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Saturday, August 16, 2014

Robin Williams


            Robin Williams was unconscious and pronounced dead Monday the 11th of August 2014.  Most of the country was stunned by this random loss of life and talent.  A talent that made many people come together, laugh, and share moments of absurdity, sometimes by attempting to emulate or reconstruct the jokes performed by this master. 
            It is always a painful mystery why people take their own lives but instead of discussing the monumentally confusing decision to commit suicide, I’d like to focus on what Robin Williams could bring to an audience as a performer.  I’ll be discussing an interview from 2006 with Robin Williams speaking with Terry Gross from “Fresh Air”.
             After I listened this reposted interview, it blew me away that anybody could be that fast, even past his prime, and that creative.  How many voice characters can someone create on the spot for no reason other than to create humor to make a point?  His style of conversation flows from serious to hilarious like a light switch and his ability to flow seamlessly in and out of character voice while having a conversation is fascinating.  


              I counted 33 different voices throughout the half an hour long interview, how many did you catch?
1.     Random Indian character
2.     Random French Character
3.     Fake Darth Vader Voice
4.     Al Pacino
5.     Stereotypical “male homosexual” voice – about himself being a “closeted” comedian when he was younger over fear of societal rejection, kept all characters inside most of the time.
6.     Rod Steiger impression on comedy being used just to meet women
7.     Random inflections to emphasize his point
8.     Sigmund Freud
9.     Grandmother voice
10.  Union “ Chicagoans”
11.   “Younger” Robin William voice from his early club days
12.   Juilliard voice – representing inflection and annunciation and diction as “perfection”
13.  “ New Yorker” voice
14.  Instead of “Doctor Ruth” – “Doctor Roof” – black sex therapist
15.  “Surfer Style American Soldier”
16.  Donald Rumsfeld as Arnold Schwarzenegger
17.  Random Western/Southern style American
18.  Random American Soldier
19.  Random “Nerdy voice”
20.  Random American from Maine
21.  Random voice of an “Man from Iraq”
22.  Bob Hope
23.  John Winters
24.  Random Character – Male voice – Jack Parr?
25.  “Robin Williams” as a character of himself
26.  Random voice of Arnold Schwarzenegger as therapist or Henry Kissinger
27.  Random “teen nerd voice”
28.  Random “French” voice
29.  Ethel Merman
30.  Random British Voice
31.  Random Mandarin Voice
32.  Martha Stewart
33.  A goat
            Some great “tools of the trade” to remember from Robin Williams are these.  Be a psychologist as an actor – getting into the role by “discovering the mind of the individual”.
            Behavior, while unusual or happy, can be brought to characters.
Improv, discipline, focus, not all goofing around and the complexity of individuals are important tools for building.  Don’t be intimidated by strange characters, Mr. Williams was quiet in school up until high school and college, so don’t be worried about being shy.  As a concept, history is the darkest comedy, attempted to remain calm and cool in public, humor only when it was necessary and feel the room. Family voices started a lot of Robin’s voices and was a great way to meet girls. Remember that honesty is key and that comedy can come from dark places. 
            Thank you Mr. Williams.  



4 comments:

  1. I was pretty devastated by this news. I don't think we should dwell on Robin Williams being gone, but most importantly that memories he has brought upon us as children, teens, and parents.

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  2. He was truly a supremely talented dude. It's amazing that someone who made so many people laugh didnt have anyone there to make him smile when he needed it. R.I.P. Robin Williams











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  3. I was watching a tribute to Robin Williams not too long ago. He was such a great human being, and will be missed. However, this just goes to show that even those who appear the happiest and make people laugh, are most likely the ones with pain and unexpressed sadness.

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  4. He was definitely one of the most talented people ever. I think it was his ability to tap into the psychology of other people or rather access all of those personalities that lived within him. Whether it was an old English nanny who was really a father trying to reconnect with his children, a corrupt children's TV show host who loses his show due to bribes from kids' parents to let their kids on the show, a serial killer tormenting an insomniac detective in Alaska, or a literature professor teaching young men to "seize the day", he was believable in all roles. We felt what he wanted us to at any moment on screen because we could tell he felt it not as a character, but as a human being. I think the more empathy you have as a human the better your acting/voice acting will become since you can relate, then translate that to the audience. He never seemed self conscious, nor afraid to show all these sides. Great post.

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