Hidden “dualities” in the theatrical performance as a hypothesis of guarantee of an aesthetic expectatorial belief

In the Western history of acting technique, it is possible to trace founding and constant concerns in spite of the different cultural subjects and the ethics and poetics of theater. Although the Stanislavskian tradition seemed to inaugurate the systematic speculation about the conditions of acting –...

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Autor principal: Pricco, Aldo Rubén; Universidad Nacional de Rosario
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Universidad Nacional del Nordeste. Facultad de Humandiades. Instituto de Letras 2022
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unne.edu.ar/index.php/clt/article/view/5998
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Sumario:In the Western history of acting technique, it is possible to trace founding and constant concerns in spite of the different cultural subjects and the ethics and poetics of theater. Although the Stanislavskian tradition seemed to inaugurate the systematic speculation about the conditions of acting –as psychophysical conditions suitable for achieving an aesthetic belief in the audience– there are data records, in a variety of forms, that prove an itinerary of reflections on the acting technique, based on a clear isotopy, from which emerges a theatrical purpose and a hypothesis about the achievement of it. That purpose consists in providing the doer with the tools to be believed, to create verisimilitude in his fictional behavior, whereas the hypothesis about how to achieve a seductive theatrical presence is based on the coincidence (whether concrete or aimed at producing an effect) between an “internal” instance and the external somatic theatrical manifestation of that “experience” of the actor-character.