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October/2004
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ActTrue
in Germany! USAREUR Festival of One-Act Plays, Heidelberg,
Germany
All
the way across the Atlantic Ocean and half way across Europe
to find my artistic self, again! To find Joy, Tears, Laugher,
Affirmation, Discovery! This is what the Art of Theatre
brings to artists and audiences. This is what I received
as a judge and teacher at the USAREUR Festival of One-Act
Plays (Europe and Korea) in Heidelberg, Germany.
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Heidelberg:
view from the Philosopher's Walk overlooking the AlteStadt
(old city), the Alte Brücke (old bridge) and Brückentor
(Bridge gate) and the Neckar River
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Alte
Brücke (old bridge) and Brückentor (Bridge gate)
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Four
days of 17 plays, of Ideas, of Invention, of Daring and Learning.
Four days of judging, sharing all that I have learned in 20
years in this "business": directing, acting, teaching, designing,
writing, producing in NY and LA. Four days of truly teaching,
for these actors, directors and technicians truly wanted,
desired to learn and to grow. They filled my ActTrue workshop
to overflowing, standing room only capacity to jump at the
chance to work on my Camera/Imagery Tech exercises. They surrounded
me with questions about process, about their futures, eyes
filled with hope and confidence. |
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Festival was hosted by the Roadside
Theater which has for over 45 years provided a full schedule
of theater-related programs for servicemen, their families,
and civilians to help develop international relations, cultural
exchange and diversity through the participation of local
citizens of many nationalities and races. At every turn I
was thanked for my work with deep gratitude, sincerity and
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The
Castle
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"THE
SYRINGA TREE ", special guest artist performance of
a heart wrenching one person play, performed briliantly
by NY Actress Gin Hammond. I cried and laughed and cheered
for two hours as this artist created over 20 different characters
on stage, without costume changes, with only the exquisite
clarity of her craft.
This
IS why I'm in the "biz"! To experience and create
such Art.
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| "SELKIE",
BEST SHOW AWARD - Third Place And $500 Program Grant - Vicenza
Soldiers Theatre |
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| But
it is I who thank them all for their gifts to me, gifts of
their hearts and their joy for life. My deepest thanks and
best wishes to my host, Jim Sohre, Entertainment Director,
Installation Management Agency-Europe, who ten years ago took
the recommendation of my Mentor, Broadway/TV/Opera Director
Charles N. Reilly, of inviting me to judge and to teach at
the Festival. This was my fourth Festival, and each has been
my opportunity to rediscover my own love and passion for our
Art. "...love and passion for our Art." If I teach anything,
I hope, above all, it is that! |
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August/2004
ActTrue
WPEC Channel 12 TV Interview!

ActTrue
was a guest on The
South Florida Business Report hosted by David Weir,
Executive Producer and Anchor. The only show in South
Florida devoted exclusively to the local business community,
in its 18 years on WPEC Channel 12, SFBR has produced
over 17,000 local business stories and nearly 2,000 interviews
with local business people.

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Mr.
Weir, a 38-year veteran of the radio and television broadcasting,
fired the questions with great interest in my work in
the South Florida Entertainment Industry.
We
discussed Film, TV, Stage, LA/NY/Florida opportunities,
and my focus: teaching acting to actors.
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I
was able to share my passion for the craft and art of acting,
as well as stories of my NY and LA professional acting,
directing, producing, writing experience with legends of
our Art: Uta Hagen, Charles Nelson Reilly, Fritz Weaver,
Julie Harris, James A. Doolittle, and my industry beginnings
in Jupiter, FL, as an apprentice at the renowned Burt Reynolds
Institute for Theatre Training.
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thanks to Mr. Weir for his generosity and his enthusiasm for
the continued growth of the South Florida Entertainment industry. |
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July/2004
Miss
Florida USA - 2005
Melissa
Witek

The
new Miss Florida USA will be starting her coaching with
ActTrue right away in preparation for the
Miss USA Pageant/2005.
We
will build upon Mellissa's proven experience and confidence
with tools of creativity and imagery.
Hagen
and Linklater: it's the foundation!
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Congratulations
to
Melissa
Witek
Miss
Florida USA/2005!!!
Melissa,
Miss Florida Panhandale USA, was crowned last week during
the live broadcast of the Miss Florida USA Pageant. Over
50 talented, elegant and savvy statewide pageant winners
vied for the coveted top crown.
After
the competition a gala celebration was held at the prestigious
Diplomat
Resort Hotel on Hollywood Beach.

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"I
truly enjoyed working with Marc over the past year.
He challenged me and helped to see my potential
as an actor and as a spokesperson.
Marc
has a lot of compassion and energy behind his work
and he connot help but pass that onto you. I
learned so much about myself and I feel 100 times
more confident in everything I do.
Marc,
thank for taking the time to help me this past year
and I dedicate much of my success to you."
Kristen
Berset
Miss
Florida USA
Miss
USA Top Ten Finalist
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Thank
you, Kristen. Your energy, wit, confidence and beauty
will open doors and blaze trails in your future. It was
a pleasure to work with you, to help you with your next
step to your dreams.
And
here's to the next step....Congrats!!!!
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May/2004

ActTrue
/ Burt Reynolds Museum
Master
Class Scene
Study Session
I
am very proud to announce the invitation by Mr. Reynolds
and Master Teacher Charles Nelson Reilly to present ActTrue
acting/scene study classes at the Burt Reynolds Museum
in Jupiter for six consecutive Sunday’s beginning May
2.
It
is an honor to give back what I learned as a Burt Reynolds
Institute Apprentice early in my professional career.
I had the priceless opportunity to work with Broadway
and Hollywood legends. My creative standards were set
by the best in the business. Thank you Burt and Charles.
Click
the logo at right for BRM website.
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ActTrue
Master Class
Scene
Study Session
May
11, 18, 25, June 1, 2004
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To meet
the specific industry demands of the South Florida actor,
ActTrue and Actor's Info Booth present a Four Week session
introducing the proven, professional, New York acting process
of the Hagen Object Exercise process as developed by legendary
Broadway Actress and Master Teacher, Uta Hagen and applying
them to the demands of Scene Work.
Click
the Actors Info Booth logo above for registration information.
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April/2004
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ActTrue
presents Mediator Seminar
ActTrue
presented a seminar: Adding Acting Skills to Your Professional
Toolbox as part of the Association of South Florida
Mediators and The Broward County Bar Association's Annual
Educational Seminar Mediation: Growth and Resistance April
3, 2004 Westin Cypress Creek Hotel
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Miss
Florida TOP 10 at Miss USA Pageant!!!

ActTrue
is coach to Kristen Berset, Miss Florida USA® 2004, and
we are very proud of Kristen's shining performance in the
Miss USA Pageant in Los Angeles.

Kristen
is a sharp, confident, fun, driven young women with a vision
and a plan for her future. It was an absolute pleasure to
work with her on her communication skills in preparation
for the Miss USA pageant. I know she will do fabulous things
in her life.
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Uta
Hagen, Legendary Stage Actress and Teacher, Dead at 84
Playbill.com
By
Robert Simonson and Andrew Gans 15 Jan 2004
Uta
Hagen The legendary theatre actress Uta Hagen, who was one
of the American acting giants of the 20th century, died
Jan. 14 at her Manhattan home, the New York Times reports.
She was 84. Hagen was regarded as one of the fiercest and
most commanding female presences ever to grace the American
stage. Whenever and wherever great talents convened, there
she was. She began her career playing Ophelia to Eva Le
Gallienne's Hamlet. Soon after, she made her New York debut
as Nina in The Seagull opposite the Lunts. In Paul Robeson's
famous production of Othello, she played Desdemona. And,
she replaced Jessica Tandy as Blanche, acting opposite Marlon
Brando in the original A Streetcar Named Desire.
She
won a Tony Award for portraying the title role in Clifford
Odets' The Country Girl; and seized another Tony for creating
the vicious and hilarious Martha in Albee's Who's Afraid
of Virginia Woolf?, the role with which she is perhaps most
identified. In 1999, the actress was presented with a Special
Lifetime Achievement Tony Award. She also had an imposing
reputation as a theorist ("Respect for Acting") and acting
teacher.
Uta
Hagen—as her name might suggest—was born in Germany in 1919,
and there was definitely something Teutonic about her. She
was a demanding, dominating presence on stage and off, rigid
in her commitment to her craft and a ferocious performer.
In her later years, either she or her playwrights seemed
to sense the nature of her character, as she typically played
willful and intimidating individualists. Her last two major
parts were as a hard-headed, ruthless psychiatrist in Nicholas
Wright's Mrs. Klein and an opinionated Greenwich Village
novelist in Donald Margulies Collected Works, both Off-Broadway
at the Lucille Lortel Theatre.
As
Edward Albee once said, "I've seen Uta act many times, and
I've never seen 'pathetic' in her quiver."
Her
skills as both a teacher and a fellow actor were sensed
by her collegues. "She was very careful not to give me too
many notes," said her Mrs. Klein co-star, Laila Robins,
"because she knows that if you give an actor too many notes,
then that actor feels like they're being watched, assessed
or judged. But every note she gave me was exactly correct.
I learned so much. She can be intimidating at times, but
that's all good."
Uta
Hagen spent most of her career on the stage. This was partly
due to her being blacklisted in the 1950s, but also a choice.
She loved long runs and had little patience for actors who
sought the ease, glory and money of Hollywood. "If you want
a bourgeois existence, you shouldn't be an actor," she declared
in one interview. "You're in the wrong profession."
She guided many an actor's career at HB Studios, the acting
school she founded on Bank Street in Greenwich Village with
her husband Herbert Berghof (Berghof died in 1990). Hundreds
of performers have passed through its doors, and it remains
of the most respected acting academies in New York City.
While
teaching there, she was given the script to Albee's Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. Her performances at that time
had been sporadic, but she leaped at the chance of playing
the tormenting and tormented Martha, who supplies the three-act
drama with a steady flow of booze, manipulation and vitriol.
She was hesitant about working with director Alan Schneider,
who had a reputation for antagonizing actors, but Schneider
never bothered her. "Uta would have chewed off his head
and spat it out," noted Albee.
She
won the Tony for her performance and became known as a supreme
interpreter of Albee's stinging prose, though she never
acted in another of the dramatist's works. (She was offered
parts, but turned them down.) Throughout her career, she
gravitated toward taxing perfectionists. Eva Le Gallienne
auditioned her twice for her Hamlet, drilling her and working
with her until "I said it right," remembered Ms. Hagen.
"She nearly hypnotized me, but it got better." Alfred Lunt
rehearsed with her through the night before giving her the
part of Nina. "They were great taskmasters in the best sense
of the word," she said of the Lunts years later. When she
left the tour of The Seagull to marry Jose Ferrer, Lunt
accused her of being unprofessional—probably the last time
she was ever called that.
Her
Broadway work following The Seagull included The Happiest
Days, Key Largo, Vickie, Othello and The Whole World Over.
After her triumph in The Country Girl, she appeared in a
series of short-lived productions: Saint Joan, In Any Language,
The Magic and The Loss and Island of Goats. She was a member
of the Pheonix Theatre of T. Edward Hambleton, whom she
called "an unbelievably serious man who was passionate about
the theatre." At the Pheonix, she got the chance to play
one of her favorite parts, the lovesick Natalya Petrovna
in Turgenev's A Month in the Country. (She repeated her
work on television in 1959, in one of her few small screen
appearances.)
Two
of her last three Broadway appearances were in plays by
her favorite writers: The Cherry Orchard by Chekhov and
You Never Can Tell by Shaw. (Her dog was named G.B., short
for George Bernard.)
Hagen
was married to actor José Ferrer from 1938 to 1948. They
performed together in Key Largo, Vickie and Othello, in
which he played Iago. The union produced her only child,
Leticia Ferrer (known as Letty), who survives her. She married
Herbert Berghof in 1957.
Ironically,
her last role was in one of the worst plays with which she
was ever associated: Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks. The
acting and star power of Ms. Hagen and her co-star David
Hyde Pierce made the slight play a hit during its 2001 Geffen
Playhouse in Los Angeles. The work promised to be her Broadway
swan song when it was announced for an April 2002 New York
bow. After she suffered a stroke, however, the show was
postponed. (It eventually opened in fall 2003 to poor reviews
and a short run.)
Ever
committed to the theatre, she continued to teach at HB Studios
until a few months before she died. "I've always said I
wanted to die onstage," she told Playbill while performing
in Collected Stories. "Then when I was in Mrs. Klein I had
bad, bad bronchitis, and took too much medication, and blanked
out. Couldn't hear, couldn't see, couldn't breathe. I went
to [director] Billy Carden and said: 'I've changed my mind.
I don't want to die onstage.' Billy said: 'Wait for the
curtain call.' "
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January/2004
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ActTrue
is coach to Kristen Berset Miss Florida USA® 2004.
It's
very exciting to bring the proven processes of imagery and
spontaneity and creativity to a whole new field.
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ActTrue
is proud to announce classes at the new Arts Academy of Hollywood.
The Arts Academy of Hollywood provides performing arts
instruction, master classes, dance, acting and music performances
all in one state of the art venue.
Hollywood
Six Week Session
Tuesdays,
7:30pm - 10:30pm
Next
Session Begins: January 20, 2004

1955
Harrison Street
Hollywood,
FL 33020
(954)
923-1950
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