Acting Class 101

By Gayle Bartos-Pool

If we’re lucky, we learn stuff everywhere we go in life. I did just that when I moved to California when I was twenty-five. I wanted to write for television and the movies. Me and five million other people. Since I didn’t know anything about the “business” of Hollywood, I thought it would be a good idea to take an acting class to see what writers needed to know when creating a screenplay character.

I happened to get a job working for a talent agent, and he got me in an acting class. This one was taught by Bruce Glover. You might have seen him in the James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever. He played the sinister/funny character that was trying to kill off Bond.

What Bruce taught was when you’re playing a character, large part, small part, or walk-on, have your character do something that makes him stand out. Have a menacing smile or a delivery of your lines that has everybody notice you. Many famous actors started as bit players and went on to fame and fortune when they did something that stood out on the screen. And that doesn’t mean just having a pretty face.

As a writer, I figured that when I wrote characters, large or small, I would give them something that stood out. It might be their clothes that telegraphed what economic bracket they fell into or a whacky giggle to show that maybe their elevator didn’t go up too many floors. Maybe it’s the words they use that show their high-toned upbringing or their lack of education.

While taking that class, I had to do an improvised scene with another actor. We were to be boyfriend and girlfriend who were having problems. As the other actor and I were chatting on stage pretending we were seeing eye-to-eye while all the time pointing out the major problems we were having with the other character, I had a piece of paper in my hand that I said was the love letter he had written to another woman. I kept folding it in half, long-ways, until it looked like a knife. Obviously, my character was signaling what I wanted to do to my soon-to-be-ex boyfriend. Actions speak louder than words sometimes.
I try to give most of the characters I write that little bit extra to define them, too.

That acting class wasn’t the only one I took. I got lessons from Rudy Solari and Guy Stockwell. Both men had long careers in Hollywood. What Rudy had actors do was write a biography for the character they were playing so they knew exactly who they were when they stepped on the stage. It didn’t have to write pages and pages, just a brief background of that character, stating where he came from, how he was raised, his education, and what he wanted out of that scene.

What this did for the actor was let him know what motivates his character because in a screenplay, the writer usually just provides the dialogue, maybe how the line should be spoken like a whisper or yelling, and a few physical actions like running away or punching someone. Of course, the director will provide even more of those directions.

But the writer of a novel or short story needs to know who this character is, what motivates him, and things like his age, hair color, and stature, because when you’re writing a story, you don’t want to get to page 275 and have your twenty-five-year-old character with black hair all of a sudden be a thirty-six-year-old blond.

I write a short biography for all my main characters, adding to it as I think about what their past might have included that will help the current story angle. And I keep a Character List for everybody appearing in the story so I know who is who, and who they know, and why they’re there. It sure helps when I get to a spot and need to know all the previous things I wrote about that character like their age, hair color, or their role in the story.

And something else about those two acting classes, they gave me the confidence to get up in front of an audience when I’m talking about the books I wrote. I already know my motivation: get people to read.

Unknown's avatar

Author: gbpool

A former private detective and once a reporter for a small weekly newspaper, Gayle Bartos-Pool (writing as G.B. Pool) writes three detective series: the Gin Caulfield P.I. series (Media Justice, Hedge Bet & Damning Evidence), The Johnny Casino Casebook Series, and the Chance McCoy detective series. She also penned a series of spy novels, The SPYGAME Trilogy: The Odd Man, Dry Bones, and Star Power. She has a collection of short stories in From Light To DARK, as well as novels: Eddie Buick’s Last Case, Enchanted: The Ring, The Rose, and The Rapier, The Santa Claus Singer, and three delightful holiday storied, Bearnard’s Christmas, The Santa Claus Machine, and Every Castle Needs a Dragon. Also published: CAVERNS, Only in Hollywood, and Closer. She is the former Speakers Bureau Director for Sisters in Crime/Los Angeles and also a member of Mystery Writers of America and The Woman’s Club of Hollywood. She teaches writing classes: “Anatomy of a Short Story,” (The Anatomy of a Short Story Workbook and So You Want to be a Writer are available.) “How To Write Convincing Dialogue” and “Writing a Killer Opening Line” in sunny Southern California. Website: www.gbpool.com.

12 thoughts on “Acting Class 101”

  1. Gayle, your post speaks volumes (pun intended). Creating a bio for your characters adds a layer of depth to them which makes them more “real” to the reader. And not just for readers – undercover cops and agents do the same thing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You are so right. I had to come up with a phony biography when I was a private detective and worked undercover. I guess my characters get the same service. But it does keep me conscious of their background when I know where they came from.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Gayle, thank you for reminding us that writers are exposed to so many experiences during their lifetime, although we don’t always realize it. . I loved reading the acting part of yours. Keep ’em coming!

    jill

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Jill. I have a character in one of my spy novels say something after she wrote a book to catch a spy: “Write what you know and make up the rest.” Writers do use their own life’s experiences just to have some reality in their fiction.

      Like

  3. Gayle – I think your time of participating in acting classes was such a profound education for your writing career. It really does round out our literary characters to know their background, but also – as you learned in those classes – our characters physical behavior. I loved the bit about folding the paper into a knife shape! This is why your stories are always so rich with interesting characters – from the waitress to the detective. Fun reading. Thanks!

    Liked by 2 people

  4. You would be terrific on stage, Gayle. I can just hear that tough-guy talk you use in some of your more humorous stories. And with Gin… well, I picture you as her when I read.

    Classes like that are great experiences in forming a character in your head and letting them peek and then, charge out on stage or on paper. Good job.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Jaxon. Our good friend, Alice Zogg, learned that I had taken those classes and she signed up for classes at the Pasadena Playhouse. Boy, did that make her presentations go from Okay to terrific. She got so much confidence from her classes that she shined when she talked to her audiences after that.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Gayle, you were very fortunate to be able to grab these opportunities that enhanced your writing. I too love the paper-turned-knife! And I’m going to make your motivation—get people to read—my expressed one as well.

    BTW, I’m a big fan of Alice Zogg and am currently reading Doomed Reunion.

    Like

  6. Thanks, Maggie. Things that happen in our lives make our writing more real. Alice uses places where she has actually been to make her books so entertaining, not to mention her great characters.

    Like

  7. Great post, GB, and sound advice too! I can attest to your skill speaking before an audience because I’ve seen you in action, and it always amazes me, how confident and comfortable you appear. I, too, write character bios and keep a spreadsheet with their details so I don’t change their eye color midway through the manuscript or make other big continuity errors. Those acting classes sure paid off for you!

    Like

Leave a reply to gbpool Cancel reply