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         [page 61] 
           
        John Steven Paul, Ph.D. 
          Valparaiso University 
        He to Pray, I to Create:(1) 
          The Concept of Kenosis and the Stanislavski System 
      
       By 
        the summer of 1906, Konstantin Stanislavski had reached a point of crisis. 
        Anton Chekhov had died in 1904 as had the Moscow Art Theatre's principal 
        financial backer Morozov. A recent production of a play had failed and 
        a promising experimental studio venture had failed. The revolution of 
        1905-06 made theatrical production in Moscow difficult if not impossible. 
        While taking a summer rest in Finland, the forty-three-year-old actor-producer 
        realized he had lost his zest for acting.(2) Recalling the memory of that 
        summer nearly twenty years later in his memoir My Life in Art, 
        Stanislavski wrote: 
       
         Why was it then that the more I repeated my roles 
          the more I sunk backward into a stage of fossilization? Examining my 
          past, step by step, I came to see clearer and clearer that the inner 
          content which was put into a role during its first creation and the 
          inner content that was born in my soul with the passing of time were 
          as far apart as the heaven and the earth. Formerly all issued from a 
          beautiful, exciting, inner truth. Now all that was left of this truth 
          was its wind-swept shell, ashes and dust that struck the niches of the 
          soul due to various accidental causes, and that had nothing in common 
          with true art.(3)  
       
        Stanislavski 
        was frustrated by the elusiveness of inspiration. He located his dissatisfaction 
        in his inability to put himself into a creative state of mind, especially 
        when playing the same role repeatedly. An accomplished and celebrated 
        actor in mid-career, Stanislavski was now searching for a way to create 
        "the life of the human spirit" and to present of that creation 
        on stage in an artistic form.(4) For Stanislavski, it would have to be 
        possible to not only master this way, and even to make of it a habit, 
        but also to teach the way to others.  
        [page 
        62] The key or the "pivot" of what would become the 
        system is the entrance, or the way, from the conscious to the sub-conscious, 
        and Stanislavski's first discoveries all relate in some way to the problem 
        of entrance. Once inside the temple, that is in the creative state 
        of mind, "Nature... will [herself] take a hand in whatever the actor 
        is doing on stage, with the result that the subconscious and even inspiration 
        will be given a chance of asserting themselves." But too often, the 
        entrance to the creative state of mind is blocked by "private worries, 
        petty resentments, successes or failures." This is, indeed the normal 
        state of mind, but from it, there must be a way to enter the creative 
        state of mind where the creation of the human spirit of the role could 
        be accomplished. How then could this entrance be found? 
        By 
        the time he returned from Finland to Moscow in the fall Stanislavski had 
        determined to discover the technical means whereby he could, at will, 
        "enter the temple of that spiritual atmosphere in which alone the 
        sacrament of creative art is possible."(5) From these discoveries 
        would emerge a system that would eventually transform the art of acting 
        in the twentieth century. In his introduction to the Stanislavki's System 
        and Methods of Creative Art,(6) David Magarshack summarizes the discoveries 
        Stanislavski made during and immediately following the summer of 1906. 
        The first three, in particular, relate to matter of entering. 
      
        -  to enter into the creative state of mind, 
          the actor must be in a state of complete freedom of body through the 
          relaxation of muscles and
 
           
         
        -  completely attentive and 
          centered on what is taking place in the soul of the character being 
          represented.(7) 
 
           
           
        -  In Finland that summer, Stanislavski had reflected 
          on the actor's preparation for the first entrance onto the stage. Whereas, 
          actors took some considerable care in making up their faces and dressing 
          their bodies, most took little time to "dress their souls," 
          to make spiritual preparations for entrance. These preparations include 
          leaving behind the circumstances of life outside the theatre for the 
          circumstances of the play and the role to be played. It is on this time 
          between arriving at the theatre and making the [page 
          63] first entrance that the actor assumes what Stanislavski 
          called "the magic if." The great actors allowed themselves 
          time for these preparations.(8) 
 
       
        For 
        the basis of his system and the language with which to articulate it, 
        Stanislavski drew upon several sources. For example, he studied the performances, 
        statements, and ideas of actors such as Tommaso Salvini and M. S. Shchepkin, 
        whose practice he admired.(9) And, even though he was no scientist in 
        the professional sense, he discovered and applied elementary laws of human 
        psychology upon which he based his "psycho-technique."(10) But 
        the most important of his sources were his own experiences and the notebooks 
        on them that he had kept diligently throughout his own acting career. 
        As he wrote: 
       
         The basis for my system is formed by the laws of 
          the organic nature of the actor which I have studied thoroughly in practice. 
          Its chief merit is that there is nothing in it that I myself have invented 
          or have not checked in practice. It is the natural result of my experiences 
          of the stage over many years.(11)  
       
        Thus 
        Stanislavski locates the basis of his system in his theatrical formation. 
        In this paper, however, I would like to suggest that Stanislavski's religious 
        formation in the Russian Orthodox Church might also have been a source 
        of ideas for his system. 
        It 
        cannot be said that Konstantin Alexeyev (1863-1938), who would take the 
        stage name "Stanislavski," grew up in the church. As the second 
        son of a wealthy textile manufacturer and merchant, however, the Russian 
        Orthodox Church was certainly a significant ingredient in [page 
        64] "the full cup of life" from which young Konstantin 
        drank.(12) Religion, art, and commerce were pillars of the culture. Icons 
        hung everywhere on the walls of the Alexeyev house.(13)  
        The 
        church is prominent in the collection of childhood memories. When his 
        oldest brother fell in love with the daughter of a simple Russian merchant, 
        Stanislavski writes, "we forced ourselves to go regularly to church; 
        we arranged solemn services, invited the best church choirs and sang early 
        mass in chorus ourselves."(14) Holidays he remembers, began with 
        church: 
       
         rising early (one must make the best of that); then 
          there is the long period of standing, the tasty holy wafer. the winter 
          sun warming us through the cupola and gilding the iconostasis, around 
          us the people in their holiday best, loud singing, and before us a day 
          full of joy.(15)  
       
        Priests 
        appear frequently in Stanislavski's memory as common threads in the social 
        fabric of Old Russia and, also, as the new Russia was about to be born. 
        Following a performance of The Cherry Orchard in the days before 
        the outbreak of the Third, (i.e. the Bolshevik Revolution), the spectators 
        "left the theatre in silence," Stanislavski writes 
       
         [page 65] and 
          who knows--perhaps many of them went straight to the barricades. Soon 
          shooting began in the city. Hardly able to find cover, we made our way 
          to our homes in the night. In the darkness I ran into a priest, and 
          thought: "They are shooting there, and we are in duty bound to 
          go, he to the church, I to the theatre. He to pray, I to create for 
          those who seek respite."(16)  
       
       II 
        Anyone 
        who attended regular masses in an Orthodox church would have been steeped 
        in the concept of kenosis, a fundamental construct and traditional 
        theme particularly in Russian Orthodox Christianity. According to Steven 
        Cassedy, the term kenosis refers to the "emptying" suggested 
        by Saint Paul in Philippians 2:7 where Christ is said to have emptied 
        himself of divinity in order to assume the form of a servant.(17)  
      
        -  
          
Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit 
            [Paul writes] but in humility regard others as better than yourselves.         
         
        - 
          
 Let each of you look not to your interests, but 
            to the interests of others.  
         
        - 
          
 Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ 
            Jesus,  
         
        - 
          
 who, though he was in the form of God, did not 
            regard equality with God as something to be exploited, 
         
        - 
          
but emptied himself, taking the form of 
            a slave, being born in human likeness.  
         
       
        "In 
        Russian theology," Cassedy writes, "[kenosis] serves as a sort 
        of negative corollary to incarnation;" that is, in order to be incarnated 
        as a human being, the Christ had first to empty himself of divinity. To 
        be flesh, to be material, is thus to be distant from the divine. 
        As 
        a term, "kenosis" was introduced into Russian theology, according 
        to Cassedy, in the nineteenth century but religious historian G.P. Fedotov, 
        traces the tradition of "kenoticism" in Russian orthodoxy to 
        the time and theology of St. Theodosius, the founder of Russian [page 
        66] monasticism in Kiev in the eleventh century. Theodosius 
        was the third saint canonized by the Russian Church and has become known 
        as "the disciple of the humiliated Christ." For Theodosius, 
        kenosis seems to have been a process that began with the incarnation, 
        Christ's assumption of the form of the servant, and was completed on the 
        cross where his humiliation was complete. 
        The 
        Pauline image of emptying the self is, at least, an evocative one 
        when we place it side by side with the complicated problem on which Stanislavski 
        began to work in 1906; that is, how may an actor enter the creative state 
        of mind at will. In My Life in Art, Stanislavski envisions the 
        actor's self as full: full of the preoccupations of daily life, full of 
        pretensions, full of bad habits and the residue of other roles. It is, 
        the actor's self that is both primary obstacle and, paradoxically, the 
        primary resource. In System and Methods of Creative Art, Stanislavski 
        prescribes "self-renunciation" as part of the process of transformation:       
       
         The first thing an actor must do on entering the 
          rehearsal room is to shed all the ties that bind him to his private 
          life. [...] There is only one difference between a good and a bad actor: 
          the ability or inability to renounce his ego, to concentrate 
          the whole of his attention on what is taking place in himself and those 
          who are admitted to his circle, and the degree of the total bestowal 
          of all his powers on the transient "now..."(18)  
       
        Having 
        renounced ego, the actor, now in a state of calm, begins the work of giving 
        life to the new self, the character to be created. Having "emptied 
        the self," we may say, of those elements noxious to creativity, the 
        actor begins the series of exercises -- relaxation, concentration, attention, 
        imagination, etc. -- that will enable the actor to create the life of 
        the human spirit of the role. Note that I do not say "a new self." 
        Stanislavski does not seem ever to speak of the rebirth of a new self. 
        Indeed he always wanted his actors to be themselves and to show themselves, 
        but selves freed of the concerns of life outside the role and in the creative 
        "mood." Not coincidentally, Stanislavski's second book (the 
        English translation of which is An Actor Prepares) is entitled, 
        in Russian, An Actor's Work on Himself.  
        [page 
        67] A consideration of kenosis leads to other insights into 
        Stanislavski's assumptions about theatre art. For example, in his essay 
        on the Russian Orthodox theologian P.A. Florensky, "Florensky and 
        the Celebration of Matter," Steven Cassedy explores the concept of 
        kenosis as it relates to icons. Recall that Christ's incarnation required 
        the emptying himself of divinity to take on the material form of a servant 
        on earth.  
      
         The status of icons in the Eastern Church, Cassedy 
          writes, is another example of the tradition status of matter in 
          Orthodox theology. Icons are material objects bearing visual representations 
          of various holy beings. The proper attitude [for the Russian Orthodox 
          faithful] is one that stems from looking beyond the physical icon to 
          something infinite and invisible that lies beyond it. The wood and paint 
          are matter; our awareness of what the icon stands for, its infinite 
          and invisible prototype, is the essential component of our experience 
          of it. The material icon simply points to something that is entirely 
          immaterial.(19)  
       
        For 
        Stanislavski, the primary aim and achievement of theatre art was the creation 
        of the life of the human spirit. One of the means whereby the actor could 
        create such a life was the stage setting, the material objects on stage. 
        Unlike Emile Zola and other Naturalists, who sought to reproduce copies 
        of physical environments on stage, Stanislavski was only interested in 
        the material set as a pathway to the immaterial. Like an icon, the set, 
        made of wood, and paint, and fabric, points the actor to something that 
        is entirely immaterial or spiritual. If the set, for whatever reason, 
        was unable to stimulate the feelings of the actor, it was of relatively 
        little use to Stanislavski. 
        Finally, 
        a consideration of kenosis and the kenotic tradition leads us through 
        the spiritual to the ethical. For St. Theodosius, according to George 
        Fedotov, Christ's kenosis, which reached its climax on the cross, 
        has its practical expression in three Christian virtues: poverty, humility, 
        and love.(20) Reference to these virtues leads us back to Paul's letter 
        to the Philippians: "do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, 
        but in humility regard others as [page 68] better 
        than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your interests, but to the 
        interests of others." 
        Recall 
        that Stanislavski's acting theory is directed primarily to the self of 
        the individual actor and the challenge for that actor of creating the 
        life of the human spirit. But it is the nature of the theatre art that 
        several actors on the stage simultaneously are creating lives simultaneously. 
        Thus, the need for communication(21) on stage among those actors is critical. 
        Thus, once the actors had successfully focused concentration on themselves 
        (and away from the audience) and were in the creative state, they had 
        to convey or transmit their thoughts and feelings to others. This process 
        involves transmission, awareness that the thoughts and feelings have been 
        received by the partner, and finally being open to, and even evoking reciprocal 
        thoughts from the other. This matrix of transactions of thoughts and feelings 
        becomes the ensemble.  
        "Such 
        a process of stage communication, says Stanislavski, is only possible 
        if the actor succeeds in banishing all his own personal thoughts and feelings 
        during the performance."(22) This statement leads us back to kenosis, 
        the emptying of the self, but also on to the reason for emptying: service 
        to other actors and to theatre art itself. 
        Stanislavski 
        invented the pseudo-scientific language of "ray emission" and 
        "ray absorption" to describe the communication process, but 
        religious language might have served him as well. For "humility" 
        vis-à-vis one's partners and "love" are powerful facilitators 
        of interpersonal communication and spiritual bonds that hold an ensemble 
        in communion with one another. 
        By 
        the time he was writing My Life in Art in 1923, the sixty-year-old 
        Stanislavski had had personal experience with "poverty" as well. 
        The revolution had transformed him overnight from a wealthy Muscovite 
        to a pauper. As Sharon Carnicke writes, "once a dapper and elegantly 
        dressed gentleman, Stanislavski now wore shabby clothes and a torn overcoat. 
        [page 69] When he reached Berlin, 
        the first stop on that year's European tour, he stayed in his hotel from 
        embarrassment.(23) In those days, the man who had once been the toast 
        of the Moscow theatre, may well have had a sense that he had "emptied 
        himself." Yet, he continued to think of himself as a servant, to 
        his country and "to his heirs," to whom he could not will his 
        labors, his quests, his losses, his disappointments, but "only the 
        few grains of gold that it has taken me all my life to find. May the Lord 
        aid me in this task!"  
      Endnotes 
      
        -  Stanislavsky, Constantin, 
            My Life In Art, trans. J. J. Robbins (New York: Meridian Books, 
          1957) 454.
 
           
           
        -  Stanislavsky 558.
 
           
           
        -  Stanislavsky 459.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack, David, Stanislavsky: 
          A Life (New York: Chanticleer Press, 1951) 30.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack 17.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack, System 
          and Methods of Creative Art, a series of lectures to opera singers 
          given between 1918 & 1922.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack, System 
          and Methods of Creative Art, "All the spiritual and physical 
          nature of the actor must be centred on what is taking place in the soul 
          of the person he is representing onstage." 21.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack, The remaining 
          two are 4) that through exercises the actor could develop a feeling 
          for truth; and 5) that this feeling for truth had to become a matter 
          of habit so that the actor would not have to think about It. The "creative 
          state of mind" could only be of use to the actor when It became 
          normal, natural, and, In fact, the actor's only means of expression.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack, Stanislavsky; 
          A Life 1.
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack 27, Wiles 
          13.
 
           
           
        - Magarshack 27.
 
           
           
        - "We spent our youth 
          In a Russia that was peaceful;" he writes, "we drank from 
          the full cup of life. The present generation has grown up amidst war, 
          hunger, world catastrophe, mutual misunderstanding and hate." Stanislavski, My Life In Art, 564. The primary source of Information about 
          Stanislavski's experiences from his childhood In the 1860's and 70's 
          through 1923 Is his memoir My Life In Art. The problems with 
          the editing and translation of this book Into English have been well 
          documented by Stanislavski's biographers David Magarshack and Jean Benedetti, 
          as well as Eric Bentley, Laurence Senelick and others. In her very useful 
          book Stanislavsky In Focus, Sharon M. Carnicke points out that 
          the 1923 MAT tour to the United States had been a critical though not 
          an economic success and that Stanislavski wrote My Life In Art 
          as a money-making scheme at a time when both the MAT and he himself 
          were in financial crises. (Carnicke 20.) Now sixty years old, in dire 
          financial straits, and on an arduous tour In a country which was deeply 
          and openly suspicious of his native land, Stanislavski began the process 
          of setting down his experiences and theories for the benefit of himself 
          and his family as well as for generations of actors to come. The memoir 
          reveals his ever-present sense of the difference between the old Russia 
          and the evolving Russia.
 
           
           
        -  e.g. "In order that 
          I may not change my mind it is necessary to make my decision binding 
          with an oath. We take an Icon from the wall, and I solemnly swear that 
          I will be nothing but the director of a circus." My Life In 
          Art 44.
 
           
           
        -  Stanislavsky 25.
 
           
           
        -  Stanislavski 39.
 
           
           
        -  Stanislavski 554.
 
           
           
        -  Steven Cassedy, P. 
          A. Florensky and the Celebration of Matter 95.
 
           
           
        -  Stanislavski, System 
          and Methods of Creative Art 150-51.
 
           
           
        -  Cassedy 96.
 
           
           
        -  George P. Fedotov, The 
          Russian Religious Mind: Kievian Christianity [from] the Tenth to the 
          Thirteenth Centuries (New York: Harper and Row, 1960) 128.
 
           
           
        -  According to Sharon Carnicke's 
          glossary in Stanislavsky in Focus, the Russian word for interaction 
          among scene partners and between actors and audience suggests "communion," 
          (and this is the translation that Elizabeth Hapgood Reynolds used in The Actor Prepares) "sharing," "interacting," 
          "relating," "being in contact."
 
           
           
        -  Magarshack 59.
 
           
           
        -  Carnicke 15.
 
       
      Bibliography 
       Benedetti, Jean. 
        "A History of Stanislavski Translation." New Theatre Quarterly 
        VI: 23 (August 1990): 266-278. 
       Carnicke, Sharon 
        M. Stanislavski in Focus. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers, 
        1998. 
       Magarshack, David. 
        Stanislavsky: A Life. New York: Chanticleer Press, 1951 
       -----------------------. 
        Stanislavsky on the Art of the Stage. New York: Hill and Wang, 
        1961. 
       Stanislavsky, 
        Constantin. My Life in Art. Trans. J. J. Robbins. New York: Meridian 
        Books, 1957. 
       Wiles, Timothy 
        J. The Theater Event: Modern Theories of Performance. Chicago and 
        London: The University of Chicago Press, 1980.      |