Continuance an actor wealth memorizing vast chunks of words and performing them flawlessly, with response and personality.Physicality
Moving around, using gestures or going over the blocking of the play while saying her lines helps the actor remember the text.Cues
A cue is a word or action that comes right before an actor's line and helps him remember it.
Actors dash off gone their lines (touch), remark them outside blustering (hearing) and read them off the page (sight).
Meaning
Remembering meaningless data is extremely difficult. By focusing on the meaning of the words, actors can memorize their lines in the context of the play as a whole.
Beats
Large chunks of text can be broken into smaller sections, called "beats," to make memorizing easier. Each beat may have a specific theme: For instance, the actor may be manipulative in one beat, and pleading in the next.
Self-Referencing
By thinking of the lines as relating to himself in some way, the actor can memorize much faster.
Forgetting a string is embarrassing and slows the total play down. Actors are pros at using a diversification of memorization techniques to stimulate at variance parts of the brain and grasp their lines with minimal application.
The Senses
Utilizing as many senses as potential is an forceful memorization way.For instance, the cue for Hamlet's "To be, or not to be" speech is the exit of the king.