Performing Arts Channel
banner
performingarts.newsmast.community.ap.brid.gy
Performing Arts Channel
@performingarts.newsmast.community.ap.brid.gy
Welcome to the Newsmast Performing Arts Channel. A curated feed of posts from the Fediverse, handmade by @newsmast@newmast.social, and broadcasting […]

[bridged from https://newsmast.community/@performingarts on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
December 26, 2025 at 5:29 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"If any of the work, that any of us do, contributes to the stretching of culture, the stretching of boundaries of empathy that’s expected of an audience… that’s the holy grail."

—Riz Ahmed

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 26, 2025 at 4:16 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
5 minutes till Hänsel und Gretel! Hexxy Christmas! 🧙‍♀️

#opera #darmstadt #HänselUndGretel #humperdinck #operasinger
December 26, 2025 at 12:55 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
RE: https://mastodon.social/@meganmariehart/115768542527519818

CAST UPDATE!
In both Hänsel und Gretel performances today, David Pichlmaier sings Peter the father instead of Johannes Martin Kränzle, and Maria Hegele sings Hänsel instead of Lena Sutor-Wernich.

#opera #darmstadt #HänselUndGretel […]
December 26, 2025 at 12:51 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"I do not try to dance better than anyone else. I only try to dance better than myself."

—Mikhail Baryshnikov

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 26, 2025 at 4:16 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
Robin Williams constantly phoned Steven Spielberg during 'Schindler's List' to lift his spirits
Robin Williams was an actor and comedian best known for bringing intense energy to his improvisational comedy. Many fans loved his outlandish humor. Others found his serious and emotional acting roles deeply moving. What most of us never had a chance to experience was that Robin Williams was also a kind and loving friend. In a recently resurfaced interview, Williams recounts reaching out to his friend, Steven Spielberg, during the filming of "Schindler's List." Knowing it was highly stressful and troubling material that Spielberg was exploring, Williams wanted to add some levity and offer relief in the best way he knew how: comedy. > See on Instagram ## Williams shares things he might say during a Spielberg phone call "So I would call him and just riff for him," explains Williams in the video. He then goes on to perform some of the funny characters and improvisational ideas that came to his mind. Using a Yiddish-influenced accent, he says, "Hello, Steven. I'm sending you some kosher email." The audience breaks into laughter. "You've got Mohel! Steven, I've been on eBay, and I've changed it to oy vey," performs Williams as the crowd roars with laughter again. Then, Williams reflects on the seriousness of the situation, sharing, "I'd called him, and we would just, every once and a while. Just to give him a fix on that, just because you know, that was a hideous, hideous thing. He kept going. He had to." Robin Williams, Washington D.C., 1998.John Mathew Smith & www.celebrity-photos.com (cropped)/ Wikimedia Commons ## Years after his passing, Williams continues to surprise and delight us Viewers of the Instagram post couldn't help but share some kind words and reflect on the memorable spirit that was Robin Williams: "A wonderful man that brought so much light..." "What a man" "Super sensitive human being, understood that sometimes we just laugh to keep going!" "You Brilliant, Talented Love, miss you , god rest your Beautiful Soul RW" "I’m glad we get to hear what all he would say to him to make him laugh! So much talent and love for others!!" "Such a special human being" Spielberg at the Israeli premier of his movie "Schindler's List."https://www.flickr.com/people/69061470@N05/ Wikimedia Commons ## Spielberg shares his gratitude for what Williams did for him _USA Today_ reported that after the 25th anniversary screening of "Schindler's List" at the Tribeca Film Festival, Spielberg shared, "Robin knew what I was going through, and once a week, Robin would call me on schedule and he would do 15 minutes of stand-up on the phone, and I would laugh hysterically, because I had to release so much." Spielberg continued, "But the way Robin is on the telephone, he'd always hang up on the loudest, best laugh you'd give him. He'd never say goodbye, just hang up on the biggest laugh." Robin Williams star on the Hollywood Walk of Famechrisinphilly5448/ Wikimedia Commons ## Celebrities remember Robin Williams Kristen Dunst recounted for a 2025 article in _People_ the kindness she experienced with Williams during the filming of the movie "Jumanji." Dunst shares, "He was just like… He left such an impression on me with his grace and the way he treated everyone." Dunst continued, "Again, what a lesson for me to learn at such a young age how to treat a crew. I mean he — just a very respectful, beautiful human.” In a 2025 article for _Entertainment_ , Matthew Lawerence, a child actor who performed with Williams in the movie "Mrs. Doubtfire," said, "He really quantified what it was to be a real artist for me in the sense that he was definitely, and I worked with some great people, and he was definitely the most brilliant artist I've ever worked with." Lawrence continued, "But on top of that, he had the compassion, he had the humility..." Robin Williams was not only a respected artist but a cherished person. Someone who struggled with his own demons and did his best to navigate the world by making it laugh. **You can watch this video about 10 Heartwarming Robin Williams Stories Told by Other Celebrities:** - YouTube www.youtube.com
www.upworthy.com
December 26, 2025 at 3:42 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"The hardest part of acting is not being guaranteed work. Every job could be your last."

—Henry Cavill

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 25, 2025 at 4:16 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"Actors are agents of change. A film, a piece of theatre, a piece of music or a book can make a difference. It can change the world."

—Alan Rickman

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 25, 2025 at 4:17 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
🩰 Marketa Brízová
📸 Daniel from Contourz Ballet Photography
📍 Prague (Czech Republic)
🌐 https://contourz.photo/v/marketabrizova

Beautiful photo session with outstanding ballerina Maggie at the HALA11 Fotostudio in Praha. Always getting pure elegance and […]

[Original post on pixelfed.social]
December 25, 2025 at 1:10 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"Everyone forgets comedians are actors. There's no question about it. A Robin Williams cannot say the same line every night for 40 weeks and make it sound fresh unless he's doing an acting job."

—Joan Rivers

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 24, 2025 at 4:16 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"My approach to acting is that I am totally intuitive. I read the script and I get it. If I don't get it, I can't do it."

—Morgan Freeman

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 24, 2025 at 4:16 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
Dear MAGA: “Theatre Kid” is Not an Insult
> _by Chris Peterson_ Somewhere along the way, I learned that the term “theatre kid” had apparently crossed over into political discourse. Not as a descriptor. Not as shorthand. As an insult. If you missed it, **a recent _New York Times_ piece** explored how “theater kid” has begun popping up in right-wing and MAGA-adjacent rhetoric, deployed the same way words like “snowflake” once were. The implication is clear enough: overly emotional, unserious, performative, soft. Someone who feels too much. Someone who talks too much. Someone who sings when they should shut up. And honestly, I had to laugh. Not because it’s clever. But because if that’s the insult, then the people throwing it around truly have no idea what they’re talking about. Because “theatre kid” isn’t a weakness. It never has been. And anyone who’s actually spent time in a rehearsal room knows that. Here’s the thing about theatre kids. They show up. Over and over again. After school. On weekends. Late nights. Early mornings. They show up when they’re tired, when they’re sick, when they’re juggling homework and jobs and family obligations. They show up knowing they’re going to be criticized. Knowing someone is going to tell them to be louder, or quieter, or different. Knowing they’re going to fail publicly at least once before they get it right. That’s not fragility. That’s stamina. Theatre kids learn early how to work as part of a team, where no single person gets all the credit. You don’t have a show without the crew. Without the stage manager. Without the person who remembered to spike the furniture, sweep the floor, and fix the mic that cut out during tech. Theatre kids understand hierarchy and collaboration at the same time. They learn when to lead and when to listen. They learn that ego can sink a production faster than a missed cue. That’s not softness. That’s discipline. They also learn empathy in a way that’s hard to replicate elsewhere. To play a role well, you have to understand someone else’s interior life. You have to sit with motivations that don’t look like yours. You have to ask why someone behaves the way they do instead of dismissing them outright. You have to listen, not just wait for your turn to speak. If that’s what people mean when they sneer “theatre kid,” then yes. Guilty as charged. What I find especially ironic about this supposed insult is how deeply it misunderstands performance. Theatre kids aren’t pretending all the time. They’re learning how to stand in front of other people and say something that matters and risk being seen. Anyone who has ever stepped onto a stage with their heart beating out of their chest knows how exposed that feels. There’s no algorithm to hide behind. No comment section buffer. Just you, the lights, and the audience. That kind of vulnerability takes courage. Real courage. Not the loud, performative kind. The quiet kind where you do the thing anyway even though you’re scared. Theatre kids also tend to grow up into people who can think on their feet. Who can read a room? Who knows how to communicate under pressure? Who can take notes without falling apart? Who understands timing, tone, and audience? These are skills employers beg for, and leaders rely on, whether they want to admit it or not. It’s not an accident that theatre kids end up everywhere. In classrooms. In boardrooms. In nonprofits. In hospitals. In politics, actually. They’re often the ones translating big ideas into human language. The ones who know how to tell a story people will remember. The ones who understand that facts alone don’t move hearts. If anything, calling someone a theatre kid says more about the speaker than the target. It suggests a discomfort with emotion. With expression. With people who refuse to flatten themselves to make others comfortable. It’s the same old reflex, just with a new label: mock what you don’t understand, diminish what you can’t control. And let’s be honest, the stereotype itself is lazy. The theatre kids I knew weren’t all jazz hands and show tunes. Some were introverts who found their voice backstage. Some were athletes who loved Shakespeare. Some were queer kids who finally felt safe somewhere. Some were straight kids who learned empathy by accident and never lost it. The rehearsal room was messy and loud and sometimes chaotic, but it was also one of the most rigorous learning environments imaginable. Nobody hands you confidence in theatre. You earn it by bombing, by being corrected, by missing your mark, by forgetting your line, and by coming back the next day anyway. You earn it by realizing that embarrassment won’t kill you. That failure isn’t fatal. That growth is uncomfortable and worth it. So no, “theatre kid” isn’t an insult. It’s a badge of honor. It means you learned how to collaborate. How to listen. How to feel. How to stand in front of others and say something true, even when your voice shakes. If that makes someone uncomfortable, that’s not the theatre kid’s problem. In a world that increasingly rewards cruelty, irony, and detachment, theatre kids are the ones who still believe sincerity matters. Who still believe stories can change people. Who still believe that art has value even when it isn’t profitable or tidy or easy to mock. You can call that naïve if you want. History suggests otherwise. So go ahead. Use “theatre kid” as an insult. We’ve been called worse from the cheap seats. And we kept going anyway. Because that’s what theatre kids do.
www.onstageblog.com
December 23, 2025 at 8:57 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"The hardest part of acting is not being guaranteed work. Every job could be your last."

—Henry Cavill

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 23, 2025 at 4:16 PM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
ON THIS DAY …
… in 1893, Engelbert Humperdinck’s opera Hänsel und Gretel premiered in Weimar.
… in 2021, some clueless social media person posts this photo of Engelbert on the Operabase account.

#opera #HänselUndGretel #humperdinck #otd #onthisday
December 23, 2025 at 11:28 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
HÄNSEL UND GRETEL

🗓️ Dec. 26
🕑 14:00
📍 Staatstheater Darmstadt

Gretel: Jana Baumeister
Hänsel: Maria Hegele
Vater: David Pichlmaier
Mutter: Solger Isalv
Hexe: Megan Marie Hart
Sandmännchen/
Taumännchen: Aki Hashimoto

Staatsorchester Darmstadt
Conductor […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]
December 23, 2025 at 11:04 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
Feeling flush with cash this Christmas? Little Andromeda would love some help to bridge a $50k gap and reopen next year. It's the coolest little fringe theatre in Aotearoa. Folk are already chipping in. With a bit of work, I know we can get this over the line! #Ōtautahi #Christchurch #theatre #NZ
Help Us | Little Andromeda Christchurch Fringe Theatre
littleandromeda.co.nz
December 23, 2025 at 10:17 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
"Ideally, that's what you've got in an acting career is an equal number of dramas and comedies and an equal number of small films and big films."

—Jason Bateman

#Acting #coaching #inspiration #actingcoach #actingcoaching #actorslife
December 23, 2025 at 4:17 AM
Reposted by Performing Arts Channel
December 22, 2025 at 11:50 PM