Re: HELP- I have REALLY BAD stage fright
I used to be in a similar position to you. Close or in tears, didn't want to stand up. Got diagnosed by my teacher as having stage fright. It's a terrible position to be in. The thing is, it can be beaten.
You say that:
I'm a drama student and have no problem getting on a stage and doing a funny act (I try to explain to them the whole 'becoming a new character' thing but then they tell me to just do my speech pretending to be another character. It's nowhere near as easy as saying it though )
This is actually an important stepping stone in the process. I think it was the thing that helped me overcome my stage fright, by being able to prove to myself that I could get up in front of everyone and deliver something.
Some tips:
- A speech is no different to a monologue or a script. It's about delivering a message that is important to an audience. They serve exactly the same function.
- When you deliver a speech, you are creating a character. It's the same process. The Obama that deliverys political speeches is different to the Obama that hangs out with his wife and kids. Create a strong character version of yourself.
- Ground yourself. Take your shoes off if you need to. It'll feel more like acting
- Breathe. Strong, steady breathes.
- Many people say focus on the task, but sometimes it can be good to do the opposite in the lead up. The waiting is often the worst part, so ask your teacher if you can go first on the second day of speeches (since most times that go over multiple lessons)
- The content of your speech is not as important as you think it is. Seriously. I think this is one of the difficult things to get over. If you treat your speech like another piece of dialogue, it doesn't have the same weight to it. People get freaked out because they are being judged. Your not really. Half the class doesn't really care about what your saying. There's very low risk.
- The worst is already over. You say you've been in tears before speeches. As someone's who's been through that, that's about as bad as it gets. I've done speeches where jokes have bombed, could hardly be heard, and had the speaker before me completely belittle the audience. Bad conditions, and yet, the tears I had previously were worse. You've done the hard part, the process can only get better.
I went from having stage fright to getting lead roles in productions, winning the public speaking award at my school, and being the best debater in my school. It can be overcome. And you can do it.
Feel free to message me if you have anything you'd like to ask.