of the day—Stanislavski felt it was under-rehearsed.[83] The production's success was due to the fidelity of its delicate representation of everyday life, its intimate, ensemble playing, and the resonance of its mood of despondent uncertainty with the psychological disposition of the Russian intelligentsia of the time.[84] Stanislavski went on to direct the successful premières of Chekhov's other major plays: Uncle Vanya in 1899 (in which he played Astrov), Three Sisters in 1901 (playing Vershinin), and The Cherry Orchard in 1904 (playing Gaev).[85] Stanislavski's encounter with Chekhov's drama proved crucial to the creative development of both men. His ensemble approach and attention to the psychological realities of its characters revived Chekhov's interest in writing for the stage, while Chekhov's unwillingness to explain or expand on the text forced Stanislavski to dig beneath its surface in ways that were new in theatre.[86]

Anton Chekhov (left), who in 1900 introduced Stanislavski to Maxim Gorky (right).[87]

In response to Stanislavski's encouragement, Maxim Gorky promised to launch his playwrighting career with the MAT.[88] In 1902, Stanislavski directed the première productions of the first two of Gorky's plays, The Philistines and The Lower Depths.[89] As part of the rehearsal preparations for the latter, Stanislavski took the company to visit Khitrov Market, where they talked to its down-and-outs and soaked up its atmosphere of destitution.[90] Stanislavski based his characterisation of Satin on an ex-officer he met there, who had fallen into poverty through gambling.[91] The Lower Depths was a triumph that matched the production of The Seagull four years earlier, though Stanislavski regarded his own performance as external and mechanical.[92]

The productions of The Cherry Orchard and The Lower Depths remained in the MAT's repertoire for decades.[93] Along with Chekhov and Gorky, the drama of Henrik Ibsen formed an important part of Stanislavski's work at this time—in its first two decades, the MAT staged more plays by Ibsen than any other playwright.[94] In its first decade, Stanislavski directed Hedda Gabler (in which he played Løvborg), An Enemy of the People (playing Dr Stockmann, his favourite role), The Wild Duck, and Ghosts.[95] "More's the pity I was not a Scandinavian and never saw how Ibsen was played in Scandinavia," Stanislavski wrote, because "those who have been there tell me that he is interpreted as simply, as true to life, as we play Chekhov".[96] He also staged other important Naturalistic works, including Gerhart Hauptmann's Drayman Henschel, Lonely People and Michael Kramer and Leo Tolstoy's The Power of Darkness.[97]

Symbolism and the Theatre-Studio[edit]

In 1904, Stanislavski finally acted on a suggestion made by Chekhov two years earlier that he stage several one-act plays by Maurice Maeterlinck, the Belgian Symbolist.[98] Despite his enthusiasm, however, Stanislavski struggled to realise a theatrical approach to the static, lyrical dramas.[99] When the triple bill consisting of The Blind, Intruder, and Interior opened on 15 October [O.S. 2 October], the experiment was deemed a failure.[100]

Design (by Nikolai Ulyanov) for Meyerhold's planned 1905 production of Hauptmann's Schluck and Jau at the Theatre-Studio he founded with Stanislavski, which relocated the play to a stylised abstraction of France under Louis XIV. Around the edge of the stage, ladies-in-waiting embroider an improbably long scarf with huge ivory needles.[101]

Meyerhold, prompted by Stanislavski's positive response to his new ideas about symbolist theatre, proposed that they form a "theatre studio" (a term which he invented) that would function as "a laboratory for the experiments of more or less experienced actors".[102] The Theatre-Studio aimed to develop Meyerhold's aesthetic ideas into new theatrical forms that would return the MAT to the forefront of the avant-garde and Stanislavski's socially conscious ideas for a network of "people's theatres" that would reform Russian theatrical culture as a whole.[103] Central to Meyerhold's approach was the use of improvisation to develop the performances.[104]

When the studio presented scenes from Maeterlinck's The Death of Tintagiles, Hauptmann's Schluck and Jau, and Ibsen's Love's Comedy on 24 August [O.S. 11 August] 1905 at Pushkino, Stanislavski was encouraged.[105] When the work was performed in a fully-equipped theatre in Moscow, however, it was regarded as a failure and the studio folded.[106] Meyerhold drew an important lesson: "one must first educate a new actor and only then put new tasks before him," he wrote, adding that "Stanislavski, too, came to such a conclusion".[107] Meyerhold would go on to explore physical expressivity, co-ordination, and rhythm in his experiments in actor training (which would found 20th-century physical theatre), while, for the moment, Stanislavski would pursue psychological expressivity through the actor's inner technique.[108] Reflecting in 1908 on the Theatre-Studio's demise, Stanislavski wrote that "our theatre found its future among its ruins".[109] Nemirovich disapproved of what he described as the malign influence of Meyerhold on Stanislavski's work at this time.[110]

Stanislavski engaged two important new collaborators in 1905: Liubov Gurevich became his literary advisor and Leopold Sulerzhitsky became his personal assistant.[111] Stanislavski revised his interpretation of the role of Trigorin (and Meyerhold reprised his role as Konstantin) when the MAT revived its production of Chekhov's The Seagull on 13 October [O.S. 30 September] 1905.[112] This was the year of the abortive revolution in Russia. Stanislavski signed a protest against the violence of the secret police, Cossack troops, and the right-wing extremist paramilitary "Black Hundreds", which was submitted to the Duma on the 3 November [O.S. 21 October].[113] Rehearsals for the MAT's production of Aleksandr Griboyedov's classic verse comedy Woe from Wit were interrupted by gun-battles on the streets outside.[114] Stanislavski and Nemirovich closed the theatre and embarked on the company's first tour outside of Russia.[115]

European tour and artistic crisis[edit]

The MAT's first European tour began on 23 February [O.S. 10 February] 1906 in Berlin, where they played to an audience that included Max Reinhardt, Gerhart Hauptmann, Arthur Schnitzler, and Eleanora Duse.[116] "It's as though we were the revelation," Stanislavski wrote of the rapturous acclaim they received.[117] The success of the tour provided financial security for the theatre, made a significant impact on European theatre, and garnered an international reputation for their work.[118] The tour had also provoked a major artistic crisis for Stanislavski that was to have a significant impact on his future direction.[119] From his attempts to resolve this crisis, his 'system' would eventually emerge.[120] Sometime in March 1906—Jean Benedetti suggests that it was during An Enemy of the People—Stanislavski became aware that he was acting without a flow of inner impulses and feelings and that as a consequence his performance had become mechanical.[121] He spent June and July in Finland on holiday, where he studied, wrote, and reflected.[122] With his notebooks on his own experience from 1889 onwards, he attempted to analyse "the foundation stones of our art" and the actor's creative process in particular.[123] He began to formulate a psychological approach to controlling the actor's process in a Manual on Dramatic Art.[124]

Productions as research into working methods[edit]

Sugar and Mytyl in Stanislavski's production of The Blue Bird (1908).

Stanislavski's activities began to move in a very different direction: his productions became opportunities for research, he was more interested in the process of rehearsal than its product, and his attention shifted away from the MAT towards its satellite projects—the theatre studios—in which he would develop his 'system'.[125] On his return to Moscow, he explored his new psychological approach in his production of Knut Hamsun's symbolist play The Drama of Life.[126] Nemirovich was particularly hostile to his new methods and their relationship continued to deteriorate in this period.[127] In a statement made on 9 February [O.S. 27 January] 1908 Stanislavski marked a significant shift in his directorial method and stressed the crucial contribution he now expected from a creative actor:

The committee is wrong if it thinks that the director's preparatory work in the study is necessary, as previously, when he alone decided the whole plan and all the details of the production, wrote the mise en scène and answered all the actors' questions for them. The director is no longer king, as before, when the actor possessed no clear individuality. [...] It is essential to understand this—rehearsals are divided into two stages: the first stage is one of experiment when the cast helps the director, the second is creating the performance when the director helps the cast.[128]

Stanislavski's preparations for Maeterlinck's The Blue Bird (which was to become his most famous production to-date) included improvisations and exercises to stimulate the actors' imaginations; Nemirovich described one in which the cast imitated various animals.[129] In rehearsals Stanislavski sought ways to encourage his actors' will to create afresh in every performance.[130] He focused on the search for inner motives to justify action and the definition of what the characters are seeking to achieve at any given moment (what he would come to call their "task").[131] This use of the actor's conscious thought and will was designed to activate other, less-controllable psychological processes—such as emotional experience and subconscious behaviour—sympathetically and indirectly.[132] Noting the importance to great actors' performances of their ability to remain relaxed, he discovered that he could abolish physical tension by focusing his attention on the specific action that the play demanded; when his concentration wavered, his tension returned.[133] "What fascinates me most", Stanislavski wrote in May 1908, "is the rhythm of feelings, the development of affective memory and the psycho-physiology of the creative process".[134] His interest in the creative use of the actor's personal experiences was spurred by a chance conversation in Germany in July that led him to the work of French psychologist Théodule-Armand Ribot.[135] His "affective memory" contributed to the technique that Stanislavski would come to call "emotion memory".[136] Together these elements formed a new vocabulary with which he explored a "return to realism" in a production of Gogol's The Government Inspector as soon as The Blue Bird had opened.[137] At a theatre conference on 21 March [O.S. 8 March] 1909, Stanislavski delivered a paper on his emerging 'system' that stressed the role of his techniques of the "magic if" (which encourages the actor to respond to the fictional circumstances of the play "as if" they were real) and emotion memory.[138] He developed his ideas about three trends in the history of acting, which were to appear eventually in the opening chapters of An Actor's Work: "stock-in-trade" acting, the art of representation, and the art of experiencing (his own approach).[139]

Stanislavski and Olga Knipper as Rakitin and Natalya in
Ivan Turgenev's A Month in the Country in 1909.

Stanislavski's production of A Month in the Country (1909) was a watershed in his artistic development.[140] Breaking the MAT's tradition of open rehearsals, he prepared Turgenev's play in private.[141] They began with a discussion of what he would come to call the "through-line" for the characters (their emotional development and the way they change over the course of the play).[142] This production is the earliest recorded instance of his practice of analysing the action of the script into discrete "bits".[143] At this stage, his technique involved identifying the emotional state contained in the psychological experience of the character during each bit and, through the use of the actor's emotion memory, forging a subjective connection to it.[144] Only after two months of rehearsals were the actors permitted to physicalise the text.[145] Stanislavski insisted that they should focus on playing the actions that their discussions around the table had identified.[146] Having realised a particular emotional state in a physical action, he assumed at this point in his experiments, the actor's repetition of that action would evoke the desired emotion.[147] As with his experiments in The Drama of Life, they also explored non-verbal communication, whereby scenes were rehearsed with actors interacting "only with their eyes".[148] The production's success when it opened in December 1909 seemed to prove the validity of his new methodology.[149]

Late in 1910, Gorky invited Stanislavski to join him in Capri, where they discussed actor training and Stanislavski's emerging "grammar".[150] Inspired by a popular theatre performance in Naples that employed the techniques of the commedia dell'arte, Gorky suggested that they form a company, modelled on the Medieval strolling players, in which a playwright and group of young actors would devise new plays together by means of improvisation.[151] Stanislavski would develop this use of improvisation in his work with his First Studio.[152]

Staging the classics[edit]

File:Craig's design (1908) for Hamlet 1-2 at Moscow Art Theatre.jpg
Symbolist Shakespeare at the MAT: Craig's 1908 design for the Craig—Stanislavski production of Hamlet (1911-12). This staging of act one, scene two prompted an ovation, which was unheard of in mid-performance at the MAT.[153]

In his treatment of the classics, Stanislavski believed that it was legitimate for actors and directors to ignore the playwright's intentions for a play's staging.[154] One of his most important—a collaboration with Edward Gordon Craig on a production of Hamlet—became a landmark of 20th-century theatrical modernism.[155] Stanislavski hoped to prove that his recently developed 'system' for creating internally justified, realistic acting could meet the formal demands of a classic play.[156] Craig envisioned a symbolist monodrama in which every aspect of production would be subjugated to the protagonist: it would present a dream-like vision as seen through Hamlet's eyes.[157] Despite these contrasting approaches, the two practitioners did share some artistic assumptions; the 'system' had developed out of Stanislavski's experiments with symbolist drama, which had shifted his attention from a Naturalistic external surface to the characters' subtextual, inner world.[158] Their production attracted enthusiastic and unprecedented worldwide attention for the theatre, placing it "on the cultural map for Western Europe," and it has come to be regarded as a seminal event that influenced the subsequent history of production style in the theatre.[159]

Increasingly absorbed by his teaching, in 1913 Stanislavski held open rehearsals for his production of Molière's The Imaginary Invalid as a demonstration of the 'system'.[160] As with his production of Hamlet and his next, Goldoni's The Mistress of the Inn, he was keen to assay his 'system' in the crucible of a classical text.[161] He began to inflect his technique of dividing the action of the play into bits with an emphasis on improvisation; he would progress from analysis, through free improvisation, to the language of the text:[162]

I divide the work into large bits clarifying the nature of each bit. Then, immediately, in my own words, I play each bit, observing all the curves. Then I go through the experiences of each bit ten times or so with its curves (not in a fixed way, not being consistent). Then I follow the successive bits in the book. And finally, I make the transition, imperceptibly, to the experiences as expressed in the actual words of the part.[163]

Stanislavski's struggles with both the Molière and Goldoni comedies revealled the importance of an appropriate definition of what he calls a character's "super-task" (the core problem that unites and subordinates the character's moment-to-moment tasks).[164] This impacted particularly on the actors' ability to serve the plays' genre, because an unsatisfactory definition produced tragic rather than comic performances.[165]

Other European classics directed by Stanislavski include: Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night, and Othello, an unfinished production of Molière's Tartuffe, and Beaumarchais's The Marriage of Figaro. Other classics of the Russian theatre directed by Stanislavki include: several plays by Ivan Turgenev, Griboyedov's Woe from Wit, Gogol's The Government Inspector, and plays by Tolstoy, Ostrovsky, and Pushkin.

Studios and the search for a 'system'[edit]

Leopold Sulerzhitsky in 1910, who led the First Studio and taught the elements of the 'system' there.

Following the success of his production of A Month in the Country, Stanislavski made repeated requests to the board of the MAT for proper facilities to pursue his pedagogical work with young actors.[166] Gorky encouraged him not to found a drama school to teach inexperienced beginners, but rather—following the example of the Theatre-Studio of 1905—to create a studio for research and experiment that would train young professionals.[167] Stanislavski created the First Studio on 14 September [O.S. 1 September] 1912.[168] Its founding members included Yevgeny Vakhtangov, Michael Chekhov, Richard Boleslavsky, and Maria Ouspenskaya, all of whom would exert a considerable influence on the subsequent history of theatre.[169] Suler (as Gorky had nicknamed Sulerzhitsky) was selected to lead the studio.[170] In a focused, intense atmosphere, their work emphasised experimentation, improvisation, and self-discovery.[171] Following Gorky's suggestions about devising new plays through improvisation, one aspect of their experiments searched for "the creative process common to authors, actors and directors".[172]

Stanislavski created the Second Studio of the MAT in 1916, in response to a production of Zinaida Gippius' The Green Ring that a group of young actors had prepared independently.[173] With a greater focus on pedagogical work than the First Studio, the Second Studio provided the environment in which Stanislavski developed the training techniques that would form the basis for his manual An Actor's Work (1938).[174]

A significant influence on the development of the 'system' came from Stanislavski's experience teaching and directing at his Opera Studio, which was founded in 1918.[175] He hoped that the successful application of his 'system' to opera, with its inescapable conventionality and artifice, would demonstrate the universality of his approach to performance and unite the work of Mikhail Shchepkin and Feodor Chaliapin.[176] From this experience Stanislavski's notion of "tempo-rhythm" emerged, which he was to develop most substantially in part two of An Actor's Work.[177] He invited Serge Wolkonsky to teach diction and Lev Pospekhin to teach expressive movement and dance and attended both of their classes as a student.[178]

From the First World War to the October Revolution[edit]

Stanislavski spent the summer of 1914 in Marienbad where, as he had in 1906, he researched the history of theatre and theories of acting in order to clarify the discoveries that his practical experiments had produced.[179] When the First World War broke out, Stanislavski was in Munich.[180] "It seemed to me," he wrote of the atmosphere at the train station in an article detailling his experiences, "that death was hovering everywhere".[181] The train was stopped at Immenstadt, where German soldiers denounced him as a Russian spy.[182] Held in a room at the station with a large crowd with "the faces of wild beasts" baying at its windows, Stanislavski believed he was to be executed.[183] He remembered that he was carrying an official document that mentioned having played to Kaiser Wilhelm during their tour of 1906 that, when he showed it to the officers, produced a change of attitude towards his group.[184] They were placed on a slow train to Kempten.[185] Gurevich later related how during the journey Stanislavski surprised her when he whispered that:

Stanislavski as Famusov in the 1914 revival of Griboyedov's Woe from Wit.

[E]vents of recent days had given him a clear impression of the superficiality of all that was called human culture, bourgeois culture, that a completely different kind of life was needed, where all needs were reduced to the minimum, where there was work—real artistic work—on behalf of the people, for those who had not yet been consumed by this bourgeois culture.[186]

In Kempten they were again ordered into one of the station's rooms, where Stanislavski overheard the German soldiers complain of a lack of ammunition; it was only this, he understood, that prevented their execution.[187] The following morning they were placed on a train and eventually returned to Russia via Switzerland and France.[188]

Turning to the classics of Russian theatre, the MAT revived Griboyedov's comedy Woe from Wit and planned to stage three of Pushkin's "little tragedies" in early 1915.[189] Stanislavski continued to develop his 'system,' explaining at an open rehearsal for Woe from Wit his concept of the state of "I am being".[190] This term marks the stage in the rehearsal process when the distinction between actor and character blurs (producing the "actor/role"), subconscious behaviour takes the lead, and the actor feels fully present in the dramatic moment.[191] He stressed the importance to achieving this state of a focus on action ("What would I do if..".) rather than emotion ("How would I feel if..".): "You must ask the kinds of questions that lead to dynamic action".[192] Instead of forcing emotion, he explained, actors should notice what is happening, attend to their relationships with the other actors, and try to understand "through the senses" the fictional world that surrounds them.[190] As part of his preparations for his role in Pushkin's Mozart and Salieri, Stanislavski created a biography for Salieri in which he imagined the character's memories of each incident mentioned in the play, his relationships with the other people involved, and the circumstances that had impacted on Salieri's life.[193] When he attempted to render all of this detail in performance, however, the subtext overwhelmed the text; overladen with heavy pauses, Pushkin's verse was fragmented to the point of incomprehensibility.[193] His struggles with this role prompted him to attend more closely to the structure and dynamics of language in drama; to that end, he studied Serge Wolkonsky's The Expressive Word (1913).[194]

The French theatre practitioner Jacques Copeau contacted Stanislavski in October 1916.[195] As a result of his conversations with Edward Gordon Craig, Copeau had come to believe that his work at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier shared a common approach with Stanislavski's investigations at the MAT.[195] On 30 December [O.S. 17 December] 1916, Stanislavski's assistant and closest friend, Leopold Sulerzhitsky, died from chronic nephritis.[196] Reflecting on their relationship in 1931, Stanislavski said that Suler had understood him completely and that no one, since, had replaced him.[197]

Revolutions of 1917 and the Civil War years[edit]

Stanislavski as General Krititski in Ostrovsky's Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man. His performance was particularly admired by Lenin.

Stanislavski welcomed the February Revolution of 1917 and its overthrow of the absolute monarchy as a "miraculous liberation of Russia".[198] With the October Revolution later in the year, the MAT closed for a few weeks and the First Studio was occupied by revolutionaries.[199] Stanislavski thought that the social upheavals presented an opportunity to realise his long-standing ambitions to establish a Russian popular theatre that would provide, as the title of an essay he prepared that year put it, "The Aesthetic Education of the Popular Masses".[200] Vladimir Lenin, who became a frequent visitor to the MAT after the revolution, praised Stanislavski as "a real artist" and indicated that, in his opinion, Stanislavski's approach was "the direction the theatre should take".[201] The revolutions of that year brought about an abrupt change in Stanislavski's finances when his factories were nationalised, which left his wage from the MAT as his only source of income.[202] On 29 August 1918 Stanislavski, along with several others from the MAT, was arrested by the Cheka, though he was released the following day.[203]

During the years of the Civil War, Stanislavski concentrated on teaching his 'system,' directing (both at the MAT and its studios), and bringing performances of the classics to new audiences (such as factory workers and the Red Army).[204] Several articles on Stanislavski and his 'system' were published, but none were written by him.[205] On 5 March 1921, Stanislavski was evicted from his large house on Carriage Row, where he had lived since 1903.[206] Following the personal intervention of Lenin (prompted by Anatoly Lunacharsky), Stanislavski was re-housed at 6 Leontievski Lane, not far from the MAT.[207] He was to live there until his death in 1938.[208] On 29 May 1922, Stanislavski's favourite pupil, the director Yevgeny Vakhtangov, died of cancer.[209]

MAT tour to the United States[edit]

In the wake of the temporary withdrawl of the state subsidy to the MAT that came with the New Economic Policy in 1921, Stanislavski and Nemirovich planned a tour to Europe and the USA to augment the company's finances.[210] The tour began in Berlin, where Stanislavski arrived on 18 September 1922, and proceeded to Prague, Zagreb, and Paris, where he was welcomed at the station by Jacques Hébertot, Aurélien Lugné-Poë, and Jacques Copeau.[211] In Paris, he also met André Antoine, Louis Jouvet, Isadora Duncan, Firmin Gémier, and Harley Granville-Barker.[212] He discussed with Copeau the possibility of establishing an international theatre studio and attended performances by Ermete Zacconi, whose control of his performance, economic expressivity, and ability both to "experience" and "represent" his role impressed him.[213]

From left to right: Ivan Moskvin, Stanislavski, Feodor Chaliapin, Vasili Kachalov, Saveli Sorine, in the USA in 1923.

The company sailed to New York and arrived on 4 January 1923.[214] When reporters asked about their repertoire, Stanislavski explained that "America wants to see what Europe already knows".[215] David Belasco, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Feodor Chaliapin attended the opening night performance.[216] Thanks in part to a vigorous publicity campaign that the American producer, Morris Gest, orchestrated, the tour garnered substantial critical praise, although it was not a financial success.[217] As actors (among whom was the young Lee Strasberg) flocked to the performances to learn from the company, the tour made a substantial contribution to the development of American acting.[218] Richard Boleslavsky presented a series of lectures on Stanislavski's 'system' (which were eventually published as Acting: The First Six Lessons in 1933).[219] A performance of Three Sisters on 31 March 1923 concluded the season in New York, after which they travelled to Chicago, Philadelphia, and then to Boston.[220]

At the request of a US publisher, Stanislavski reluctantly agreed to write his autobiography, My Life in Art, since his proposals for an account of the 'system' or a history of the MAT and its approach had been rejected.[221] He returned to Europe during the summer where he worked on the book and, in September, began rehearsals for a second tour.[222] The company returned to New York on 7 November and went on to perform in Philadelphia, Boston, New Haven, Hartford, Washington, D.C., Brooklyn, Newark, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and Detroit.[223] On 20 March 1924, Stanislavski met President Calvin Coolidge at the White House.[224] They were introduced by a translator, Elizabeth Hapgood, with whom he would later collaborate on An Actor Prepares.[225] The company left the US on 17 May 1924.[226]

Soviet productions[edit]

On his return to Moscow in August 1924, Stanislavski began with the help of Gurevich to make substantial revisions to his autobiography, in preparation for a definitive Russian-language edition, which was published in September 1926.[227] He continued to act, reprising the role of Astrov in a new production of Uncle Vanya (his performance of which was described as "staggering").[228] With Nemirovich away touring with his Music Studio, Stanislavski led the MAT for two years, during which time the company thrived.[229]

Stanislavski's production of Mikhail Bulgakov's The Days of the Turbins in 1926, with scenic design by Aleksandr Golovin.

With a company fully versed in his 'system,' Stanislavski's work on Mikhail Bulgakov's The Days of the Turbins focused on the tempo-rhythm of the production's dramatic structure and the through-lines of action for the individual characters and the play as a whole.[230] "See everything in terms of action" he advised them.[231] Aware of the disapproval of Bulgakov felt by the Repertory Committee (Glavrepertkom) of the People's Commissariat for Education, Stanislavski threatened to close the theatre if the play was banned.[232] Despite substantial hostility from the press, the production was a box-office success.[233]

In an attempt to render a classic play relevant to a contemporary Soviet audience, Stanislavski re-located the action in his fast and free-flowing production of Pierre Beaumarchais' 18th-century comedy The Marriage of Figaro to pre-Revolutionary France and emphasised the democratic point of view of Figaro and Susanna, in preference to that of the aristocratic Count Almaviva.[234] His working methods contributed innovations to the 'system': the analysis of scenes in terms of concrete physical tasks and the use of the "Line of the Day" for each character.[235] In preference to the tightly-controlled, Meiningen-inspired scoring of the mise en scène with which he had choreographed crowd scenes in his early years, he now worked in terms of broad physical tasks: actors responded truthfully to the circumstances of scenes with sequences of improvised adaptations that attempted to solve concrete, physical problems.[235] For the "Line of the Day," an actor elaborates in detail the events that supposedly occur to the character 'off-stage,' in order to form a continuum of experience (the "line" of the character's life that day) that helps to justify his or her behaviour 'on-stage'.[236] This means that the actor develops a relationship to where (as a character) he has just come from and to where he intends to go when leaving the scene.[236] The production was a great success, garnering ten curtain calls on opening night.[236] Thanks to its cohesive unity and rhythmic qualities, it is recognised as one of Stanislavski's major achievements.[236]

With a performance of extracts from its major productions—including the first act of Three Sisters in which Stanislavski played Vershinin—the MAT celebrated its 30-year jubilee on the 29 October 1928.[237] While performing Stanislavski suffered a massive heart-attack, though he continued until the curtain call, after which he collapsed.[238] With that, his acting career came to an end.[239]

A manual for actors[edit]

While on holiday in August 1926, Stanislavski began to develop what would become An Actor's Work, his manual for actors written in the form of a fictional student's diary.[240] Ideally, Stanislavski felt, it would consist of two volumes: the first would detail the actor's inner experiencing and outer, physical embodiment; the second would address rehearsal processes.[241] Since the Soviet publishers used a format that would have made the first volume unwieldy, however, in practice this became three volumes—inner experiencing, outer characterisation, and rehearsal—each of which would be published separately, as it became ready.[242] The danger that such an arrangement would obscure the mutual interdependence of these parts in the 'system' as a whole would be avoided, Stanislavski hoped, by means of an initial overview that would stress their integration in his psycho-physical approach; as it turned out, however, he never wrote the overview and many English-language readers came to confuse the first volume on psychological processes—published in a heavily abridged version in the USA as An Actor Prepares (1936)—with the 'system' as a whole.[243]

Diagram of Stanislavski's 'system', based on his "Plan of Experiencing" (1935).

The two editors—Hapgood with the American edition and Gurevich with the Russian—made conflicting demands on Stanislavski.[244] Gurevich became increasingly concerned that splitting An Actor's Work on Himself into two books would not only encourage misunderstandings of the unity and mutual implication of the psychological and physical aspects of the 'system,' but would also give its Soviet critics grounds on which to attack it: "to accuse you of dualism, spiritualism, idealism, etc".[245] Frustrated with Stanislavski's tendency to tinker with details in preference to addressing more important missing sections, in May 1932 she terminated her involvement.[246] Hapgood echoed Gurevich's frustration.[247]

In 1933, Stanislavski worked on the second half of An Actor's Work on Himself.[248] By 1935, a version of the first volume was ready for publication in America, to which the publishers made significant abridgements.[249] A significantly different and far more complete Russian edition, An Actor's Work on Himself, Part I, was not published until 1938, just after Stanislavski's death.[250] The second part of An Actor's Work on Himself was published in the Soviet Union in 1948; an English-language variant, Building a Character, was published a year later.[251] The third volume, An Actor's Work on a Role, was published in the Soviet Union in 1957; its nearest English-language equivalent, Creating a Role, was published in 1961.[252] The differences between the Russian and English-language editions of volumes two and three were even greater than those of the first volume.[253] In 2008 an English-language translation of the complete Russian edition of An Actor's Work on Himself was published, with one of An Actor's Work on a Role following in 2010.[254]

Development of the Method of Physical Action[edit]

Sketches by Stanislavski in his 1929-1930 production plan for Othello, which offers the first exposition of what came to be known as his Method of Physical Action rehearsal process.

While recuperating in Nice at the end of 1929, Stanislavski began a production plan for Shakespeare's Othello.[255] Hoping to use this as the basis for An Actor's Work on a Role, his plan offers the earliest exposition of the rehearsal process that became known as his Method of Physical Action.[256] He first explored this approach practically in his work on Three Sisters and Carmen in 1934 and Molière in 1935.[257]

In contrast to his earlier method of working on a play—which involved extensive readings and analysis around a table before any attempt to physicalise its action—Stanislavski now encouraged his actors to explore the action through its "active analysis".[258] He felt that too much discussion in the early stages of rehearsal confused and inhibited the actors.[259] Instead, focusing on the simplest physical actions, they improvised the sequence of dramatic situations given in the play.[260] "The best analysis of a play," he argued, "is to act it in the given circumstances".[261] If the actor justified and committed to the truth of the actions (which are easier to shape and control than emotional responses), Stanislavski reasoned, they would evoke truthful thoughts and feelings.[262]

Stanislavski's attitude to the use of emotion memory in rehearsals (as distinct from its use in actor training) had shifted over the years.[263] Ideally, he felt, an instinctive identification with a character's situation should arouse an emotional response.[264] The use of emotion memory in lieu of that had demonstrated a propensity for encouraging self-indulgence or hysteria in the actor.[264] Its direct approach to feeling, Stanislavski felt, more often produced a block than the desired expression.[264] Instead, an indirect approach to the subconscious via a focus on actions (supported by a commitment to the given circumstances and imaginative "Magic Ifs") was a more reliable means of luring the appropriate emotional response.[265]

This shift in approach corresponded both with an increased attention to the structure and dynamic of the play as a whole and with a greater prominence given to the distinction between the planning of a role and its performance.[266] In performance the actor is aware of only one step at a time, Stanislavski reasoned, but this focus risks the loss of the overall dynamic of a role in the welter of moment-to-moment detail.[267] Consequently, the actor must also adopt a different point of view in order to plan the role in relation to its dramatic structure; this involves adjusting his or her performance by holding back at certain moments and playing full out at others.[268] A sense of the whole thereby informs the playing of each episode.[269] Borrowing a term from Henry Irving, Stanislavski called this the "perspective of a role".[270]

Every afternoon for five weeks during the summer of 1934 in Paris, Stanislavski worked with the American actress Stella Adler, who had sought his assistance with the blocks she had confronted in her performances.[271] Given the emphasis that emotion memory had received in New York, Adler was surprised to find that Stanislavski rejected the technique except as a last resort.[272] The news that this was Stanislavski's approach would have significant repercussions in the US; Lee Strasberg angrily rejected it and refused to modify his version of the 'system'.[273]

Political fortunes under Stalin[edit]

Following his heart attack in 1928, for the last decade of his life Stanislavski conducted most of his work writing, directing rehearsals, and teaching in his home on Leontievski Lane.[274] In line with Joseph Stalin's policy of "isolation and preservation" towards certain internationally famous cultural figures, Stanislavski lived in a state of internal exile in Moscow.[275] This protected him from the worst excesses of Stalin's "Great Terror".[276]

A number of articles critical of the terminology of Stanislavski's 'system' appeared in the run-up to a RAPP conference in early 1931, at which the attacks continued.[277] The 'system' stood accused of philosophical idealism, of a-historicism, of disguising social and political problems under ethical and moral terms, and of "biological psychologism" (or "the suggestion of fixed qualities in nature").[278] In the wake of the first congress of the USSR Union of Writers (chaired by Maxim Gorky in August 1934), however, Socialist realism was established as the official party line in aesthetic matters.[279] While the new policy would have disasterous consequences for the Soviet avant-garde, the MAT and Stanislavski's 'system' were enthroned as exemplary models.[280]

Final work at the Opera-Dramatic Studio[edit]

Stanislavski at work in the final year of his life.

Given the difficulties he had with completing his manual for actors, Stanislavski decided that he needed to found a new studio if he was to ensure his legacy.[281] "Our school will produce not just individuals," he wrote, "but a whole company".[282] In June 1935, he began to instruct a group of teachers in the training techniques of the 'system' and the rehearsal processes of the Method of Physical Action.[283] His wife, Lilina, also joined the teaching staff.[284] Twenty students (out of 3,500 auditionees) were accepted for the dramatic section of the Opera-Dramatic Studio, where classes began on 15 November.[285] Stanislavski arranged a curriculum of four years of study that focused exclusively on technique and method—two years of the work detailed later in An Actor's Work on Himself and two of that in An Actor's Work on a Role.[286] Once the students were acquainted with the training techniques of the first two years, Stanislavski selected Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet for their work on roles.[287] He worked with the students in March and April 1937, focusing on their sequences of physical actions, on establishing their through-lines of action, and on rehearsing scenes anew in terms of the actors' tasks.[288] By June 1938 the students were ready for their first public showing, at which they performed a selection of scenes to a small number of spectators.[289] The Opera-Dramatic Studio embodied the most complete implementation of the training exercises that Stanislavski described in his manuals.[290]

From late 1936 onwards, Stanislavski began to meet regularly with Vsevolod Meyerhold, with whom he discussed the possibility of developing a common theatrical language.[291] In 1938, they made plans to work together on a production and discussed a synthesis of Stanislavski's Method of Physical Action and Meyerhold's biomechanical training.[292] On 8 March, Meyerhold took over the rehearsals for Rigoletto, the staging of which he completed after Stanislavski's death.[293] On his death-bed Stanislavski declared to Yuri Bakhrushin that Meyerhold was "my sole heir in the theatre—here or anywhere else".[294] Stalin's police tortured and killed Meyerhold in February 1940.[295]

Stanislavski died in his home at 3:45pm on 7 August 1938, having probably suffered another heart-attack five days earlier.[296] Thousands of people attended his funeral.[297] Three weeks after his death his widow, Lilina, received an advanced copy of the Russian-language edition of the first volume of An Actor's Work on Himself—the "labour of his life," as she called it.[298] Stanislavski was buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow, not far from the grave of Anton Chekhov.[299]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b For dates before the Soviet state's switch from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar in February 1918, this article gives the date in the New Style (Gregorian) date-format first, followed by the same day in the Old Style (Julian) date-format (which appears in square brackets and slightly smaller); this is to enable an accuracy in dates given in line with the published sources, some of which use today's calendar, some of which use the date that appears in contemporary sources. Thus, Stanislavski was born on the 17 January according to the Gregorian calendar that is in use today, while his birthday was 5 January according to the Julian calendar that was in use at the time. The difference between the two is 12 days in the 19th century and 13 days in the 20th (12 days for Julian dates prior to 1 March 1900 [Gregorian 14 March] and 13 days for Julian dates on or after 1 March 1.1900) For more information on the difference between the two systems, see the article Old Style and New Style dates. Dates after 1 February 1918 are presented as normal.
  2. ^ Carnicke (2000, 11). Stanislavski's development of a theorised praxis—in which practice is used as a mode of inquiry and theory as a catalyst for creative development—identifies him as the first great theatre practitioner. Stanislavski's 'system' is, Benedetti argues, "his practice examined, tested and verified"; see Benedetti (1989, 1), Counsell (1996, 25), and Gordon (2006, 39).
  3. ^ Carnicke (1998, 33), Golub (1998, 1033), and Magarshack (1950, 385, 396).
  4. ^ Benedetti (1999b, 254), Leach (2004, 14), and Milling and Ley (2001, 1).
  5. ^ Carnicke (2000, 16), Golub (1998, 1032), and Milling and Ley (2001, 1). Stanislavski began developing a 'grammar' of acting in 1906; his initial choice to call it his System struck him as too dogmatic, so he preferred to write it as his 'system' (without the capital letter and in inverted commas), in order to indicate the provisional nature of the results of his investigations. Modern scholarship follows that practice; see Benedetti (1999a, 169), Gauss (1999, 3-4), and Milling and Ley (2001, 1).
  6. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 59), Braun (1982, 59), Carnicke (2000, 11), and Worrall (1996, 43).
  7. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 165), Carnicke (2000, 12), Gauss (1999, 1), Gordon (2006, 42), and Milling and Ley (2001, 13-14).
  8. ^ Carnicke (2000, 12-16, 29-33) and Gordon (2006, 42).
  9. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 317) and Magarshack (1950, 378).
  10. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 374-375) and Magarshack (1950, 404).
  11. ^ Benedetti (1989, 1) and (2005, 109), Gordon (2006, 40-41), and Milling and Ley (2001, 3-5).
  12. ^ Benedetti (1989, 1) and Gordon (2006, 42-43).
  13. ^ Benedetti (1989, 18, 22-23), (1999a, 42), and (1999b, 257), Carnicke (2000, 29), Gordon (2006, 40-42), Leach (2004, 14), and Magarshack (1950, 73-74). Need a better citation for unity of all elements (add to MAT Hamlet draft too). As Carnicke emphasises, Stanislavski's early prompt-books, such as that for the production of The Seagull in 1898, "describe movements, gestures, mise en scène, not inner action and subtext" (2000, 29). The principle of a unity of all elements (or what Richard Wagner had called a Gesamtkunstwerk) survived into Stanislavski's 'system,' while the exclusively external technique did not; although his work shifted from a director-centred to an actor-centred approach, his 'system' nonetheless valorises the absolute authority of the director. The Gesamtkunstwerk was an important principle for the Symbolists.
  14. ^ Milling and Ley (2001, 5). The belief that this period of collective analysis was important to play production was one of the principles and working practices that Stanislavski and Nemirovich found they had in common during their legendary 18-hour conversation that led to the establishment of the MAT.
  15. ^ Bablet (1962, 134), Benedetti (1989, 23-26) and (1999a, 130), and Gordon (2006, 37-42). Carnicke emphasises the fact that Stanislavski's great productions of Chekhov's plays were staged without the use of the 'system' (2000, 29).
  16. ^ Benedetti (1989, 25-39) and (1999a, part two), Carnicke (1998, 29) and (2000, 21-22, 29-30, 33), and Gordon (2006, 41-45). In his notes on the play Woe from Wit, which were drafted between 1916 and 1920, Stanislavski writes: "Usually stage action implies something false and external. It is common to think that a work is rich in stage action, when people come and go, marry, divorce, kill or threaten others, when the plot is tight. That is a nonsense. Stage action is not a matter of coming on, moving about, waving one's arms, etc. It is not a question of legs and body but of inner movement, endeavour. So, let us understand 'action', once and for all, not as facial expression, not as histrionic representation, not as external but as internal, not as physical but as psychological" (1957, 136). Stanislavski elaborates his notion of subtext in chapter 19 ("Voice and Speech") of An Actor's Work (1938).
  17. ^ Benedetti (1989, 30) and (1999a, 181, 185-187), Counsell (1996, 24-27), Gordon (2006, 37-38), Magarshack (1950, 294), and Milling and Ley (2001, 2).
  18. ^ Carnicke (2000, 13), Gauss (1999, 3), Gordon (2006, 45-46), and Milling and Ley (2001, 6).
  19. ^ Benedetti (1989, 5-11, 15, 18) and (1999b, 254), Braun (1982, 59), Carnicke (2000, 13, 29), Counsell (1996, 24), Gordon (2006, 38, 40-41), and Innes (2000, 53-54).
  20. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 201), Carnicke (2000, 17), and Stanislavski (1938, 16-36). Stanislavski's "art of representation" corresponds to Mikhail Shchepkin's "actor of reason" and his "art of experiencing corresponds to Shchepkin's "actor of feeling"; see Benedetti (1999a, 202).
  21. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 170).
  22. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 182-183).
  23. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 325, 360) and (2005, 121). Add Roach citation. The term "Method of Physical Action" was applied to this rehearsal process after Stanislavski's death. Benedetti indicates that though Stanislavski had developed it since 1916, he first explored it practically in the early 1930s; see (1998, 104) and (1999a, 356, 358). Gordon argues the shift in working-method happens during the 1920s (2006, 49-55). An actor who trained under Stanislavski in this approach, Vasili Toporkov, provides in his Stanislavski in Rehearsal (2004) a detailed account of the Method of Physical Action at work in Stanislavski's rehearsals for The Embezzlers by Valentin Kataev (1928), Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol, adapted by Mikhail Bulgakov (1932), and Tartuffe by Molière (a production completed by Mikhail Kedrov in 1939).
  24. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 355-256), Carnicke (2000, 32-33), Leach (2004, 29), Magarshack (1950, 373-375), and Whyman (2008, 242). At this stage in his career, Stanislavski had come to feel that too much discussion in the early stages of rehearsal confused and inhibited the actors; see Benedetti (1999a, 355), Carnicke (2000, 32), and Magarshack (1950, 374-375).
  25. ^ Quoted by Magarshack (1950, 375).
  26. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 359-360), Golub (1998, 1033), Magarshack (1950, 387-391), and Whyman (2008, 136).
  27. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 359-363) and Magarshack (1950, 387-391), and Whyman (2008, 136). Benedetti (1998, xii) and Whyman (2008, 136). Benedetti argues that the course at the Opera-Dramatic Studio is "Stanislavski's true testament". His book Stanislavski and the Actor (1998) offers a reconstruction of the studio's course.
  28. ^ Carnicke (1998, 1, 167) and (2000, 14), Counsell (1996, 24-25), Golub (1998, 1032), Gordon (2006, 71-72), Leach (2004, 29), and Milling and Ley (2001, 1-2). Many actors routinely equate his 'system' with the American Method, although the latter's exclusively psychological techniques contrast sharply with Stanislavski's multivariant, holistic and psychophysical approach, which explores character and action both from the 'inside out' and the 'outside in' and treats the actor's mind and body as parts of a continuum; see Benedetti (2005, 147-148), Carnicke (1998, 1, 8), Golub (1998, 1033), and Gordon (2006, 72). Not only actors are subject to this confusion; Lee Strasberg's obituary in The New York Times credited Stanislavski with the invention of the Method: "Mr. Strasberg adapted it to the American theatre, imposing his refinements, but always crediting Stanislavsky as his source" (Quoted by Carnicke 1998, 9). Carnicke argues that this "robs Strasberg of the originality in his thinking, while simultaneously obscuring Stanislavsky's ideas" (1997, 9). In a note from 1913 Stanislavski wrote that a character "is sometimes formed psychologically, i.e. from the inner image of the role, but at other times it is discovered through purely external exploration"; quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 216). Neither the tradition that formed in the USSR nor the American Method, Carnicke argues, "integrated the mind and body of the actor, the corporal and the spiritual, the text and the performance as thoroughly or as insistently as did Stanislavsky himself" (1998, 2). For evidence of Strasberg's misunderstanding of this aspect of Stanislavski's work, see Strasberg (2010, 150-151).
  29. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 354-355), Carnicke (1998, 78, 80) and (2000, 14), and Milling and Ley (2001, 2).
  30. ^ From a note written by Stanislavski in 1911, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 289).
  31. ^ Benedetti (1989, 1) and (1999a, xiv, 288), Carnicke (1998, 76), and Magarshack (1950, 367). The American publishing company for the English-language edition was Little, Brown and Company.
  32. ^ Benedetti (1999a) and Magarshack (1950). This article draws substantially on both books. There is also an out-of-print English translation of Elena Poliakova's Russian biography of Stanislavski (1982).
  33. ^ "If, in the United States one could be 'rich as Rockefeller,' in Moscow the corresponding expression was, and is, 'rich as Alekseiev'" (Benedetti 1999, 3). See also Carnicke (2000, 11), Magarshack (1950, 1), and Leach (2004, 6). The Alexeievs were a prosperous, bourgeois family, whose factories manufactured gold and silver braiding for military decorations and uniforms. Margarshack indicates that at this time "the life of the rich Moscow merchant was indistinguishable from the life of the Moscow nobility" (1950, 3).
  34. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 21, 24) and Carnicke (2000, 11). The prospect of becoming a professional actor was taboo for someone of his social class; actors had an even lower social status in Russia than in the rest of Europe, having only recently been serfs and the property of the nobility. Benedetti explains that Stanislavski "inherited" his stage name from another amateur, Dr Mako: "a friend at Luibimovka, and an admirer, as he had been as a boy, of the ballerina Stanislavskaia. It was a safe name to adopt. Of Polish origin, it suggested humble status and was unlikely to be associated with one of Moscow's most eminent bourgeois families". Magarshack gives the amateur actor's name as Markov (1950, 19).
  35. ^ Braun (1982, 59) and Carnicke (2000, 11).
  36. ^ Carnicke (2000, 11).
  37. ^ Benedetti writes that the children of the house "were taken to the theatre and concerts almost as soon as they could walk" (1999, 10); see Benedetti (1999a, 6-11) and Magarshack (1950, 9-11, 27-28). The family's mansion at Red Gates, on Sadovaia Street, became a focus for the artistic and cultural life of the city.
  38. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 13, 18), Carnicke (2000, 11), Gordon (2006, 40), and Magarshack (1950, 31-32, 77). Stanislavski's father, Sergei Vladimirovich Alekseiev, was elected head of the merchant class in Moscow (one of the most important and influential positions in the city) in 1877; that same year, he had a fully-equipped theatre built on his estate at Liubimovka for the entertainment of his family and friends. The family's second theatre was added in 1881 to their mansion at Red Gates, on Sadovaia Street in Moscow (where Stanislavski lived from 1863 to 1903).
  39. ^ Benedetti (1989, 2), (1999a, 14), and (2005, 109), Gordon (2006, 40), and Magarshack (1950, 21-22).
  40. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 18) and Magarshack (1950, 26).
  41. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 18-19) and Magarshack (1950, 25, 33-34). He would disguise himself as a tramp or drunk and visit the railway station, or as a fortune-telling gypsy; he extended the experiment to the rest of the cast of a short comedy in which he performed in 1883, and as late as 1900 he amused holiday-makers in Yalta by taking a walk each morning "in character". As Benedetti explains, however, Stanislavski soon abandoned the technique of maintaining a characterisation in real life; it does not form a part of his 'system'. Stanislavski's frequent term "experiencing the role" is often mistranslated as "living the role"; see Carnicke (2000, 17).
  42. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 19-20), Magarshack (1950, 49-50), and Whyman (2008, 139). Komissarzhevsky was a professor at the Conservatory and leading tenor of the Bolshoi. Together they devised exercises in moving and sitting stationary "rhythmically", which anticipated Stanislavski's later use of physical rhythm when teaching his 'system' to opera singers. He provided one of the models (the other was Stanislavski himself) for the character of Tortsov in his actor's manual An Actor's Work (1938); see Benedetti (2008a, xxi). He was the father of the famous actress Vera Komissarzhevskaya.
  43. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 21). Students were encouraged to mimic the theatrical tricks and conventions of their tutors.
  44. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 14-17) and (2005, 100). In 1823, Pushkin had concluded that what united the diverse classical authors—Shakespeare, Racine, Corneille and Calderón—was their common concern for truth of character and situation, understood as credible behaviour in concrete circumstances: "The truth concerning the passions, verisimilitude in the feelings experienced in the given circumstances, that is what our intelligence demands of a dramatist" ("Pushkin's aphorism," 1830; Benedetti offers an alternative translation of Pushkin's aphorism in his The Art of the Actor: "Authenticity of the passions, sentiments that seem true in the proposed circumstances, that is what our intelligence requires of the writer"). Gogol, meanwhile, campaigned against overblown, effect-seeking acting. In an article of 1846, he recommends a modest, dignified mode of comic performance in which the actor seeks to grasp "what is dominant in the role" and considers "the character's main concern, which consumes his life, the constant object of his thought, the 'bee in his bonnet'". This inner desire forms the "heart of the role," to which the "tiny quirks and tiny external details" are added as embellishment. The Maly soon became known as the House of Shchepkin, the father of Russian realistic acting who, in 1848, promoted the idea of an "actor of feeling". This actor would "become the character" and identify with their thoughts and feelings: he would "walk, talk, think, feel, cry, laugh as the author wants him to". A copy of Shchepkin's Memoirs of a Serf-Actor, in which the actor describes his struggle to achieve a naturalness of style, was heavily-annotated by Stanislavski; see Banham (1998, 985) and Benedetti (1999a, 14-16) and (2005, 100-101).
  45. ^ Banham (1998, 985).
  46. ^ Benedetti (1989, 2).
  47. ^ Banham (1998, 985), Benedetti (1989, 20) and (2005, 109), and Magarshack (1950, 51-52). For more on Fedotova, see Schuler (1996, 64-88). The development of a responsive interaction between actors was a significant innovation of the conventions of theatrical performance at the time; as Benedetti explains: "Leading actors would simply plant themselves downstage centre, by the prompter's box, wait to be fed the lines and then deliver them straight at the audience in a ringing voice, giving a fine display of passion and 'temperament'. Everyone, in fact, spoke their lines out front. Direct communication with other actors was minimal. Furniture was so arranged as to allow the actors to face front" (1989, 5). Fedotova encouraged Stanislavski to "look your partner straight in the eyes, read his thoughts in his eyes, and reply to him in accordance with the expression of his eyes and face"; quoted by Magarshack (1950, 52).
  48. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 17). Foreign actors would often come to Moscow during Lent (when Russian actors were prohibited from appearing).
  49. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 17).
  50. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 18), Gordon (2006, 41), and Milling and Ley (2001, 5). Years later, Stanislavski wrote that Salvini was the "finest representative" of the art of experiencing approach to acting; see Stanislavski (1938, 19).
  51. ^ Magarshack (1950, 52, 55-56). Stanislavski made a proposal to Fyodor Sollogub and Aleksandr Fedotov to establish the Society, which would unite amateur and professional actors and artists. Stanislavski's autobiography gives Sollugub's name as "Count Fyodor Salogub". Aleksandr Fillipovich Fedotov was a theatre director and the estranged husband of of Stanislavski's teacher, Glikeriya Fedotova. The profits from Stanislavski's family's factory were particularly high in 1887-1888; Stanislavski decided to use the surplus 25,000-30,000 roubles to form the Society, for which he had the Ginzburg House on Tverskaia Street converted into a luxurious clubhouse with its own large stage and exhibition rooms. Benedetti writes that as a result of the profitability of the family factory, Stanislavski "suddenly found himself with 25,000-30,000 roubles more than he expected"; he continues: "he decided to spend it all on an ambitious scheme" (1999a, 27). Worrall, however, offers a more modest figure for Stanislavski's initial financial investment in the Society: "With his first year’s dividend of 1,020 roubles he established, together with Komissarzhevskiy and Fedotov, the Society of Art and Literature" (1996, 24). Fedotov became head of the dramatic section, Komissarzhevski was the head of the operatic and musical section, and Sollogub was appointed head of the graphic arts section; the drama and opera sections each had a school; see Magarshack (1950, 56). To research the curriculum of the society's drama school, Stanislavski spent the summer of 1888 in Paris, where he studied the classes and performances of the Comédie-Française. The society's school was to offer classes in dramatic art, the history of costume, make-up, drama, Russian literature, aesthetics, fencing and dancing. The school opened on 20 October [O.S. 8 October] 1888 and the society itself was officially inaugurated on 15 November [O.S. 3 November] with a ceremony attended by Anton Chekhov; see Benedetti (1999a, 29-30) and Worrall (1996, 25).
  52. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 30-40) and Worrall (1996, 24). With the guidance of Fedotov and Sollogub, Stanislavski finally abandoned the operatic conventions and theatrical clichés in his acting that he had mimicked from other actors' performances; see Benedetti (1989, 20-21) and Magarshack (1950, 64).
  53. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 35-37). Belinsky's conception provided the basis for a moral justification for Stanislavski's desire to perform that accorded with his family's sense of social responsibility and ethics.
  54. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 37) and Magarshack (1950, 54), and Worrall (1996, 26).
  55. ^ a b Benedetti (1999a, 42).
  56. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 43).
  57. ^ Magarshack (1950, 81).
  58. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 47).
  59. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 46) and Magarshack (1950, 82-85). They first met on 10 November [O.S. 29 October] 1893. Stanislavski later recalled that Tolstoy had delivered, over dinner, a sermon on vegetarianism. Tolstoy re-wrote the fourth act of his The Power of Darkness along the lines of Stanislavski's suggestions in 1896. Tolstoy's What Is Art? (1898) promoted immediate intelligibility and transparency as an aesthetic principle. Stanislavski's concept of "experiencing the role" is based on Tolstoy's belief that rather than knowledge, art communicates felt experience; see Carnicke (2000, 17).
  60. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 54).
  61. ^ Worrall (1996, 27); see also Magarshack (1950, 78-80) and Benedetti (1999a, 42-43).
  62. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 40-43), Braun (1995, 27), Magarshack (1950, 70-74), Milling and Ley (2001, 6), and Worrall (1996, 28-29). Stanislavski had enthusiastically studied the Ensemble's productions of Julius Caesar, The Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night, as well as a number of plays by Schiller, during their second visit to Moscow in 1890. The Ensemble's approach included historical accuracy in set, props and costumes and complex crowd effects achieved through a tightly-drilled rehearsal process. Its use of off-stage sound to produce the illusion of a reality beyond the visible stage particularly impressed Stanislavski. Their productions demonstrated a model for artistic achievement with relatively unskilled actors that Stanislavski was to adopt for the early part of his career as a director.
  63. ^ Magarshack (1950, 73).
  64. ^ Benedetti (1989, 23) and (1999a, 47), Magarshack (1950, 86-90), and Worrall (1996, 28-29). He first explored this process during his painstaking rehearsals for Karl Gutzkow's melodrama Uriel Acosta and Shakespeare's Othello.
  65. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 35-36, 44).
  66. ^ Benedetti (1989, 23) and (1999a, 48) and Magarshack (1950, 80).
  67. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 44 and 50-51).
  68. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 55).
  69. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 59) and Worrall (1996, 43).
  70. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 61) and Worrall (1996, 64). Their discussion lasted from lunch at 2pm in a private room in the Slavic Bazaar restaurant to 8am the following morning over breakfast at Stanislavski's family estate at Liubimovka.
  71. ^ Benedetti (1989, 16) and (1999, 59-60). The Maly performed Nemirovich's work as a playwright and his play The Worth of Life had beaten Chekhov's The Seagull to win the Griboyedov prize, much to the author's dismay. At the Philharmonic school he taught Vsevolod Meyerhold and Olga Knipper, whom he would invite to join the MAT. In 1896 Stanislavski had discussed with Nikolai Efros (who was to become the Moscow Art Theatre's first literary manager) his ideas for a scheme to establish a network of touring theatre companies that would bring high-quality drama to the surrounding area of selected towns. Stanislavski proposed to call them "open" or "accessible" theatres, in a bid to avoid alarming the authorities with their connection to the dangerously democratising "popular theatre" movement that was spreading across Europe, spearheaded by Romain Rolland. On 28 February [O.S. 16 February] 1897, Stanislavski joined Anton Chekhov, whom he had met the previous evening, in an open public discussion on the creation of a popular theatre that was reported in the press. At this time he also helped to organise the first all-Russian conference on the theatre, whose keynote speaker, Yevtikhiy Karpov, urged the creation of a "Russian people's theatre". Stanislavski returned to his ideas for a people's theatre in 1905 and again in 1910; see Benedetti (1999a, 56, 59), Bradby and McCormick (1978, 11-44), Magarshack (1950, 318), and Worrall (1996, 15, 35).
  72. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 60-61).
  73. ^ Benedetti (1989, 16). Responsibility was to be shared between them on the basis of their individual strengths, with Stanislavski overseeing production and Nemirovich in charge of the repertoire and literary decisions; each had a veto.
  74. ^ Benedetti (1989, 17-18) and (1999, 61-62) and Carnicke (2000, 29). They selected actors from Nemirovich's class at the Philharmonic school and Stanislavski's amateur Society of Art and Literature group, along with other professional actors. The company consisted of 39 actors, 23 men and 16 women, 30% of whom came from Nemirovich's Philharmonic class and 35% of whom came with Stanislavski from the Society of Art and Literature, with a total staff numbering 323; see Worrall (1996, 40, 43-44).
  75. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 62-63) and Worrall (1996, 37-38). Stanislavski's family's assets amounted to some 8 million roubles at the time. Stanislavski would only ever invest an initial 10,000 roubles in the MAT. In an attempt to raise the rest of the theatre's 28,000 roubles launch capital, Nemirovich persuaded some of the directors of the Philharmonic Society to contribute. Members of the board of the Society of Art and Literature also invested. The theatre's principal shareholder, however, was to be Savva Morozov, who invested 10,000 roubles. The company had 13 shareholders, who signed an agreement on 22 April [O.S. 10 April] 1898; see Benedetti (1999a, 63-64) and Worrall (1996, 38-40). With an annual salary of 4,200 roubles each, Stanislavski and Nemirovich were to represent the interests of the acting company in the business, though with the aim of transferring control to the actors eventually.
  76. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 67) and Braun (1982, 61).
  77. ^ Worrall (1996, 45) and Benedetti (1999a, 68). "We are striving to create the first rational, moral, and public-accessible theatre," Stanislavski said, "and we dedicate our lives to this high goal". For want of suitable rehearsal space in Moscow, the company met in Pushkino, isolated 50 miles from the city; see Benedetti (1999a, 68-69).
  78. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 70). Throughout June and July the company rehearsed productions of Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, Sophocles' Antigone, Hauptmann's The Assumption of Hannele, Pisemsky's Men Above the Law, Lenz's The Tutor and Alexei Tolstoy's Tsar Fiodor Ioannovich; see Benedetti (1999a, 67-72) and Worrall (1996, 46-47).
  79. ^ Stanislavski's Othello (1896) had made a strong impression on the twenty-two year old Meyerhold, who would become an important director and theatre practitioner in his own right; see Benedetti (1999a, 52, 70).
  80. ^ Gordon (2006, 37-38, 55) and Innes (2000, 54).
  81. ^ Need to locate the citations for each of these and a general one for the co-direction. Stanislavski played Trigorin, Meyerhold played Konstantin, and Olga Knipper played Arkadnia.
  82. ^ Rudnitsky (1981, 8) and Benedetti (1999a, 85).
  83. ^ Stanislavski threatened to have his name removed from the posters when Nemirovich refused his demand to postpone its opening by a week. Rehearsals were spread over 24 sessions: 9 with Stanislavski and 15 with Nemirovich; see Benedetti (1999a, 85).
  84. ^ Allen (2001, 20-21) and Braun (1981, 64). To commemorate this historic production, which gave the MAT its sense of identity, the company to this day bears the seagull as its emblem.
  85. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 386) and Leach (2004, 14). Stanislavski also played Shabelski in the MAT's production of Chekhov's Ivanov in 1904.
  86. ^ Benedetti (1989, 25-26). In Stanislavski's words, Chekhov and the MAT were united in a common desire "to achieve artistic simplicity and truth on the stage"; quoted by Allen (2001, 11). By 1922, however, Stanislavski had become disenchanted with the MAT's productions of Chekhov's plays—"After all we have lived through," he remarked to Nemirovich, "it is impossible to weep over the fact that an officer is going and leaving his lady behind" (refering to the conclusion of Three Sisters); quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 272).
  87. ^ Braun (1988, xvi) and Magarshack (1950, 201, 226).
  88. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 119), Braun (1988, xvi) and Magarshack (1950, 201-202). Up until that point, Gorky had only written short stories, which had made him immensely popular in Russia. As well as directing and acting in Gorky's plays, Stanislavski also provided financial support for Gorky's theatre in Nizhny Novgorod in 1904, which he saw as an opportunity to develop the network of provincial theatres that he hoped would reform the art of the stage in Russia (of which he had dreamed since the 1890s). Stanislavski sent some pupils from the Art Theatre School—as well as Ioasaf Tikhomirov, who ran the school—to work at Gorky's theatre. By the autumn, however, after the censor had banned every play that it proposed to stage, the project was abandoned; see Benedetti (1999a, 150).
  89. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 119-131), Braun (1988, xvi-xvii), Magarshack (1950, 202, 229, 244), and Worrall (1996, 131). Nemirovich took over the direction of The Lower Depths during its rehearsal process and the two directors disagreed on the correct approach to the play; neither of their names appeared on its posters and Nemirovich claimed all the credit for its success. The title of The Philistines has also been translated as Small People, The Merchant Class, The Petty-Bourgeois, and The Artisans. It premièred in St Petersburg in early 1902 as part of the MAT's tour; Benedetti gives its opening as 7 April [O.S. 25 March], while Braun gives it as 8 April [O.S. 26 March]; see Benedetti (1999a, 126) and Braun (1988, xvi). The Lower Depths premièred in Moscow on 31 December [O.S. 18 December] 1902; see Benedetti (1999a, 130) and Braun (1988, xvii).
  90. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 127-129). Viktor Simov, the company's scenic designer, based his designs for the production on photographs taken during the trip. Several photographs of the production, taken in 1904, appear in Dacre and Fryer (2008, 34-37).
  91. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 127).
  92. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 130), Braun (1988, xvii-xviii) and Magarshack (1950, 202, 244). Gorky's relationship with the MAT after this became more strained. In 1904 both Gorky and Savva Morozov had terminated their relationship with the MAT in the wake of conflict with Nemirovich; despite Stanislavski's attempts to persuade him otherwise, Gorky refused permission for the company to produce his Enemies and declined "any kind of connection with the Art Theatre". Nemirovich had insulted Gorky with his critical assessment of Gorky's new play Summerfolk, which he described as shapeless and formless raw material that lacked a plot. Nemirovich's behaviour prompted Morozov to resign from the MAT's board and to withdraw his financial support (though he maintained his initial investment in the theatre of almost 15,000 rubles); see Benedetti (1999a, 149-150). The following year, however, Stanislavski was able to persuade Gorky to allow the company to perform his Children of the Sun, under Stanislavski's direction. He directed it in the now-familiar Naturalistic manner for which the MAT had become famous, despite Gorky's misgivings. The first performance was a public dress rehearsal on the 6 November [O.S. 24 October] 1905; see Benedetti (1999a, 159-160, 387) and Magarshack (1950, 275-276).
  93. ^ Houghton (1973, 8).
  94. ^ Worrall (1996, 36).
  95. ^ Benedetti (1989, 23) and (1999a, 386-387) and Meyer (1974, 529-530, 820).
  96. ^ Quoted by Meyer (1974, 820-821).
  97. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 386) and Innes (2000, 54).
  98. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 149, 151), Braun (1995, 28), and Magarshack (1950, 266). The ideas of Valery Bryusov and the Russian Symbolist movement represented the avant-garde in Russia at the time. Bryusov called for a form of acting that released the actor's creativity and the audience's imagination from the limitations of the conventions of realism. Bryusov had criticised the realism of the MAT in a famous article entitled "Unneccessary Truth" (1902); see Braun (1995, 30-31) and Carlson (1993, 313-314). As Stanislavski would come to do with his '|system', Bryusov placed the burden for a modernist transformation of the art of the stage squarely on the shoulders of the actor: the "art of the theatre", he wrote, "and the art of the actor are one and the same thing". Bryusov, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 151); "The theatre's sole task is to help the actor reveal his soul to the audience". Bryusov, quoted by Braun (1995, 31). Materlinck's essay on symbolist drama "The Tragic in Daily Life" (1896) had been published in Russian translation in 1901 (as part of his The Treasure of the Humble). In May 1904 the translator of Maeterlinck's three plays into Russian, Konstantin Balmont, met with the playwright to seek his opinions on their staging. Maeterlinck explained that he wished his dialogue to be spoken with an understated expressivity that should fall somewhere between romantic declamation and total realism; see Benedetti (1999a, 150-151), Braun (1982, 109) and (1995, 28), Carlson (1993, 313-316), and Magarshack (1950, 265).
  99. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 151), Braun (1995, 28), and Magarshack (1950, 265).
  100. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 151-152, 386) and Braun (1995, 28).
  101. ^ Leach (1989, 104).
  102. ^ Braun (1995, 29), Magarshack (1950, 267), and Rudnitsky (1981, 56). Meyerhold had recently returned to Moscow with the results of the experiments he had conducted with his "New Drama Association" in the Ukraine and Georgia. Meyerhold had left the MAT in early 1902 and within months had established a company with Alexander Kosheverov in the city of Kherson in southern Ukraine. When in 1903 Meyerhold assumed sole responsibility for the company, he renamed it the "New Drama Association"; Rudnitsky explains that, two years before Stanislavski's experiments, this had been "the first sign that there was in Russia a director who would at least try to depart from the aesthetic system of psychological realism and in practice apply the principles of Symbolism to the theatre. For Meyerhold soon made it known that 'New Drama' was for him not only Ibsen, Hauptmann and Chekhov, but also Maeterlinck, Przybyszewski, and Schnitzler" (1981, 33). Having toured a number of other Russian cities, in 1904 the company moved to the more cosmopolitan Tbilisi in Georgia; see Benedetti (1999a, 155), Rudnitsky (1981, 27-48) and Leach (2004, 55). Officially attached to the MAT but actually subsidised privately by Stanislavski himself, the Theatre-Studio was inaugurated on 16 June [O.S. 3 June] 1905. Meyerhold was to be its artistic director, with Stanislavski serving as a co-director. Its company consisted of actors from Meyerhold's "New Drama Association," actors from the MAT, some from the Alexandrinsky Theatre in St Petersburg, and students from the Art Theatre School. Stanislavski hired a run-down theatre for the Theatre-Studio on the corner of Povarskaya Street and Merzlyakovsky Lane, the former Nemchinov theatre in the Girsh house, which he paid more than 20,000 roubles to renovate; Benedetti gives the size of the theatre as 1,200 seats, whereas Rudnitsky gives its size as 700 seats; see Benedetti (1999a, 156) and Rudnitsky (1981, 56). Magarshack writes that the Theatre-Studio cost Stanislavski more than 50,000 roubles (1950, 274). See also Braun (1995, 29).
  103. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 154-156), Braun (1995, 27-29), Magarshack (1950, 267-274), and Rudnitsky (1981, 52-76). At the first meeting of its members, Stanislavski defined the studio's task as "to find together with new currents in dramatic literature correspondingly new forms of dramatic art" (Stanislavski speaking at the first meeting of the Theatre-Studio members on 18 May [O.S. 5 May] 1905); quoted by Rudnitsky (1981, 56). In his proposal, Meyerhold had described its task as the search for "new means of representation for a new dramaturgy"; Rudnitsky (1981, 54). Stanislavski presented a proposal for the MAT to develop a network of theatres at a meeting with colleagues on 26 February [O.S. 13 February] 1905, but Nemirovich scuppered the idea. Stanislavski would return to the idea again in 1918 in the wake of the October Revolution; see Benedetti (1999a, 247-248). Bryusov became involved as its literary advisor and helped to define the company's artistic principles.; see Benedetti (1999a, 156), Braun (1995, 30), and Magarshack (1950, 270).
  104. ^ Leach (2004, 56).
  105. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 159) and Magarshack (1950, 272). The stone barn that had been converted into a small theatre for the studio's rehearsals was not the same one in which the MAT had rehearsed some years earlier; see Magarshack (1950, 269).
  106. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 161) and Magarshack (1950, 272-274).
  107. ^ Meyerhold, quoted by Rudnitsky (1981, 74). See also Benedetti (1999a, 161) and Magarshack (1950, 273-274).
  108. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 161), Leach (2004, 1) and Rudnitsky (1981, 73). Rudnitsky observes that "Stanislavski at that time still believed in the possibility of 'peaceful coexistence' for Symbolist abstractions and the live, physical and psychological realization of completely credibly acted characters. Stanislavski's subsequent Symbolist productions showed his ineradicable striving toward realistic justification and prosaic circumstantiality of Symbolist motifs" (1981, 75).
  109. ^ Stanislavski, quoted by Rudnitsky (1981, 75).
  110. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 156) and Braun (1995, 29).
  111. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 154) and Magarshack (1950, 282-286). Gurevich was the editor of the influential Symbolist journal The Northern Herald ([Severnyi vestnik] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) from 1894 to 1917; see Carnicke (1998, 75) and Slonim (1962, 86). She and Stanislavski had been writing to one another since the MAT's first tour to St Petersburg. She worked as his advisor for the next 30 years. Meyerhold later credited Sulerzhitsky with continuing the experiments of the Theatre-Studio in Stanislavski's productions of Knut Hamsun's The Drama of Life (1907), Leonid Andreiev's The Life of Man (1907), Maurice Maeterlinck's The Blue Bird (1908), and the MAT's production of Hamlet (1911) with Edward Gordon Craig.
  112. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 159).
  113. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 160).
  114. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 161), Magarshack (1950, 276), and Worrall (1996, 170-171).
  115. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 162) and Magarshack (1950, 276).
  116. ^ The MAT opened with Tolstoy's Tsar Fiodor Ioannovich, which had been re-rehearsed for the tour; the company also took its productions of Gorky's The Lower Depths, Chekhov's Uncle Vanya and Three Sisters, and Ibsen's An Enemy of the People. The company also visited Dresden, Leipzig, Prague, Vienna, Frankfurt, Hanover, Karlsruhe, Wiesbaden, Düsseldorf, and Warsaw, returning to Moscow on 16 May [O.S. 3 May] 1906; see Benedetti (1999a, 163-165) and Magarshack (1950, 276-277).
  117. ^ Letter to his brother, Vladimir, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 169).
  118. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 165). Benedetti writes that "For German and Austrian writers the Art Theatre seemed to offer a new way of thinking about acting and directing, a new concept of the nature of the theatre itself. It opened up a range of possibilities". Hauptmann said that the MAT had staged the kind of theatre of which he had always dreamt. Schnitzler wrote that the experience changed his life forever. Reinhardt founded his Kammerspiele theatre in direct imitation of the MAT. See Benedetti (1999a, 165-166).
  119. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 166-167) and Gordon (2006, 41-42).
  120. ^ Benedetti (1998, xx) and Gordon (2006, 41).
  121. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 166-167) and Gordon (2006, 41-42).
  122. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 167-168) and Magarshack (1950, 281-282).
  123. ^ Stanislavski quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 168); see also Gordon (2006, 42).
  124. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 167-168).
  125. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 181) and Magarshack (1950, 306).
  126. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 159, 172-174) and Magarshack (1950, 287). Benedetti argues that Stanislavski's "attempts to base the production on psychological action only, without gestures, conveying everything through the face and eyes, met with only partial success" (1999, 174).
  127. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 172-173) and Magarshack (1950, 286-287).
  128. ^ Stanislavski in a statement made on 9 February [O.S. 27 January] 1908, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 180); see also Magarshack (1950, 273-274).
  129. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 177, 179, 183). Stanislavski's speech to the company after the play's first read-through was published in French on 15 June 1907 in the Mercure de France and in a Russian translation from the French version on 9 August [O.S. 27 July] 1907 in the Stolichnoe Utro; see Benedetti (1999a, 177-178). Stanislavski spent two weeks with Maeterlinck in Normandy in the summer of 1908, where he found that, in the words of Magarshack, Maeterlinck "had most precise views about everything but not the slightest idea how to carry them out on the stage" (1950, 295). Note earlier uses of improvisation; from Meyerhold and Gorky. See Benedetti (1999a, 360).
  130. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 182-183). Rehearsals for the production began on 29 December [O.S. 16 December] 1907; see Benedetti (1999a, 178).
  131. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 182-183).
  132. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 170).
  133. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 185) and Magarshack (1950, 304).
  134. ^ Stanislavski, letter to Vera Kotlyarevskaya, 18 May [O.S. 5 May] 1908; quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 184) and Whyman (2008, 247-248). Benedetti indicates that this is the earliest mention of the concept of "affective memory" in Stanislavski's writings and occurs before his exposure to the work of Théodule-Armand Ribot in July 1908. Whyman highlights Stanislavski's interest in the unity of physical and psychological processes in the same year that he discovers Ribot, although she maintains that he sometimes discusses the relationship in dualist terms; see Whyman (2008, 248-253).
  135. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 184-185) and Magarshack (1950, 304). Ribot's books The Diseases of the Memory and The Diseases of the Will had been published in Russian translation in 1900; see Ribot (2006) and (2007) for English-language versions.
  136. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 185), Counsell (1996, 28-29), and Stanislavski (1938, 197-198).
  137. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 185-186) and Magarshack (1950, 294, 304). Drawing on Gogol's notes on the play, Stanislavski insisted that its exaggerated external action must be justified through the creation of a correspondingly intense inner life; see Benedetti (1999a, 185-186) and (2005, 100-101). Admiring the results of the new working method, Nemirovich praised the production's "deep psychological investigation of the characters and the rediscovery of direct, simple speech" and said that of all their work at the MAT, none had "been in the hands of the actors to such a degree"; Nemirovich, interview in Russkoe Slovo on 1 December [O.S. 18 November] 1908; quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 186).
  138. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 200) and Magarshack (1950, 304-305).
  139. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 201) and Stanislavski (1938, 16-36). Stanislavski's "art of representation" corresponded to Shchepkin's "actor of reason" and his "art of experiencing corresponded to Shchepkin's "actor of feeling"; see Benedetti (1999a, 202).
  140. ^ Magarshack (1950, 304-306) and Worrall (1996, 181-182). Magarshack describes the production as "the first play he produced according to his system".
  141. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 190) and Magarshack (1950, 305).
  142. ^ Leach (2004, 17) and Magarshack (1950, 307).
  143. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 190).
  144. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 190). Stanislavski would soon change this approach - find mood stuff.
  145. ^ Leach (2004, 17).
  146. ^ Leach (2004, 29).
  147. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 198).
  148. ^ Magarshack (1950, 305-306).
  149. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 194).
  150. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 203) and Magarshack (1950, 320).
  151. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 203-204), Magarshack (1950, 320-321), and Whyman (2008, 242). In a speech given in 1920, Vsevolod Meyerhold proposed a similar practice: "We shall need scenarios and we shall often utilize even the classics as a basis for our theatrical compositions. [...] It is possible that we shall adapt texts in co-operation with the actors of the company [...]. Joint work on texts by the company is envisaged as an integral part of the theatre's function. It is possible that such team-work will help us to realize the principle of improvisation, about which there is so much talk at the moment and which promises to prove most valuable"; Meyerhold (1991, 169-170).
  152. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 204), Magarshack (1950, 320-322, 332-333), and Whyman (2008, 242).
  153. ^ Innes (1983, 152). For more detail on Craig's staging of this scene, see the article on the production.
  154. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 225). A play could be adapted "to the actor's inner experiences," he explained to a skeptical Nemirovich during rehearsals for the MAT's revival of Griboyedov's Woe from Wit in 1914. To support his position, Stanislavski cited Gogol's advice to "take any play of Schiller or Shakespeare and stage it as contemporary art demands" and Chekhov's delight at the MAT actor Ivan Moskvin's creative departure from Chekhov's intentions in his characterisation of Epikhodov in their production of The Cherry Orchard.
  155. ^ Benedetti (1998, 188-211). Craig and Stanislavski were introduced by Isadora Duncan in 1908, from which time they began planning the production. A serious illness of Stanislavski's, however, delayed its opening until 5 January 1912 [O.S. 23 December 1911] (he contracted typhoid fever in August 1910); see Benedetti (1999a, 195) and Magarshack (1950, 311, 315).
  156. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 189-195).
  157. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 189-195). On Craig's relationship to Russian symbolism and its principles of monodrama in particular, see Taxidou (1998, 38-41); on Craig's staging proposals, see Innes (1983, 153); on the centrality of the protagonist and his mirroring of the 'authorial self', see Taxidou (1998, 181, 188) and Innes (1983, 153). The most famous aspect of the production is Craig's use of a single, plain set that varied from scene to scene by means of large, abstract screens that altered the size and shape of the acting area; see Innes (1983, 140-175). The different arrangements of the screens for each scene were used to provide a spatial representation of Hamlet's state of mind or to underline a dramaturgical progression across a sequence of scenes, as visual elements were retained or transformed; see Innes (1983, 165-167). There is a persistent theatrical myth that these screens were impractical and fell over during the first performance. This myth may be traced to a passage in Stanislavski's My Life in Art (1924); Craig demanded that Stanislavski delete the story and Stanislavski admitted that the incident occurred only during a rehearsal. He eventually provided Craig with a sworn statement that the mishap was due to an error by the stage-hands and not the design of Craig's screens. The screens had been built ten feet taller than Craig's designs specified, which may have also contributed. Craig had envisaged specially-costumed, visible stage-hands to move the screens, but Stanislavski had rejected the idea. This forced a curtain close and delay between scenes, which disrupted the sense of fluidity and movement inherent to Craig's conception; see Innes (1983, 67-172).
  158. ^ See Benedetti (1998, part two).
  159. ^ Innes (1983, 172) and Benedetti (1999a, 199). Reviews in Britain's The Times and in the French press praised the production as an unqualified success; those in the Russian press were mostly hostile.
  160. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 211).
  161. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 214).
  162. ^ Benedetti suggests that this inflection indicates the influence of Stanislavski's conversations with Gorky (1999a, 215).
  163. ^ From notes in the Stanislavski archive, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 215).
  164. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 216-218) and Carnicke (1998, 181).
  165. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 216, 218). Of the Molière production, Stanislavski wrote that: "Initially we approached the play in a very simplistic fashion defining the supertask as 'I want to be ill'. The greater my efforts to achieve that and the more I succeeded, the more it became obvious that we were turning a satirical comedy into a pathological tragedy about illness. But we quickly grasped our error and defined the despot’s supertask as 'I want people to think I am ill'. With that the comic aspect of the play suddenly came alive, the basis for exploitation by a group of charlatans from the medical world had been created and a tragedy was suddenly transformed into a malicious comedy" (quoted by Benedetti 1999a, 216-217); of the Goldoni production, he wrote: "at first we defined the supertask as 'I want to hate women' (misogyny) but this stopped the play from being either funny or effective. Once I had understood that the hero liked women and did not actually wish to be a misogynist but only appear so, then the supertask became 'I want to woo them secretly' (simulating misogyny) and the play suddenly came to life" (quoted by Benedetti 1999a, 218).
  166. ^ Stanislavski made several statements concerning his desire to focus on teaching throughout 1910. At a meeting of the board on 18 September [O.S. 5 September] 1911, Nemirovich finally proposed that the organisation should respond to Stanislavski's repeated requests. See Benedetti (1999a, 206-209) and Magarshack (1950, 331)..
  167. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 209) and Gauss (1999, 34-35).
  168. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 209-11), Leach (2004, 17), and Whymann (2008, 31).
  169. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 210) and Gauss (1999, 32, 49-50). Boleslavsky and Ouspenskaya went on to found the influential American Laboratory Theatre (1923-1933) in New York, which they modeled on the First Studio. Boleslavsky's manual Acting: The First Six Lessons (1933) played a significant role in the transmission of Stanislavski's ideas and practices to the United States. Boleslavsky thought that his student Lee Strasberg over-emphasised the role of emotion memory at the expense of dramatic action; see Banham (1998, 112). Chekhov (another of the students of the First Studio and, under the name of the Second MAT, would lead the group) would also come to reject the use of the actor's emotion memory in his later work; see Chamberlain (2000, 80-81).
  170. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 209), Gauss (1999, 32-33), and Leach (2004, 17-18). Described as the "soul" of the studio, Suler taught the elements of Stanislavski's 'system' in its germinal form: relaxation, concentration of attention, imagination, communication, and emotion memory; see also Chamberlain (2000, 80). Gauss writes that "the actual daily operation fell almost entirely to Suler during the first stage of the Studio's existence"; (1999, 35).
  171. ^ Gauss (1999, 40), Leach (1994, 18), and Whyman (2008, 242).
  172. ^ From the notes by Sulerzhitsky on a speech given by Stanislavski in September 1912, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 210); see also Magarshack (1950, 332-333).
  173. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 211) and Gauss (1999, 61-63).
  174. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 236), Gauss (1999, 65), and Leach (2004, 19).
  175. ^ Stanislavski created the Opera Studio in 1918 under the auspices of the Bolshoi Theatre, though it later severed its connection with the theatre. The studio underwent a series of name-changes as it developed into a full-scale company: in 1924 it was renamed the "Stanislavski Opera Studio"; in 1926 it became the "Stanislavski Opera Studio-Theatre"; in 1928 it became the Stanislavski Opera Theatre; and in 1941 the theatre merged with Nemirovich's music studio to become the Stanislavski and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Academic Music Theatre. See Benedetti (1999a, 211, 255-270), Magarshack (1950, 350-352), Stanislavski and Rumyantsev (1975, x), and Whyman (2008, 135). Nemirovich had created the Moscow Art Theatre Music Studio in 1919, though Stanislavski had no connection to it; see Leach (2004, 20) and Benedetti (1999a, 255). Prior to his eviction in March 1921, Stanislavski worked with the Opera Studio in the two rehearsal rooms of his large house on Carriage Row. His brother and sister, Vladimir and Zinaïda, ran the studio and also taught there. It accepted young members of the Bolshoi and students from the Moscow Conservatory. See Benedetti (1999a, 255-259), Magarshack (1950, 350-352) and Whyman (2008, 135). A series of thirty-two lectures that he delivered at the Opera Studio between 1919 and 1922 were recorded by Konkordia Antarova and published in 1939; they have been translated into English as Stanislavsky on the Art of the Stage (1950). Antarova made the notes on Stanislavski's teaching, which his sister Zinaïda located in 1938. Liubov Gurevich edited them and they were published in 1939. Magarshack and Benedetti (both of whom have written biographies of Stanislavski) offer slightly different periods for the delivery of the lectures: Magarshack gives 1918-1922 while Benedetti gives 1919-1922; see Benedetti (1999, 256, 259), Leach (2004, 51-52), and Milling and Ley (2001, 4); see Stanislavski (1950). Pavel Rumiantsev documented the studio's activities until 1932; his notes were published in 1969 and appear in English under the title Stanislavski on Opera (1975). Rumiantsev joined the Opera Studio in 1920 from the Conservatory and sang the title role in its production of Eugene Onegin in 1922; see Benedetti (1999a, 259).
  176. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 256), Magarshack (1950, 351), and Whyman (2008, 139).
  177. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 259).
  178. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 256) and Whyman (2008, 129). Serge Wolkonsky popularised the work of François Delsarte and Émile Jaques-Dalcroze in Russia; see Whyman (2008, 123-130). Lev Pospekhin was from the Bolshoi Ballet.
  179. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 221) and Magarshack (1950, 336-337). His studies included books by Luigi Riccoboni, his son François Riccoboni, Rémond de Saint-Albin, Adrienne Lecouvreur, Gustave Doré, August Wilhelm Iffland, and Benoît-Constant Coquelin, the theories of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Schiller, and Denis Diderot, and the history of the previous two centuries of theatre.
  180. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 222) and Magarshack (1950, 337). Stanislavski intended to return to Russia via the Swiss border with his wife and Gurevich.
  181. ^ From Stanislavski's article "A Prisoner of War in Germany," quoted by Magarshack (1950, 338).
  182. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 222) and Magarshack (1950, 338).
  183. ^ Magarshack (1950, 338-339).
  184. ^ Magarshack (1950, 339).
  185. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 222) and Magarshack (1950, 339-340).
  186. ^ Gurevich, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 222); see also Magarshack (1950, 339).
  187. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 222) and Magarshack (1950, 340).
  188. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 222-223) and Magarshack (1950, 340-341). They were placed on a train to Lindau, where they were allowed eventually to enter Switzerland. From there they proceeded after a few days through Geneva to Marseille, where a boat took them via the Dardanelles to Odessa. On 27 September [O.S. 14 September] 1914 Stanislavski arrived in Moscow.
  189. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 223-224) and Magarshack (1950, 342).
  190. ^ a b Benedetti (1999a, 224).
  191. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 224) and Carnicke (1998, 174-175).
  192. ^ Quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 224).
  193. ^ a b Benedetti (1999a, 227).
  194. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 228-229) and Whyman (2008, 122-130, 141-143).
  195. ^ a b Benedetti (1999a, 248).
  196. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 239), Leach (2004, 18), and Magarshack (1950, 343-345). Worrall gives his cause of death as a boating accident (1996, 221).
  197. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 341).
  198. ^ Stanislavski, in a letter to Nestor Aleksandrovich Kotliarevski from 16 March [O.S. 3 March] 1917, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 253).
  199. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 247).
  200. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 245-248) and Magarshack (1950, 348-349).
  201. ^ Lenin expressed particular admiration for Stanislavski's performance as General Krutitski in Aleksandr Ostrovsky's Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man, which he saw on 15 December 1918; see Benedetti (1999a, 251).
  202. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 245-246).
  203. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 251-252).
  204. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 252-253) and Magarshack (1950, 349-350). In 1919 the MAT was nationalised (along with all other theatres). In January of that year, Stanislavski began his "Creative Mondays" seminars at the MAT, which explored theatre aesthetics. Later in the year he gave lectures on the 'system' at the MAT and the Second Studio. He was also involved with the Habima Theatre company (a group of Jewish Palestinian actors based in Moscow who performed plays in Hebrew); between September 1920 and April 1921 he taught them elements of his 'system' and worked on scenes from Woe from Wit and The Merchant of Venice; see Benedetti (1999a, 254), Carnicke (1998, 31), and Rudnitsky (1988, 53-54).
  205. ^ In 1917 the son of Stanislavski's old tutor Fyodor Komissarzhevsky published a book on the 'system,' despite not having been trained in it; infuriated, Stanislavski considered legal action; see Benedetti (1999a, 260) and Leach (2004, 46). In 1919 Michael Chekhov published an article on the 'system' in the magazine of the Proletcult organisation; see Benedetti (1999a, 260). Stanislavski's secretary, Vladimir Volkenstein, published a monograph on Stanislavski in 1922 that stressed the importance of physical action in the 'system'; due to its description of his conflict with Nemirovich, the book caused Stanislavski some embarrassment; see Benedetti (1999a, 267-268).
  206. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 126, 257-258). His house on Carriage Row was opposite the Hermitage Theatre. After the October Revolution in 1917, Stanislavski let most of the rooms in this house to members of the First Studio, who used its larger rooms as rehearsal spaces.
  207. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 257-258) and Magarshack (1950, 352). The house contained a large ballroom that he used for rehearsals, teaching, and performances, which following his Opera Studio production of Eugene Onegin (1922) became known as the Onegin Room; see Benedetti (1999a, 259). Leontievski Lane was renamed Stanislavski Lane on 18 January 1938; see Magarshack (1950, 396).
  208. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 258).
  209. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 274), Magarshack (1950, 356), and Worrall (1996, 221).
  210. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 273-274). The subsidy to the academic theatres was restored in November 1921.
  211. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 275-282) and Magarshack (1950, 357-9). The MAT's productions for the tour were: Tsar Fyodor Ioannovich, Three Sisters, The Lower Depths, Uncle Vanya, The Cherry Orchard, and A Provincial Lady.
  212. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 275-282) and Magarshack (1950, 357-9).
  213. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 282, 326).
  214. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 283) and Magarshack (1950, 360-362). Magarshack gives their arrival as late on Wednesday 3 January, disembarking the following day.
  215. ^ Quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 283).
  216. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 284) and Magarshack (1950, 364). The opening night was on 8 January 1923.
  217. ^ Benedetti (199a, 284-287) and Milling and Ley (2001, 13-14). Benedetti suggests that the financial difficulties were caused by Gest's decision to set ticket prices too high. A letter by John Barrymore was published in which he wrote that the performance of The Lower Depths given on 19 January was the greatest theatrical experience of his life; see Benedetti (1999a, 285).
  218. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 286), Carnicke (1998, 3), Gordon (2000, 45), Gordon (2006, 71). In a letter to Nemirovich, Stanislavski wrote: "No one here seems to have had any idea what our theatre and our actors were capable of. I am writing all this not in self-glorification, for we are not showing anything new here, but just to give you an idea at what an embryonic stage art is here and how eagerly they snatch up everything good that is brought to America. Actors, managers, all sorts of celebrities join in a chorus of the most extravagant praise. Some of the famous actors and actresses seize my hand and kiss it as though in a state of ecstacy"; quoted by Magarshack (1950, 364).
  219. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 283, 286) and Gordon (2006, 71-72). Boleslavsky had been able to extend his visa thanks to an invitation from Stanislavski to act as an assistant director to the company. The interest generated led to Boleslavsky's decision to establish the American Laboratory Theatre, along with another of Stanislavski's former students, Maria Ouspenskaya, later that year. There they taught the 'system' as they had encountered it in its early stages at the First Studio; Stanislavski had, by this time, already developed it much further, giving greater attention to physical actions and objectives.
  220. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 287) and Magarshack (1950, 367).
  221. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 288), Carnicke (1998, 76), and Magarshack (1950, 367). The publishing company was Little, Brown and Company.
  222. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 289-291) and Magarshack (1950, 367). The MAT's productions for the second US tour were: Nemirovich's adaptation of The Brothers Karamazov (opened 19 November); The Mistress of the Inn (opened 21 November); An Enemy of the People (opened 3 December); Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man (opened 5 December); and The Cherry Orchard.
  223. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 291-294) and Magarshack (1950, 368).
  224. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 294) and Magarshack (1950, 368).
  225. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 294) and Carnicke (1998, 75).
  226. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 295).
  227. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 297-298) and Magarshack (1950, 368). This work continued until the early months of 1926. Nemirovich contributed sections on Chekhov that Stanislavski incorporated into the text. Magarshack gives the year of its publication as 1925.
  228. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 301). The production opened on 11 May 1926.
  229. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 299, 315). In 1925 he took the company on tour in the Caucasus and Southern Russia; see Magarshack (1950, 376).
  230. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 302). Benedetti emphasizes the contrast between the perception of the 'system' as being concerned principally with character and Stanislavski's actual attention to the play's "structure and meaning". At the suggestion of Pavel Markov, the MAT's new literary manager, Mikhail Bulgakov had been approached to adapt his novel The White Guard, although Stanislavski was unsure of the adaptation's merits until he saw a run-through in late May or early June 1926, after which he took over its direction. He initially referred to the play as a "piece of Soviet agit-prop"; see Benedetti (1999a, 300-302)
  231. ^ Quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 302).
  232. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 302). After being re-worked and re-written, The Days of the Turbins opened on 5 October 1926; see Benedetti (1999a, 303-304).
  233. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 304). The German philosopher Walter Benjamin, who saw the production during his visit to Moscow, admired its scenic design but was unimpressed with the play, describing it as "an absolutely revolting provocation". Benjamin saw the production on 14 December 1926. He wrote in his Moscow Diary: "The naturalistic style of the sets was remarkably good, the acting without any particular flaws or merits, Bulgakov's play itself an absolutely revolting provocation. Especially the last act, in which the white guards 'convert' to bolshevism, is as dramatically insipid as it is intellectually mendacious. The communist opposition to the production is justified and significant. Whether this final act was added on at the request of the censors, as Reich claims, or whether it was there all along has no bearing whatsoever on the assessment of the play" (1986, 25).
  234. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 306-308) and Magarshack (1950, 370). The Marriage of Figaro opened on 28 April 1927, having been rehearsed since the end of 1925. Stanislavski trimmed the play's five-act structure to eleven scenes and employed a revolve to quicken scene-changes and to keep the audience engaged in the story (in the final scene four distinct settings were revolved as characters chased one another through the garden). Figaro "isnt a hero in the sense of our own recent turbulent revolutionary times," he argued, but "for his period he is a rebel, a representative of the people"; quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 307). He interpreted Figaro's through-line of action as "I want to be married in order to be free". At Stanislavski's request, Aleksandr Golovin's scenic design contrasted the shabby poverty of the servants' quarters with the opulence of the salon above; see also Benedetti (2008b, 8).
  235. ^ a b Benedetti (1999a, 308-309).
  236. ^ a b c d Benedetti (1999a, 309).
  237. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 317) and Magarshack (1950, 376-378).
  238. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 317) and Magarshack (1950, 378).
  239. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 317).
  240. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 303). Stanislavski based the character of the tutor on his old teacher Komissarzhevski (as well as himself), the tutor's assistant on Suler, and the protagonist on Vakhtangov (also, as well as himself). The protagonist's name is Kostya Nazvanov—Kostya is a familiar form of Konstantin and Nazvanov means "Chosen One". The tutor is called Tortsov, which connotes "Creator," and the other students have names such as "Fatty," "Brains," "Beauty," and "Arguer". Dialogues between Tortsov and the students predominate. Milling and Ley indicate that, in adopting this dialogue form, Stanislavski may have followed the precedent of Denis Diderot and/or Edward Gordon Craig; see Benedetti (1999a, 320) and Milling and Ley (2001, 15-16).
  241. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 331) and Carnicke (1998, 73).
  242. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 331) and Milling and Ley (2001, 4).
  243. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 332).
  244. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 344). Carnicke (1998, 74), and Milling and Ley (2001, 4).
  245. ^ Gurevich, quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 345).
  246. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 346).
  247. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 347).
  248. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 350). Stanislavski undertook this work on the second half of the book while in Nice again.
  249. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 366-367) and Carnicke (1998, 73).
  250. ^ Carnicke (1998, 73).
  251. ^ Carnicke (1998, 73) and Milling and Ley (2001, 15).
  252. ^ Carnicke (1998, 73) and Milling and Ley (2001, 15).
  253. ^ Carnicke (1998, 73).
  254. ^ The publication of An Actor's Work and An Actor's Work on a Role, both translated by Jean Benedetti, enables a detailed comparisson of the significant differences in comparison with An Actor Prepares, Building a Character, and Creating a Role; see Stanislavski (1938 and 1957). Sharon M. Carnicke argues that despite some changes to the terminology of the 'system' the "Russian books still serve as one of the best keys to his actual concerns about art" (1998, 82).
  255. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 324). Extracts of the plan are translated in Cole (1955, 131-138) and Stanislavski (1957, 27-43).
  256. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 325, 360) and (2005, 121). The term "Method of Physical Action" was applied to this rehearsal process after Stanislavski's death. Benedetti indicates that Stanislavski had developed it since 1916 (1998, 104).
  257. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 356, 358). An actor who trained under Stanislavski in this approach, Vasili Toporkov, provides in his Stanislavski in Rehearsal (2004) a detailed account of the Method of Physical Action at work in Stanislavski's rehearsals for The Embezzlers by Valentin Kataev (1928), Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol, adapted by Mikhail Bulgakov (1932), and Tartuffe by Molière (a production completed by Mikhail Kedrov in 1939).
  258. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 70, 355-356), Leach (2004, 29), and Magarshack (1950, 373-375).
  259. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 355) and Magarshack (1950, 374-375).
  260. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 355), Magarshack (1950, 375), and Whyman (2008, 242).
  261. ^ Quoted by Magarshack (1950, 375).
  262. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 355-356) and Magarshack (1950, 375). In a letter to Elizabeth Hapgood, Stanislavski wrote: "Do you know the words? Never mind, use your own. You can't remember the sequence of the conversation? Never mind, I'll prompt you. We go through the whole play like this because it is easier to control and diret the body than the mind which is capricious. That is why the physical line of a role is easier to create than the psychological. But can the physical line of a role exist without the psychological when the mind is inseparable from the body? Of course not. That is why simultaneously the physical line of the body evokes the inner line of a role. This method takes the creative actor's attention off feelings, leaves them to the subconscious which alone can properly control and direct them"; quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 356).
  263. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 325-326) and Gordon (2006, 74). Emotion memory remained useful during training, Stanislavski felt, as a means of addressing emotional inhibition.
  264. ^ a b c Benedetti (1999a, 325).
  265. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 325-326).
  266. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 326) and Magarshack (1950, 372-373).
  267. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 326) and (2005, 126). Stanislavski gives the following example: "some actors playing Luka in The Lower Depths, don't even bother to read the last act because they don't appear in it. As a result, they don't have the right perspective and can't play their role. The beginning depends on the end. The last act is the result of the old man's speech. The actor playing Luka must always have the end of the play in view, and lead the other actors, whom he influences, towards it" (1938, 459).
  268. ^ Benedetti (1998, 108), (1999a, 326), and (2005, 125-127). Ermete Zacconi's abilities, which Stanislavski had admired in Paris in 1923, served as an exemplary model of this control over the shaping of a performance. In his chapter on this aspect of the 'system' in An Actor's Work, Stanislavski refers to Tommaso Salvini's performance of Othello and quotes Salvini's description of his "double life" on stage: "I laugh and weep and at the same time analyse my laughter and tears" (1938, 456-459). As Whyman indicates, with this idea Stanislavski revises the "double consciousness" of the actor described by Denis Diderot in his The Paradox of Acting (written c. 1773 but published in 1830); see Whyman (2008, 149).
  269. ^ Benedetti (1998, 108), (1999a, 349), and (2005, 125) and Magarshack (1950, 372). Stanislavski writes that the actor "must see the whole perspective the whole time, otherwise he will not be able to order, colour, shade and shape the different parts" (1938, 460). He compares this shaping of each episode in light of its significance to the play as a whole with the foreground and background elements in a painting (1938, 458).
  270. ^ Benedetti (1998, 108), (1999a, 221), and (2005, 125-126) and Whyman (2008, 149). In contrast to the "perspective of the role" that appreciates the role as a whole, Stanislavski called the moment-to-moment awareness the "perspective of the actor". Benedetti indicates that those who reduce Stanislavski's approach to a form of "naive subjectivity" have often ignored this aspect of the 'system,' which Stanislavski himself felt was essential to the creation of a work of art; see (2005, 127). For Stanislavski's explanation of this concept, see chapter 20 of An Actor's Work (1938, 456-462).
  271. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 351) and Gordon (2006, 74).
  272. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 351) and Gordon (2006, 74). Under the influence of Richard Boleslavsky, emotion memory had become a central feature of Lee Strasberg's training at the Group Theatre in New York. In contrast, Stanislavski recommended to Stella Adler an indirect pathway to emotional expression via physical action. Benedetti writes that "It has been suggested that Stanislavski deliberately played down the emotional aspects of acting because the woman in front of him was already over-emotional. The evidence is against this. What Stanislavski told Stella Adler was exactly what he had been telling his actors at home, what indeed he had advocated in his notes for Leonidov in the production plan for Othello". Stanislavski confirmed this emphasis in his discussions with Harold Clurman in late 1935; see Benedetti (1999a, 351-352).
  273. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 351) and Gordon (2006, 74).
  274. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 318), Carnicke (1998, 33), Clark et al. (2007, 226), and Magarshack (1950, 396). In 1938, Leontievski Lane was renamed "Stanislavski Lane" as part of his 75th birthday celebrations.
  275. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 372) and Carnicke (1998, 33).
  276. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 372).
  277. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 335-336). The RAPP conference ran from 25 January to the 4 February 1931. The 'system' was attacked again at a second conference in December 1931. The playwright Alexander Afinogenov, with whom Stanislavski worked when the MAT rehearsed his play Fear in September 1931, leveled the last of these accusations, though when Stanislavski invited him to offer alternative terms, he was unable to do so. In a letter to Gurevich on 9 April 1931, Stanislavski described Afinogenov as someone who "splits hairs over words"; quoted by Benedetti (1999a, 337). His play Fear opened at the MAT on 24 December 1931; see Benedetti (1999a, 338, 341-342).
  278. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 335-336).
  279. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 354-355) and Carnicke (1998, 78). The congress was held in Moscow between 17 August and 2 September 1934 and its minutes were published in November that year. Andrei Zhdanov declared that "truth and historical concreteness of the artistic depiction must be combined with the task of the ideological transformation and education of the working people in the spirit of Socialism. This method of artistic literature and literary criticism is what we call socialist realism"; see Bowlt (1988, 290-297).
  280. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 355) and Carnicke (1998, 78, 80).
  281. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 359) and Magarshack (1950, 387). Stanislavski was recuperating in Nice at the time (1935).
  282. ^ Letter to Elizabeth Hapgood, quoted in Benedetti (1999a, 363).
  283. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 360), Magarshack (1950, 388-391), and Whyman (2008, 136). The teachers had some previous experience studying the 'system' as private students of Stanislavski's sister, Zinaïda Sokolova. Stanislavski taught them again in the autumn; see Benedetti (1999a, 363).
  284. ^ Magarshack (1950, 391).
  285. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 362-363).
  286. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 363) and Whyman (2008, 136).
  287. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 368) and Magarshack (1950, 397-399). He "insisted that they work on classics, because, 'in any work of genius you find an ideal logic and progression'."
  288. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 368-369). "They must avoid at all costs," Benedetti explains, "merely repeating the externals of what they had done the day before".
  289. ^ Magarshack (1950, 400).
  290. ^ Benedetti (1998, xii) and Whyman (2008, 136). Benedetti argues that the course at the Opera-Dramatic Studio is "Stanislavski's true testament". His book Stanislavski and the Actor (1998) offers a reconstruction of the studio's course.
  291. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 368-369).
  292. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 371-373).
  293. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 371, 373) and Whyman (2008, 136).
  294. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 373), Leach (2004, 23), and Rudnitsky (1981, xv).
  295. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 373).
  296. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 374) and Magarshack (1950, 404).
  297. ^ Magarshack (1950, 404).
  298. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 375).
  299. ^ Benedetti (1999a, 376) and Magarshack (1950, 404).

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