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By ROBERT W. BETHUNE Many a director has asked, “What is
going on in that actor’s head?” I’ve asked that question myself, but
not the way I’m asking it here. Here, I really do want to know what’s
going on in the actor’s head, and by that I mean the actor’s actual
brain. What are all those neurons doing while we act? I would love to
know. Neuroscience is making really fascinating
strides these days. We’re able to do real-time imagery of brain function,
so that we can ask people to experience something of interest and watch
how their brains respond. It’s still at a pretty coarse, broad level;
it’s not as if we can watch individual synapses fire and instantly know
what each firing means, but we are getting to the point where we can
learn really interesting things about how the human brain works, and
begin to surmise how brain function relates to mind, to mental experience,
to consciousness—that amazing mystery that has fascinated and
puzzled humanity since the dawn of, well, consciousness. Over the decades, actors have written
from time to time about the experience of acting. Different actors express
their experience different ways, and it seems clear that more than one
fundamental kind of experience is involved, but for many actors—most
actors, I would venture to say—the experience of acting involves
a change in how one experiences oneself. For the time being—for
the duration of the performance, and sometimes outside of performance
as well—one experiences a change, sometimes a far-reaching change,
in one’s sense of oneself. My own experience is similar to much
of what I see others write about. People who know me very well, such
as my wife, tell me that in performance they see a clear and distinct
difference between the me they know and the person they see on stage.
When things are going right, I feel very much the same way, that when
I am “in character” I think, feel and perceive things differently then
when I am not. Yet, at the same time, I know who I am, I know what I’m
doing, and I retain an awareness of what is going on, what my performance
task of the moment is, and what performance tasks—speaking, moving,
expressing in whatever manner, doing whatever there is to do—are
coming up and how I mean to meet them. In many respects, it is not so
very different from what I experience in real life; as I sit here writing,
I am aware of who I am, where I am, what’s going on around me, what
I’m doing and what I shall be doing in the next few moments. The difference
between my world at this moment and my world on stage is that at this
moment I’m not involved with a fiction. That’s the really fascinating thing
to me. It is eminently possible, and frequently achieved on stage, to
be so involved with a fiction as to generate perfectly authentic esthetic,
cognitive and affective responses to that fiction. Sometimes there is
a loss or blurring of awareness of the fiction as such; sometimes there
is not; sometimes there is positive affirmation of the fiction, as in
the many devices playwrights have used over the centuries such as direct
address, stylization of language and action, presentational devices,
alienation effects and so forth. Regardless of the style, and pace Herr Brecht, the effect is the same—intense involvement in the fiction,
perhaps even more intense than one’s ordinary involvement in reality. So now we come to it. What is the brain
doing in all this? What is the flow of mental action? Does the mind
of an audience member act in ways that mirror how the mind of the actor
works? Is watching live theater different neurologically than watching
a motion picture or reading a book? In what ways does the mind resist
fictive involvement, and what thresholds are crossed on the way to accepting
it? Is the brain at some level unable to distinguish reality from fiction?
If so, how do other levels of the brain act to restore the distinction?
How could we take advantage of better understanding of how the brain
processes fiction to provide a better experience—and ethically,
should we do so? I hope someday, somewhere, somebody
tackles serious research on the neurology of performative fiction. With
any luck, it could shed fascinating light on this art of theater and
art forms like it. Who knows when it will happen? But I’m looking forward
to it when it does. |