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166 results for “fast”
Crash Mats & Safety Pads (Full Stunt Kit)
Eight crash mats in various sizes, knee pads, elbow pads, and a body harness. This is the safety equipment my stunt team uses for medium-height falls and wall work. Tip: Never do a stunt for the first time on camera. Rehearse until the fear becomes respect.
Minimalist Film Directing Workshop -- Two Takes and Print
I direct fast and quiet. No yelling, no ego, no fiftieth take. We shoot a short scene with available light, two cameras, and maximum two takes per setup. Tip: Trust your actors. Hire good people and get out of their way. The director's job is to create an environment where the truth can happen.
Shakespeare for Screen Actors -- Making the Bard Breathe
I directed and starred in Looking for Richard because Shakespeare terrified me -- and the only way past fear is through it. We work on verse-speaking, iambic pentameter as BREATH not math, and finding the modern man inside the Elizabethan language. Richard III is our text. Bring your courage.
Character Empathy Workshop -- Becoming Someone You're Not
The hardest characters are the ones you disagree with. I teach you to find the humanity in ANYONE -- a cruel mother, a fascist collaborator, a bitter editor. We don't judge characters. We understand them. That understanding IS the performance. Tip: Ask 'Why does this person think they're right?' and you've found the character.
Character Preparation Workshop -- Building From the Ground Up
For Malcolm X, I read every speech, visited every location, and fasted for three days. For Training Day, I rode with real narcotics officers. Preparation is the foundation. We build your character's backstory, physicality, and voice from scratch. Tip: Know ten times more about your character than the script reveals. The audience sees the iceberg tip, but they FEEL the mass beneath.
Voice & Narration Workshop -- Making People Listen
I've narrated documentaries, audiobooks, and the voice of God himself. The secret? Slow down, breathe deeply, and mean every word. We work on resonance, pacing, and the art of reading text as if you're discovering it for the first time. Tip: Read the sentence silently first. Feel it. THEN say it aloud.
Neapolitan Cooking Class -- Cucina Povera e Ricca
I cook the food I grew up with in Pozzuoli -- pasta e fagioli, melanzane alla parmigiana, spaghetti con le vongole. Poor food made with dignity. I published two cookbooks because the kitchen is where I feel most myself. We cook for three hours and eat together. Tip: Never measure garlic. Measure with your heart.
Natural Screen Acting Workshop -- No Makeup, No Tricks
I refused the Hollywood makeover. My eyebrows stayed thick, my name stayed Swedish, and the camera loved me anyway. I teach you to show up as yourself and let that be enough. We work on emotional transparency, natural movement, and the courage to be imperfect on camera. Tip: Beauty fades. Honesty doesn't.
Screen Coolness Workshop -- Less Is More, Period
I cut half my lines from every script. The directors hated it. The audience loved it. I teach you the Meisner principle applied to film: react truthfully, say only what's essential, and let your face do the work. Tip: If you can say it with a look, don't say it with words.
Stunt Driving Workshop -- Speed, Control, Camera Angles
Bullitt's twelve-minute car chase changed action cinema. I'll teach you pursuit driving: heel-toe downshifting, controlled drifts, and how to hit your mark at speed while a camera car is six feet off your bumper. We use a closed course and start slow. Tip: Smooth is fast. Jerky is dangerous.
Leather Racing Jacket (Heuer-Patched, Le Mans Replica)
Gulf-blue leather racing jacket with Heuer patch, exactly as I wore in Le Mans. This is the jacket that launched a thousand fashion imitations. It's insured, so please don't crash in it. Borrow for photo shoots, car shows, or just feeling invincible.
Dance for Camera Workshop -- Choreographing for the Lens
Stage dance faces one direction. Camera dance exists in 360 degrees. I teach you to choreograph for angles, cuts, and tracking shots. We study the puddle-splashing in Singin' in the Rain and the ballet in An American in Paris. Tip: The camera is your dance partner. Don't ignore it.
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