American Repertory Company
The American Repertory Company was a repertory company from the 1980s until 2004, when founder Manu Tupou died on June 5. Manu Tupou not only was the founder but remained artistic director until his death in 2004.
Director | Manu Tupou |
---|---|
Location | , |
In this photo from left right :Pablo Espinosa, Corin Nemec, Ken Lee, Lee Reyes, Manu Tupou, Ernie Reyes Jr., Santino Ramos |
History
The American Repertory Company was founded by Manu Tupou who was the artistic director.
American Repertory Company was a private company which offered classes limited to no more than 12 or 15 students at the very maximum at a time as well as private training. This allowed Tupou to give focus on his students in detail and find their working problem and remedy it. Although Tupou brought with him the teachings of his teachers, he sought to revamp these techniques while retaining their strength and intensity in order to protect the actors' sanity. The new technique was called the New Era Acting Technique (NEAT).
Technique and training
Manu Tupou formulated his discoveries into the simplistic, but revolutionary, "New Era Acting Technique" (NEAT). The hallmark of the NEAT technique is its respect for the sanctity and sanity of the individual artist.
Notable alumni
- Eric Roberts (The Dark Knight, L.A. Confidential),
- Ernie Reyes Jr. (Red Canvas, Alice in Wonderland)[1]
- Corin Nemec (Parker Lewis Can't Lose, Chicago Massacre: Richard Speck) [2]
- Calvin Levels (Hellbound, Johnny Suede)
- Jerri Manthey (The Limited) (Komodo vs Kobra)
- Ken Lee (Sudden Impact)
- Santino Ramos (Mind Polish: Master Hubbard's Special Reserve)[3]
- Selwyn Ward (One Simple Promise) (Power Rangers)
- Arash Dibazar (Ultimate Fight)[4]
References
- "Ernie Reyes Jr. - Pictures, News, Video Clips, Layouts, Wallpapers & Fan Club - Flixster". Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2009-02-09.
- "Party Favors: Corin Nemec & More ยป Quick Stop Entertainment". Archived from the original on 2009-01-26. Retrieved 2009-02-09.
- "Santino Ramos - Tri-Animus Pictures". Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2010-03-17.
- "Arash Dibazar Official Site". Archived from the original on 2009-09-12. Retrieved 2009-02-09.