'' (1908). Stanislavski's activities began to move in a very different direction: his productions became opportunities for
research, he was more interested in the process of
rehearsal than its product, and his attention shifted away from the
MAT towards its satellite projects—the theatre studios—in which he would develop his
system. On his return to Moscow, he explored his new psychological approach in his production of
Knut Hamsun's
Symbolist play
The Drama of Life.
Nemirovich was particularly hostile to his new methods, and their relationship continued to deteriorate in this period. In a statement made on , Stanislavski marked a significant shift in his
directorial method and stressed the crucial contribution he now expected from a creative actor: The committee is wrong if it thinks that the director's preparatory work in the study is necessary, as previously, when he alone decided the whole plan and all the details of the production, wrote the
mise-en-scène and answered all the actors' questions for them. The director is no longer king, as before, when the actor possessed no clear individuality. [...] It is essential to understand this—rehearsals are divided into two stages: the first stage is one of experiment when the cast helps the director, the second is creating the performance when the director helps the cast. Stanislavski's preparations for
Maeterlinck's The Blue Bird (which was to become his most famous production to-date) included
improvisations and other exercises to stimulate the actors' imaginations; Nemirovich described one in which the cast imitated various animals. In rehearsals he sought ways to encourage his actors'
will to create afresh in every performance. This use of the actor's
conscious thought and will was designed to activate other, less-controllable psychological processes—such as emotional experience and
subconscious behaviour—sympathetically and indirectly. "What fascinates me most", Stanislavski wrote in May 1908, "is the rhythm of feelings, the development of
affective memory and the
psycho-physiology of the creative process." His interest in the creative use of the actor's personal experiences was spurred by a chance conversation in Germany in July that led him to the work of French psychologist
Théodule-Armand Ribot. His "affective memory" contributed to the technique that Stanislavski would come to call "emotion memory". Together, these elements formed a new vocabulary with which he explored a "return to
realism" in a production of
Gogol's The Government Inspector as soon as
The Blue Bird had opened. At a theatre conference on , Stanislavski delivered a paper on his emerging system that stressed the role of his techniques of the "magic if" (which encourages the actor to respond to the fictional circumstances of the play "as if" they were real) and emotion memory. He developed his ideas about three trends in the history of acting, which were to appear eventually in the opening chapters of ''An Actor's Work'': "stock-in-trade" acting, the
art of representation, and the art of experiencing (his own approach). Breaking the MAT's tradition of open rehearsals, he prepared
Turgenev's play in private. They began with a discussion of what he would come to call the "through-line" for the characters (their emotional development and the way they change over the course of the play). This production is the earliest recorded instance of his practice of analysing the action of the script into discrete "bits". At this stage in the development of his approach, Stanislavski's technique was to identify the emotional state contained in the psychological experience of the character during each bit and, through the use of the actor's emotional memory, to forge a subjective connection to it. Only after two months of rehearsals were the actors permitted to physicalise the text. Stanislavski insisted that they should play the actions that their discussions around the table had identified. Having realised a particular emotional state in a physical action, he assumed at this point in his experiments, the actor's repetition of that action would evoke the desired emotion. As with his experiments in
The Drama of Life, they also explored
non-verbal communication, whereby scenes were rehearsed as "silent
études" with actors interacting "only with their eyes". The production's success when it opened in December 1909 seemed to prove the validity of his new methodology. Late in 1910,
Gorky invited Stanislavski to join him in
Capri, where they discussed actor training and Stanislavski's emerging "grammar". Inspired by a popular theatre performance in
Naples that employed the techniques of the ''
commedia dell'arte'', Gorky suggested that they form a company, modeled on the
medieval strolling players, in which a playwright and group of young actors would
devise new plays together using
improvisation. Stanislavski would develop this use of improvisation in his work with his First Studio. == Staging the classics ==