Breaking character
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Breaking character
Breaking character, "to break character", is a theatrical term used to describe when an actor, while actively performing in character, slips out of character and behaves as his or her actual self. This is an acceptable occurrence while in the process of rehearsal, but is unheard of and extremely unprofessional while actively performing in front of an audience or camera (except when the act is a deliberate breaking of the fourth wall). If the breaking of character is particularly serious, it is dubbed corpsing, which in film or television would normally result in an abandonment of that take. For example, an actor and actress may be testing out a scene in front of their director. The actress may break character half-way through to suggest that she try delivering a certain line from a different position on the stage.
Famous breaks in filmOccasionally actors in film and television can be glimpsed breaking character as they find themselves laughing or otherwise reacting to unexpected events in front of the camera. During filming of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, while actor Viggo Mortensen was filming the scene of Aragorn kicking an Uruk-hai helmet in anguish over the apparent deaths of Merry Brandybuck and Pippin Took, he broke two toes on the last take. Mortensen let out what director Peter Jackson referred to as a "godawful scream." The crew was unaware that this scream was not acting, and Mortensen finished the scene before approaching Jackson and having his toes fixed, and this take made it to the final version. Other examples of breaking character in movies include:
The advent of DVD players, with the use of their precise pause and slow-motion functions, has made it far easier to spot breaks in character in motion pictures. On TelevisionAndy Kaufman had an infamous appearance on Fridays where he broke character in the middle of a sketch, prompting fellow cast member Michael Richards to grab the cue cards and throw them on a table in front of Andy. A fight also erupted on camera before the show cut to commercial. It was later revealed that this was a gag prearranged by Kaufman and the show's producers in collusion with Richards, although not everyone on set was aware it was a joke. Harvey Korman was infamous for breaking character on The Carol Burnett Show when he would start laughing during sketches, usually due to the antics of Tim Conway, who would deliberately try to crack Korman up. In Fawlty Towers, John Cleese's antics could cause others to break character. In particular, The Wedding Party features an exceptionally long tirade by Cleese as Basil Fawlty, during which several other actors and actresses can be seen breaking character as they laugh. A sketch on British sketch show A Bit of Fry and Laurie had an instance of breaking character. The sketch, which involved Stephen Fry playing a policeman who required details from a middle-aged man played by Hugh Laurie, who gives the policeman falsely ridiculous and increasingly inane details about himself. The sketch ends with Fry hitting Laurie on the head with a rubber bat. This caused Laurie to break character, moaning to himself "That was too hard" in a sotto tone. Whilst Fry is still in character continuing with the rest of the sketch, Laurie shouts at him "Never mind the friggin' sketch! That was too hard, that really hurt!". Fry then breaks the fourth wall, still in character mentioning to the audience Laurie "is just a child, really". Many instances of breaking character occurred on Saturday Night Live, such as a sketch where Christina Applegate and David Spade could not stop laughing at Chris Farley's motivational speaker character, Matt Foley, as well as the band members in the More Cowbell sketch reacting to Will Ferrell's antics. Jimmy Fallon broke character in several sketches he participated in, which became one of his trademarks. Michael Jordan broke character, laughing, in a Stuart Smalley (Al Franken) sketch as he attempted to say the line, "I don't have to be a great basketball player". In Blackadder Goes Forth, Stephen Fry, who was cast as Gen. Melchett would improvise his character by giving the impression Melchett had piles and groan every time he sat down. In the episode General Hospital Melchett sits next to Capt. Blackadder and Nurse Mary and groans, forcing Rowan Atkinson to hide a smile. In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode Symbiosis, as the cargo bay doors close on her character's last appearance in the episode, Denise Crosby breaks character and waves at the camera. Although it was in the next episode, Skin of Evil, where her character Tasha Yar dies, this was the last scene of her that was filmed as a series regular, so she wanted to "wave bye-bye" to her fans. In live theaterPerformers of live theater are renowned for never breaking character, even under dire circumstances. An extreme example of this occurred in Washington, D.C. in the year 2000 when Nana Visitor and Vicki Lewis starred in the Broadway tour of Chicago. Lewis broke her ankle halfway through the third number, and the other dancers completed the number around her while attempting to cover the injury as Lewis was escorted off stage. Then, as the dancers exited, another actress seamlessly pranced onto stage and announced, in character, that a "sexy new fox is gonna be playing Velma Kelly, but don't you cats get confused." Virtual and gaming environmentsBreaking character or corpsing is also being used more frequently to describe a user-player who, having assumed the role of a virtual character or avatar and is acting within a virtual or gaming environment, then breaks out of that character. For example, this could be either a player-character behaving inappropriately within the social-cultural environment depicted by the virtual or gaming environment or the player ceasing to play (momentarily or entirely) leaving the character suspended and/or lifeless. Professional wrestlingBreaking character is not solely limited to performances in traditional theater, television, and film; the phenomenon is not unheard of in professional wrestling, which is normally highly scripted. WWE commentator Jim Ross once famously broke character during a match in which WWE wrestler (and friend of Ross) Mick Foley took a 16 foot "bump" (fall) through the roof of a steel cage structure known as Hell in a Cell. Ross exclaimed, "Will somebody stop the damn match?!" While phrases such as that are often used by professional wrestling commentators to make matches seem more legitimate, Ross later stated that he made the comment out of character, being seriously worried for his friend (who had, indeed, suffered a severe concussion as a result of the fall). Later on in the match, Ross nearly broke character by calling Mick "the toughest son of a bitch he had ever seen, period," before covering himself as Stone Cold Steve Austin is pushed as that type of character - instead added "...in this sort of environment (aka the Cell itself)." Much of the WWF roster broke character in 1999 when Owen Hart fell to his death from the rafters of Kemper Arena in Kansas City; much of the onscreen drama of the WWE was similarly shunted aside in 2005 for some weeks after the death of Eddie Guerrero. In 2007, after the death of the Benoit family, Vince McMahon was forced to abandon the storyline of his "death," appearing out of character to speak about the incident and its repercussions. In 2008 the night Ric Flair retired on WWE Raw, numerous wrestler's broke kayfabe, including Edge, Randy Orton, Paul "Big Show" Wight broke character when he sobbed and hugged Flair after the show. See also
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