Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Retirement

The science of doing nothing is quite interesting. In ordinary walking around life I forget to truly relax, and 'do nothing.' At the beginning of a swim training session doing 'nothing' is a great boon because relaxed muscles made gradually to work, work better. Last Saturday at the East LA HS swimming pool I was the only swimmer doing laps in the 50 meter pool. By the end I'd completed 3,000 meters, less tired than when I began. I have a strong hunch that deep relaxation helps one achieve a longer life than one might otherwise enjoy.


"Professional relaxation" is a phrase used by Actors Studio co-founder Lee Strasberg. I was first exposed to the concept in about 1961 in Lee's acting class in the Capitol Theater building on Broadway - up the hill a bit, toward 57th street. The Method was hot in those days so luminaries, such as Marilyn Monroe showed up, albeit not for long. A bit later, in the same class, moved to the 10th floor of Carnegie Hall actually on 57th street, I had begun to surrender to the idea that relaxation can be willed through close self-examination accompanied by slow, exploratory movements. The next step in the process, in Lee's class, was to test whether the muscles associated with speech and singing are in lock step with muscles in the rest of the body. An exercize undertaken by each member of the class, separately, was to stand erect in front of the class and 'sing' a song making each syllable separately and explosively loud while keeping the rest of the body still, all the while making eye contact with the seated class. **


On one occasion a young actress (Actor, female) did quite well, boldly, but midway through her 'song' she inexplicably reached up to pull her sweater down to cover her exposed waist. Oh wow! Lee launched into a 20 minute harrangue on the utter absurdity of her extraneous, involuntary motion with her left hand. It was as if he were accusing her of fearing he, Lee, might be interested in that part of her anatomy. He didn't say that, but to me it seemed implied. Lee was good at implications. Point: if the brain doesn't know what the body is doing, or if the body has a separate life of its own, how can the actor ever perform what the actor intends to perform?


The same is true for athletes. The golfer addressing the ball almost visibly seems to be doing an inventory of what he/she is about to do: You can almost see Tiger, or whoever, letting go, lifting a foot perhaps to ease involuntary tension, then repositioning the foot.


In retirement I've continued learning to relax, in the pool, in bed (and wow that's where it really truly pays off! Lee once said that women actors in his class had thanked him for their finally being able to conceive! He said, "There's no extra charge") or even when horsing around. Tomorrow, if I can find it, I'll 'Enter' my mini essay published in a retirement periodical, called How To Kill A Fly with your bare hands.


** A variation of this 'still' version of the exercize was to make rhythmic movements involving the entire body then at will make the same explosively loud 'sung' sounds unattached to any movement of the body: object, to free the vocal muscles to do their job, and the motor muscles to do their different job. I liked that one more than I did the still version. While wildly moving you could forget about being observed. In ordinary life we fidget to shake off being observed. Notice how many great actors, especially on screen, could stay still and remain marvellously expressive.


Barry

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

ah and is there a difference between relaxing and having too much time on your hands - and if you do end up with too much time on your hands does that make it impossible to actually relax?

Anonymous said...

Mental relaxation and physical relaxation
are considered wholly different in the acting
theory I was exposed to in Lee's classes over
a 13 year period. Speaking for myself mental
relaxation comes from having a clear conscience
with nothing left unattended to. Physical relaxation
(professional variety) can be measure by
performance, willingness to compete, or engage,
or endure. We often have tension so severe
that if we were to suddenly let go we'd probably
sob. I've seen that a lot. How might you feel
deliberatley relaxing each limb. and your trunk,
and head, while travelling during daylight on a
public bus? Or train. Not a plane cause we aren't too
observable on a plane. Being observed leads to
tensing up, which is why 'professiional relaxation'
is so imperative for actors.

Barry

Anonymous said...

This relaxsation technique is rather interesting.
I wonder if it works for full time students who need to find a way to relax while taking a test.
Or while listening to a lecture that would even let Einstein doze off into the land of dreams. Considering that the lecture is about E=mc2 and still would let Albert find his well deserved rest. LOL.
If one is too relaxed, one can easily find eternal rest among the chairs in a lecture hall.
If too relaxed, one finds no contrast to wanting to hear a lecture no matter how exciting or boring it could be.
So, I ask, where do you find the correct way to use relaxsation and still find enough oomph to paticipate in whatever life may bring?
BEA

Anonymous said...

Let me, please, use another of Lee's phrases.
"...block between impulse and expression...."
Tension, the opposite of relaxed (forget for the
moment the colloquial expression 'Taking it easy')
is what sets up a block between impulse and
expression.

Classroom (acting classroom) uses of "professional
relaxation" was creating through sense memory
objects from the past, creating a "Private Moment,"
and as an aid to improvization. In Literature there is a
splendid example In Swans Way, a division of
Rememberance Of Things Past by Marcel Proust, in
which the narrator remembers the past when he recalls
the smell of cake dipped in tea while he was talking
to his mother earlier in life. Such a sense memory
could power an actor's performance for an entire play,
and anyway be a big help during rehearsals while the
behaviour of the characters are still fluid.

Barry
http://journals.aol.com/bbartle3/Vengeance/





Anonymous said...

I hear you.

I was quite used to working full time/going to school full time at the same full time....

The I had kids, and I became a SAH Mom. I suddenly- unless the children were home/awake- had absolutely nothing to do. It seems that a lot of financial aid was wasted on me, because the state of Massachusetts got about 6 working years out of me before I began to blog full time.

I still haven't found a way to cope with the idle time, short of visiting blogs and eating a lot of cheese. Relaxation should not be taken for granted, and it takes awhile to become proficient.