This is a practical acting book that attempts to rethink acting theory entirely in terms of what cognitive science and cognitive psychology have discovered about human behaviour and thinking over the last decades.
Starting from the idea that the main hindrance to a great acting performance is self-consciousness on the part of the performer, My Character Wouldn't do That examines the ways in which some of our traditional and contemporary approaches to acting put us into a 'mind space' that can encourage self-consciousness. Examining evidence from a range of contemporary cognitive sciences, the book approaches acting and actor training in an entirely different way.
Based on the latest research into brain activity and human behaviour, the book covers areas that standard acting texts do (character, emotion, memory, imagination, making active choices) but reconceives each of these elements through the lens of that contemporary research.
The book is the first to look closely at what contemporary research tells us about-
*personality/character and how environment shapes us
*how memory works and how actors can work with (rather than against) their memory in preparing for performance
*why actors must use different kinds of brain states and imagination in the various stages of preparation, rehearsal, and performance
*how actors can frame active choices in a way that refocuses the source of thought and action
why actors should distinguish the stages of preparation and the kinds of thinking / imagination that works at each stage