Farlsborough wrote:If you separate yourself, thinking "I'm the magician, I must get out my script flawlessly..." you'll be very nervous and won't feel part of the situation necessarily.
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Farlsborough wrote:Some people would say scrap the script - I would say stick with it, but as you become more confident, thin it down to the bare bones. It's good to have permanent lines, like bullet points, that help to structure the effect, but allow for chat and reactions too.
I agree completely with this, but I'd like to add something else to it as well...
A very small part of my day job is to make presentations, which are sometimes recorded on video. Sometimes the people doing the recording are the BBC, PA or other broadcasters. Knowing that you are going to be on national TV can make one rather nervous and the only way I can come across as being natural is to have a rough idea of what I'm going to be talking about (the facts and the order in which they should come), rather than sticking *tightly* to a script. If you try to follow a script word-for-word and you are not very experienced then you'll come unstuck.
Even if you remember the words perfectly, you risk appearing quite wooden because you're running an internal autocue rather than connecting with the audience (visible or otherwise). And that brings me on to my second point. When you perform, you actually need to turn 'up' your volume. Watch TV presenters and listen to radio presenters. If someone talked and acted like they do on-screen in real life you'd think there was something wrong with them. That is because we are trained to over-act slightly - which looks natural on screen and on stage.
If you act completely naturally you'll come across as quite boring. Most people's normal voices are quite monotonous. Listen to DJs - their voices are going up and down all over the place - even quite conservative ones. Then watch the hand and face movements of TV presenters (including magicians etc) - those hands and eyebrows will most likely be flying around. In real life you'd think, "what a nutter" but if you don't do it in a performance you'll look scared, bored or generally not interested/interesting.
Incidentally, this is quite different to acting on TV, where movements are usually cut right down. Watch Holby City and other TV dramas to see what I mean.