|  None 
          of us would rationally decide to turn our personal decisions over to 
          novelists, the desire for instruction still remains one of the most 
          powerful motives for reading novels.(18) More than merely involving 
          us in a story which may help us to transcend a seemingly mundane existence, 
          reading can provide a microcosm of a world in which we can view ourselves 
          making decisions and performing tasks quite different from our normal 
          habitude. This distance allows us opportunity to gain another perspective, 
          it has allowed us to gain a needed understanding of another dimension 
          of the world that God created and those blessed creatures that inhabit 
          it. It is from these characters with whom we keep company for a time 
          that Booth suggests we have much to learn. Values observed and questioned 
          from an involvement in the thoughts and actions of these characters 
          are of utmost value to our moral development.
  
         
we must both open ourselves to others that 
          look initially dangerous or worthless and yet prepare ourselves to cast 
          them off whenever, after keeping company with them, we must conclude 
          that they are potentially harmful. Which of these opposing practices 
          will serve us best at a given moment will depend on who "we" 
          are and what the "moment" is. The only fully general advice 
          inherent in all this is that by taking thought about who and where we 
          are, and about when it is, we may improve our chances of finding and 
          dwelling with others who are in fact our true friends.(19)    Patricia 
        Ward believes that the ethical/theological perspective may also foster 
        the formation of character of readers who are on their way to developing 
        a consistent basis for their choices and actions.(20) She would further 
        prescribe, along with Booth and others, that if we are to truly integrate 
        the spirit of literature into the hearts of our students, we must [page 
        44] emphasize the ethical nature of the piece and its application, 
        rather than merely give a textual analysis. Both authors would agree that, 
        as students identify with the characters in their various dilemmas, they 
        begin to bring their values into contact with those of the implied author 
        and of the fictional world of the text. The astute reader, working her 
        way through a text can focus on the ethical moment or moments when she 
        can construct the import of values, choices, and actions, and make judgments 
        about them.(21)   Whenever 
        I work my way into a narrative, the "I," that "me," 
        becomes increasingly like my picture of the implied author. I succumb; 
        I begin to see as he sees or she sees, to feel as she feels, to love what 
        he loves, or to mock what she mocks. Booth strengthens his stance when 
        he asserts that once we lose our capacity to succumb, when we reach a 
        point at which no other character can manage to enter our imagination 
        or emotional or intellectual territory and take over for the moment, then 
        we are dead on our feet.(22)   Experiencing 
        literature in this way, forces one to begin to scrutinize one's own intentions 
        and motivations. What are the things that matter, the things that are 
        of value  those things that one cares about so deeply that they 
        can change the immediate path of this journey? In noting the special importance 
        of narrative for use in moral education, psychologists Robinson and Haupe 
        insist that where practical choice and action are concerned, stories are 
        better guides than rules and maxims. Rules and maxims state significant 
        generalizations about experience, but stories illustrate what those summaries 
        mean.(23)   If 
        a student is to chart a course with some degree of security and assurance, 
        it is essential that he be given the opportunity to investigate the whys 
        of the system, to make the system work for him, and not have the maxims 
        arbitrarily imposed upon him. Atmosphere must be created for introspection 
        and exploration of his beliefs and subsequent actions. This must be encouraged. 
        Moral reflection is often an internalized conversation among various voices 
        of one's conscience.   [page 
        45] Booth repeats the "Byronic/Faustian" notion that 
        it is better to be damned for a sincere, passionately individual embrace 
        of a falsehood, than to be saved through submission to someone else's 
        truth.(24) One can certainly take this to the logical extreme and live 
        out the consequences as did Faust, but one does indeed need to continually 
        examine her journey and adjust her path and expectations accordingly.   This 
        examination of self and exploration of individuality involves necessarily 
        the risk-taking abilities so sought after but so infrequently followed. 
        Unfortunately, in the evangelical subculture this action is often supported 
        with lip service only. This risk requires that one fully personalize his 
        faith and leads ultimately to a freedom in Christ and life. This can be 
        done with assurance, knowing that we are in a context that will not fail. 
        God's grace is made perfect in this experience. It is freedom in Christ 
        that allows us to tackle the tough questions of character and moral development 
        in literature and to explore it in depth in theater. Theater gives a student 
        the opportunity to do this in a context that is more forgiving than the 
        real world. The lonely, bravely honest battler for freedom, breaking the 
        fetters of a hostile past, does so by seeking what is truly new  
        seeking finally to "learn in my own life and away from home and friends 
        what the heart is and what is feels."(25)  III. Theater: A Laboratory for Character   Teaching 
        ethics requires more than informative lectures and stimulating discussions; 
        it must include an activity which permits the student to involve himself 
        in the decision-making process in order to stretch his thinking out of 
        the present mold. The mimetic nature of theater requires this involvement 
        in the preparation of truthful and believable characterization.   Far 
        too often the value of a theater program is based on the professionalism 
        of the final performances and the emotional response of the audiences. 
        While this is certainly an important part of the evaluation, one can hardly 
        validate the time spent during the weeks of preparation, especially in 
        the divergent and busy life of a college student, with merely an observation 
        of several nights of performance. I am in no way attempting to minimize 
        the value of performance, and involvement of the audience and its emotional 
        growth, as justifiable [page 46] objectives, 
        but prime emphasis must be placed on the growth of the students through 
        their involvement in the character study necessary to prepare these penetrating 
        and illuminating performances. The participation in the lives of these 
        characters, and the students' involvement in the process of decision-making 
        and action-taking, is the experience that can change their lives.   Taking 
        the narrative example a step further and actually involving the student 
        in the action of decision-making forces her to question the intentions, 
        the whys, of the action, in the context of the world created by the playwright. 
        Developing this sense of moral imagination in the student helps to expand 
        her understanding of the diversity of existence in the world in which 
        she lives, and encourages her to consider carefully creative and alternative 
        problem solving.   Criticism 
        of the acting style of much of the 18th and 19th centuries rests in the 
        rather superficial and elocutionary manner used in the depiction of character. 
        Although some of this larger-than-life style of acting was necessary in 
        order to read over the murky footlights and gas lamps of the theater houses 
        of that period, much depth of understanding, the sense of honesty and 
        truth that we demand today, was sacrificed.   The 
        representational actor deliberately chooses to imitate or illustrate the 
        character's behavior. It is as though the actor were merely putting on 
        a costume and moving through prescribed choreography, albeit with much 
        emotion. The presentational actor attempts to reveal human behavior through 
        the use of him or herself, through an understanding of the inner motivations 
        of the character he is portraying.(26) Uta Hagen believes that the presentational 
        actor trusts that a form will result from identification with the character 
        and discovery of this character's action. To create this moment she believes 
        that character and ethics, a point of view about the world in which the 
        actor lives, must be developed.(27) This perspective, this sensitive consciousness 
        and moral identity to which Holmes refers as well, is certainly the basis 
        for the fully faceted, ethically astute student that faith-based educators 
        would like to see as the product of their efforts.   [page 
        47] "I am I, but what IF?" This "magic If", 
        developed by Stanislavski as a stimulus for character development, gives 
        the student an opportunity to explore a character and her situation, based 
        on the student's own experience, what she believes to be true. This "what 
        if" greatly expands the possibilities of choice, and enhances potential 
        for the development of the moral imagination that Holmes and Hauerwas 
        see as essential to the process of developing a moral identity. One's 
        journey of character is dependent upon his experience.   Remember 
        that the character in a play is a potential always awaiting realization. 
        The aim of he actor is to bring as much of herself as possible to the 
        role, and to take as much of the character as possible back with her when 
        finished. This actualization requires penetrating and, at times, painful 
        introspection to arrive at this point of self-knowledge. Improvisational 
        exercises must be developed sensitively in preparation for this task, 
        to assist the student on the quest of contacting herself, and ultimately 
        making final connection with the character. Emphasis must be placed on 
        the fact that it is a process. Nothing happens suddenly but death. The 
        characterization accepted quickly will be clichéd, glib, and easy. 
        The essence of presentational acting, the believable and electrifying 
        characters with whom we can identify, indicates a presentation in truth 
        and honesty. It arises from a study that is continually developing, never 
        stagnating, as new perspective is gained in the search for and ultimate 
        application of truth. This model seems the perfect metaphor for a life 
        lived in a Christian ethic: one that is lived in truth and honesty, sensitively 
        aware, with a depth of self-knowledge, fully faceted, never superficial 
        or two-dimensional.   The 
        more an actor develops a full sense of his own identity, the more his 
        scope and capacity for identification with other characters than his own 
        will be made.  
          If 
          I compare myself to a large meaty, round apple, I discover that my inner 
          and outer cliché image of myself is only a wedge of it  
          possibly the wedge with the rosy cheek on the skin. But I have to become 
          aware or myself as the total apple  the firm inner flesh as well 
          as the brown rotten spot, the stem, the seeds, the core. All of the 
          apple is me. The more I discover, the more I realized that I have endless 
          sources within myself to put to use in illumination of endless characters 
          in dramatic literature; that I am compounded of endless human beings 
          [page 48] depending on the events 
          moving in on me, my surrounding circumstances, relationships with a 
          variety of people, what I want and what's in my way at a given moment: 
          all within the context of my unique identity.(28)   The 
        potential sense of interconnectedness with these characters and their 
        lives is fully explored by Booth as well. But interesting perspective 
        is gained as he suggests that as creatures made in the image of God, we 
        are hence essentially affiliated and joined to others more like us than 
        different.  
          If 
          I think of myself not as an atomic unit bumping other atoms but as a 
          character  as someone doing my best to enact the various roles 
          assigned to me  I discover that there are no clear boundaries 
          between the others who are somehow both outside and inside me and the 
          'me' that the others are 'in'
I am not bounded by my skin.(29)   One's 
        response may likely be "I'm not like that!" But it is more likely 
        that it will be a recognition: "I am like that more than I know. 
        What am I going to do about it? How will this investigation and subsequent 
        discoveries alter the way I think about myself and my interaction with 
        others?"   A 
        student's own identity and self-knowledge are the main sources for any 
        character he may want to play. But as Booth and Hagen suggest, an understanding 
        and respect for his connection with other potential characters, both without 
        and within himself, as discovered on the journey, is also essential to 
        a fully dimensional characterization.   The 
        journey toward this self-knowledge forces a student to deal very specifically 
        with a number of the objectives Holmes lists as essential for developing 
        virtues and values, for establishing a moral identity. These objectives 
        for an effective integration of faith and learning include:  
         [page 49] 1. 
          consciousness raising  2. consciousness sensitizing  3. values analysis  4. values clarification  5. values criticism  6. moral imagination  7. moral reasoning  8. moral decision making  9. responsible agents  10. virtue development  11. moral identity(30)   Each of these objectives must follow in specific sequence. 
        It is impossible to stimulate moral imagination or practice moral reasoning 
        without first developing a knowledge of, and sensitivity to, the social 
        dilemma. Only then can one begin to analyze and clarify the values at 
        work and evaluate ethical decision-making. Theater allows both the depth 
        of understanding and involvement of the characters in the situation, and 
        the distance to observe the action that can lead the student through the 
        journey and subsequently contribute to his moral clarity.   To 
        fully understand and appreciate the context of her life, to become truly 
        sensitive to what gives real meaning to her life  to what she really 
        cares deeply about  and how this will in time affect her decision-making 
        process and subsequent actions, certainly does require a student to become 
        a responsible agent in developing virtues and a sense of moral identity. 
        Holmes' objectives are a basis for the questions posed by any actor as 
        she attempts to understand and identify with her character. It is essential 
        that she crack the representational façade and delve into the whys 
        of the character's intentions and motivations. The greater facility the 
        actor has for bringing herself to the character, as well as finding the 
        character in herself, the more honest and believable the final portrayal 
        will be. The sensitivity and awareness, the sense of self-truth gained 
        by the actor through this journey, will certainly validate the time spent, 
        and the possible pain incurred in the process.   [page 
        50] Developing a believable character depends on choices and 
        the viability of these choices for an actor and his audience. Understanding 
        why the character made the choice he did must be based on a personalization 
        of the character, on developing an in-depth character biography. This 
        personalization is the process through which the actor makes the dramatic 
        situation meaningful, so he can believe in what is happening and respond 
        with truth and sincerity. It enables him to find that essential inner 
        connection to this character's objectives. This biography will be more 
        helpful to the actor if it is based on Stanislavski's "magic If." 
        Creating this inner essence of a character supersedes the externals. These 
        external traits and mannerisms will be more believable as they grow from 
        the development of the inner soul of the character. It is the external 
        approach to character definition that illustrates the very worst abuses 
        of representational acting often practiced by the well-intentioned novice.   A 
        student's discovery of the psychology of her character is a journey into 
        the mind, heart, body, and soul of another being.(31) Psychology explains 
        behavior. The psychological portrait a student designs for her character 
        must justify her character's action and dramatic function in the world 
        of the play. Every choice the student makes from the first time she reads 
        the play, brings her closer to a definition of the character. Through 
        formulating a super objective and scene objectives, and choosing and performing 
        action within the given circumstances, the student creates a pattern of 
        behavior that reveals character.   The 
        director will assist the student in rehearsals as she searches for the 
        answers to the penetrating questions of motivation: "What do I want? 
        What must I have at this moment? Why? What am I willing to do to get it? 
        What are the obstacles, physical, emotional and ethical that must be confronted 
        to reach this goal?"   Answering 
        these questions in depth gives the student the understanding necessary 
        for the internal justification of actions to follow. During rehearsal 
        the student is able to make the necessary adjustments. This process is 
        greatly enhanced when the student keeps a journal of her discoveries. 
        This journaling experience further gives the student the opportunity to 
        pull from her own life experiences in an attempt to identify with the 
        character and make an honest connection with that character in their dilemma 
        of life. The student is also encouraged to [page 
        51] apply helpful insights from her character study to the 
        development of her own moral identity. These insights are gained by the 
        student in his own individual preparation for each rehearsal as well as 
        within the community of actors interacting during the rehearsal procedure 
        itself. The rehearsal then becomes the laboratory experience necessary 
        for the student to validate action choices as the logical extension of 
        a developing inner dimension. Through repetition of these actions in rehearsal 
        they become fully and truthfully integrated into the character and the 
        play. All that the student says and does to further her through line of 
        action and her dramatic function defines who she is. A student must never 
        be judgmental or fearful of her character. She must penetrate the soul 
        of the villain as she would the victim.(32) As she constantly justifies 
        action choices, she actually begins to think as her character would. |