Stella Adler (February 10, 1901 – December 21, 1992) was an American actress and acting teacher.
A member of Yiddish Theater's
Adler dynasty, Adler began acting at a young age. She shifted to producing, directing, and teaching, founding the
Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York City in 1949. Later in life she taught part time in Los Angeles, with the assistance of her protégée, actress
Joanne Linville,
who continued to teach Adler's technique.
[Stella Adler, 91, an Actress And Teacher of the Method](_blank)
''The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', December 22, 1992.
Early life
Stella Adler was born in Manhattan's
Lower East Side
The Lower East Side, sometimes abbreviated as LES, is a historic neighborhood in the southeastern part of Manhattan in New York City. It is located roughly between the Bowery and the East River from Canal to Houston streets. Historically, it w ...
in New York City.
[Adler Stella]
''Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century'', by Susan Ware, Stacy Lorraine Braukman, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Harvard University Press, 2004. . pp. 9–10 She was the youngest daughter of
Sara and
Jacob P. Adler,
the sister of
Luther,
Jay, Frances, and
Julia Adler and half-sister of Charles Adler and
Celia Adler, star of the Yiddish Theater. All five of her siblings were actors. The Adlers were part of the Jewish American Adler acting dynasty, which had its start in the
Yiddish Theater District and was a significant part of the vibrant ethnic theatrical scene that thrived in New York from the late 19th century to the 1950s. Adler became the most famous and influential member of her family. She began acting at the age of four as a part of the
Independent Yiddish Art Company of her parents.
Career
Adler began her acting career at the age of four in the play ''Broken Hearts'' at the Grand Street Theatre on the Lower East Side, as a part of her parents' Independent Yiddish Art Company.
She grew up acting alongside her parents, often playing roles of boys and girls. Her work schedule allowed little time for schooling, but when possible, she studied at public schools and
New York University
New York University (NYU) is a private university, private research university in New York City, New York, United States. Chartered in 1831 by the New York State Legislature, NYU was founded in 1832 by Albert Gallatin as a Nondenominational ...
. She made her London debut, at the age of 18, as Naomi in ''Elisa Ben Avia'' with her father's company, in which she appeared for a year before returning to New York. In London, she met her first husband, Englishman Horace Eliashcheff; their brief marriage, however, ended in a divorce.
Adler made her English-language debut on Broadway in 1922 as the Butterfly in ''The World We Live In'', and she spent a season in the
vaudeville
Vaudeville (; ) is a theatrical genre of variety entertainment which began in France in the middle of the 19th century. A ''vaudeville'' was originally a comedy without psychological or moral intentions, based on a comical situation: a drama ...
circuit. In 1922–23, the renowned Russian actor-director
Konstantin Stanislavski made his only U.S. tour with his
Moscow Art Theatre. Adler and many others saw these performances, which had a powerful and lasting impact on her career and the 20th-century American theatre.
She joined the
American Laboratory Theatre in 1925; there, she was introduced to Stanislavski's theories, from founders and Russian actor-teachers and former members of the
Moscow Art Theater—
Richard Boleslavsky and
Maria Ouspenskaya. In 1931, with
Sanford Meisner and
Elia Kazan
Elias Kazantzoglou (, ; September 7, 1909 – September 28, 2003), known as Elia Kazan ( ), was a Greek-American film and theatre director, producer, screenwriter and actor, described by ''The New York Times'' as "one of the most honored and inf ...
, among others, she joined the
Group Theatre, New York, founded by
Harold Clurman,
Lee Strasberg, and
Cheryl Crawford, through theater director and critic, Clurman, whom she later married in 1943. With Group Theatre, she worked in plays such as ''Success Story'' by John Howard Lawson, two
Clifford Odets plays, ''
Awake and Sing!'' and ''
Paradise Lost
''Paradise Lost'' is an Epic poetry, epic poem in blank verse by the English poet John Milton (1608–1674). The poem concerns the Bible, biblical story of the fall of man: the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their ex ...
'', and directed the touring company of Odets's ''Golden Boy'' and ''More to Give to People''. Members of Group Theatre were leading interpreters of the
method acting
Method acting, known as the Method, is a range of rehearsal techniques, as formulated by a number of different theatre practitioners, that seeks to encourage sincere and expressive performances through identifying with, understanding, and expe ...
technique based on the work and writings of Stanislavski.
In 1934, Adler went to Paris with Harold Clurman and studied intensively with Stanislavski for five weeks. During this period, she learned that Stanislavski had revised his theories, emphasizing that the actor should create by imagination rather than memory. Upon her return, she broke away from Strasberg on the fundamental aspects of method acting.
[''Twentieth Century Actor Training: Principles of Performance'', by Alison Hodge. Routledge, 2000. . p. 139] In 1982, the day Strasberg died, Adler is said to have remarked, "It will take the theatre decades to recover from the damage that Lee Strasberg inflicted on American actors."
In January 1937, Adler moved to Hollywood. There, she acted in films for six years under the name Stella Ardler, occasionally returning to the Group Theater until it dissolved in 1941. Eventually, she returned to New York to act, direct, and teach, the latter first at
Erwin Piscator's
Dramatic Workshop at the
New School for Social Research
The New School for Social Research (NSSR), previously known as The University in Exile and The New School University, is a graduate-level educational division of The New School in New York City, United States. NSSR enrolls more than 1,000 stud ...
, New York City, before founding Stella Adler Conservatory of Theatre in 1949. In the following years, she taught
Marlon Brando
Marlon Brando Jr. (April 3, 1924 – July 1, 2004) was an American actor. Widely regarded as one of the greatest cinema actors of the 20th century,''Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia'' ,
Steve McQueen,
Dolores del Río,
Robert De Niro
Robert Anthony De Niro ( , ; born August 17, 1943) is an American actor, director, and film producer. He is considered to be one of the greatest and most influential actors of his generation. De Niro is the recipient of List of awards and ...
,
Elaine Stritch,
Martin Sheen
Ramón Gerard Antonio Estévez (born August 3, 1940), known professionally as Martin Sheen, is an American actor. His work spans over six decades of television and film, and his accolades include three Emmy Awards, a Golden Globe Award, and ...
,
Manu Tupou,
Harvey Keitel
Harvey Keitel ( ; born May 13, 1939) is an American actor and film producer, known for his portrayal of morally ambiguous and "tough guy" characters. He rose to prominence during the New Hollywood movement, and has held a long-running associatio ...
,
Melanie Griffith,
Peter Bogdanovich, and
Warren Beatty
Henry Warren Beatty (né Beaty; born March 30, 1937) is an American actor and filmmaker. His career has spanned over six decades, and he has received an Academy Award and three Golden Globe Awards. He also received the Irving G. Thalberg Memor ...
, among others, the principles of characterization and script analysis. She also taught at the New School,
[Theater; Stella Adler In Her Latest Role: Author]
''The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', September 4, 1988. and the
Yale School of Drama. For many years, Adler led the undergraduate drama department at New York University,
and became one of America's leading acting teachers.
Stella Adler was much more than a teacher of acting. Through her work she imparts the most valuable kind of information—how to discover the nature of our own emotional mechanics and therefore those of others. She never lent herself to vulgar exploitations, as some other well-known so-called "methods" of acting have done. As a result, her contributions to the theatrical culture have remained largely unknown, unrecognized, and unappreciated.
:—Marlon Brando
In 1988, she published ''The Technique of Acting'' with a foreword by Marlon Brando.
From 1926 until 1952, she appeared regularly on
Broadway. Her later stage roles include the 1946 revival of ''
He Who Gets Slapped'' and an eccentric mother in the 1961 black comedy ''Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad''. Among the plays she directed was a 1956 revival of the Paul Green/Kurt Weill antiwar musical ''Johnny Johnson''. She appeared in only three films: ''
Love on Toast'' (1937), ''
Shadow of the Thin Man'' (1941), and ''
My Girl Tisa'' (1948). She concluded her acting career in 1961, after 55 years. During that time, and for years after, she became a renowned acting teacher.
Stanislavski and the method
Adler was the only member of the
Group Theatre to study with Konstantin Stanislavski.
She was a prominent member of the Group Theatre, but differences with
Lee Strasberg over
Stanislavski's system (later developed by Strasberg into
method acting
Method acting, known as the Method, is a range of rehearsal techniques, as formulated by a number of different theatre practitioners, that seeks to encourage sincere and expressive performances through identifying with, understanding, and expe ...
) made her leave the group.
Adler met with Stanislavski again later in his career and questioned him on Strasberg's interpretation. He told her that he had abandoned emotional memory, which had been Strasberg's dominant paradigm, but that they both believed that actors did not have what is required to play a variety of roles already instilled inside them, and that extensive research was needed to understand the experiences of characters who have different values originating from different cultures.
Like Stanislavski, Adler understood the "gold hidden" inside the circumstances of the text. Actors should stimulate emotional experience by imagining the scene's "given circumstances," rather than recalling experiences from their own lives. She also understood that 50% of the actor's job is internal (imagination, emotion, action, will) and 50% is externals (characterization, way of walking, voice, face). To find what works for the character, the actors must study the circumstances of the text and make their choices based on what one gets from the material.
For instance, if a character talks about horse riding, one needs to know something about horse riding as an actor, otherwise one will be faking. More importantly, one must study the values of different people to understand what situations would have meant to people, when those situations might mean nothing in the actor's own culture. Without this work, Adler said that an actor walks onto the stage "naked". This approach is one for which both Marlon Brando and Robert De Niro became famous.
Adler also trained actors' sensory imagination to help make the characters' experiences more vivid. She believed that mastery of the physical and vocal aspects of acting was necessary for the actor to command the stage, and that all body language should be carefully crafted and voices need to be clear and expressive. She often referred to this as an actor's "size" or "worthiness of the stage". Her biggest mantra was perhaps "in your choices lies your talent", and she encouraged actors to find the most grand character interpretation possible in a scene; another favorite phrase of hers regarding this was "don't be boring".
Singer-songwriter
Janis Ian
Janis Ian (born Janis Eddy Fink; April 7, 1951) is an American singer-songwriter who was most commercially successful in the 1960s and 1970s. Her signature songs are the 1966/67 hit "Society's Child, Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking)" an ...
studied under Adler in the early 1980s to help her feel more comfortable on stage, and the two women remained close friends until Adler's death. In her autobiography ''Society's Child'' (2008), Ian recalled that Adler had little patience for students who weren't progressing as she wanted, going so far on one occasion as to give one of her students a dime and tell her to call her mother to pick her up because "she had no business in the theater." On another occasion, Ian relates, Adler forcibly ripped a dress off another actress's body to get the actress to play a scene a different way.
Personal life and death
Adler was related to
Jerry Adler, an actor and theatre director.
Adler married three times: first to Horace Eliascheff—the father of her only child, Ellen—from 1923 to 1930; then from 1942 until 1959 to director and critic
Harold Clurman, one of the founders of the Group Theatre. She was finally married to
physicist
A physicist is a scientist who specializes in the field of physics, which encompasses the interactions of matter and energy at all length and time scales in the physical universe. Physicists generally are interested in the root or ultimate cau ...
and novelist
Mitchell A. Wilson, from 1966 until his death in 1973. From 1938 to 1946, she was sister-in-law to actress
Sylvia Sidney
Sylvia Sidney (born Sophia Kosow; August 8, 1910 – July 1, 1999) was an American stage, screen, and film actress whose career spanned 70 years. She rose to prominence in dozens of leading roles in the 1930s. She was nominated for the Academy ...
. Sidney was married to Luther Adler at the time and provided Stella with a nephew. Even after Sidney and Luther divorced, she and Sylvia remained close friends.
A lifelong
Democrat, she supported
Adlai Stevenson's campaign during the
1952 presidential election.
On December 21, 1992, Adler died from
heart failure
Heart failure (HF), also known as congestive heart failure (CHF), is a syndrome caused by an impairment in the heart's ability to Cardiac cycle, fill with and pump blood.
Although symptoms vary based on which side of the heart is affected, HF ...
at the age of 91 in Los Angeles.
Legacy
Adler's technique, based on a balanced and pragmatic combination of imagination and memory, is hugely credited with introducing the subtle and insightful details and a deep physical embodiment of a character.
Elaine Stritch once said: "What an extraordinary combination was Stella Adler—a goddess full of magic and mystery, a child full of innocence and vulnerability."
In the book ''Acting: Onstage and Off'', Robert Barton wrote: "
dlerestablished the value of the actor putting herself in the place of the character rather than vice versa ... More than anyone else, Stella Adler brought into public awareness all the close careful attention to text and analysis Stanislavski endorsed."
In 1991, Stella Adler was inducted into the
American Theater Hall of Fame.
In 2004, the
Harry Ransom Center at the
University of Texas at Austin
The University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin, UT, or Texas) is a public university, public research university in Austin, Texas, United States. Founded in 1883, it is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System. With 53,082 stud ...
acquired Adler's complete archive along with a small collection of her papers from her former husband
Harold Clurman. The collection includes correspondence, manuscripts, typescripts, lecture notes, photographs, and other materials. Over 1,100 audio and video recordings of Adler teaching from the 1960s to the 1980s have been digitized by the center and are accessible on site. The archive traces her career from her start in the New York
Yiddish Theater District to her encounters with Stanislavski and the Group Theatre to her lectures at the Stella Adler Studio of Acting.
[Ransom Center acquires Stella Adler archive]
The University of Texas at Austin, April 26, 2004.
In 2006, she was honored with a posthumous
star
A star is a luminous spheroid of plasma (physics), plasma held together by Self-gravitation, self-gravity. The List of nearest stars and brown dwarfs, nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night sk ...
on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame
The Hollywood Walk of Fame is a landmark which consists of 2,813 five-pointed terrazzo-and-brass stars embedded in the sidewalks along 15 blocks of Hollywood Boulevard and three blocks of Vine Street in the Hollywood, Los Angeles, Hollywood dist ...
in front of the Stella Adler Theatre at 6773 Hollywood Boulevard.
Adler is a character in ''Names'', Mark Kemble's play about former Group Theatre members' struggles with the
House Un-American Activities Committee. Kemble consulted her about characterizations for the play and she told him to "just make it up".
Stella Adler schools
Irene Gilbert, a longtime protégée and friend, ran the
Stella Adler Studio of Acting in Los Angeles until her death.
The Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York opened a new studio in Los Angeles named the Art of Acting Studio in 2010 and is run by the Adler family.
Career on Broadway
All works are the original Broadway productions unless otherwise noted.
* ''The Straw Hat'' (1926)
* ''Big Lake'' (1927)
* ''The House of Connelly'' (1931)
* ''1931'' (1931)
* ''Night Over Taos'' (1932)
* ''Success Story'' (1932)
* ''Big Night'' (1933)
* ''Hilda Cassidy'' (1933)
* ''Gentlewoman'' (1934)
* ''Gold Eagle Guy'' (1934)
* ''
Awake and Sing!'' (1935)
* ''
Paradise Lost
''Paradise Lost'' is an Epic poetry, epic poem in blank verse by the English poet John Milton (1608–1674). The poem concerns the Bible, biblical story of the fall of man: the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their ex ...
'' (1935)
* ''Sons and Soldiers'' (1943)
* ''Pretty Little Parlor'' (1944)
* ''
He Who Gets Slapped'' –
revival (1946)
* ''Manhattan Nocturne'' (1943)
* ''Sunday Breakfast'' (1952)
Works
* ''The Fervent Years: The Group Theatre and the Thirties'', By Harold Clurman, Stella Adler.
Da Capo Press, 1983. .
* ''The Technique of Acting'', by Stella Adler. Bantam Books, 1988. .
* ''Creating a Character: A Physical Approach to Acting'', by Moni Yakim, Muriel Broadman, Stella Adler. Applause Books, 1993. .
* ''Stella Adler: The Art of Acting'', by Stella Adler, Howard Kissel, Applause Books, 2000. .
* ''Stella Adler on Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov'', by Stella Adler, Barry Paris. Random House Inc, 2001. .
* ''Stella Adler on America's Master Playwrights: Eugene O'Neill, Thornton Wilder, Clifford Odets, William Saroyan, Tennessee Williams, William Inge, Arthur Miller, Edward Albee'', by Stella Adler, Barry Paris (editor). Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group 2012. .
See also
*
Michael Chekhov
*
Ivana Chubbuck
*
Ion Cojar
*
Uta Hagen
*
Estelle Harman
*
Robert Lewis
*
Sanford Meisner
*
Constantin Stanislavski
**
Stanislavski's system
*
Lee Strasberg
References
External links
*
*
*
Stella Adler Jewish Women Encyclopedia
Stella Adler Los AngelesStella Adler Studio of ActingThe Stella Adler and Harold Clurman archiveat the
Harry Ransom Center,
University of Texas at Austin
The University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin, UT, or Texas) is a public university, public research university in Austin, Texas, United States. Founded in 1883, it is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System. With 53,082 stud ...
Irene Gilbert and Stella Adler papers, circa 1959–1998 (bulk 1970–1992) The Billy Rose Theatre Division,
New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
at ''
The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
''
{{DEFAULTSORT:Adler, Stella
1901 births
1992 deaths
Actresses from Manhattan
American stage actresses
Jewish American actresses
American drama teachers
American people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent
American acting theorists
American women non-fiction writers
Jewish American non-fiction writers
Yiddish theatre performers
American vaudeville performers
20th-century American actresses
American film actresses
American acting coaches
20th-century American Jews