AcknowledgmentsPreamble: Saw the Air Thinking about actors and their allure; Natalie Wood in Rebel Without a Cause; viewers love of acting; momentary performance; acting, action, and activity; acting, evidence, and biography; Linda Darnell; casting and gatekeeping.1 Fantastic PerformanceThinking about acting style and culture; innocent and scientific watching, and falling in; The Edge of Tomorrow; The Last Laugh; With Blood on My Hands: Pusher II; predictive performance and John Wayne; transcendent performance and Katharine Hepburn; Bringing Up Baby; Now, Voyager; El Dorado.2 Beaux Gestes Thinking about language and gesture; The Disorderly Orderly; Anthony Perkins in Psycho; Jeff Goldblum in Le Weekend; Touch of Evil; the flower of the gest; Ralph Richardson and Christophe Lambert in Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes; effects gesture; Life of Pi and keyframing; animated performance and puppetry; Blithe Spirit; Robert Walker in My Son John; The Stepford Wives; The Musee Grevin; Jacques de Vaucansons duck; The Thief of Bagdad; Charlton Heston and Gary Cooper in The Wreck of the Mary Deare; cinematic gesture and The King of Comedy; The Thin Man; Cool Hand Luke; The Red Shoes; hands and handfulness; actors under direction; John Frankenheimer, Burt Lancaster, and The Train; Antony and Cleopatra; Hitchcock, gesture, and cattle; Kim Novak, Vertigo, and vertiginous gesture.3 Curtains Thinking about the actors multiple selves; Vivian Sobchack and the actors four bodies; performance amplification; Alec Guinness and preparation; rehearsal and downkeying; curtain calls; Whose Life Is It Anyway?; Murder on the Orient Express; Citizen Kane; The Magnificent Ambersons; The Bad Seed; behind-the-scenes musicals; theatrical exhibition spaces; credit-roll goofing; Peter OToole and Winona Ryder offscreen; Birdman; fans and fan logic; actor-in-the-street stories; acting audiences; the Academy Awards.4 Its Not a Man, Its a Place! Thinking about setting and the actors labor; workplaces under capitalism and factory design; the sound stage environment; Rope; acting and make-up; Technicolor; My Dinner with Andre; Ian Carmichael; Ingrid Bergman and Under Capricorn; The Wizard of Oz; Grey Gardens; Simon Callow and A Room with a View; Charles Laughton in The Hunchback of Notre Dame; Boris Karloff; 2001: A Space Odyssey; Haruo Nakajima, Godzilla, and body division; Billion Dollar Brain; The French Lieutenants Woman; Chinatown; Fred Astaire dancing with Ginger Rogers; the sound boom; the caffeination schedule; acting, editing, and lighting; predetermined focus; Suddenly, Last Summer; The Hands of Orlac; The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance; Instructions for John Howell; panoptical setting; Laurence Olivier in Sleuth; setting and characters; Bette Davis in The Letter; the character at home in Marnie; hypothetical performance, Sandra Bullock, and Gravity; Andy Serkis; the actors mirror; animation vocalizing; The Member of the Wedding.5 Acting Intimate Thinking about actors trade secrecy; Philip Seymour Hoffman in Boogie Nights; Anthony Hopkins and Hannibal Lecter; Colin Farrell and truth-telling; Joaquin Phoenix in The Master; zombie performance; George Herbert Mead; Hud; Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice; onscreen urination and bleeding; Leonardo DiCaprio in Django Unchained; the actors voice; acting and musculature; the actors touch; interpersonal contact and audience exclusion; The Bourne Identity; anxious interiors; Peter Lorre in Casablanca, The Maltese Falcon, and Hotel Berlin; Richard Burton in The Spy Who Came In from the Cold; the Doctrine of Natural Expression; anti-intellectualism, the portrayal of genius, and Jesse Eisenberg; acting the amnesiac; forgotten moralities and cathartic awakening.NotesWorks Cited and ConsultedIndex