
Ethan Hawke
May 13, 2021
01:01:18
Create Work When Opportunities Dry Up
- When opportunities are scarce, make your imagination manifest by creating work yourself.
- Study writing and direct your creativity so you are ready when a great opportunity arrives.
Train With Great Writing Daily
- Practice language and great writing daily by memorizing speeches or scenes from writers you admire.
- Record yourself and watch performances to study word choice, rhythm, and sentence-level craft.
Binge Your Favorites Intentionally
- Watch entire bodies of work from actors you love to learn patterns and choices.
- Study both great and bad performances to give yourself permission to fail and learn.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app 1 chevron_right 2 chevron_right 3 chevron_right 4 chevron_right 5 chevron_right 6 chevron_right 7 chevron_right 8 chevron_right 9 chevron_right 10 chevron_right 11 chevron_right 12 chevron_right 13 chevron_right 14 chevron_right 15 chevron_right 16 chevron_right 17 chevron_right 18 chevron_right 19 chevron_right 20 chevron_right 21 chevron_right 22 chevron_right 23 chevron_right 24 chevron_right
Introduction
00:00 • 4min
The Business of the Voice of Our Industry
04:04 • 2min
How to Let Go of a Character
05:47 • 2min
The Importance of Leaving Characters
08:07 • 2min
Early Career Advice for Actors
09:55 • 3min
How to Fill Your Brain and Work on Your Ability
12:30 • 3min
The Power of Failure
15:58 • 2min
The Importance of Questioning
17:43 • 2min
The Value of the Artistic Community
19:56 • 3min
The Irony of Judging an Actor
23:12 • 2min
The Importance of Being a Vessel
24:42 • 3min
The Power of Flow
27:33 • 2min
How to Let Your Instincts Fly
29:12 • 2min
The Importance of Silence
30:51 • 2min
How to Stay Present on Stage
33:15 • 2min
The Importance of Physicality in Acting
35:22 • 3min
The Importance of Being in Character
38:40 • 3min
Waiting for Godot
41:53 • 2min
Beckett: A Response to World War II
44:11 • 2min
How I Got My Side Card
45:49 • 3min
The Worst Audition Horror Story
48:50 • 3min
Silver Bullet Performances
51:42 • 2min
How to Be a Better Artist
53:50 • 2min
Christine McKenna-Tarela, Our Backstage Casting Insider
55:36 • 6min
Actor, writer, director, and all-around storyteller Ethan Hawke is an advocate for truthfulness in both art and life. Although wary of giving advice, he provides plenty in his thoughtful “In the Envelope” interview: get out of your head and into your gut, study the work of artists you admire, use auditions as opportunities to exceed your comfort zone, and more. The more holistically one approaches a career in the arts, he says, the better. “But more essential to that is, most of us are only as good as our opportunities. And when the opportunities aren’t there, you have to search for ways to articulate your love...to make your imagination manifest.”
Born in Texas and raised in New York and New Jersey, Ethan has been producing intensely honest work since his teenaged breakout roles in “Explorers” and “Dead Poets Society.” He’s appeared before or behind the camera in “Reality Bites,” “Gattaca,” “The Hottest State,” Blumhouse Productions films, “First Reformed,” “Blaze,” and “Tesla,” to name a few. One of the few artists to be Academy Award–nominated for both acting (for “Training Day” and “Boyhood”) and writing (for “Before Sunset” and “Before Midnight,” two of several collaborations with fellow filmmaker Richard Linklater), Ethan is also a Tony-nominated New York theater veteran, arts philanthropist, and political activist. This year he starred in the New Group’s “Waiting for Godot” and produced, co-wrote, and earned a SAG Award nod as John Brown on Showtime’s limited series “The Good Lord Bird.” Read his 2018 Backstage cover story here: https://bit.ly/3eGQm2K
---
Backstage has been the #1 resource for actors and talent-seekers for 60 years. In the Envelope, Backstage’s podcast, features intimate, in-depth conversations with today’s most noteworthy film, television, and theater actors and creators. This is your guide to every aspect of acting, from voiceover and commercial work to casting directors, agents, and more. Full of both know-how and inspiration, In the Envelope airs weekly to cover everything from practical advice on navigating the industry, to how your favorite projects are made, to personal stories of success and failure alike. Join host Jack Smart, Awards Editor at Backstage, for this guide on how to live the creative life from those who are doing it every day: https://bit.ly/2OMryWQ
Follow Backstage and In the Envelope on social media:
- https://www.facebook.com/backstage
- https://www.twitter.com/backstage
- https://www.twitter.com/intheenvelope
- https://www.instagram.com/backstagecast
Looking to get cast? Subscribe here: www.backstage.com/subscribe
Browse Backstage casting listings: https://bit.ly/3mth68e
Check out our community-driven virtual programming, The Slate: https://bit.ly/2WDNXf0
Backstage stands in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement: https://bit.ly/3cuMBt5
Special thanks to...
- Host: Jack Smart
- Producer: Jamie Muffett
- Social media: Katie Minard, Alysa Cirelli
- Design: Mark Stinson, Caitlin Watkins
- Additional support: Christine McKenna-Tirella, Kasey Howe, Samantha Sherlock, Benjamin Lindsay, Oriella St. Louis
