The Barrow Group’s approach to storytelling is detailed in TBG co-Artistic Director Seth Barrish’s book AN ACTOR’S COMPANION.
Check out the below videos and introduction to Seth’s book to learn more.
Seth Barrish discusses his book
Book launch with Mike Birbiglia
Seth Barrish discusses his book with Frank Oz
“There is a muscularity, not to mention wisdom and truth, to Seth’s techniques. He is a wonderful teacher, and I know that having him as my first guide is one of the luckiest things to have happened to me in my career and life.”Anne Hathaway, Academy Award Winner
“Seth Barrish has coached me on almost every TV project, film or audition I’ve done since we met ten years ago. When it comes to wisdom about acting, there’s no one I hold in higher regard.” Mike Birbiglia, comedian/director/actor
The Introduction to An Actor’s Companion
“As a working actor, director, artistic director, musician, and teacher, I’ve come in contact with many amazing artists who have taught me a great deal. I wish to share with you, as concisely as possible, some of what I’ve learned.
Here’s a collection of my favorite actings tips, tools, and exercises. I love every one. They are easy to understand and even easier to apply. You can use them in rehearsal and in performance.
Each bit of craft came to me by way of other actors, directors, teachers, friends, colleagues, students, and personal experience. I am unable to properly credit the source for each tip because I can’t remember who showed me what. But I am deeply appreciative of all the people who have contributed to this book (see “Acknowledgements”).
I chose to provide the following tips without any detailed explanation of their theoretical underpinnings. In other words, I don’t explain why they work. I prefer to cut to the chase and just provide the tips (I have a short attention span and have always found reading about acting theory excruciating).
The tips are presented in random order, yet there is a common thread. Each is designed to do the following:
· Encourage spontaneity
· Foster entertaining, human, and compelling behavior
· Help you to become more sensitive, imaginitive, responsive, and alive onstage
· Relax you
· Change your work effortlessly and invisibly (so the audience won’t detect any effort on your part and therefore will feel like they are watching a real person rather than an actor “working”)
· Bring more freedom to your work
In a nutshell, here are my personal beliefs about acting:
· Acting is easy.
· Acting is most exciting when it is spontaneous and moment-to-moment.
· Unplanned behavior is usually much more interesting than planned behavior.
· Relaxation is the key to many of the things we strive for.
· The best technique is invisbile.
· The best techniques leave us free (free to imagine, free to respond, free to feel, free to whatever).
· I don’t think there is one “way” to approach acting. It’s about finding whatever works.
I hope the following tips will work for you. If not, the book will certainly look impressive on your bookshelf.”
This book is truly unlike anything else I know—these pieces are haikus on specific elements of performance and character building.” Philip Himberg, Executive Director, Sundance Theatre Institute