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Rosalind
Stockwell
Ros
trained as a teacher at Central School and subsequently taught
drama in the community.
Experience
as a performer began with TIE, puppet and mask work, performance
art, and work on the London Fringe.
Commercial tours followed, including
trips to India and South East Asia, then lead parts in rep, and
Naomi in Simon Gray’s Hidden Laughter in the West End.
Film
includes The French Lieutenant’s Woman and
recently student and low budget films.
Ros
has worked in voice overs for fifteen years. Work has covered dubbing
for international film distribution, documentaries and
adverts for television, and numerous adverts for radio.
Since
studying for an MA in Text & Performance at King’s
College London and RADA, Ros has been Head of Theatre Studies
at Collingham, an independent sixth form college.
Her
area of interest is Stanislavski, whose theories are the starting
point for methods taught at The Studio in New
York,
where Brando
and Monroe trained. Stanislavski’s quest for realism in acting
is essential study for any student of film.
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