Sanford Meisner
- Also called:
- Sandy Meisner
- Born:
- August 31, 1905, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
- Died:
- February 2, 1997, Sherman Oaks, California (aged 91)
- Also Known As:
- Sandy Meisner
- Founder:
- Group Theatre
Sanford Meisner (born August 31, 1905, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died February 2, 1997, Sherman Oaks, California) was an actor and one of the most influential teachers of acting in the United States after World War II (1939–45). His students acted on the screen and the stage across the United States using what had become known as the “Meisner technique.”
Early life, introduction to acting, and the Group Theatre
Sanford Meisner was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Hermann and Bertha Knoepfler Meisner, both immigrants from Hungary. He was the eldest of four children. Hermann Meisner was a furrier, and the family lived in the Bronx briefly before returning to Brooklyn. When Sanford was 5 years old, his younger brother died of bovine tuberculosis, contracted from drinking unpasteurized milk during a trip a couple of years earlier to the Catskill Mountains, which the family had taken in an attempt to improve Sanford’s health. His brother’s death, and the reaction of his parents, who believed it would not have happened if they had not needed to go to the Catskills for Sanford’s health, strongly influenced Sanford’s life, as he felt tremendous guilt and became withdrawn.
Meisner wanted to be an actor from an early age, but as a child he also found comfort in playing the piano. He graduated from Erasmus Hall High School in 1923 and enrolled in the Damrosch Institute of Music (now part of the Juilliard School) to pursue additional musical studies. However, he also decided to try his hand as an actor and secured a scholarship to the Theatre Guild School of Acting. During his time there he met Lee Strasberg, Harold Clurman, and Cheryl Crawford. The four of them, along with Stella Adler, were among the original members who launched the famed Group Theatre.
The Group Theatre’s first season opened in the fall of 1931, and Meisner played a variety of roles. Its resident playwright, Clifford Odets, wrote Awake and Sing, Rocket to the Moon, and Golden Boy, among other plays in which Meisner was featured prominently. Meisner remained with the Group Theatre until it disbanded in 1941.
Teaching, the Meisner technique, and later work
In 1935 Meisner was recruited by the Neighborhood Playhouse School of Theater in Manhattan to teach, though he did not think of himself as a teacher. He built upon the method of acting popularized by Konstantin Stanislavsky, and Meisner became head of the acting department there by 1936.
Meisner encouraged his students to study their emotions, as Stanislavsky’s inward-looking method did. Meisner also insisted that actors need to react to other actors on stage in order for performances to be fresh and real. The director Elia Kazan reportedly said, “Take it from a director: if you get an actor that Sandy Meisner has trained, you’ve been blessed.”
Among Meisner’s students were Robert Duvall, David Mamet, Jon Voight, Diane Keaton, Lee Grant, Gregory Peck, Grace Kelly, and Steve McQueen. While he was teaching full-time, Meisner continued to act and direct. In 1955 he directed a revival of William Saroyan’s Time of Your Life on Broadway that was critically acclaimed.
In 1958 Meisner moved to become the director of the new talent division of Twentieth Century–Fox studio. He appeared in films, including The Story on Page One (1959) and a film adaptation (1962) of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender Is the Night. He returned to New York in 1962, where he began teaching at the American Musical Theater Academy. Also that year, he met James Carville. The two began a relationship and remained together for the rest of Meisner’s life; they also adopted a son whom they met on the island of Bequia (in the West Indies country of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines), where they had established a second home.
In 1964 Meisner returned to the Neighborhood Playhouse, where he continued to teach until the late 1980s. During this time, he was diagnosed with cancer of the larynx. After having it removed, he had to learn how to talk by manipulating bursts of air in his esophagus. In 1985 Meisner and Carville opened the Meisner/Carville School of Acting on Bequia and later established it in Los Angeles. In 1995 the pair, with Martin Barter, opened the Sanford Meisner Center for the Arts (now the Sanford Meisner Center), also in Los Angeles.
Sydney Pollack, an alumnus of the Neighborhood Playhouse, produced a 1985 film called Sanford Meisner: The Theatre’s Best-Kept Secret, later released on television in 1990 as an American Masters episode. Meisner’s approach to acting was captured in a book that he wrote with Dennis Longwell, Sanford Meisner on Acting (1985). The Sanford Meisner Approach: An Actor’s Workbook, written by former student Larry Silverberg, was published in 1994. In 1995 Meisner showed his students that he was still using the techniques he had taught as he played the role of a patient on the popular television series E.R., which wound up being his last performance. With coauthor Scott Trost, Carville published De Tree A We: The Remarkable Lives of Sanford Meisner, James Carville and Boolu, an account of his life with Meisner and their adopted son, in 2017.