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EyeActing

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    Hi! Welcome to the Mikroteater
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    and the beautiful Chat Noir.
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    And right now,
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    it’s all happening at a theater,
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    because, people,
    we're going to an audition!
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    Follow me, and follow
    the arrows, to the audition.
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    Let's go.
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    For the last 6 or 7 years,
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    I've been developing
    a new acting technique.
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    And I've simply called it "EyeActing."
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    It's based on the concept that
    where you look in a room
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    affects how you feel.
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    OK, do you have sound?
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    Not yet.
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    Let me see. There.
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    Now you have sound.
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    You can put this there.
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    It turns out that through new research,
    and neurology,
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    it turns out that where you look
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    in a room affects how you feel.
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    In other words, your gaze
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    has a direct connection
    to your subconscious.
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    Tell me a little bit about Vera.
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    Vera is,
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    she is a girl who
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    hasn't had it easy growing up.
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    And together with five other girls,
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    she has found herself a pack. She lives
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    outside of normal society.
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    She's pretty young.
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    When you talk about Vera now,
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    can you feel her anywhere in your body?
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    In my mouth,
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    - Yes, good.
    - Here, very much.
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    In your cheeks?
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    Yes. Almost like I can't open my mouth.
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    That's good.
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    Now if you look at the line,
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    a horizontal line
    starting at the windows over there.
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    Can you feel Vera
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    strongest gazing to your left?
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    Or in the middle?
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    Or can you feel Vera
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    when you gaze to your right side?
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    On my left.
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    On your left?
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    Do you have an area, or a point?
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    I have an area.
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    You have an area.
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    When we work with EyeActing,
    it's helpful to use
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    something called bilateral music.
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    It’s a kind of music
    that we listen to with earphones.
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    And it alternates
    between the left and right ear,
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    and it helps the actor concentrate.
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    When working on a scene,
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    you always start with the body,
    finding a point
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    on what I call the line —
    the horizon in your field of vision.
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    Then, you find the point
    that corresponds to
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    how you feel in your body,
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    and this activates the subconscious.
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    Slowly,
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    you shift your focus from the conscious
    to the subconscious,
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    and this allows the subconscious
    to bring forth both emotions and physical behavior
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    sometimes you can see that actor
    undergo a total physical transformation.
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    How old are you?
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    - 15.
    - 15?
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    How is that?
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    It's okay.
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    It's okay to be 15?
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    No.
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    No?
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    No.
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    Tell me?
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    - No.
    - Tell me.
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    No. I don’t want to talk about it.
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    You don't want to tell me?
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    Where do you feel being 15 in your body?
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    In your cheek?
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    - My jaw.
    - In your jaw?
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    Could you see if you could find
    that point on the line
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    that corresponds to
    how you feel it
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    in your jaw?
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    I think it’s here.
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    You think it’s there? Okay.
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    Do you have the point or just the area?
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    I have the point.
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    You have the point. Yes. Good.
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    I think so.
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    Yes, that's good.
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    Great.
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    What do you feel?
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    I feel nauseous, and angry.
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    You’re nausesous and angry?
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    Where are you nauseous and angry, Vera?
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    All over.
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    All over?
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    All over me.
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    All over you?
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    Yes. Okay.
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    The most intriguing aspect of EyeActing
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    is its organic nature
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    and the direct engagement
    with the subconscious,
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    revealing something
    that is truly skinless.
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    It's very vulnerable.
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    When there was no one inside,
    we went in.
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    Klara approached the man
    behind the counter
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    and asked for some cigarettes.
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    When he turned around,
    we threw ourselves at him,
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    me and Klara, we put a knife to his eye,
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    and we took all the money in the cash register,
    and some from the safe.
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    And then we ran out.
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    Okay.
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    You want to take your headphones off?
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    Just a response,
    just an impulsive response.
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    You don't have to
    think much about it, or be smart
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    or make it academic in anyway.
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    Can you just...
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    Exciting, new, different, strange.
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    Overwhelming.
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    It was an extreme force,
    and I still feel it.
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    I still feel it.
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    But do you think this is
    deeper than the Method?
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    Yes. It really gets into your muscle.
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    I can't explain it any other way.
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    I don’t know if you could feel
    when you got into being 15 years old
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    you became very obstinate.
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    Oh fuck.
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    Could you feel that?
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    We could hear it.
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    - What?
    - I could hear it.
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    You answered a bit rudely and...
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    She was rude and it was perfectly fine.
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    There was no problem.
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    but, “No, I don’t want to,”
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    “No, I don’t want to talk about it,”
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    “No, I didn’t want to go there."
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    - Did you feel that?
    - Yes.
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    Do you remember?
    Do you have a sense of doing that?
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    Yes, I remember. And I remember
    how surprised I was at my own answer.
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    Then again it was a little bit like,
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    the best I can explain it is muscle memory,
    like, I don’t care.
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    I won't take this.
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    This attitude just came up -
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    pretend you don't care.
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    Right, right.
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    Why should I waste my time on this.
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    - No?
    - Yes.
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    The big difference between EyeActing
    and traditional Stanislavsky techniques
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    I believe, is working on
    what we call the analysis.
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    We're used to doing
    the analysis beforehand,
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    usually sitting around a table
    before we get up on our feet.
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    The challenge with that is
    when we work on the analysis,
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    we're using the cognitive
    part of our brain,
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    the upper part responsible
    for thoughts and words.
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    But what EyeActing does
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    is to go directly to the subconscious.
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    The subconscious then
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    sends electrical signals
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    back up to the cognitive part,
    which are then expressed theatrically.
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    In other words,
    when you work with the analysis,
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    you're moving in the wrong direction
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    compared to the flow
    of electrical signals in the brain.
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    This is why I believe
    there are a lot of actors
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    who find it difficult to transition
    from working on the analysis
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    into being in the zone.
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    What I call the "flow zone" is the condition
    when the actor is just living on stage.
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    Yes, yes, very exciting.
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    It was almost a coincidence
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    that I stumbled upon this technique.
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    Because I had heard
    about a workshop in Oslo
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    centered around a groundbreaking
    new treatment method.
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    And during the break, I started talking
    with the workshop leader, David Grand.
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    David Grand had developed
    the Brainspotting technique,
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    which is a treatment method.
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    When he heard that I worked
    with theater and acting training,
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    he became quite excited
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    and said, "You have to remember
    that this technique
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    can also bring out
    characters from inside of us.”
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    Wow, that’s exciting!
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    What Brainspotting does is
    it accesses the parts of the brain
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    that go into character immediately.
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    You don't have to have all the experiences
    a character has had to use Brainspotting.
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    We have a vivid ability to imagine.
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    We have mirroring neurons that are active,
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    and they can be activated even more
    if we can feel it in our bodies.
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    If we can feel the experience in our body,
    we get an even deeper access
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    to these experiences
    when we use Brainspotting.
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    Understanding Brainspotting
    as a method of acting coaching
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    you need to know
    what it does in the brain.
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    And just a quick brain education,
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    the top part of the brain which is
    the human brain, only humans have it,
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    is called the neocortex.
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    Underneath it is the mammalian brain
    and the reptilian brain.
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    And we call it the sub cortex.
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    Language and thought is up here.
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    Emotion and intuition and
    and body experience is down here.
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    Brainspotting uses eye positions.
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    We really look for
    relevant eye positions in a person.
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    So when the actor finds that spot
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    and all of a sudden, "Wow,
    I'm right there,"
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    and they start to drop down
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    and they start to
    have character memory come up
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    and they feel it in their body
    and they feel it emotionally,
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    it's very active,
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    but it also feels very safe
    to the actor.
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    When the actor finds that spot,
    they're home.
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    Now it’s getting down here.
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    Yes.
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    - Yes.
    - Now it's gone.
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    Yes.
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    There's something here.
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    When you told me
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    that you were developing
    a new acting technique
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    It's not every day you get to talk to
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    someone who is creating
    a new acting technique.
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    Let's see, Lars-Erik,
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    if we can find a spot on the line
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    that corresponds to
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    where in your body you can feel Henrik.
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    Shall we try that?
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    If you look at this,
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    do you think it's
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    on your right side?
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    Or do you think it's in the middle?
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    - Anna?
    - Yes, honey.
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    I would like for us to …
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    What would you like?
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    When we get married,
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    can we let
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    old vicar Samuel Gransjø marry us?
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    Hmmm...
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    Yes.
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    - Yes.
    - Yes, we can if you want.
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    Here.
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    Here?
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    Yes, here.
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    Just you and me and the vicar
    and two witnesses
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    and nobody else.
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Title:
EyeActing
Video Language:
Norwegian Bokmal
Duration:
23:49
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
Anne Northrup edited English subtitles for EyeActing
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