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I Don't Need an Acting Class
E Podcast

I Don't Need an Acting Class

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Become a Paid Subscriber: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/actingclass/subscribe

Academy Award winner and celebrated acting teacher Milton Justice invites you into his weekly acting class, based on his years of study with the legendary Stella Adler. I Don’t Need an Acting Class delves deep into the craft of acting, breaks down concepts, tools and techniques, explores endless possibilities and offers you a foundation on which to build a solid, dependable process. Produced by Walker Vreeland.

Become a Paid Subscriber: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/actingclass/subscribe

Academy Award winner and celebrated acting teacher Milton Justice invites you into his weekly acting class, based on his years of study with the legendary Stella Adler. I Don’t Need an Acting Class delves deep into the craft of acting, breaks down concepts, tools and techniques, explores endless possibilities and offers you a foundation on which to build a solid, dependable process. Produced by Walker Vreeland.

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Talking Out Revisited

Actor work is not an intellectual exercise. And it’s not about “good writing.” It’s about experiencing. The audience doesn’t come to the theater for the words on the page. They come for the experience of what the character is going through — in the world of the play. In this episode, I return to one of my core tools: Talking Out. Through études — structured improvisations in which you speak aloud everything happening with your character — you begin to move off analyzing and philosophizing about the character and move into the experience of the character.
Art and literature 1 week
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13:53

The Technique Works!

Actors have a tendency to abandon their technique as soon as they get an audition – and leap to a performance. Just taking a little time to really think about the text makes an enormous difference.
Art and literature 2 weeks
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5
16:19

Building a Character

There are many roads in to building a character and, unfortunately, there is no paint-by-number approach. It's great as an actor to play with several different techniques.
Art and literature 3 weeks
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18:49

Connecting Through Specifics

When an actor does not connect, you catch them "acting". It doesn't matter if it's a television series or a play. Specificity helps us connect.
Art and literature 1 month
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16:11

Fighting Clichés through Specificity and Events

We have a tendency to leap to clichés because the dialogue seems to lead us there. There's a way to fight this.
Art and literature 1 month
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16:32

An Encyclopedic Possibility of Choices

It's very difficult to believe that there is not just one correct choice. As long as an actor is clear what the text is about, there are countless roads in to the experience of the world of the play.
Art and literature 1 month
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17:04

Your choices must feed the text

"Everything is something." It seems simple, but as actors we often skip over something that can give us the key we're looking for.
Art and literature 1 month
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14:43

Everything is Something

The craft of acting is there to give us confidence. If we're not confident it's easy to see, especially for people casting. One of our problems is that we often throw away lines, – or parts of lines, – or even entire phrases. We miss the opportunities for creative acting work because we rush so fast to performance.
Art and literature 1 month
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15:08

There is no shortcut to learning to act

There are all sorts of quick fix "schools" of acting, but it's an art form and it takes dedicated study to become confident in your technique.
Art and literature 2 months
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05:39

Impulse instead of Action

The purpose of the technique is to help open your talent, not strangle it. I'm suggesting that you think in terms of what the impulse is for a scene, – or what's going on with your character.
Art and literature 2 months
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04:40

The Dreaded Vocabulary of Acting

The vocabulary of acting is strangling the talent of actors. The need to use the right words is cutting off the actor's talent.
Art and literature 2 months
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04:42

NYC Classes Begin January 12th

In person classes in New York City begin January 12th
Art and literature 2 months
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00:56

NYC Classes Beginning October 27th!

We can't wait to see you! https://www.theactorlab.nyc
Art and literature 5 months
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00:30

Bonus Video Ep: Let It Happen

This acting class session focuses on the fundamental tension between allowing authentic moments to emerge versus forcing them through overthinking. The instructor addresses how students lose their natural instincts by getting trapped in intellectual analysis—particularly when trying to justify their emotional responses with logical explanations. Using examples from student work, including one student's fascination with construction sites and another's exploration of Stalin attending the ballet, the discussion emphasizes that specificity and genuine reaction matter more than elaborate backstories or explanations. The core lesson revolves around trusting initial instincts rather than explaining them away, with the instructor advocating for letting artistic discoveries "happen" organically rather than manufacturing them through mental effort. The session concludes with insights about building authentic attitudes toward scene partners without overcomplicating the process, drawing from Stella Adler's techniques about immediate, specific observations.
Art and literature 6 months
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14:05

Why Your Acting Choices Must Feed the Material

In this episode, Milton Justice explores the critical concept of matching your acting choices to the specific material you're working with. Using examples from his recent work with students, Milton demonstrates how actors often make the mistake of building relationships and emotions that don't serve the genre or tone of their project. He discusses a student working on a romantic comedy whose choices weren’t serving the genre, and another student writing a letter for "All My Sons" that was intellectually brilliant but wrong for the character. Milton emphasizes that while connection exercises are important for learning technique, actors must understand the form they're working in - whether it's a complex play like "All My Sons," a simple TV procedural, or a romantic comedy. He also shares insights about his upcoming acting studio in NYC and reflects on his experience directing "The Glass Menagerie." www.theactorlab.nyc www.idontneedanactingclass.com
Art and literature 6 months
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14:29

Filling The Choice

In this episode, Milton Justice explores why actors struggle to make choices substantial enough to serve their material. He contextualizes modern acting within theater history, explaining how realistic theater emerged in the late 1800s with playwrights like Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov. Milton discusses why Stanislavski's approach of having actors use their own lives fails - people don't relate to their experiences in theatrically useful ways, simply living without recognizing dramatic potential. Milton emphasizes that an actor's talent lies in making appropriate choices substantial enough to warrant emotional investment. Using student Grace's work as an example, he highlights how actors must understand the magnitude of their choices and earn them fully rather than throwing them away. Milton challenges students to see the extraordinary within ordinary things, to see that actors must become educators, philosophers, motivators, whose job it is to transform ideas meaningfully in order to remind us of our humanity. www.idontneedanactingclass.com www.theactorlab.nyc
Art and literature 7 months
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17:22

Playing Characters Beyond Your Experience

Milton and Kaleb explore how to authentically portray characters whose experiences are completely outside your own. They discuss the crucial role of script analysis in understanding what kind of person your character is within the specific world of the play. Kaleb shares his current challenge, balancing the playwright's thematic intentions with finding the character's personal motivations. They examine practical techniques like taking your character to imaginary places outside the play and how sometimes a single powerful image can unlock an entire performance without needing to experience every detail of the character's background.
Art and literature 7 months
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13:42

What Worked and What Didn't

Milton interviews student J.P. McCloskey about his off-Broadway experience in the Stephen Metcalfe play Strange Snow. J.P. identifies a major challenge: after months of rehearsals without set or props, he felt lost during tech rehearsal. The solution involves building specific relationships to the physical environment through "talking out" what you see and feel about the space. J.P. shares his character breakthrough: moving from himself to the character by giving the character activities outside the play - imagining him at a donut shop, playground, or going through morning routines. This progression from "seeing him in the world" to "thinking like him" to "being him" solved the common problem of character separation. The discussion covers building traumatic backstory by approaching it both from the character's present perspective and experiencing it as it happened, emphasizing the importance of knowing which elements require deeper investment.
Art and literature 7 months
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16:08

Casting Directors Need to See This

Milton shares insights from a panel with top New York casting directors including Bernard Telsey and Billy Hopkins. The key revelation: casting directors are looking for "active listening" - actors who remain fully present and engaged even when not speaking. Many actors mistakenly think they only need to act when delivering lines, but casting directors immediately notice when an actor goes "dead" during listening moments. Milton advocates for his "telephone method" - talking out everything happening before and during scenes to ensure continuous engagement. The goal is experiencing circumstances rather than just reporting them, distinguishing between describing facts and experiencing those facts. Note: Casting directors confirmed that Instagram following has zero impact on casting decisions.
Art and literature 7 months
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17:14

Announcement!

The Actor Lab is an acting studio founded by industry veterans Milton Justice and Patrick Quagliano, and producer Walker Vreeland. The studio aims to fill critical gaps in contemporary actor training by focusing exclusively on fundamental acting techniques, script analysis, and practical scene work in a supportive yet challenging environment. Unlike other acting programs, The Actor Lab emphasizes personalized guidance and honest feedback rather than vague instruction. We view acting as a lifelong pursuit where growth as an actor parallels growth as a human being, and strive to create a community of passionate, like-minded artists where professional actors can reconnect with their craft and receive individualized attention. Our classes provide a space for artists to rediscover their passion while developing concrete processes that build confidence in their work and meet high standards of traditional excellence.
Art and literature 7 months
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02:01
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