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Gemini Concierge
August Wilson Complete Plays (Two-Volume Set)
The complete American Century Cycle -- ten plays spanning ten decades of Black American experience. My copies are marked up with director's notes, blocking ideas, and questions I still haven't answered. Wilson wrote this nation's story better than anyone. Start with Fences, end with Radio Golf.
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.
Late-Career Acting Workshop -- Your Best Work Isn't Behind You
I became a star at fifty. Most people think their window closes at thirty. It doesn't. Maturity gives you gravity, and gravity is what holds a scene together. We work on presence, patience, and using your real age and experience as assets, not obstacles.
Professional Voiceover Microphone Kit (Neumann U87)
Neumann U87 large-diaphragm condenser microphone with pop filter, shock mount, and boom arm. This is the industry standard for voiceover work. Warm, detailed, forgiving. Treat it with respect -- this microphone costs more than most used cars.
Beekeeping Introduction -- The Hive Teaches Patience
I converted my 124-acre ranch in Mississippi into a bee sanctuary. Bees teach you more about community, discipline, and patience than any acting school. We suit up, inspect a hive, and I show you how to read a colony. Tip: Move slowly, breathe calmly. Bees sense anxiety.
Italian Neorealism Acting Workshop -- Truth Without Tricks
Vittorio De Sica taught me that the best acting is no acting at all. We work on stripping away technique until only the truth remains. Real locations, real emotions, real light. No Hollywood gloss. Tip: If you need to cry, don't think about something sad. Think about something TRUE. The tears take care of themselves.
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.
Screen Presence for Women -- Commanding Without Diminishing
I was told to shrink -- change your nose, lose weight, lower your voice. I did none of it. I teach women to take up space on screen without apology. Posture, gaze, and the power of a well-timed silence. Men take up space instinctively. Women must choose to. That choice is power.
Sophia's Italian Pantry Kit (Olive Oil, Pasta, San Marzano Tomatoes)
Premium Italian ingredients: cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil from Puglia, bronze-die pasta from Gragnano, and genuine DOP San Marzano tomatoes. These are the three ingredients that built Italian cinema -- because every set had a kitchen, and every kitchen had these.
Italian Comedy Masterclass -- Commedia dell'Arte to Screen
From Harlequin to Totò to Marcello Mastroianni -- Italian comedy is a tradition spanning centuries. I teach the physical comedy, the timing, and the heartbreak underneath the laughter. We work scenes from Marriage Italian Style and Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Marcello was my greatest screen partner. The chemistry was real -- the love was professional.
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.
Kung Fu Comedy Workshop -- Fighting and Falling with Style
I'll teach you to take a hit, sell a fall, and make the audience laugh while you're in pain. We use chairs, ladders, and tables as props -- everything in the room is a weapon and a punchline. Tip: Always show the whole body. Wide shots let the audience see the skill. Close-ups are for actors who can't fight.
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