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Acting - Making
Your Character Believable
By
Michael Russell
To be believable an actor
needs to truly study their character. There is a very
simple method that an actor can use to do this. It is
called the GOTE method. GOTE is a very easy to remember
acronym. It stands for Goal, Obstacle, Tactics and
Expectation. This is a very basic approach to breaking
down a character. Now lets go over each of these
objectives.
Goal is what the character is
going after. It is the whole purpose for the play. The
goal kicks off all of the action. The goal is to be
persuaded by the character. Now the goal can't be general,
it needs to be something very specific. For example a
general goal would be "I want to feel fulfilled by
marrying someone." A more specific goal would be "I want
John to marry me." The goal needs to be very targeted. A
good exercise is to imagine you are starving and there is
a sandwich just out of your reach. Now try to reach for
it. That is how you need to be when going after your
goals.
The obstacle is what stands
in the way of the goal. The obstacle needs to be in direct
opposition to the goal. For example if the goal is "I want
John to marry me" the obstacle may be "My parents hate
John." The character needs to struggle with the obstacle
to reach their goal. This is what makes a play interesting
and not just 2 people having a conversation about the
weather on stage.
Tactics are what a character
uses to overcome the obstacles and reach the goal. This is
were a play gets fun. The tactics make the character real.
The tactics a character chooses shows the audience what
type of person they are. The tactics can be funny,
honorable, deceitful, etc. There can be multiple tactics
used by an actor. A good actor will be able to move from
tactic to tactic with ease in order to achieve the goal.
Expectation gives tone and
excitement to the tactics. This is what stops the goals
from being too academic and boring. It shows what is the
characters excitement and enthusiasm behind their goal.
You can find what the
character's GOTE is by just studying the play. An actor
should take notes when reading a play. You can set up a
GOTE sheet to have with you as you read. Just take a paper
and write Goal, Obstacle, Tactics and Expectation. It is
also helpful to write name, sex, age, marital status,
education and make up a typical day in the life of the
character (a day that does not take place during the
play).
It really doesn't take that
much extra work to setup a GOTE sheet. A character needs
to come alive to the viewer. They need to draw the viewer
into their world. An actor needs to do everything to
create a character and world that is 100% believable.
Studying a character's GOTE sheet can add the 3rd
dimension to a character that is often missing in theater.
Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to
Acting
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Michael_Russell
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