You have to believe that some people are born for the stage.
Reality is the stage. Life is like a play, and a play is like life. The reality of life is an improvisational performance. It is a performance without a script and full of random variables, requiring you to adapt flexibly.
There are four stages of learning performance: the stage of liberating one's nature, the stage of self-awareness, the stage of extensive learning, the stage of repetitive training, and the stage of proficient control.
Performance should be accurate, coherent, authentic, and specific. Performance is the process of embodying and concretizing thoughts and souls. It is the process of making real actions in an imaginary environment.
Immerse yourself and let the audience immerse themselves. Have a sense of identity with yourself and let the audience have a sense of identity with you. Have a sense of empathy and let the audience have a sense of empathy. Get into the role yourself and let the audience get into the role.
Performance has general skills and specialized skills, depending on who you want to "become." Whether you want to play a wealthy businessman, a politician, or a speaker, there are certain factors that contribute to performing well. A good improvisational performance is the result of these factors.
Listen, observe, and feel genuinely. Integrate performance into your own blood and become one with yourself. Have confidence, a sense of belief, willpower, liberate your nature, relax, focus, have control, eliminate distractions, let go of irrelevant things, be fully engaged, and be patient.
The most painful thing in life is not the performance itself but the self-spiritual consumption outside of the performance. Living is tiring because performance consumes a lot of time, energy, and effort, and the final performance outcome is uncertain.
Others are both the audience and performance partners. Do not perform a monologue, but learn to interact with others.
Life is a performance, and life is a stage. To perform well, it is essential to understand and familiarize oneself with the process. Reading, observing people, and traveling are all good ways to understand and familiarize oneself with the stage. The deeper the understanding and familiarity, the more relaxed and in control one becomes. With stronger control, one can perform more effortlessly in front of the camera, resulting in a better final presentation.