Screen Actors Guild

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    When discussing the content of the theater, I like seeing themes that explore overcoming some type of struggle or just wanting to be loved. The characters I like to see is people who actually show deep emotion in who they are playing. I like for the actors to actually fulfill the characters actions and rolls making me feel as if I have the same feelings he or she is portraying in the play. The plots that interest me during a play is actually seeing a character try over and over…

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    that most who are in the theatre did join for this very reason, there are some points where the similarities of watching and participating detour into major differences. I preface this with a brief glimpse into my background. First off, I was not an actor. I loved the theatre very much and wanted to become a part of it, however I was not one for being on stage performing. The technical department was the next logical choice so I joined to operate the sound and lighting. I bring this up only so…

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    overcome my weaknesses. Along with that, I really want to try out some serious roles with some serious characters talking about serious topics, that is a line that I haven’t crossed yet that I am looking forward to cross. Along with any progressing actor, I have strengths as well as my share of weaknesses. One of my biggest weakness that I very recently realized I had was that I am afraid to make mistakes. That in itself isn’t the weakness I was referring to, but that fear has led me to be…

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    That is really great! I have interviewed many young actors who have acted longer than you and have not won any awards. That is something to be proud of. Aw, thank you. Not to put down the others at all, but it 's neat that you 've jumped in, and they have recognized your talent in that way. Aw, thanks. In your career so far, what do you think has been your most challenging role? I 'd say my most challenging role was the first play I was ever in. It was a two hander play at the Arts Club…

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    is not exactly a new concept in modern times. However, in the Elizabethan era, the concept of meta-theatre was one of the first iterations of this. In a nutshell, meta-theatre describes the blurred line between the world and the stage, audience and actor, reality and illusion, seeming and being; much like the breaking of the fourth wall does today in digital media. In Hamlet, this concept of meta-theatre is depicted through Hamlet’s viewing of himself being in a play. Whereas he is truly…

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    they want to be an amazing actor one day because their major was entertainment/theatre. How I felt about this play is that it was not to my high expectation when I saw it. The actors in some scene was be fragile when they was acting. In the other scene of the play of “The Good Doctor” was great, for “The Sneezer” the actor in that play caught the audience attention. The actor in that act was showing so much emotion in that act and I could tell the relationship with the actors in it was strong.…

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    minute, you arrive at your assigned seat and the well dressed man wishes you a wonderful evening and leaves to assist another audience member. Waiting for the show to begin, you decide to look through your program. Headshots and biographies of the actors and characters amuse you for a short period of time, but then you begin to notice that there are more people involved in the show than you had originally thought. Pages and pages of credits for everything from stagehands and…

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    Deborah Character Analysis

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    did ascertain that while this cast has some notable and recognized professionals, there are also several outstanding newcomers. Thankfully, all the actors and actresses work together to make this another of my favorites of the holiday season. In fact, at the end of this film, I declared that this is unmistakably my kind of film. No stranger to the screen, Deborah gives a blissfully magnificent performance as Mrs. Hinden, the one who is sympathetic to Allie 's plight. After all, her character has…

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    Furthermore, after hearing the guards listen to the World Series game on the radio, the audience learns the year is 1963, and for those who lived during that era, the underlying message of the movie soon spills out onto the screen. The constant collisions between the nurse and McMurphy represented the political problems our nation faced when too much power was given to the wrong kinds of people. Berardinelli goes on to say, "On the surface, the movie is about the struggle of…

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    determined that about 38% of Latinas were sexualized in films. This research shows how Hollywood portrays Latinas and how they are mostly seen as “sex pots”. Latinas are not usually cast in films due to their talents but for what they can bring to the screen pertaining to the stereotype, that Latinas are only good as sex symbols. For example, Eva Longoria, in Desperate Housewives, played a scheming Latina homemaker who used her looks to advance her social life. As well as Sofia Vergara in Madea…

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