Students from the University of Maryland attending the Salzburg Academy on Media and Global Change got a special session with academy-award winning actress Vanessa Redgrave August 13.
"One of the problems for us all is that we are not, and cannot often be aware of what's going on that the camera hasn't focused on," she told the students.
During a session with students and faculty from five continents and fifteen countries, Ms. Redgrave drew connections between the responsibilities of an actor and those of journalists. "When I was told today about the main fundamental ground on which these courses in which you're all taking part are based - Media and Global Change - I immediately remembered the Latin slogan that flew on the flag above Shakespeare's Globe Theater - Totus Mundus Agit Histrionem - 'All the world moves the actor' - is actually what I think is the direct translation, as opposed to 'All the world's a stage.' All the world moves the actor, by which can be considered not only the professional actor, but the individual - the individuals who find themselves in the world."
Ms. Redgrave came to the Salzburg Academy on the morning of her last of three performances during the Salzburg Festival of Joan Didion's play "A Year of Magical Thinking." The acclaimed hour and a half-long play, in which she is the only actor, is staged without intermission. The Festival itself is noted for being one of the world's most spectacular venues for opera, theater and music and Redgrave has been one of the stars of the month-long series of events.
The hour that Ms. Redgrave spent talking and taking questions from students and faculty found her musing on her decades-long career as an actor, an ambassador for UNICEF and a human rights activist.
She called on the students in the room to speak out for what they believed is important - but to do so while considering their own biases and assumptions: "We certainly have the capacity to be independent thinkers. And of course we can be more independent as thinkers and as human beings if we are capable of examining our most fervently held beliefs, and seeing them in this changing world," she noted. Actors, as well as journalists, needed to commit to such a rigorous self-reflection. "The whole point of theater is of course to - and I say 'of course' because I didn't once realize this - but it is actually to help us examine ourselves. Not saying 'they're wrong, we're right,' but to examine ourselves."
The program in Salzburg is jointly led by the International Center for Media and the Public Agenda (ICMPA) (Merrill School of Journalism) at the University of Maryland and the Salzburg Global Seminar.
- HOME
- PHYSICAL SCIENCES
- EARTH SCIENCES
- LIFE SCIENCES
- MEDICINE
- SOCIAL SCIENCES
- CULTURE
- VIDEO
- CONTRIBUTORS
- CONTEST
Subscribe to the newsletter
[x]
Stay in touch with the scientific world!
Know Science And Want To Write?
What's Happening
- Music + Physics + Creativity = Genius
- Autism And Vaccines: Why People Still Believe The Hype
- Reductionism And Systems Thinking: Complementary Scientific Lenses
- Higgs Mass Limits: 130-210 GeV !!
- The Quote of the Week: Audio and Video Quarks!
- Why So Many Earthquakes This Decade?
- Naked Beauty On Paradise Island
- "the lightness of the electron, of course, has some qualitative explanations in the realistic state..."
- "My highest dream is that those who come after me will have higher ones...."
- "Tree: that is poetry - you have a wonderful way with words...."
- "Making my best effort to speak the common language here, yet many are already familar with tree..."
- "You've gotten way off topic. Your original comment, which I satirized, implied that there are real..."
- Sex on the brain: 'Doublesex' gene key to determining fruit fly gender
- Caltech-led team provides proof in humans of RNA interference using targeted nanoparticles
- Newly identified growth factor promotes stem cell growth, regeneration
- Einstein researchers discover 2 new ways to kill TB
- Astronomers get sharpest view ever of star factories in distant universe
Books By Writers Here
© 2010 ION Publications LLC










Yes! To get the facts and to get them right! And not to classify sides of a dispute into "goodies" and "baddies", as some people are wont to do.
And both the acting profession and media bodies tend to be self-selecting, so that they take in and promote "people who think like us".
Robert H. Olley
Physics Department
University of Reading
England