Movement for the Actor – Lesson Plan:
Basic Human anatomy, why is it significant to the actor?
Hello, I am Lexia Tomlinson and welcome to my seminar: my
focus will be on joints, physical theatre and the practitioners Moshe
Feldenkrais and Lester Horton.
As I am doing joints I will only be focusing on the skeletal
structure of the human body. Can anyone tell me how many bones there are in the
human adult body? (206) However when we
were infants there were as up to 300-350 at birth, this then dwindled down to
270, can anyone tell me why there is now a reduction in the amount of bones as
we get older? (As we grow older our
bones fuse together, the most obvious our Skull bones, sacrum and hip bone.)
The main bones of the
human skeleton are:
- The
Skull - Cranium, Mandible and Maxilla
- Shoulder
girdle - clavicle and scapula
- Arm
- humerus, radius and ulna
- Hand
- Carpals, Metacarpals and Phalanges
- Chest
- Sternum and Ribs
- Spine
- Cervical area (top 7 vertibrae), Thoracic (next 12), Lumbar (bottom 5
vertebrae), Sacrum (5 fused or stuck together bones) and Coccyx (the tiny
bit at the bottom of the spine).
- Pelvic
girdle - Ilium, Pubis and Ischium.
- Leg
- Femur, Tibia and Fibula
- Ankle
- Talus and calcaneus (not shown above)
- Foot
- Tarsals, Metatarsals and Phalanges.
Synovial (diarthrosis):
Synovial joints are by far the most common classification of joint within the
human body. They are highly moveable and all have a synovial capsule
(collagenous structure) surrounding the entire joint, a synovial membrane (the inner
layer of the capsule) which secretes synovial fluid (a lubricating liquid) and
cartilage known as hyaline cartilage which pads the ends of the articulating
bones. There are 6 types of synovial joints which are classified by the shape
of the joint and the movement available.
oint Type | Movement at joint | Examples | Structure |
Hinge | Flexion/Extension |
Elbow/Knee
|
Hinge joint
|
Pivot | Rotation of one bone around another | Top of the neck (atlas and axis bones) |
Pivot Joint
|
Ball and Socket | Flexion/Extension/Adduction/ Abduction/Internal & External Rotation |
Shoulder/Hip
|
Ball and socket joint
|
Saddle | Flexion/Extension/Adduction/ Abduction/Circumduction |
CMC joint of the thumb
|
Saddle joint
|
Condyloid | Flexion/Extension/Adduction/ Abduction/Circumduction |
Wrist/MCP & MTP joints
|
Condyloid joint
|
Gliding | Gliding movements | Intercarpal joints |
Gliding joint
|
Why do you
think knowing about your basic human anatomy is relevant as an actor?
Open to
question and answer.
My answer:
The reason
knowing about your anatomy is important is because our body is our ‘tool’ and
we need to know how it works, so that we can look after it and manipulate it to
physicalise the characters that we are playing.
When I say
manipulation I mean an awareness, to know where you start and the character
begins. For example I was in a LAMDA Acting exam, I was fully aware of my torso
and arms, I’d planned that out to fit with my character but I’d forgotten about
my feet and did what is known as “dancing feet”. This resulted in a marking
down. As an actor can you think of a think when you weren’t fully aware or
planned out what you would be doing with a particular body part for your time
on stage or film?
Understanding
our anatomy is also vital for movement, can anyone tell me how many planes of
motion there are? (Answer 3)
And what
those planes are of motion are called?
Sagittal Plane
The Sagittal plane passes through the body front to
back, so dividing it into left and right. Movements in this plane are the up
and down movements of flexion and extension
Frontal Plane
The frontal plane divides the body into front and
back. Movements in this plane are sideways movements, called abduction and
adduction
Transverse Plane
This plane divides the body into top and bottom.
Movements in this plane are rotational in nature, such as internal and external
rotation, pronation and supination
Has anyone
ever come across the neutral passion when acting?
- Standing
upright
- Legs
together and knee straight
- Toes
pointing straight forwards
- Arms
by the side
- Palms facing straight down
The Feldenkrais Method:
The Feldenkrais Method was developed by Moshe
Feldenkrais, Feldenkrais was a scientist and well respected Judo instructor, in
his youth an injury threatened to leave him severely disabled in his later
years, his doctors suggested surgery. However he refused it, instead he used
his knowledge of “anatomy, physiology, psychology and
engineering, as well as his mastery of martial arts, to healing his own knee.
During the process he realised the vital importance of working with the whole body and indeed the whole self in order to achieve lasting, radical change”
During the process he realised the vital importance of working with the whole body and indeed the whole self in order to achieve lasting, radical change”
Activities:
1.Could you all go lie in separate spaces of the
room please, lay how you feel comfortable not how you think you should. (Wonder amongst the group observing how they
lay)
2. Could you all lay flat on your stomach, stretched
out, now turn your head to the right, then lift your right hand , see how your
pelvic bone lifts with that movement, now lift your left leg so it rest on the
other . Repeat movement another 4 times please. Now switch to your left. Try
that movement without looking at the hand. How does it feel now?
3. Could you lay on your back and left your legs so
the sole of your feet is flat on the ground, now very slowly and gently let
your knees tilt a little bit to the right and a little bit to the left; don’t
go so slow that your legs feel heavy and that you’re having to be strong to
carry out the movement.
A variant on this movement is bring one leg over the
other, could you all go with your right, tilt to the right then back to the
centre, do that twice more then switch to your left leg and do the same
movement.
Could you lay back flat on your back, slowly roll
onto your stomach draw your arms up gently push up onto your knees so you’re in
a “doggy” position bring your leg of choice through your arms slowly push up
until standing into the neutral position.
Lester Horton was a major artistic contribution to
the modern American dance movement, Horton studied ballet and choreographed for
stage and film. What makes Horton’s techniques special is that fact that he
moved away from the clean lines of ballet
“ It was not fashioned on
his body, nor was it made to fit the straitjacket of any philosophical or
physical concepts; it was a technique developed to serve the art of dance
through group participation.”
What he wanted to
focus on was new ways of doing things e.g “New ways were developed to go up, to
go down, to use one leg, to use both legs, and to see how long a balance could
be held in what seemed an impossible position.”
Speaking of impossible, we shall try some of his warm ups.
Activities:
2. The next position is for you to be in a
parallel, back leg straight whilst front leg is pointed horizontally, drop your torso and abdomen whilst keeping
arms out straight, now drop down like so.
Bibliography
Author/s
|
Year
|
Title
|
Edition (if not 1st)
|
Location Where published
|
publisher
|
||
Smart, Ted. (2001) Human
Body. London (UK): Dorling Kindersley limited.
Peragola, Mara Della. (2003) The Feldankrais Journal No. 16. (Online).
|
http://www.innerbody.com/anatomy/skeletal-male
(14th Nov 2012)