Day 8 Topic 9
What it is
A short list of doable actions you can play onstage—words like soothe, bargain, threaten, invite. Verbs make your acting visible. The audience can see “soothe” (soften eyes, gentle touch), but they can’t see “feel sad” unless you translate it into an action.
Why it matters
- Verbs stop “indicating” (pretending) and start doing.
- They keep your choices consistent when nerves hit.
- They help you pivot fast when a partner or conductor changes something.
How to build it (5 minutes)
- Pick your character’s top drive (Bond / Defend / Acquire / Learn / Feel).
- Choose 10 verbs that serve that drive and fit the show’s style.
- Make sure each verb is playable (you can show it with body/voice).
Quick verb bank (pick 10)
- Bond: invite, reassure, comfort, charm, soothe
- Defend: block, warn, control, dismiss, contain
- Acquire: bargain, claim, tempt, demand, secure
- Learn: probe, test, assess, verify, study
- Feel: thrill, revel, savor, release, indulge
How to use it in rehearsal
- Write one verb per beat in your score.
- If a moment feels fuzzy, grab a new verb from the list and run it again.
- On camera, check: “Could a stranger name what I’m doing?” If not, swap to a clearer verb.
Tell me what you think about this and what you want to hear next!