The 12-Step Chubbuck Acting Technique
- OVERALL OBJECTIVE
- What does your character want from life more than anything?
- Finding what your character wants throughout the entire script.
- SCENE OBJECTIVE
- What your character wants over the course of an entire scene, which supports the character’s OVERALL OBJECTIVE.
- OBSTACLES
- Determining the physical, emotional and mental hurdles that make it difficult for your character to achieve his or her OVERALL and SCENE OBJECTIVE.
- SUBSTITUTIONS
- Endowing the other actor in the scene with a person from your real life that makes sense to your OVERALL OBJECTIVE and your SCENE OBJECTIVE.
- For instance, if your character’s SCENE OBJECTIVE is “to get you to love me,” then you find someone from your present life that really makes you need that love – urgently, desperately and completely. This way you have all the diverse layers that a real need from a real person will give you.
- INNER OBJECTS
- The pictures you see in your mind when speaking or hearing about a person, place, thing or event.
- BEATS and ACTIONS
- A BEAT is a thought.
- Every time there’s a change in thought or tactic, there’s a BEAT change.
- ACTIONS are the mini-OBJECTIVES that are attached to each BEAT that support the SCENE OBJECTIVE and, therefore, the OVERALL OBJECTIVE.
- MOMENT BEFORE
- The event that happens before you begin the scene (or before the director yells, “Action!”), which gives you a place to move from, both physically and emotionally.
- MOMENT BEFORE is the event (re-imagined in your thoughts) that gives you the urgency to get your SCENE OBJECTIVE.
- PLACE AND FOURTH WALL
-
- Using PLACE and FOURTH WALL means that you endow your character’s physical reality – which, in most cases, is realized on a stage, soundstage, set, classroom or on location – with attributes from a PLACE from your real life.
- Using PLACE and the FOURTH WALL creates privacy, intimacy, history, meaning, safety and reality.
- The PLACE/FOURTH WALL must support and make sense with the choices you’ve made for the other tools.
- DOINGS
- The handling of props, which produces behavior.
- Brushing your hair while speaking, tying your shoes, drinking, eating, using a knife to chop, etc. are examples of doings.
- The act of using DOINGS tells us what you are really thinking and feeling.
- Remember, words can lie, behavior never does!
- INNER MONOLOGUE
- The dialogue that’s going on inside your head that you don’t speak out loud because it’s vulgar, too revealing, not politically correct, ineffective, and exposing second guessing/insecurities.
- Dialogue, that can’t be spoken aloud because it would defeat your purpose/OBJECTIVE.
- PREVIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES
- Your character’s history.
- The accumulation of life experiences that determines why and how they operate in the world.
- And then personalizing the character’s PREVIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES to that of your own so you can truly and soulfully understand the character’s behavior and become and live the role.
- Remember: it is your past that establishes your present life choices, and how you currently negotiate life.
- LET IT GO
- While the Chubbuck Technique does use an actor’s intellect, it is not a set of intellectual exercises.
- This technique is the way to create human behavior so real that it produces the grittiness, textures, layers and rawness of becoming a true human being – to live a role, not perform it.
- In order for you to duplicate the natural flow of life and be spontaneous, you have to get out of your head.
- To achieve this you have to trust the work you’ve done with the previous eleven tools, and LET IT GO.