Dictionary Definition
actor
Noun
2 a person who acts and gets things done; "he's a
principal actor in this affair"; "when you want something done get
a doer"; "he's a miracle worker" [syn: doer, worker]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From actor, (cognate: Ancient Greek άκτωρ (aktor) "leader", from άγω (agō) "to lead, carry, convey, bring").Noun
- a person who performs in a theatrical play or film
- one who acts; a doer
- one who takes part in a situation
- An advocate or proctor in civil courts or causes.
- One who institutes a suit; plaintiff or complainant.
- (policy debate) One who enacts a certain policy action.
- The entity that performs a role (in use case analysis).
Synonyms
- (person who performs in a theatrical play or film): actress (female), performer, player
- (one who acts): doer
- (one who takes part): participant
- (advocate in civil courts or cases):
- (a plaintiff): complainant, plaintiff
- (one who enacts a policy action)
- (entity performing a role in use case analysis): role
Derived terms
Translations
person who performs in a theatrical play or film
- Albanian: aktor, aktore
- Bosnian: glumac, glumica
- Croatian: glumac, glumica
- Czech: herec
- Estonian: näitleja
- Finnish: näyttelijä
- French: acteur, actrice
- German: Schauspieler, Schauspielerin
- Greek: ηθοποιός ,
- Hebrew: שחקן (sakhqan) , שחקנית (sakhqanit)
- Hungarian: színész
- Icelandic: leikari (a man), leikkona (a woman)
- Italian: attore, attrice
- Japanese: 俳優 (haiyū); 役者 (yakusha)
- Kashubian: teatrownik
- Latin: āctor m nominative, āctoris m genitive
- Maltese: attur , attriċi , atturi p
- Polish: aktor
- Portuguese: actor , actriz (Portugal); ator , atriz (Brazil)
- Romanian: actor, actriţă
- Russian: актёр
- Scottish Gaelic: cluicheadair , cleasaiche , ban-chleasaiche , ban-chluicheadair
- Sinhala: නළුවා /නිළිය ,රංගන ශිල්පියා /රංගන ශිල්පිනිය ,
- Slovak: herec, herečka
- Slovenian: igralec , igralka
- Spanish: actor, actriz
- Swedish: skådespelare
- Telugu: నటుడు (naṭuḍu)
one who acts; a doer
- Albanian: aktor , aktore , bërës , bërëse
- Finnish: tekijä, toimija
- French: faiseur, faiseuse
- German: Handelnde
- Hungarian: cselekvő
- Italian: attore , attice
- Polish: aktor
- Russian: деятель (d'éjat'el)
- Scottish Gaelic: cluicheadair , cleasaiche , ban-chleasaiche , ban-chluicheadair
- Slovak: činiteľ
- Swedish: skådespelare
one who takes part in a situation
advocate in civil courts or cases
plaintiff
one who enacts a policy action
entity performing a role in use case analysis
Latin
Etymology
Agent noun formed from actus, perfect passive participle of agere to do, + -or, agential endingNoun
actor 3rd decl. (pl., actoris)Portuguese
Noun
actor- actor (person who performs in a theatrical play or movie)
See also
actrizRomanian
Noun
Declension
Spanish
Noun
- actor (person who performs in a theatrical play or movie)
Extensive Definition
An actor, actress, player or rarely thespian (see
terminology)
is a person who acts in a
dramatic production and
who works in film, television, theatre, or radio
in that capacity. The ancient Greek word for an actor,
(hypokrites), when rendered as a verb means "to interpret"; in this
sense, an actor is one who interprets a dramatic character.
Terminology
The word actor refers to one who acts, while actress refers specifically to a female who acts. The Oxford English Dictionary states that originally "'actor' was used for both sexes". The English word actress does not derive from the Latin actrix, probably not even by way of French actrice; according to the Oxford English Dictionary, actress was "probably formed independently" in English. As actress is a specifically feminine word, some feminists assert that the word is sexist. Gender-neutral usage of actor has re-emerged in modern English, especially when referring to male and female performers collectively, but actress remains a commonly used word.The gender-neutral term player was common in film
in the early days of the Production
Code, but is now generally deemed archaic. However, it remains
in use in the theatre, often incorporated into the name of a
theatre group or company (such as the East West
Players).
History
The first recorded case of an actor performing took place in 534 BC (probably on 23 November, though the changes in calendar over the years make it hard to determine exactly) when the Greek performer Thespis stepped on to the stage at the Theatre Dionysus and became the first known person to speak words as a character in a play or story. Prior to Thespis' act, stories were only known to be told in song and dance and in third person narrative. In honour of Thespis,a 6th century B.C poet, actors are commonly called Thespians. Theatrical legend to this day maintains that Thespis exists as a mischievous spirit, and disasters in the theatre are sometimes blamed on his ghostly intervention.Actors were traditionally not people of high
status, and in the Early
Middle Ages travelling acting troupes were often viewed with
distrust. In many parts of Europe, actors could not even receive a
Christian burial, and traditional beliefs of the region and time
period held that this left any actor forever condemned. However,
this negative perception was largely reversed in the 19th and 20th
centuries as acting has become an honored and popular profession
and art. Part of the cause is the easier popular access to dramatic
film entertainment and the resulting rise of the movie
star—as regards both their social status and the
salaries they command. The combination of public presence and
wealth has profoundly rehabilitated their image.
In the past, only men could become actors in some
societies. In the ancient Greece and Rome and the medieval
world, it was considered disgraceful for a woman to go on the
stage, and this belief continued right up until the 17th century,
when in Venice it was
broken. In the time of William
Shakespeare, women's roles were generally played by men or
boys. The British prohibition(Victor Andersen) was ended in the
reign of Charles
II who enjoyed watching female actors (actresses) on
stage.
Techniques
General
Acting and actresses employ a variety of techniques that are learned through training and experience. Some of these are:- The rigorous use of the voice to communicate a character's lines and express emotion. This is achieved through attention to diction and projection through correct breathing and articulation. It is also achieved through the tone and emphasis that an actor puts on words
- Physicalisation of a role in order to create a believable character for the audience and to use the acting space appropriately and correctly
- Use of gesture to complement the voice, interact with other actors and to bring emphasis to the words in a play, as well as having symbolic meaning.
Shakespeare is
believed to have been commenting on the acting style and techniques
of his era when Hamlet gives his
advice to the players in the play-within-the-play. He encourages
the actors to “speak the speech ... as I pronounced it to
you,” and avoid “saw[ing] the air too much with your hand” ,
because even in a “whirlwind of passion, you must ... give
it smoothness.” On the other hand, Hamlet urges the players to “Be
not too tame neither.” He suggests that they make sure to “suit the
action to the word, the word to the action”, taking care to
“o'erstep not the modesty of nature.” As well, he told the players
to not “... let those that play your clowns ... laugh, to
set on some quantity of barren spectators to laugh too,” which
Hamlet considered to be a “villainous” and “pitiful” tactic.
The English critic Benedict
Nightingale discussed and compared great classical actors of
the long dead past, and the present, and their magical effects upon
audiences, in this 1983 article from the New York Times, available
online.
As opposite sex
Historically, acting was considered a man's profession; so, in Shakespeare's time, for instance, men and boys played all roles, including the female parts. However when an eighteen year Puritan prohibition of drama was lifted after the English Restoration of 1660, women began to appear on stage. The first occurrence of the term actress in the OED being by Dryden in 1700.In Japan, men (onnagata) took over the female
roles in kabuki theatre
when women were banned from performing on stage during the Edo period.
However, some forms of Chinese
drama have women playing all the roles.
In modern times, women sometimes play the roles
of prepubescent
boys. The stage role of Peter Pan, for
example, is traditionally played by a woman, as are the principal
boy and dame in
British pantomime.
This is uncommon in film, however, except in animated films and television
programmes, where boys are sometimes voiced by women. For example,
in The
Simpsons the voice of Bart Simpson
is provided by Nancy
Cartwright. Opera has several
"pants
roles" traditionally sung by women, usually mezzo-sopranos.
Examples are Hansel in
Hänsel und Gretel, and
Cherubino in The
Marriage of Figaro.
Having an actor dress as the opposite sex for
comic effect is also a long standing tradition in comic theatre and
film. Most of Shakespeare's comedies include instances of overt
cross-dressing,
such as Francis
Flute in
A Midsummer Night's Dream. The movie
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum stars Jack Gilford
dressing as a young bride. Tony Curtis
and Jack
Lemmon famously posed as women to escape gangsters in the
Billy
Wilder film Some
Like It Hot. Cross-dressing for comic effect was a frequently
used device in most of the thirty Carry On
films. Dustin
Hoffman and Robin
Williams each appeared in a hit comedy film in which they
played most scenes dressed as a woman.
Several roles in modern plays and musicals are
played by a member of the opposite sex (rather than a character
cross-dressing), such as the character Edna Turnblad in
Hairspray — played by Divine in
the original
film, Harvey
Fierstein in the Broadway
musical, and John
Travolta in the 2007
movie musical. Occasionally the issue is further complicated
through a woman acting as a man pretending to be a woman, like
Julie
Andrews in Victor/Victoria
or Gwyneth
Paltrow in Shakespeare
in Love.
Acting awards
- Academy Awards, also known as the Oscars, for film
- Cannes Film Festival Awards, international French festival for world wide films and documentaries
- Golden Globe Awards for film and television
- Emmy Awards for television
- Genie Awards for Canadian film
- Gemini Awards for Canadian television
- British Academy of Film and Television Arts Award for film and television; also known as BAFTA
- Tony Awards for the theatre (specifically, Broadway theatre)
- European Theatre Awards for the theatre
- Laurence Olivier Awards for the theatre (named in honour of actor Sir Laurence Olivier)
- Screen Actors Guild Awards for actors in film and television
- Indian National Film Awards for the Indian cinema.
- Filmfare Awards honors excellence in the Indian Film Industry (Bollywood) - limited to Hindi language films only.
- Goya Awards for Spanish film.
- San Sebastián International Film Festival Spanish film festival Celebrated in San Sebastián.
- César Awards for French film.
- AFI Awards for Australian film.
- Berlinale German film festival in Berlin (Golden and Silver Bear)
- Piala Citra (Citra Award) for Indonesian film.
- IFTA's for the Irish Film and Television
- Kids Choice Awards for Nickelodeon and TV channels based on kids.
See also
- Acting
- Voice Actor
- Leading actor
- Supporting actor
- Character actor
- Bit part
- Movie star
- Celebrity
- Stunt work
- List of male film actors
- List of female film actors
- Method acting
- Pornographic actor
- Presentational acting and Representational acting
- Improvisational theatre
- Film producers
- Thespis
- Vaudeville
- Charisma
- Q Score
- Dramatis personæ
Further reading
- An Actor Prepares by Konstantin Stanislavski (Theatre Arts Books, ISBN 0-87830-983-7, 1989)
- A Dream of Passion: The Development of the Method by Lee Strasberg (Plume Books, ISBN 0-452-26198-8, 1990)
- Sanford Meisner on Acting by Sanford Meisner (Vintage, ISBN 0-394-75059-4, 1987)
- Letters to a Young Actor by Robert Brustein (Basic Books, ISBN 0-465-00806-2, 2005).
- The Alexander Technique Manual by Richard Brennan (Connections Book Publishing ISBN 1-85906-163-X, 2004)
- The Empty Space by Peter Brook
- The Technique of Acting by Stella Adler
- Acting Power by Robert Cohen, (McGraw-Hill, 1987)
- Acting Professionally: Raw Facts About Careers in Acting by Robert Cohen (2003). (McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0-072-56259-5, 2003)
Works cited
- Elam, Keir. 1980. The Semiotics of Theatre and Drama. New Accents Ser. London and New York: Methuen. ISBN 0416720609.
- Weimann, Robert. 1978. Shakespeare and the Popular Tradition in the Theater: Studies in the Social Dimension of Dramatic Form and Function. Ed. Robert Schwartz. Baltimore and London: The John Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801835062.
References
External links
- Actors' Equity Association (AEA): a union representing U. S. theatre actors and stage managers.
- American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA): a union representing U. S. television and radio actors and broadcasters (on-air journalists, etc.).
- British Actors' Equity: a trade union representing UK artists, including actors, singers, dancers, choreographers, stage managers, theatre directors and designers, variety and circus artists, television and radio presenters, walk-on and supporting artists, stunt performers and directors and theatre fight directors.
- Media Entertainment & Arts Alliance: an Australian/New Zealand trade union representing everyone in the media, entertainment, sports, and arts industries.
- Acting, Just the Facts an article on being an actor
- Screen Actors Guild (SAG): a union representing U. S. film and TV actors.
actor in Tosk Albanian: Schauspieler
actor in Arabic: ممثل
actor in Asturian: Actor
actor in Bosnian: Glumac
actor in Bulgarian: Актьор
actor in Catalan: Actor
actor in Czech: Herec
actor in Welsh: Actor
actor in Danish: Skuespiller
actor in German: Schauspieler
actor in Modern Greek (1453-): Ηθοποιός
actor in Spanish: Actuación
actor in Esperanto: Aktoro
actor in Persian: هنرپیشه
actor in French: Acteur
actor in Scottish Gaelic: Actair
actor in Galician: Actor
actor in Korean: 배우
actor in Croatian: Glumac
actor in Ido: Aktoro
actor in Indonesian: Pemeran
actor in Italian: Attore (spettacolo)
actor in Hebrew: שחקן
actor in Georgian: მსახიობი
actor in Latin: Actor
actor in Lithuanian: Aktorius
actor in Hungarian: Színész
actor in Macedonian: Актер
actor in Malay (macrolanguage): Pelakon
actor in Dutch: Acteur
actor in Japanese: 俳優
actor in Norwegian: Skuespiller
actor in Norwegian Nynorsk: Skodespelar
actor in Novial: Aktore
actor in Uzbek: Aktyor
actor in Polish: Aktor
actor in Portuguese: Actor
actor in Romanian: Actor
actor in Quechua: Aranway pukllaq
actor in Russian: Актёр
actor in Albanian: Aktori
actor in Simple English: Actor
actor in Slovak: Herec
actor in Slovenian: Filmski igralec
actor in Serbian: Глумац
actor in Serbo-Croatian: Glumci
actor in Finnish: Näyttelijä
actor in Swedish: Skådespelare
actor in Tagalog: Artista
actor in Thai: นักแสดง
actor in Vietnamese: Diễn viên
actor in Tajik: Ҳунарпеша (филм)
actor in Turkish: Aktör
actor in Ukrainian: Кіноактор
actor in Yiddish: אקטיאר
actor in Chinese: 演員
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Artful Dodger, Casanova, Don Juan, Machiavel, Machiavelli, Machiavellian, Roscius, actress, affecter, agent, antagonist, antihero, architect, author, bad guy, bamboozler, barnstormer, befuddler, beguiler, bit, bit part, cast, character, character actor,
character man, character woman, charmer, child actor, counterfeiter, creator, cue, deceiver, deluder, diseur, diseuse, dissembler, dissimulator, dodger, doer, double-dealer, dramatizer, duper, enchanter, entrancer, executant, executor, executrix, fabricator, fake, faker, fat part, feeder, foil, fooler, forger, fraud, gay deceiver, heavy, hero, heroine, histrio, histrion, hoaxer, hollow man, hypnotizer, impersonator, ingenue, jilt, jilter, joker, jokester, juvenile, kidder, lead, lead role, leading lady,
leading man, leading woman, leg-puller, lines, mainstay, maker, man of straw, mannerist, matinee idol,
medium, mesmerizer, mime, mimer, mimic, misleader, monologist, mover, mummer, operant, operative, operator, pantomime, pantomimist, paper tiger,
part, partaker, participator, party, performer, perpetrator, person, personage, phony, piece, plagiarist, plagiarizer, playactor, player, practical joker, practitioner, pretender, prime mover,
producer, protagonist, protean actor,
ragger, reciter, role, role-player, seducer, sharer, side, soubrette, spoofer, stage performer, stage
player, stooge, straight
man, straight part, straw man, stroller, strolling player,
subject, supporter, supporting
character, supporting role, sustainer, tease, teaser, theatrical, thespian, title role, trouper, upholder, utility man, villain, walk-on, walking part,
worker