Uta Hagen's Acting Class
Uploader: HB Studio
Original upload date: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 00:00:00 GMT
Archive date: Mon, 06 Dec 2021 06:40:03 GMT
"Uta Hagen’s Acting Class" is a feature length documentary film that places the viewer right in the heart of Uta's classroom here at HB Studio. Watch Ms. Hagen work with actors and demonstrate the maj
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or techniques of acting. Former students Whoopi Goldberg, Amanda Peet, Jack Lemmon and Christine Lahti talk about her influence on their work.
#UtaHagen was a groundbreaking actress, teacher, activist and mentor to seven generations of artists at HB Studio.
Learn about the Uta Hagen Institute at HB Studio: https://hbstudio.org/programs/the-hagen-institute/
About Uta Hagen
Uta Hagen was famous for originating the role of Martha in the 1962 Broadway premiere of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Hagen was cast, early on, as Ophelia in Le Gallienne’s production of Hamlet in 1937, and went on to play the leading role of Nina in a Broadway production of Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull in 1938. Hagen was just 18 at the time. She played George Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan on Broadway in 1951. In the role of Desdemona in Shakespeare’s Othello, Hagen was part of the longest-running Shakespearean production ever on Broadway, which featured Paul Robeson as Othello and her then-husband Jose Ferrer as Iago (1943-44). She took over the role of Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire for the national tour which closed in 1949. Later in her life, Hagen earned accolades for leading stage roles in Mrs. Warren’s Profession, Collected Stories, and Mrs. Klein.
Among Hagen’s numerous awards, she was elected to the American Theatre Hall of Fame in 1981. Hagen received three Tony Awards, including the Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1999. In March 2003, Hagen was awarded the National Medal of Honor for the Arts. She was honored, along with the other recipients, in a gala ceremony at the White House.
Uta Hagen was a transcendent actor, life-changing teacher, and blazingly honest advocate for the relevance and power of theater. Her integrity was legendary; she defiantly told truth to power and took personal and professional risks for the sake of great art. During the McCarthy era, Hagen was put on the Hollywood blacklist, and as a result, her film opportunities dwindled and she focused her career on teaching and New York theatre.
Uta Hagen was one of the most renowned and respected acting teachers of the 20th century. She was highly sought-after and influential among those she trained at HB Studio, and quickly adopted the role of master teacher and studio co-lead, beside her partner in love and work, Herbert Berghof. During her time at the acting studio, she authored best-selling acting texts, the seminal Respect for Acting and the definitive A Challenge for the Actor. Both texts still enjoy worldwide distribution among university students studying drama. Her most substantial contributions to theatre pedagogy were a series of “object exercises” that remain prominent training for acting professionals. In 2001, the documentary Uta Hagen’s Acting Class features Hagen in a series of master classes on her exercises.
Notable actors that studied under Uta Hagen include Katie Finneran, Liza Minnelli, Whoopi Goldberg, Jack Lemmon, Debbie Allen, F. Murray Abraham, Rita Gardner, Steve McQueen, Amanda Peet, Marlo Thomas, Jerry Stiller, Charles Nelson Reilly, and Hal Holbrook, among many others. https://hbstudio.org/about-hb-studio/alumni/
"Because I love the theater, and believe it to be not only the actor’s training but testing ground, it is with great pleasure that I recommend this set." – Meryl Streep
"She taught me the truth about human behavior." – Jack Lemmon
"Here is Ms. Hagen at her extraordinary best… Will watching this video make you a better actor, director or teacher? Yes, yes, and yes." – David Hyde Pierce