20 Outdated Acting Career Tools? | Answers for Actors

You may soon become obsolete. Outmoded like past acting career tools are now yesterday’s Lady Gaga. The hot, new device on which you’re accessing this post is already a technological Rick Moranis before you end reading… Below are once vital needs (and fringe benefits) to the career of an actor that are now just charming antiquities of memory. Will you be next?

Actors soon becoming obsolete? Outmoded like the past acting career tools that are now yesterday’s Lady Gaga. The hot, new device on which you’re accessing this post is already a technological Rick Moranis before you end reading. Could actors one day diminish in need like toll collectors, postal workers, gas station attendants, or be obliterated entirely into the graves of jesters, lectors and vaudeville performers? “Nah, never…,” you say? Hmm. iActor and GoogleActors are in the wings…maybe.

Below are once vital needs (and fringe benefits) to the career of an actor that are now just charming antiquities of memory. Will you be next? Ask a lector (if you can find one living).

1. Status update:

postcard

.

2. An actor’s office:

PhoneBooth

.

3. Actor’s tablet/laptop:

datebook

..

4. Résumé desktop publishing:

typewritter

..

5. Delete button:

whiteout

..

6. Scanner:

Carbon Paper

..

7. This form of ‘modern’ headshot:

Image1

..

8. An actor promoting ‘variety’:

Comp1

..

9. An actor’s reel on one of these:

VHS tape

..

10. An actor’s voice-over reel on one of these:

cassettetape

..

11. Actor’s reel and/or voice-over reel on this:

CD

..

12. Sides or a script delivered by one of these…:

BikeMessenger

..

13. or by one of these:

FAX

..

14. Voice-mail:

AnsweringService

..

15. Broadway social media:

Broadway Show jacket

..

16. Broadway try-outs:

Forrest TheatreSchubert

..

17. Pilot with a 24 episode pick-up:

MASH

..

18. This entertainment district:

42nd Street

..

19. Union audition line jumping:

AEA_EligibleCard

..

20. A New York Times ‘Instagram’ marking “You’ve made it” (and knowing what the number after Al Hirschfeld’s signature indicated):

Hirschfield

One vital aspect of acting will never be obsolete: education. Never be lulled into ignorance by an arrogance of “I know all that I need to know.” For if you follow such foolhardiness you’ll be surpassed by working actors who create opportunities via:

Paul Russell's Access to Agents

4-week master class now registering!

My Best,
Paul

Share Answers for Actors:

Facebook Twitter More...

StumbleUpon.com
E-mail Post to Friends…

Follow Paul Russell Casting:

follow Paul on Facebookfollow Paul on Twitter

Paul Russell’s career as a casting director, director, acting teacher and former actor has spanned nearly thirty years. He has worked on projects for major film studios, television networks, and Broadway. Paul has taught the business of acting and audition technique at NYU and has spoken at universities including Yale, Temple and the University of the Arts. He is the author of ACTING: Make It Your Business – How to Avoid Mistakes and Achieve Success as a Working Actor. For more information, please visit www.PaulRussell.net.

Get One-On-One:

Get Work:

Get The Feed:

Classes with Paul Russell Paul's book ACTING: Make It Your Business!

Answers For Actors Feed

Visit Paul @ PaulRussell.net and/or:

Paul Russell on Facebook Paul on Twitter Paul on MySpace
ACTING: Make It Your Business

Is There Overused Audition Material? | Answers for Actors

Three casting directors bluntly weigh-in on an actor’s most dreaded fear…

“You can’t do that scene, everyone does it.”

“Never sing that song in an audition, it’s done to death.”

“Everyone and their mother murders that monologue.”

How many times have you heard the above or similar about audition material? Spoken by actors who say ‘they’re in the know’; or blathered by academics who haven’t attended a professional audition since being tenured when Cats was a West End curiosity; or whined from cranky casting zombies bitter for having to beg actors audition for no-to-low paying gigs?

There is no such thing as ‘overdone.’ A repeated monologue, scene or song is either done well by an actor or mangled with injustice by a presenter.

Actress Laura Gurry contacted me and two of my casting director colleagues, Scott Bradley and Michael Cassara, in seeking advice on the too-oft-asked-question-by-worrisome-actors, “Is it overdone?”

Gurry, Bradley, and Cassara generously permitted me to share with you our Facebook exchange:

Overdone1

There was a reason I’d rarely heard “Unbridled Passion” if at all…

Overdone2

Oooh… auditors at the combines, say no more:

Overdone3

Overdone4

Cassara’s succinct answer shows how simple the answer is to this overwrought question.

The above, and the following excerpt from ACTING: Make It Your Business applies to any audition material be it monologue, scene or interpretive sock puppet soliloquy. Understood? Good:

“…The unwritten law prohibiting use of “overused songs” in auditions is bull. The b.s. comes from auditors and academics who are lazy listeners. I have no problem hearing countless renditions of “Corner of the Sky” from Pippin and “Anthem” from Chess. If an “overused song” is presented well, I’m a happy casting director. Reach for that money note beyond your range in “Anthem” with a screech and you’re history.

“…A person’s ability to sing a song well, with great skill, should be the barometer for talent, rather than the number of times the song has been heard.

“If you sing and interpret a song well, do it. But don’t become hooked on a couple of songs at which you know you kick ass. Having a songbook that covers all genres of music is key to versatility. Variety is welcomed and necessary.”

And finally: don’t let newbie-while-jaded casting personnel or ‘in-the-know’ actors stop you from doing what you do well. Go ahead and belt “Defying Gravity” from Wicked as long as you don’t land it with an earth shuddering thud.

My Best,
Paul

Casting Directors, Talent Agents, Directors & Actors

Love the Best-Selling Book for Actors
ACTING: Make It Your Business!

AMIYB_Amazon“Humorous and witty…
Actors everywhere who are trying to succeed in the business, young or old, on stage or on camera, anywhere in the world, take note:

This is your roadmap!”
BERNARD TELSEY, casting director – CSA
(NBC’s Peter Pan – LIVE!, Into The Woods – The Movie, Wicked, Sex & The City)
“All the right questions asked and answered…
and with a generous portion of good humor.”
SUZANNE RYAN, casting director, CSA
(Law & OrderUnforgettable)
“I love this book!
Paul’s book tells you what you don’t want to hear but really need to know
EVERY actor should read this book!”
DIANE RILEY, Senior Legit Talent Agent
Harden-Curtis & Associates
“Paul’s book made me proud to be a part of this community we call ‘show!'”
KAREN ZIEMBA, TONY & Drama Desk Award Winning Actress
“Paul Russell’s words are not only blunt & accurate they zero in on all the questions every actor wants to know but is afraid to ask!”
KEN MELAMED, Talent Agency Partner
Bret Adams, Ltd.
“I had my Business of Acting, BFA Seniors, class do book reports on a variety of “business of acting” books and ACTING: Make It Your Business came out a clear winner—considered to be essential for their bookshelves!
Dr. NINA LeNOIR,
Dept. Chair – Dept. of Thtr.
Chapman University

Get smarter on the business of acting from legendary Hollywood & Broadway actors and talent agents in a casting director Paul Russell’s Best-Selling Book ACTING:AMIYB_Amazon Make It Your Business!

Share Answers for Actors:

Facebook Twitter More...

StumbleUpon.com
E-mail Post to Friends…

Follow Paul Russell Casting:

follow Paul on Facebookfollow Paul on Twitter

Paul Russell’s career as a casting director, director, acting teacher and former actor has spanned nearly thirty years. He has worked on projects for major film studios, television networks, and Broadway. Paul has taught the business of acting and audition technique at NYU and has spoken at universities including Yale, Temple and the University of the Arts. He is the author of ACTING: Make It Your Business – How to Avoid Mistakes and Achieve Success as a Working Actor. For more information, please visit www.PaulRussell.net.

Get One-On-One:

Get Work:

Get The Feed:

Classes with Paul Russell Paul's book ACTING: Make It Your Business!

Answers For Actors Feed

Visit Paul @ PaulRussell.net and/or:

Paul Russell on Facebook Paul on Twitter Paul on MySpace
ACTING: Make It Your Business