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Acting teacher Stella Adler receives posthumous star on Walk of Fame Famed acting teacher Stella Adler, whose students included Marlon ... Friday. "I owe way, way too much to Stella Adler," Oscar-winning actor and Adler ... during the ceremony in front of the Stella Adler Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard ... |
OBITUARIES; Drama Teacher Stella Adler Dies; Pupils Included Brando, De Niro Stella Adler, 91, an acting teacher who coached such ... and Martin Sheen. She was founder of the Stella Adler Conservatory of Acting West, which a... |
Yiddish actress leaves theater legacy; 'Stella Adler' deals with struggles, obstacles teacher faced ... great actress and acting teacher Stella Adler, who, born into a Yiddish theatrical ... Warehouse Theatre in the District. Stella Adler was an u... |
Profile: Acting teaching styles of Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler ... teaching styles of Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler Host: RENEE MONTAGNE Time: 11:00 ... acting teachers, Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler. Both we... |
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Stella Adler Description
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Date of Birth
10 February 1901, New York, New York, USA
21 December 1992, Los Angeles, California, USA ( heart failure)
Mini Biography
Stella Adler was born on February 1, 1901, in New York, the youngest daughter of the Yiddish theater actors, Jacob P. Adler and Sarah Adler, who founded an acting dynasty. In addition to her parents, Stella's family included her siblings Charles Adler, Jay Adler, Julia and Luther Adler, all of whom appeared on Broadway. Stella made her debut at the age of four in the family-owned theater in the play "Broken Hearts". At the age of 18, she made her London debut as "Naomi" in "Elisa Ben Avia", in which she appeared for a year before returning to New York. Stella then spent the next 10 years treading the boards in vaudeville and Yiddish language theaters throughout North and South America and Europe. In all, she appeared in 100 plays.
Adler was widely acclaimed in the Yiddish theater, but she wanted to break out of that theatrical ghetto and play a wider variety of roles on the legitimate stage and in Hollywood. What was constant in Adler's 83-year-long career was her intense dedication to broadening the level of artistry in the theater.
she made her Broadway debut as a replacement in Carl Kapek's "The World We Live In". (Her official debut as a member of the original company was in "The Straw Hat" on Oct 14, 1926). After its run played out, she joined the acting school run by Richard Boleslawski and Maria Ouspenskaya, the American Laboratory. Both Boleslavsky and Maria Ouspenskaya were former members of the famous Moscow Art Theatre.
While married to Horace Eleaschreff, Adler met Harold Clurman, who would become her second husband and one of the co-founders of The Group Theatre, in 1924 (They would marry 19 years later). In this period, she met another future Group Theatre co-founder, Lee Strasberg, at the Actor's Laboratory when she participated in classes there in 1928. Along with Cheryl Crawford, Clurman and Strasberg founded the Group Theatre in 1931. It became arguably the most influential theater group in 20th century America, at least in terms of its influence on acting by introducing the teaching of Konstantin Stanislavski's System to the American stage. Its aim was the championing of realism and it is credited with bringing naturalism into the American theater. Clurman and Strasberg invited Adler to become a founding member of the Group Theatre. The Utopian political ideals that were central to the idea of the Group Theatre did not appeal to Adler, nor did the cooperative focus of the company, but she did join after being promised leading roles and because She supported Clurman's vision of the theater as an art form. It was with the Group Theatre that Stella played some of her more acclaimed roles, including "Sarah Glassman" in "Success Story", "Bessie Berger" in "Awake and Sing" and "Clara" in "Paradise Lost".
In 1934, she took a leave of absence from the Group Theatre and traveled to Russia to study for five weeks in Moscow Art Theatre, and in private sessions with the great man himself, Konstantin Stanislavski, whose motto was "Think of your own experiences and use them truthfully." Adler was among few American actors, such as Michael Chekhov and Richard Boleslawski to study privately with Stanislavsky. In August 1934, she returned from Russia, and made a presentation of what She learned from Stanislavski, then she began teaching acting classes to members of The Group Theatre troupe, including the actors Elia Kazan, Sanford Meisner and Robert Lewis. Meisner and Lewis would go on to be the most influential acting teachers in America after Adler herself and Strasberg. Kazan, who would go on to become the greatest theatrical director in 20th century American theater, also had a huge impact on American acting by championing what became known in the vernacular as "The Method", which was closely related to Adler's teaching. Kazan's exposure to Konstantin Stanislavski's System via Adler was highly influential in his work.
Stella Adler, being the most experienced of the Group Theatre actors, had not accepted Lee Strasberg's idiosyncratic version of Stanislavski's System, which Strasberg interpreted as "method" and shifted its goals to memory exercises. "The (memory) emphasis was the sick one" in Strasberg's "method", said Stella Adler, as it made acting under Strasberg increasingly painful for her. Feeling uncomfortable with the Group Theatre members, many of whom were also Communist Party members, Adler left the company in 1937 to conquer Hollywood. According to her later student and friend, Marlon Brando, she had a bad nose job to camouflage her looks, so hell-bent was She on conquering the movies as she had the stage. She was not to succeed.Adler spent six years as an associate producer at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio, at which she acted in movies under the name "Stella Ardler."
she did not achieve the quality of roles or the acclaim that She had in the theater, and she eventually returned to the stage in the early 1940s, acting and directing on Broadway and in London. Adler also began to teach at German
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Eric Osmond Trivia
Son of Ken OsmondBrother of Christian OsmondEric Gardner, Panacea Entertainment; ...Eric S...
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Leslie McCasky Date of Birth
21 December 1966, Evanston, Illinois, USAAlumni Home PageStratton W. Beesley
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Masasa Moyo Date of Birth
23 July ????, London, Ontario, Canada
Birth Name
Masasa Moyo
Height
5' 5" (...
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Don Gray Date of Birth
27 January 1913, Meyersdale, Pennsylvania, USA
Date of Death
24 July 1966, Los An...
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Jonathan Mostow Date of Birth
28 November 1961, Woodbridge, Connecticut, USAPersonal Quotes
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William E Danforth Date of Birth
13 May 1867, Syracuse, New York, USA
Date of Death
16 April 1941, Skaneateles, Ne...
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