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APPRECIATIVE AUDIENCE: Kostopoulos.
Peter Fox |
we’re on stage in
Prosser Studio, behind Memorial Auditorium. We’re
standing in a circle, shoes off, rolling our heads,
dipping our shoulders, wiggling our fingers down to
the tips. We open our faces wide, then scrunch them
up. Make room in our bodies for our voices to live.
Take deep breaths and let them go.
Then, we’re in a Bronx bar, on a dreary Monday
night. And drama lecturer Kay Kostopoulos is asking
our company of thespians to visualize the so-called
fourth wall—the theatrical space behind the audience.
What’s hanging there? How does it feel?
Students in Contemporary Scene Study start to pitch
suggestions. A dart board. An old calendar. A neon Budweiser
sign. And an especially grating touch: Tom Jones singing
“It’s Not Unusual” on a grimy jukebox.
Kostopoulos beams. “Okay, Megan, cross downstage
and look at the ‘Bud babe’ sign,”
she says. “Take a fake sip of your drink, taste
it and start talking. And go with a heavy-duty Bronx
accent and any other cliché you can think of.
Make a huge choice, because you can always
pull back.”
Junior Megan Cohen and sophomore Lauren Dunagan are
embarking on a cold reading of John Patrick Shanley’s
Savage in Limbo. Each time they repeat the
scene, Kostopoulos adds new elements. “Get furious
with her, Megan—like you want to kill her!”
And to Dunagan: “Keep shuffling your cards while
you watch her.”
Kostopoulos, who has an MFA degree from San Francisco’s
American Conservatory Theater (ACT), has taught advanced
acting courses in the drama department since 1998. Her
“contemporary” class puts students in touch
with a range of modern playwrights. “I’ve
done Russian realism and revisionist plays, but as an
Asian-American actor, contemporary stuff is what I’ll
probably get the most work in,” says senior Jason
Lee. “I think people in the drama world tend to
look down on modern works as kind of nihilistic, but
Kay’s really taught us about the beauty that there
is in colloquial playwriting.”
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‘Go with a heavy-duty
Bronx accent and any other cliché you can
think of. Make a huge choice.’
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In the course, Lee and seven other students, most of
them drama majors, are exploring John Guare’s
Lydie Breeze and Sam Shepard’s A
Lie of the Mind, in addition to the Shanley piece.
The actors are paired off and they get an intense half-hour
of Kostopoulos’ attention as they work the scenes
they’ve been assigned. “You really must
listen to the other person,” she will tell them.
“Too often actors only think about their own parts,
and that’s dead on stage. So follow through after
a line leaves you, to make sure it lands on the other
person. Make sure it is understood.”
For many students, Kostopoulos says, getting on their
feet with a contemporary script can feel like crossing
the border into a foreign country. “A lot of these
plays are about rapid rate of utterance—speaking
quickly and clearly and with great precision—and
it’s a skill they can learn. With a [George Bernard]
Shaw play, you have to speak quickly or it’s going
to be five hours long.”
Kostopoulos also urges students to stay “in the
moment” with one another on stage and trust that
they’ll remember their lines when it’s their
turn to speak. “Your focus must be present, or
the audience will see it right away,” she adds.
Each fall, Kostopoulos helps evaluate prospective freshmen
who want to audition as part of the admission process,
and as Commencement approaches she crosses her fingers
for graduating seniors. “I want to give them as
much encouragement and support as I can, but I also
know that it’s a hard, hard, hard life of rejection,”
she says. “It’s not like you graduate, go
out and get a job.” Because the odds of getting
into graduate school are so overwhelming, Kostopoulos
says it was particularly gratifying when three of her
students were admitted to Yale, Brown and ACT last year.
“Often they’re so talented, but they can’t
get in the door. But these three just hit it—one,
two, three. It was fabulous.”
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