What does the author suggest is the origin of the 'awkwardness' of youth?

Correct answer: Insecurities about social expectations and attempts to imitate adult behavior.

Explanation

The author posits that the physical awkwardness often associated with youth is not merely a biological phase but is rooted in the psychological stress of navigating social norms and trying to conform to an unfamiliar adult world.

Other questions

Question 1

After you have studied a play and determined your character's relationship to its theme, what is the subsequent step you must take regarding the other characters?

Question 2

What must an actor do to achieve genuine, electrified action rather than dry, mechanical actions in their interactions?

Question 3

When playing an antagonist, what is the primary mistake an actor often makes?

Question 4

In the example of playing the mother in 'Look Homeward, Angel', what must the actress do to justify her actions of tying her son to the boardinghouse?

Question 5

According to the text, how is a new relationship in a play typically created by an actor?

Question 6

When an actor constructs relationships and finds substitutions, what is the crucial final step to make this work effective on stage?

Question 7

What is the author's critique of how young actors often portray teenagers?

Question 8

What advice did the author give to the twenty-eight-year-old actress who felt too young to play a forty-year-old character?

Question 9

What is a suggested 'general guidepost' for an actor playing someone who is very old?

Question 10

According to the author, what is primarily at stake when establishing the age of your character?

Question 11

In the author's class demonstration, what causes her to feel 'eighteen, inside and out'?

Question 12

What does Dame Sybil Thorndike's comment, 'You can only be too young for Joan!', suggest about playing certain roles?

Question 14

What is the consequence for an actor who fails to include a character's love for their mother when portraying the relationship as primarily an intruding one?

Question 15

In the author's imaginary scenario about meeting the agent Ada Bloom, what causes the initial plan of action to change?

Question 16

What is the fundamental building block of a character's relationship with others, according to the text?

Question 17

When beginning the detailed work of examining intimate likes and dislikes, what example of a question does the author provide regarding a husband's warring aspects?

Question 18

What does the text identify as the two traps an actor can fall into when playing an antagonist without proper justification?

Question 19

To create the love-hate relationship for Martha in 'Who's Afraid...', what did the author have to do?

Question 20

What does the author state is the main reason an actor must define relationships in specific areas like 'In love? At work? At home? In public?'?

Question 21

What specific physical characteristic of a lover does the author use as an example of an intimate detail an actor should examine?

Question 22

What does the text suggest is a common reaction when someone you love shows off in public?

Question 23

According to the chapter, our psychological relationship to others often makes us feel what?

Question 24

In the example from 'Butterflies Are Free', why must the actress playing the mother evaluate her son's problems through 'her' eyes, not his?

Question 25

What is the author's primary warning about using a single person from one's life as a substitution for a character relationship?

Question 26

Which character's relationship required the author to use substitutions of her father, her child, several crushes, and many past loves?

Question 27

What is the author's opinion on the cliché of the 'hunched posture, the wobbly head, the cracked voice' for portraying old age?

Question 28

In the author's friendship with a man in his late seventies, how did she perceive him?

Question 29

What physical manifestation occurred when the author shook hands with the student she imagined to be Alfred Lunt?

Question 30

What is the final point made about the 'magic of Duse or Ruth Draper' transforming themselves into a young enchantress?

Question 31

When building relationships, what kind of interaction must an actor's aim be to bring about between themselves and others on stage?

Question 32

What is described as the 'immensity of the task' for an actor regarding other characters on stage?

Question 33

In exploring power dynamics, which of these is NOT listed as a specific area to ask oneself about leading or following?

Question 34

How does the text describe a relationship of pretended closeness with secret distrust?

Question 35

The chapter on Relationship is reserved for the topic of a character's age because establishing it with faith is closely linked to what?

Question 36

When the author advises to 'pit yourself against the other characters, and go!', what does this call for the actor to do?

Question 36

What does the author believe about her nerves as she has aged?

Question 37

What must an actor do to prevent falling into the trap of playing the 'hero' when portraying a protagonist?

Question 38

What does the author suggest can happen to a relationship even before we meet a stranger?

Question 39

According to the author, when a twenty-year-old actor portrays a teenager, what is the underlying technical error?

Question 40

What is the key to finding a belief in a required age, as demonstrated by the 'Epitaph for George Dillon' example?

Question 41

The author's friend in her early forties seemed like a grandmother because she continuously did what?

Question 42

What is the powerful influence on how you deal with other characters that becomes obvious from the author's handshake demonstration?

Question 43

Besides your feeling of being older or younger, what else must your adjustments relating to your character's age be aligned with?

Question 44

When defining relationships in broad terms, which of the following is NOT given as an example?

Question 45

What does the author state is at the foundation of human needs and the circumstances that shape relationships?

Question 46

If a first meeting in a play makes sparks fly between two characters, what does the text compare this to?

Question 47

What is the author's stated aim in having the actor endow relationships with specific elements and make themselves vulnerable?

Question 48

When you have only 'assumed' your relationship to other characters, what is the resulting action described as?

Question 49

In the author's imagined meeting with the literary agent Ada Bloom, what is her final action after her attack turns to pussy-footing?

Question 50

In the author's view, what is the consequence of an actor judging the antagonist character they are playing?