Becoming a Triple Threat with Performer Matthew Morrison
1. Listening Like a Scene Partner, Not a Star
True acting begins with listening — not just hearing lines, but absorbing energy, intention, and subtext. It’s not your turn to talk; it’s your turn to react truthfully. Whether it’s a duet, a scene, or silence, your job is to stay in it — listening with your eyes, body, breath. The more deeply you listen, the more alive you’ll be on stage.
2. The Mirror Is Not the Audience
Rehearse in front of a mirror? Sure. But perform for a human. This tool reminds you to stop “watching” yourself perform and instead connect with those watching you. Your job is not to impress — it’s to affect. The mirror builds technique; the audience deserves vulnerability.
3. Own the Space — Don’t Apologize for Being There
This tool helps performers claim their space, their story, their voice. Walk in like you belong, because you do. That doesn’t mean arrogance; it means presence. Posture, eye contact, stillness — these small shifts transform energy from tentative to commanding.
4. Breathe Before You Begin
A simple breath — real, human, present — can shift your entire energy. This tool anchors your body and mind before any entrance, line, or song. Breath is your access point to honesty. If you’re not breathing, you’re not fully there.
5. Integration Over Perfection
The triple threat doesn’t mean being flawless at acting, singing, and dancing. It means being able to integrate all three in service of the story. This tool encourages performers to embrace imperfection and focus on cohesion. When everything works together, you become a full-body storyteller.
6. The “What Do I Want?” Drill
Every character is trying to get something — love, power, forgiveness, attention. Knowing what your character wants in every moment grounds your performance in truth. This tool forces clarity. When you know what you’re fighting for, every gesture, note, and glance becomes charged with purpose.
7. The “Why You?” Question
Why are you the only person who can tell this story? This tool challenges performers to bring their identity, quirks, and truth into the work. You’re not cast to be a copy — you’re cast to bring your version. This question is the gateway to originality, charisma, and staying power.
8. The Emotional Bookmark
This is a technique where you associate specific lines or lyrics with personal memories or experiences. It’s how you keep performances fresh night after night. This tool helps performers revisit emotion rather than manufacture it, ensuring authenticity every time.
9. Vocal Storytelling Over Vocal Acrobatics
Don’t sing to be impressive. Sing to be understood. This tool teaches performers to prioritize emotional clarity over riffs or volume. Audiences don’t remember the highest note — they remember the moment their heart broke because you meant what you sang.
10. The Stillness Test
If your performance works when you stand completely still, it works. This tool is about stripping away the filler and testing if your choices hold emotional weight without movement. Once you have that, then you layer in staging, choreography, or gestures with precision.