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Friday, August 1, 2014

THE MOMENT AN AMAZONIAN TRIBE MEET THE OUTSIDE WORLD FOR THE FIRST TIME!


First contact: The moment natives from Amazonian tribe who were driven out of the jungle by logging and drug traffickers meet the outside world

  • Young men thought to be part of 50-strong group along Brazil's Envira River
  • They were 'driven away after homes were set alight and they were shot at'
  • Natives spoke of vultures eating bodies of relatives they were unable to bury
  • Some then contracted the flu and had to be treated by government medics
  • It is believed cocaine-growing gangs on Brazil-Peru border are responsible
  • People are also being pushed out by oil and gas mining and illegal logging 
  • Campaigner: 'The latest situation is really serious and deeply worrying'

HOW BODY LANGUAGE AFFECTS YOUR AUDITIONS

How Body Language Affects Your Auditions

Courtesy of Matt Newton Backstage http://www.backstage.com/advice-for-actors/backstage-experts/how-body-language-affects-your-auditions/?utm_campaign=Expert%20Posts&utm_content=7055818&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook

In auditions, confidence is everything. It’s your body language, your voice, how you carry yourself, the image you project, before you even open your mouth. It’s those first 15 seconds of your audition as you are walking into the room. Your body language should say, “Trust me. I got this!” and make the casting director, producers, directors, and showrunners believe you, and feel like they can put you on set or on stage the very next day. You are performance ready, you are owning it, you have unshakeable confidence, and there isn’t a doubt in anyone’s mind. It’s the most attractive quality for an actor to have in an audition.
It’s very obvious when an actor who is unsure of what they are doing and lacks confidence walks into the room. Their shoulders are low, they avoid eye contact, they are tentative in their choices, their voice is soft, and the sides are shaking in their hands. It makes you look “green,” and makes the casting director nervous. Before you even open your mouth, your body language says, “I’m sorry for the audition you are about to see.” It ain’t pretty, and if you don’t believe in yourself, nobody else will.
True confidence comes from training—from practice being in front of the camera and on stage. It’s about being prepared, being confident in your work, and then setting it free in the room, listening and letting spontaneity take over. Even seasoned actors question themselves once (or twice) in a while.
If you don’t have that confidence yet, you have to learn to fake it. You are an actor, right? Act like a “confident person.” What does that mean? It means walk in with your head high (even if you are freaking out inside), look the people in the room in the eye (not in a creepy way), breathe, have the sides in your hand, and be fully prepared and with your audition. If you are the type of actor whose hands shake a lot when they are holding the sides, put something with a little weight to it underneath (a headshot folder or a book). It will stop the shaking and make you seem that much more sure of yourself. (“Wow, this guy isn’t nervous at all!”) That alone speaks volumes about you.
Even if this job is paying a top of show guest star, and you need it to pay your rent, and you don’t know how you are going to eat that night, you can never let them see that. Desperation can be spotted a mile away. Never let them see you sweat, and act like you have been doing this forever. Don’t bring that stuff into the room with you. The more you listen in the scene, the less self-aware you are, the more your body relaxes, the more connected you are physically and emotionally, and the better your audition is.
You ever have days when you are miserable, and if you force yourself to smile, eventually you will actually make yourself happier? Same goes with body language. Sit or stand confidently, ground yourself in the audition, put your shoulders back, avoid shifting the weight on your legs, breathe, look the reader right in the eye, and think to yourself “I got this.” It is self-fulfilling, and will actually make you feel more confident. It should feel like you are having this great party, and you don’t really care if anyone shows up, because you are so sure it’s going to be amazing.
Same goes for auditions. Don’t be the guy that’s begging people to come to your party. If they don’t like your choices, too bad. They are missing out on a great party.
Like this advice? Check out more from our Backstage Experts!
Matt Newton is an acting coach and Backstage Expert. For more information, check out Newton’s full bio!
 

JAMIE FOXX WILL PLAY MIKE TYSON IN HIS MOVIE BIOPIC


Mike Tyson says Jamie Foxx will play him in his movie life story

Courtesy of Ben Child the Guardian http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/jul/30/mike-tyson-wants-jamie-foxx-in-movie-biopic

Former heavyweight champion says he and the actor are 'in discussion' about a proposed biopic, which would use the same CGI wizardry as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

The former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson has claimed that Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx is set to play him in a new biopic, through the magic of CGI. Tyson told the Daily Mirror that Foxx would portray him in different stages of his life, aided by the technology used for the David Fincher fantasy The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. He also claimed Martin Scorsese would be involved in the proposed biopic.
"Me and Jamie Foxx are in discussion, and we gonna do it," said Tyson, 48. "Within a year to 18 months, we're going to do the Mike Tyson story and he's going to portray me, and now they have this new animation; because you know Jamie's pretty much my age so he can't portray me but they have this new system."
Foxx, 46, has reportedly asked Tyson for help training for the role. Having previously impersonated Tyson, for comedy skits, he revealed an interest in portraying the boxer during an appearance on the US TV show Live with Kelly and Michael in May. "I got a chance to hang out with Mike when Mike was at his height," he said, "and I watched [him] go from his height to where he is now, and I talked to him about doing his story. I think that story would be fantastic … and I had my makeup artist dress me up as Mike Tyson … People were literally coming up asking for autographs. So hopefully, Mike, if you're listening, let's make history."
The Django Unchained actor won the best actor Oscar in 2005 for another biopic, Ray, about the musician Ray Charles.
Tyson became the youngest undisputed heavyweight champion of the world at 20, after uniting the WBC, WBA and IBF titles. In 1992 he was convicted of rape, and in 2003 he was declared bankruptcy, despite reported career earnings of more than $300m (£180m). He was the subject of sympathetic documentary, Tyson, directed by James Toback and released in 2008.
Fincher's Benjamin Button used CGI to show Brad Pitt as a man who ages backwards from a tiny old man to a strapping young 50-year-old and beyond. The film, based loosely on an F Scott Fitzgerald short story, was nominated for 13 Oscars in 2009 but won just three in art and technical categories.