A favorite quote of mine regarding technique is by the singer Lionel Richie, who said, “Let go of your training wheels and let your talent speak for itself.” This statement has two key implications: First, he didn’t say not to train. I’m a highly-trained actor myself, having studied an amalgamation of acting approaches over many years, including Meisner, Method, and personal coaching from the renowned acting teacher Harold Guskin. Most great actors have studied an acting technique, and many of the greatest actors have benefited greatly from those techniques.
The second implication is that at some point, you have to let go of the training wheels. You have to trust yourself and what you’ve absorbed and internalized. Because when you’re in a scene, you’re not thinking about technique — you’re living. And the moment you start thinking about technique, you’re no longer living. You’re managing. And managed acting is dead acting.
What I’ve found, both in my own work and in working with actors over many years, is that the most powerful moment in an actor’s development often comes not from learning something new, but from releasing something old — a belief, a habit, a safety mechanism that was once useful but has since become a cage.