In rehearsal, time stretches as the actor builds, explores, and experiments. Onstage, time accelerates—moments compress and expand unpredictably. On film sets, time becomes technical and fragmented. In memory, time becomes the invisible archive that feeds future roles. He suggests that every performance is a negotiation with time, and that learning to control one’s internal tempo is a hallmark of masterful acting.
Actors who embrace vulnerability can create performances that resonate beyond the moment, becoming timeless expressions of human truth. He argues that audiences do not merely watch—they complete the performance. Every breath, reaction, and moment of silence becomes part of the artistic fabric. Master actors understand this and adjust intuitively, shaping their performance to the energy in the room or the intimacy of the camera.

