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"Our audience doesn't know you. Write something for them." Audience, I think. Who are they?
The ones I live for.
When I'm an actor the answer is simpler. It's the audience I feel out there on the other side of the curtain while I'm waiting in the wings breathing myself into character whichever character I'm going to be for the audience.
They're out there rustling into their places living the lives they're living until I'm in my place coming alive with someone they'll be stopping the lives they're living to watch, to be with to want and grow and laugh and cry with to live and maybe even die with for a moment.
I hear them out there and I don't, of course. Because I'm pouring myself into the soul they're going to see. And a peculiarity of that soul the one created on a stage is that it always hears those others out there in their places, even hears them breathing as well as laughing and shifting and coughing and thinking, and sleeping. And sobbing, and listening. I can feel when they're listening.
Funny. An actor's always being told " You're not listening" meaning you're not really listening to the other character in a scene. And what is the clear sign of listening? Nothing. Absolute stillness. Stillness so deep the blood begins to respond - to hear and to act- while the body, the will, does nothing nothing on its own, nothing planned nothing but listen.
And the soul on stage listens to the others out there because although this soul must be as deep and freely into itself as my skill and this night's inspiration allows, its reason for living is only to share itself with the audience.
And life created between the actor and the others who've stopped their lives to come and partake of the stream the energy flowing from stage to the "house" and back - giving back - this life is created by those present created together. It cannot exist, come to life without all its creators.
So when you hear me say "I need the audience" the possible meanings of that statement " without selling tickets, I can't live" or "I can't live without performing" are not what I mean to say. What I mean to say is my work can only be completed by you.
Now I no longer listen from behind the curtain. When I did, I could quiet my fears by saying " I believe in this play. As an actor, I am its conduit. I carry the play between its author and its audience I deliver it. And the wish I have to serve them both Will carry me beyond this nervousness through, to the best work I can do." Something like that, I'd say to myself.
But I've moved. I sit now with you, the audience. I try to hear what you hear the way you hear it try to hear whether I've begun anything that speaks to you anything that justifies your gathering together with these actors in this moment to finish the creation.
And I not only need the audience I love the audience unconsciously, inevitably, like loving a child. Because the audience, like the child, is all of us open, waiting for life, never wrong If you think you are not like a child, never mind it's my job to make you so. And when I've done it well and the actors deliver it well and you've come to complete the circuit the life created in the air between us will sing.
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