BY WENDY
SODERBURG
UCLA TODAY Staff
In a tiny dance studio in East Melnitz Hall,
13 students sat in a circle, eyes closed, caressing different
objects: a candle, a piece of ribbon, a cracker, a
Slinky.
Jean-Louis Rodrigue, visiting assistant
professor of acting, observed them closely. "Explore the
shape, the weight, the texture," he encouraged. "What does
that do to the relationship between you and the
object?"
The students, all enrolled in Rodrigue's
Alexander Technique 425B course in the M.F.A. acting program,
rubbed the objects against their skin, tasted them, tossed
them into the air.
"When I squeezed it, I felt as if I were at
the beach because it sounded like sand," one student commented
about the small beanbag he held. "I could feel the ocean
breeze."
"That's the power of contact," Rodrigue said.
"It's important to use an object to release tension when
you're on stage. If you're tense, touch something, even if
it's you."
The Alexander Technique is a method that
integrates the body and mind in action. Named after F.M.
Alexander, an Australian actor who developed it in the early
1900s, the technique helps improve everyday activities as well
as more complex, skilled actions such as singing or
acting.
"Alexander teaches you how to be more aware of
yourself and how to prevent doing things that are
destructive," Rodrigue explained. "For instance, you learn
that the primary control is the relationship of the head to
the spine. This helps to develop presence, which is
fundamental in acting."
Rodrigue's expertise has placed him in demand
in Hollywood, where he has coached major directors, producers
and actors including, most recently, Hilary Swank who
portrayed an aristocrat in the period film, "The Affair of the
Necklace."
Acting, not teaching, was Rodrigue's original
goal. Born in Morocco and raised in Milan, he moved with his
family to New York in 1966, where he attended the American
Musical and Dramatic Academy and later studied with renowned
acting teacher Herbert Berghof.
In 1970, Rodrigue received a scholarship to
the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco, where he
first learned about the Alexander Technique.
"Everybody in the theater studied it, even
stagehands and directors," Rodrigue said. "I became fascinated
with movement and awareness of the body."
Subsequently, Rodrigue trained to be an
Alexander teacher. He introduced it to musicians in the San
Francisco Symphony and the Los Angeles Philharmonic before
joining UCLA in 1988. Most recently, he's been working with
former professional football player Bo Eason, who will star in
an off-Broadway production, "Runt of the Litter," later
this month.
But Rodrigue has no intention of leaving UCLA.
"If you have to teach someone else what you know, it requires
a clear idea of who you are," he said. "Education sharpens
your chops, keeps you awake. It's exciting!"
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