Interview

Miquel Crespi

'We help actors overcome their fears'

Crespi argues that preparing actors for a play or TV part is about providing them with specific tools the director can take advantage of and that they can use throughout their career

What does an act­ing coach do?
Our job con­sists in pro­mot­ing the dif­fer­ent as­pects and po­ten­tial of an actor, ei­ther to give more rel­e­vance to a char­ac­ter they need to cre­ate or one that al­ready ex­ists. Coach­ing is usu­ally a tool to help ac­tors get rid of fears, to help them over­come chal­lenges. We work with knowl­edge ac­tors al­ready have.
Which ac­tors have you worked with?
Nau­si­caa Bonnín, we built her char­ac­ter for Tres dies amb la família. We had to draw out the max­i­mum emo­tional pos­si­bil­i­ties of her char­ac­ter. And Jaume Madaula for a TV3 se­ries.
Can your job as a coach clash with the di­rec­tor’s job?
We do coach­ing after ac­tors have al­ready worked with the script. Coach­ing of­fers ac­tors a basis, some back­ground to make them feel com­fort­able. We give them tools that di­rec­tors can use later. We don’t in­ter­fere in the di­rec­tor’s job. In any case, it’s the ac­tors who help them to cre­ate char­ac­ters. Every char­ac­ter has a past that gets them to where they are. If we un­der­stand that, then we will bet­ter un­der­stand why they react in a cer­tain way.
Is that an Amer­i­can way of doing things?
Yes, many di­rec­tors per­ceive the work we do as a tech­ni­cal con­tri­bu­tion. Ac­tors have al­ready pre­pared their part, they al­ready know their work well. It’s true that in our cul­ture, di­rec­tors like to work with ac­tors more than in other cul­tures.
Is this prepa­ra­tion more ad­dressed to cin­ema than the­atre?
In the­atre, we pre­pare cast­ings so that ac­tors have the most re­sources pos­si­ble avail­able to them. In the­atre there is time for re­hearsals, it’s a process that ma­tures slowly. After the pre­miere, ac­tors feel in­creas­ingly more com­fort­able, there’s more flu­id­ity, they find so­lu­tions for pos­si­ble slip-ups they might have had dur­ing the first shows. TV and cin­ema are brief mo­ments, you have to do a lot of work be­fore­hand.
Are some the­atre schools bet­ter than oth­ers?
Each school has its own meth­ods, but they are all about the same idea, which is act­ing. When you are tal­ented, you cre­ate your own method, which is a sum of all the other meth­ods. After being an actor my­self, I be­came a the­atre teacher and there are quite a few ac­tors who tell me they still use the tools I taught them. It’s like putting a puz­zle to­gether.
There are sit­u­a­tions when an actor be­comes fa­mous in a TV se­ries and then does a play. The au­di­ence goes to see her but they’re dis­ap­pointed be­cause she isn’t the char­ac­ter they love on TV.
It hap­pened with Mont Plans, when she was doing a TV pro­gramme with Jordi González and then did Chaise longue. Maybe it wasn’t what the au­di­ence was ex­pect­ing, but we need to take ad­van­tage of all avail­able tools to at­tract au­di­ences to the the­atre.
How is it pos­si­ble for the mem­bers of T de teatre com­pany, for in­stance, to fin­ish with the Jet Lag se­ries and then be asked to do mono­logues, some­thing they haven’t done for decades?
Some­times it’s hard to con­nect with the au­di­ence. But artists have the right to grow and trans­form a show. It hap­pens in the­atre as well as in other dis­ci­plines, such as the plas­tic arts. I would say that the most suc­cess­ful shows are the ones with less con­tent, be­cause they pro­vide au­di­ences with sat­is­fac­tion on mul­ti­ple lev­els .
How is your work as an act­ing coach dif­fer­ent to other jobs you have done?
To start with, it’s not a desk job. It al­ways in­volves phys­i­cal work. All of an actor’s ex­pres­sion must nec­es­sar­ily go through phys­i­cal work.

From actor to coach

The path Crespi has trodden from acting and spontaneous characterisation to coaching has been a long one. After working with La Cubana on the marathon run of Teresines SA at the Teatre Coliseum in Barcelona, he was a scriptwriter for television and then started teaching theatre, including in the US. Still an actor with great comic potential, he occasionally returns to the stage with companies he creates himself. Crespi’s curiosity also extends to other fields, such as magic, which he alternates with clown work. And now he can add acting coach to the list.

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