's performance in
A Streetcar Named Desire, directed by former
Group Theatre member
Elia Kazan, exemplified the power of
method acting, the American development of Stanislavski's system, in the
cinema of the 1950s. Many of Stanislavski's former students taught acting in the
United States, including
Richard Boleslavsky,
Maria Ouspenskaya,
Michael Chekhov, Andrius Jilinsky, Leo Bulgakov, Varvara Bulgakov, Vera Solovyova, and
Tamara Daykarhanova. Others—including
Stella Adler and
Joshua Logan—"grounded careers in brief periods of study" with him. Boleslavsky's manual
Acting: The First Six Lessons (1933) played a significant role in the transmission of Stanislavski's ideas and practices to the West. In the
Soviet Union, meanwhile, another of Stanislavski's students,
Maria Knebel, sustained and developed his rehearsal process of "active analysis", despite its formal prohibition by the state. In the United States, one of Boleslavsky's students,
Lee Strasberg, went on to co-found the
Group Theatre (1931—1940) in
New York with
Harold Clurman and
Cheryl Crawford. Together with Stella Adler and
Sanford Meisner, Strasberg developed the earliest of Stanislavski's techniques into what came to be known as "
Method acting" (or, with Strasberg, more usually simply "the Method"), which he taught at the
Actors Studio. Boleslavsky thought that Strasberg over-emphasised the role of Stanislavski's technique of "emotion memory" at the expense of dramatic action. Every afternoon for five weeks during the summer of 1934 in
Paris, Stanislavski worked with Adler, who had sought his assistance with the blocks she had confronted in her performances. Given the emphasis that emotion memory had received in New York, Adler was surprised to find that Stanislavski rejected the technique except as a last resort. Stanislavski confirmed this emphasis in his discussions with
Harold Clurman in late 1935. The news that this was Stanislavski's approach would have significant repercussions in the US; Strasberg angrily rejected it and refused to modify his approach. Among the actors trained in the Meisner technique are
Robert Duvall,
Tom Cruise,
Diane Keaton and
Sydney Pollack. Though many others have contributed to the development of method acting, Strasberg, Adler, and Meisner are associated with "having set the standard of its success", though each emphasised different aspects: Strasberg developed the psychological aspects, Adler, the sociological, and Meisner, the behavioral. While each strand of the American tradition vigorously sought to distinguish itself from the others, they all share a basic set of assumptions that allows them to be grouped together. The relations between these strands and their acolytes, Carnicke argues, have been characterised by a "seemingly endless hostility among warring camps, each proclaiming themselves his only true disciples, like religious fanatics, turning dynamic ideas into rigid dogma." Stanislavski's Method of Physical Action formed the central part of Sonia Moore's attempts to revise the general impression of Stanislavski's system arising from the American Laboratory Theatre and its teachers. Carnicke analyses at length the splintering of the system into its psychological and physical components, both in the US and the USSR. She argues instead for its
psychophysical integration. She suggests that Moore's approach, for example, accepts uncritically the
teleological accounts of Stanislavski's work (according to which early experiments in emotion memory were 'abandoned' and the approach 'reversed' with a discovery of the scientific approach of
behaviourism). These accounts, which emphasised the physical aspects at the expense of the psychological, revised the system in order to render it more palatable to the
dialectical materialism of the Soviet state. In a similar way, other American accounts re-interpreted Stanislavski's work in terms of the prevailing popular interest in
Freudian psychoanalysis. Strasberg, for example, dismissed the "Method of Physical Action" as a step backwards. Just as an emphasis on action had characterised Stanislavski's First Studio training, so emotion memory continued to be an element of his system at the end of his life, when he recommended to his directing students: One must give actors various paths. One of these is the path of action. There is also another path: you can move from feeling to action, arousing feeling first. "Action, 'if', and 'given circumstances'", "emotion memory", "imagination", and "communication" all appear as chapters in Stanislavski's manual ''An Actor's Work'' (1938) and all were elements of the
systematic whole of his approach, which resists easy schematisation. Stanislavski's work made little impact on
British theatre before the 1960s.
Joan Littlewood and
Ewan MacColl were the first to introduce Stanislavski's techniques there. The first
drama school in the country to teach an approach to acting based on Stanislavski's system and its American derivatives was
Drama Centre London, where it is still taught today. Many other
theatre practitioners have been influenced by Stanislavski's ideas and practices.
Jerzy Grotowski regarded Stanislavski as the primary influence on his own theatre work. ==Criticism of Stanislavski's theories==