1 00:00:16,876 --> 00:00:22,381 What would you do if you had only till 6 o'clock tomorrow morning to live? 2 00:00:24,042 --> 00:00:28,501 This is the kind of question I would ask my young Japanese actors 3 00:00:28,542 --> 00:00:31,384 who are going to play Kamikaze pilots 4 00:00:31,792 --> 00:00:35,035 in a play I directed called "The Winds of God". 5 00:00:36,083 --> 00:00:41,807 They would look inside, and think about what is dear to them, 6 00:00:42,626 --> 00:00:45,730 and they would have to make some choices and act on it. 7 00:00:45,731 --> 00:00:49,751 This is the kind of work that I would be asking actors to do. 8 00:00:50,876 --> 00:00:53,308 Sometimes, actors have to go 9 00:00:53,315 --> 00:00:56,543 to places that are a little dark, or that could hurt, 10 00:00:57,250 --> 00:01:02,942 but in a way, the regular people, we, cannot sometimes go there, 11 00:01:03,752 --> 00:01:08,940 so we ask the actor to go there for us and express things that we can't express, 12 00:01:09,250 --> 00:01:11,709 express things we want to, but we can't. 13 00:01:12,209 --> 00:01:15,751 And that's probably why actors can get a lot of money. 14 00:01:16,918 --> 00:01:20,917 But this is the kind of work that I've been involved with. 15 00:01:20,918 --> 00:01:24,483 With "The Winds of God" I traveled with them, 16 00:01:25,709 --> 00:01:29,543 - Australia, New Zealand - we toured a lot, we went to London, 17 00:01:30,626 --> 00:01:34,626 Actors Studio, and we were also invited to the United Nations. 18 00:01:35,959 --> 00:01:41,001 There, there was one lady who I met after the show, 19 00:01:41,394 --> 00:01:45,705 and she said, "My father taught me to hate the Japanese, 20 00:01:46,250 --> 00:01:51,034 but when I saw this play I thought they were like my own sons." 21 00:01:51,918 --> 00:01:54,333 It was a beautiful comment, 22 00:01:54,334 --> 00:01:59,041 and it made it all the more meaningful that I could work the way I do. 23 00:01:59,042 --> 00:02:01,160 And so, today, I want to share 24 00:02:01,184 --> 00:02:04,530 the love for drama, and this amazing work 25 00:02:05,459 --> 00:02:11,402 on how we try with artists to create maybe just one moment 26 00:02:12,209 --> 00:02:15,648 where we can move people and inspire people. 27 00:02:20,501 --> 00:02:23,751 I also want to talk to you about my international work 28 00:02:23,752 --> 00:02:25,751 which has led me to casting. 29 00:02:25,751 --> 00:02:30,543 And again, that's an amazing, wonderful thing I want to share with you, 30 00:02:30,544 --> 00:02:32,751 because when you think about casting, 31 00:02:32,752 --> 00:02:37,202 you have a script, you have words in the script, 32 00:02:37,337 --> 00:02:38,940 and that's all you really have. 33 00:02:38,940 --> 00:02:41,811 You have the director's vision, you have your idea as well, 34 00:02:41,811 --> 00:02:43,752 but you have this, 35 00:02:44,375 --> 00:02:50,000 and then you have to find actual actors who can fit this role. 36 00:02:52,000 --> 00:02:54,501 But you have to use your imagination 37 00:02:54,501 --> 00:02:57,610 and to get insight on what they can do. 38 00:02:59,209 --> 00:03:00,710 And then you put them together, 39 00:03:00,751 --> 00:03:04,291 and sometimes an amazing thing happens, 40 00:03:04,292 --> 00:03:05,793 because it's like magic: 41 00:03:05,794 --> 00:03:09,373 the role becomes more charismatic, 42 00:03:09,751 --> 00:03:12,543 the actor becomes even more charismatic. 43 00:03:14,250 --> 00:03:18,715 Here are some of the films I was involved with. 44 00:03:21,751 --> 00:03:24,793 I did want to show you the Kamikaze pilots, 45 00:03:25,669 --> 00:03:27,525 that's the one that I worked on. 46 00:03:29,209 --> 00:03:33,213 And I worked on "The Last Samurai" fully for two years. 47 00:03:33,755 --> 00:03:35,752 It was really amazing. 48 00:03:38,250 --> 00:03:41,542 Ken Watanabe was the actor that auditioned, 49 00:03:41,542 --> 00:03:46,820 there were, you know, many more, almost 400 Japanese actors. 50 00:03:48,709 --> 00:03:50,541 "Memoirs of a Geisha". 51 00:03:50,542 --> 00:03:55,750 The little girl who played Sayuri, I looked at her picture, 52 00:03:55,751 --> 00:03:58,043 and I thought, "Ah, this is the young one." 53 00:03:58,044 --> 00:04:00,960 And I kind of chose her through a picture. 54 00:04:02,751 --> 00:04:09,190 And Rinko Kikuchi in "Babel", she [was] among other Japanese actors, 55 00:04:09,501 --> 00:04:13,351 but she stood out because of her amazing intensity. 56 00:04:16,250 --> 00:04:19,416 And there are several others I'm doing 57 00:04:19,875 --> 00:04:24,208 including "Unbroken" which has not been released yet in Japan. 58 00:04:24,209 --> 00:04:27,501 There was an amazing performer, Miyavi, who was in there. 59 00:04:27,501 --> 00:04:30,374 And this one, "The Emperor", 60 00:04:30,375 --> 00:04:35,927 is a film that I produced along with Gary, and Eugene, my son. 61 00:04:38,501 --> 00:04:42,835 I just really believe that there was meaning in to produce this 62 00:04:42,836 --> 00:04:45,335 and show it to as many people as possible. 63 00:04:47,501 --> 00:04:50,252 So apart from casting, 64 00:04:50,959 --> 00:04:56,734 just my work [is] in teaching, directing, coaching and casting, 65 00:04:58,751 --> 00:05:02,333 I've kind of brought down the elements of drama 66 00:05:02,334 --> 00:05:05,791 into three things, three pillars, possibly. 67 00:05:05,792 --> 00:05:08,001 But these are the things I look for in actors, 68 00:05:08,002 --> 00:05:13,527 these are the things I work with in trying to get better acting. 69 00:05:17,819 --> 00:05:20,835 The first pillar is the truth of oneself. 70 00:05:22,501 --> 00:05:24,249 It's not so easy really, 71 00:05:24,250 --> 00:05:27,999 because we all think that we want to look good, 72 00:05:28,000 --> 00:05:31,616 we don't want to show our bad [sides], 73 00:05:33,501 --> 00:05:36,252 but the actor has to really use all of himself 74 00:05:36,253 --> 00:05:39,466 because the power will not be there to present. 75 00:05:40,459 --> 00:05:44,458 So he has to be able to accept all the parts of himself 76 00:05:44,459 --> 00:05:49,284 that might not be so good, that he wants to hide, maybe. 77 00:05:49,542 --> 00:05:52,892 It's like a pie, like an apple pie, 78 00:05:53,209 --> 00:05:56,292 and you can't try to get rid of a part of the pie 79 00:05:56,293 --> 00:05:58,043 because it is a part of you. 80 00:05:58,044 --> 00:06:02,215 And so you try to accept all the parts of yourself, 81 00:06:02,417 --> 00:06:04,959 and once you do, it becomes a little bit easier, 82 00:06:04,960 --> 00:06:09,504 because you're truthful, you're working on truth. 83 00:06:10,250 --> 00:06:14,213 This is what I believe is so important, 84 00:06:14,792 --> 00:06:17,917 especially in Japan right now with young people. 85 00:06:17,959 --> 00:06:21,249 I tell them, "There is only one DNA, 86 00:06:21,250 --> 00:06:24,168 there is only one fingerprint, there is only one you. 87 00:06:26,042 --> 00:06:28,084 So, in a way, you are perfect." 88 00:06:28,542 --> 00:06:30,376 And so, for the actor, 89 00:06:31,000 --> 00:06:33,459 instead of comparing oneself to somebody else, 90 00:06:33,459 --> 00:06:36,181 "That person is a better actor than I... " or whatever, 91 00:06:36,181 --> 00:06:40,250 they can use whatever they have to try to fulfill their role. 92 00:06:41,751 --> 00:06:45,106 I have a quote from Elia Kazan, 93 00:06:45,375 --> 00:06:49,458 who's a legendary film director who worked with James Dean, 94 00:06:49,459 --> 00:06:52,839 and he wrote an actor's creed, a code: 95 00:06:54,501 --> 00:06:58,291 "I will have my heart open, I will be vulnerable... 96 00:06:58,292 --> 00:07:01,681 The one thing I want most is to be myself." 97 00:07:02,918 --> 00:07:04,544 So that's really important. 98 00:07:04,545 --> 00:07:07,449 The second pillar 99 00:07:10,280 --> 00:07:12,833 is what I would call purposeful action. 100 00:07:12,834 --> 00:07:14,626 For example, when we see drama, 101 00:07:14,627 --> 00:07:19,460 we root for the person that really fights all these obstacles 102 00:07:19,472 --> 00:07:21,421 to try and get what they want. 103 00:07:21,422 --> 00:07:23,500 This is what drama is all about: 104 00:07:23,501 --> 00:07:28,541 that there is one amazing purpose, the heart, yearning, wanting something, 105 00:07:28,542 --> 00:07:34,188 and the actor goes through all these difficulties to try to get there. 106 00:07:36,751 --> 00:07:39,460 And that's what the actor also has to find in himself, 107 00:07:39,461 --> 00:07:41,500 his need, his purpose. 108 00:07:41,501 --> 00:07:44,249 And he has to really - 109 00:07:44,250 --> 00:07:47,917 Because he's going to fail several times, but it's OK, 110 00:07:47,918 --> 00:07:51,085 because he has that passion and that purpose to get there. 111 00:07:53,250 --> 00:07:59,775 For example, in my case, I wanted to get a song from Stevie Wonder. 112 00:08:00,501 --> 00:08:03,521 I write lyrics, and I kind of thought, 113 00:08:03,834 --> 00:08:07,876 for this musical I've been writing, I want to have his music. 114 00:08:07,876 --> 00:08:10,710 And, of course, it is difficult, it took me 5 years, 115 00:08:10,711 --> 00:08:15,612 and this con artist, really, you know, lots of problems. 116 00:08:16,250 --> 00:08:20,895 But I met Yoko Ono on the way, so it was kind of nice. 117 00:08:21,173 --> 00:08:23,249 But after 5 years, 118 00:08:23,250 --> 00:08:25,709 Stevie Wonder came out of his hotel room 119 00:08:25,709 --> 00:08:29,999 with his brother, who led him to the piano, and set beside me, 120 00:08:30,000 --> 00:08:35,491 and he started to play the song, and I was so moved, 121 00:08:38,458 --> 00:08:42,210 and I got tears in my eyes, but obviously they were silent tears. 122 00:08:42,211 --> 00:08:44,785 Yet, he heard them, 123 00:08:45,007 --> 00:08:47,291 because he stopped part-way 124 00:08:47,292 --> 00:08:52,402 to wipe my tears with those big hands he has. 125 00:08:53,959 --> 00:08:59,784 So, if you believe in it, and you really want it, you can get it. 126 00:09:00,751 --> 00:09:04,023 And that's what I want to qualify, the purpose: 127 00:09:04,292 --> 00:09:06,542 first, it has to be very positive. 128 00:09:07,209 --> 00:09:09,501 You can't act on something that is negative, 129 00:09:09,542 --> 00:09:11,632 you can't say, "I want to get out of here." 130 00:09:11,632 --> 00:09:13,026 It's a little difficult. 131 00:09:13,026 --> 00:09:14,964 But you can say, "I want to go there," 132 00:09:14,964 --> 00:09:16,710 and that's where the action comes. 133 00:09:16,711 --> 00:09:19,501 So, it's got to be positive, and at the same time, 134 00:09:19,502 --> 00:09:23,663 the biggest thing is to have belief in what you want to do, 135 00:09:24,792 --> 00:09:28,209 as I'd believed in wanting to get that song from Stevie, 136 00:09:28,250 --> 00:09:30,333 or in wanting to make a movie, or whatever. 137 00:09:34,501 --> 00:09:39,046 There is a Tony award-winning dramatist, 138 00:09:41,959 --> 00:09:47,270 Simon Stephens, who said something that I thought was really wonderful. 139 00:09:48,250 --> 00:09:50,249 "It is the job of the dramatist 140 00:09:50,250 --> 00:09:54,848 to release universes of thought and feeling through action." 141 00:09:55,667 --> 00:09:58,084 For example, he mentioned this one word, OK, 142 00:09:58,085 --> 00:10:01,501 and that was the funniest word in the whole play. 143 00:10:01,542 --> 00:10:04,043 It means that it's not just the word alone, 144 00:10:04,044 --> 00:10:06,376 but it's the behavior and the action. 145 00:10:10,250 --> 00:10:12,250 Now I want to come to the third pillar 146 00:10:12,251 --> 00:10:16,723 which is so easy to say, and yet so difficult to achieve. 147 00:10:17,209 --> 00:10:22,271 It is to talk, really to talk, and really to listen. 148 00:10:22,876 --> 00:10:27,322 I think that it is an art to be able to really listen. 149 00:10:27,626 --> 00:10:32,291 We so often talk and think that we are transmitting something, 150 00:10:32,292 --> 00:10:34,417 but we have something else on our mind, 151 00:10:34,459 --> 00:10:36,960 the other person has something else on his mind. 152 00:10:36,961 --> 00:10:39,333 It's not a real moment 153 00:10:39,334 --> 00:10:44,379 where it is really true, and full, and alive, and real. 154 00:10:44,792 --> 00:10:49,612 This is the kind of a moment I've been privileged to see many times, 155 00:10:49,959 --> 00:10:53,959 and that I strive for in the work I want to do. 156 00:10:55,250 --> 00:10:59,215 Here are some moments with my students, 157 00:11:01,584 --> 00:11:05,806 and I believe that little moments like that 158 00:11:06,125 --> 00:11:08,709 of a real talk and listening - 159 00:11:09,417 --> 00:11:11,626 Very quickly. Patric? Are you here? 160 00:11:11,626 --> 00:11:14,377 Can I have your help for one second? Oops! 161 00:11:14,378 --> 00:11:16,041 (Man voice) 162 00:11:16,042 --> 00:11:18,793 Oh, really? What? OK. 163 00:11:19,579 --> 00:11:21,323 Patrick: Sure. 164 00:11:21,324 --> 00:11:23,242 Yoko Narahashi: Is that too late? 165 00:11:23,242 --> 00:11:25,819 Patrick: No, that's all right. YN: It's all right? OK. 166 00:11:25,819 --> 00:11:28,246 I'm just going to ask him to - 167 00:11:28,247 --> 00:11:30,506 Patrick: What role am I casting for here? 168 00:11:31,250 --> 00:11:34,625 YN: The next movie. The big one. Patrick: OK, the big one. 169 00:11:34,626 --> 00:11:36,374 Let's go! I'm ready. 170 00:11:36,375 --> 00:11:40,001 YN: Say whatever word you'd like to say. Whatever word. 171 00:11:41,083 --> 00:11:43,792 Patrick: Flow. YN: Flow. OK, just say it to me. 172 00:11:44,473 --> 00:11:45,727 Patrick: Flow. 173 00:11:46,250 --> 00:11:48,584 YN: OK, there was something there, right? 174 00:11:48,584 --> 00:11:51,436 OK, here we're just passing the word. 175 00:11:51,437 --> 00:11:54,537 OK, this time, can you look at me, 176 00:11:54,542 --> 00:11:57,667 and you can see what kind of a situation I am in, right, 177 00:11:57,668 --> 00:11:59,750 feel where I am, 178 00:11:59,751 --> 00:12:03,126 and then can you say it to me with, you know, 179 00:12:03,150 --> 00:12:06,505 try to say something with that word to me. 180 00:12:06,506 --> 00:12:09,436 Is there something you want to relate to me through that word? 181 00:12:10,873 --> 00:12:12,108 Patrick: Flow. 182 00:12:12,125 --> 00:12:17,458 YN: Oh, (Laughter) flow. That's nice. Thank you. (Applause) 183 00:12:17,459 --> 00:12:19,918 That was beautiful, thank you. 184 00:12:19,918 --> 00:12:22,917 Patrick: And the word was "love". YN: Oh, my goodness! 185 00:12:22,918 --> 00:12:25,293 What he was trying to say underneath was love. 186 00:12:25,334 --> 00:12:27,709 I really felt that. Thank you very much. 187 00:12:27,710 --> 00:12:29,795 But that's what it's all about. 188 00:12:31,250 --> 00:12:32,542 So, I would like to - 189 00:12:32,542 --> 00:12:37,043 Oh! Here is just one more, another one of those moments. 190 00:12:37,722 --> 00:12:39,757 A giraffe and an ostrich. 191 00:12:41,167 --> 00:12:44,833 I would like to end with another final quote, 192 00:12:44,991 --> 00:12:48,293 because I can't say it any better than this amazing person, 193 00:12:48,294 --> 00:12:52,303 a Spanish cheloist who was always for peace. 194 00:12:52,792 --> 00:12:55,625 And whatever work I'm doing with drama, 195 00:12:55,626 --> 00:12:58,293 I think this is closest to my heart, so, 196 00:12:59,542 --> 00:13:02,293 "Yes, you're a marvel. 197 00:13:02,334 --> 00:13:06,132 And when you grow, can you then harm another 198 00:13:06,133 --> 00:13:08,752 who is, like you, a marvel? 199 00:13:09,751 --> 00:13:12,750 You must work, we must all work, 200 00:13:12,751 --> 00:13:16,286 to make the world worthy of its children." 201 00:13:16,752 --> 00:13:18,221 By Pablo Casals. 202 00:13:18,222 --> 00:13:19,506 Thank you very much. 203 00:13:19,507 --> 00:13:21,018 (Applause)