Bunkobons

← All books

Cover of My Life in Art

My Life in Art

by Constantin Stanislavski

Buy on Amazon

My Life in Art is the autobiography of the Russian actor and theatre director Konstantin Stanislavski. It was first commissioned while Stanislavski was in the United States on tour with the Moscow Art Theatre, and was first published in Boston, Massachusetts in English in 1924. It was later revised and published in a Russian-language edition in Moscow under the title Моя жизнь в искусстве. It is divided into 4 sections entitled: 1-Artistic Childhood, 2-Artistic Youth, 3-Artistic Adolescence and 4-Artistic Adulthood.

Recommended by

"‘Creativeness begins from that moment when in the soul and imagination of the actor there appears the magical, creative if…that is, the imagined truth which the actor can believe as sincerely and with greater enthusiasm than he believes practical truth.’ In a nutshell, that is Stanislavski’s approach to acting – that the actor has to enter into some imaginative contract with the world of the play, the creative if. Now since Stanislavski wrote this, other acting methods have appeared. Midway through the 20th century the Brechtian method appeared, in which the actor is not expected to enter into the world of illusion but is expected to assess reality and present the character to the audience. What Stanislavski was after was a kind of immersion of the actor in the situation and the character. But this book is such an important keystone of 20th-century acting that you have to read it. And of course out of it, in America, came the Method, which often perverted Stanislavski. But the whole American tradition of James Dean, Marlon Brando and everything that follows from that is very important. How he came by it is one of those strange accidents. He was a relatively well-to-do figure. He met various like-minded people in Moscow towards the end of the 19th century and they were dissatisfied with the existing state of theatre and so put their resources into creating a new sort of theatre. I think it was a decisive break with the past. The impression one gets with Stanislavski was that before he comes to codify the principles of acting, there was a much more hit-and-miss attitude, a kind of divine amateurism. What Stanislavski does is to say you can apply to acting a system and a method – it’s not just a case of relying on occasional flashes of inspiration, it’s all about discipline, method and system. I’d like to emphasise this word, discipline. He says, ‘Why may the dramatic artist do nothing, spend his day in coffee houses and hope for the gift of Apollo in the evening? Enough. Is this an art when its priests speak like amateurs?’ “To my generation Kenneth Tynan was the role model we aspired to, because he made dramatic criticism sexy and exciting and glamorous.” So what he’s attacking is the lazy habits of Russian actors at the time, and the assumption that you can turn up in the evening and ‘turn on’ a performance, as it were. That seems to me the core thing that Stanislavski is writing about. The other thing the book does is to establish the role of the director. Stanislavski was directing most of these early Moscow Art Theatre productions, at a time when the concept of ‘the director’ was pretty alien to most theatres – certainly in Britain, where the stage manager got the play on to the stage. What Stanislavski shows is that plays don’t just happen. So this work became a crucial bible, again in Britain, in the 1920s, 30s, 40s, when the idea of the director was beginning to take root, and the idea that plays had to be a symphony of sound, music, light and everything else, was becoming established. So I don’t think anyone who cares about theatre and the way it has developed can avoid reading this book. I should also say that the book is not a dry articulation of a code. It’s a very humane and enlightening book, and a very ironic book."
20th Century Theatre · fivebooks.com