Lindsay Price offers this great web page of advice for scene work and what is necessary to have as components. Having actors give their own advice having known what works and what doesn't is very beneficial to other actors out there.

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Lindsay Price offers this great web page of advice for scene work and what is necessary to have as components. Having actors give their own advice having known what works and what doesn't is very beneficial to other actors out there.
This article is made up of advice actors have given to other actors on how to play emotional scenes well. Most of the time this is what gets lost the most in scene's moments. If the emotions are portrayed wrongly, that will effect the beauty and ability of the scene.
This next site is full of videos and interview of 10 renowned directors that offer their advice and insight on how they direct. Getting these amazing artist's points of view adds a lot to this site. It's amazing to see how they think and how much their ideas effect the small moments in a scene.
The most famous director in all of Hollywood, Steven Spielberg, has some amazing insight of his genius way of looking at scenes with this creative view points. There is no mind like Spielberg's, and this interview let's us get into his mind which is astonishing.
As the atom is the smallest discrete unit of matter, so the scene is the smallest discrete unit in fiction; it is the smallest bit of fiction that contains the essential elements of story. You don'...
This website, by writer Holly Lisle, discusses from a writer's point of view on what is an extremely important part of scene work. The smallest moments of a scene are controlled by what the writer creates. She compares the smallest parts of scenes to atoms as the smallest units of matter. Every atom makes up every single bit of our world as every part of a scene makes it whole. These are equally important. Lisle makes some really helpful points in her site.
Writing a Screenplay: A simple, user friendly guide to writing your screenplay scene by scene.
Tim of how-to-write-a-screenplay-aid.com wrote about how to write successful scenes, and the steps it takes to get there. There are a lot of elements that go into screenwriting, especially when you have to consider that the scenes are going to be filmed. There are different elements necessary to consider that are different depending whether you're on screen or on stage.
Simple humor which never gets old is from the movie, The Waterboy. The ignorance and oblivion of the main character (Waterboy) is what makes this goofy humor fun and enjoyable. Even though it's the opposite of sophisticated, it manages to get a smile and laugh out of me every time.
Another great tip actors need is how to analyze a script. This is also an important priority of the actor's. To understand a scene and moment is necessary to be able to bring it to life when in character. This article by Simi Horwitz offers some vital points from Jacquelyn Landgraf who works at the Atlantic Acting School, Peter Arcese of the HB Studio, and Ellen Gerstein who is a private teacher out of Los Angeles.
This next article, Acting Is About Making Great Choices, by Kimberly Jentzen, is a great example of how actors must execute the choices they're making in order to carry a scene forward. From an actor's perspective, this is one of the top priorities to make any scene work well.
The Educational Theatre Association published an article by Bruce Miller, a director/actor/author/teacher, discussing what he teaches his college theatre students. There are so many examples of how to create moments with not only what you say, but how you say it, and your body language. Miller offers a perfect view of the actor's perspective, as well as many great tips to improve your choices as an actor.
The reason this next scene is so funny is because of how relatable it is. The movie This is 40 is made up of situations that could happen to any family or any couple suffering through a midlife crisis. The ability for the audience to connect with the characters is what makes these scenes so hilarious.
Another innocently humorous comedies is the movie Happy Gilmore. This goofy golfer who has absolutely no idea what he is doing ends up being abnormally amazing at driving the ball down the fairway. The ignorance of Adam Sandler's character is what makes this kind of comedy work so well in these scenes.
One of the best comedies I've ever seen is The Hangover. Not only is the comedy extremely well-written, but the plot line is so twisted into this absolutely crazy scenario that it makes it even funnier at how ridiculous the situation and the characters involved are. These few scenes from this movie show how the writer who created the script and the scenes, the actors and the way they developed their characters, and the way the director and cinematographer chose to film the movie worked together to create what the perfect example of good comedy should be like.
A classic comedic scene that never fails to make me laugh are those from the movie Elf. It is a goofy comedy where you really feel like Buddy (Will Ferrel) truly believes he is an elf. When obviously that isn't the case.
Going off of the interview with Khouri, the writer of Nashville, and how she keeps moments from turning superficial, I picked a recent scene from the season finale of Nashville. This scene is a great example of how the writers and actors worked together to make this scene feel so real. I really can feel that these two characters have a life long history of many ups and downs together.