Walter Carrington Educational Trust

Charity for the Walter Carrington Educational Trust

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F. Matthias Alexander (1869-1955)

flower F. Matthias Alexander was born in Tasmania in 1869. He started to evolve his now world-famous technique in the early 1890s. It was initially developed to solve the frequent loss of voice he suffered working as a reciter. A successful reciter and teacher of elocution he toured Australia, Tasmania and New Zealand. He first taught the Technique as applied to elocution, but he gradually discovered how applicable it is to all activities of living and how fundamental a contribution to health and well-being it makes. He settled first in Melbourne, and later in Sydney where he advertised his Operatic and Dramatic Conservatory in 1902.

Encouraged by doctors, Alexander moved to London in 1904. He had great success in introducing his technique to the acting community and in medical circles and wrote several pamphlets on the health benefits of the Technique as well as its application to breathing and voice production (reproduced in a later compilation, Articles and Lectures). It was, however, with Man’s Supreme Inheritance (1910), that he first presented his evolutionary hypothesis developed from his practical experience: that we are evolving from the instinctive to the conscious in the use of ourselves. Our innate ability consciously to adapt by the means of the primary control is our “supreme inheritance.”

During the period 1914–24 he also taught regularly in New York and Boston where John Dewey became his pupil and supporter and wrote forewords not only to the next edition of Man’s Supreme Inheritance (1918), but also to Constructive Conscious Control of the Individual (1923) and The Use of the Self (1932). In these books he developed and expanded his theme, including examples and case stories as illustrations.

During the 1920s and 1930s Alexander’s pupils included Bernard Shaw, Aldous Huxley, Leonard Wolf, Sir Stafford Cripps, The Archbishop of Canterbury, The Earl of Lytton and doctors, scientists and performers.

In 1931 Alexander started a 3-year course, training teachers in his technique, which ensured its survival and continual expansion. He also encouraged and oversaw the establishment of a small school where children were taught with attention to the “means-whereby” in contrast to the “end-gaining” mentality which neglects the “how” in every activity.

At the outbreak of war in 1939 Alexander moved the school to the USA. Here he finished his last book, The Universal Constant in Living (1942), reminding us all that we are constantly using ourselves, that our use continuously affects our functioning, and that we can co-ordinate and control that use to great advantage.

After the war, back in London, in 1947, Alexander suffered a stroke which paralysed his left side. He used his technique to fully recover from his stroke and continued to teach to within a few days of his death.

NEWS

The deadline for the next round of applications for teacher training at CTC is 15th June 2018.

How to apply.

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Scott Workman

Brigadier Scott Workman OBE  is a serving Army office currently working in the Ministry of Defence in the procurement and acquisition area. He has seen operational service in Northern Ireland, Africa, Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan. He is currently in his final year of service and taking Alexander Technique lessons. He has three children, and he is a keen offshore sailor.

Scott Workman

Brigadier Scott Workman OBE  is a serving Army office currently working in the Ministry of Defence in the procurement and acquisition area. He has seen operational service in Northern Ireland, Africa, Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan. He is currently in his final year of service and taking Alexander Technique lessons. He has three children, and he is a keen offshore sailor.

Christopher Carrington

Christopher is the eldest son of Dilys and Walter Carrington.  After leaving school in 1960, he joined the Royal Air Force as an officer cadet at the RAF College, Cranwell. He graduated as a pilot in 1963 and after several flying appointments, served in the Ministry of Defence and NATO Headquarters in Brussels.  After retiring from the RAF in 1991 he worked in London as financial controller and company secretary for a not-for-profit organisation.  In 2001, he ceased full-time employment to accompany his partner on her diplomatic appointments overseas. Now fully retired Christopher is living in west London.

James Rowsell

James, LLB Hons, is Barrister at Law. He has worked for a variety of Investment Banks as an equity financial analyst and salesman, and in a number of senior management roles for Paribas, James Capel (HSBC), Salomon Brothers, Citigroup, and Man Group. He recently retired as CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald in Europe. He is a pupil of the Alexander Technique.

Regina Stratil, administrator

Regina is the administrator of the Constructive Teaching Centre and the administrator the archives. She trained at the Alexander Technique Studio, London, and teaches at the Trust’s Alexander Technique Centre in Imperial Wharf, and at Student Central, former ULU building, in Bloomsbury.

Jean M. O. Fischer, centre manager

Jean is in charge of coordinating all activities at the centre and associated administration. He trained 1984-87 and did two post-graduate terms at Constructive Teaching Centre in 1988. He taught at the Alexander Technique Studio 1997-2012 and is currently teaching on the CTC training courses. He gives individual lessons at the Pimlico Centre for the Alexander Technique, London. Jean has annotated and edited books on the Alexander Technique, and is the publisher of books on the Technique under the Mouritz imprint. Jean is a previous Congress Director, STAT Council Member, and trustee of the FM Alexander Trust.

Gerald Foley

Gerald qualified as a civil engineering in 1957. He is author of The Energy Question (Penguin, 1976) and has written extensively on energy and environmental issues in the developing world. He taught at the Architectural Association School of Architecture, and has worked for the International Institute for Environment and Development and the Panos Institute. During the 1990s he carried out studies for the World Bank, EU, UN and other international agencies. He was chair of the Board of Trustees of the Panos Institute during the 1990s. He trained as a teacher of the Alexander Technique at the Constructive Teaching Centre and has been a visiting teacher at CTC since 2002.

Mary Anne Sutherland

Mary Anne graduated from the Courtauld Institute in 1968.  She then worked in the Editorial office of McKinsey.  After having two children she taught on the Christie’s Fine Arts Course, was a freelance lecturer in Art History and started and ran Art at Exhibition.  From 1983 she was a tutor at City and Guilds of London Art School.  She has also worked with asylum seekers for a human rights lawyer.  Mary Anne has been a pupil of the Alexander Technique with Ruth Murray at the Constructive Teaching Centre for three years.