Pilot Season – Landing an Audition

Actors Getting Pilots

Paul Russell

It’s Pilot Season!

Yes it’s that time of year when the entertainment industry is tossed into a tail spin as hundreds of pilots are sought and fought for (and no I’m not talking about the sometimes handsome navigators of cramped cockpits).

Pilots: Small screen’s answer to ‘let’s see what shit sticks to the screen and succeeds.’ An actor getting a pilot audition and then the project getting green-lighted for a ‘go’ is a herculean feat in itself. The actor and project getting broadcast and then possibly picked-up for more than several episodes has as slim a possibility for success as does Glenn Beck winning a Pulitzer Prize for Journalism. The average journeyman actor (with or without representation) getting cast in a pilot is about as possible as Honey Boo Boo playing Ophelia opposite Stewie Griffin’s Lear. But all is not totally impossible or improbable… but let us pray we never have to endure the tiara toddler tripping her tongue upon the Bard.

So how does the journeyman actor get the near-impossible pilot audition and subsequent series?

The Represented Actor:

Your agent submits you for a pilot and then you and your rep hope for the best.

Next!

The Unrepresented Actor:

You doggedly pursue an agent to represent you. Hope to get a meeting. Pray to be signed. Then patiently wait to be submitted on a pilot whereupon you hope for the best.

Next!

I can virtually hear angry actor voices grumbling, ‘Thanks Paul, you’re a lot of f-ing help.” Well, I never promised you a prose garden.

In a discussion I recently had with Jack Menashe, the prior President of Independent Artists Agency who is also one of the four agents who gives candid actor career advice in ACTING: Make It Your Business, I asked Menashe for insightful measures for his clients and the non-represented actor to get into the Fort Knox of screen employ that is pilot season.

“Actors have to understand that getting an audition for a pilot is not going to happen because the actor has an agent or just a picture, resume and a smile,” Menashe began. “Casting directors who work on television pilots are extremely picky about who gets in because the casting director’s reputation is on the line with the producer.”

I pushed Menashe on then how best to get past the picky gate-keepers like myself.

“Two ways,” Menashe offered. “The unrepresented actor would do him or herself a huge service by going to paid auditions. But not the typical run-of-the-mill paid auditions. During pilot season they should be going to places that screen the actors first before those actors are allowed to meet with talent agents and casting directors who work on television projects. L.A. and New York are loaded with them. Years ago when I had first launched Independent Artists, I discovered a high caliber of talent had channeled into this resource.”

Signing those exceptional actors Menashe then prodded casting directors to seeing the newly minted clients for pilots. But he was not alone in his championing of actors. Menashe spoke of how a casting director assisted both him and an actor to getting quickly into pilot and film auditions.

“A casting director took me to a show that included an actor who she had seen the night prior at one of your seminars (Paul Russell’s Studies for Actors).  He was incredible.  I signed him and his first year with me he booked his first major supporting feature film role, his first television pilot, several low-budget features and theater gigs.”

Having struck success once, Menashe went back to the source of finding untapped talent.

“In the years to come, I would sign several actors through these venues,” Menashe continued, “all of whom have landed notable work in film, television and theater.”

But success sometimes is soured.

“Unfortunately some of the actors,” Menashe continued, “who are screened by the staff of these audition venues are far from what I and my colleagues are looking for either as talent or as business-people, or in many cases both.”

And oh how true that is. As I’ve witnessed in my own Access to Agents and similar seminars I attend actors can pay out precious paper repeatedly to acting studios but if the actors doesn’t have the talent to match their deep pockets there’s no way in hell they’ll move forward. Well, unless they happen to land a reality TV gig. But when eating iguana intestines on a deserted island becomes the new Bard of our time, then it’s time for all actors to pack-up their make-up kits and call it a day.

Menashe also brought up another path to pilots. One not so much as immediate but none-the-less a route well traveled by others that brought lasting rewards: comedy clubs.

“If an actor has a great sense of humor,” Menashe suggested, “along with a unique comic perspective then he or she as an actor needs to get on stage at comedy clubs. Do the open mic nights. Push into the industry evenings. Casting directors for half-hour comedies mine comedy clubs. That’s how many unknown actors suddenly land a TV show.”

“You mean the actors that bum-fart Kansas or Lodi, New Jersey never heard of?” I added.

“Exactly,” Menashe responded. “It’s not the quickest route but it gets you in front of the major players of gate-keeping for TV.”

Represented or not, an actor should be heeding Menashe’s words by taking an active attack in seeking to book on-camera work for pilot season. One such avenue is to be an informed actor.

ACTING: Make It Your Business

If, as you began this read, were looking for a quick, sure-fire Rubik’s Cube simplistic solution to getting an audition for a pilot then you really don’t understand this business. If angered or frustrated by that statement you need reconsideration for your chosen profession. Nothing comes easily for anyone on either side of the audition table. If you have read the chapters on film and pilot auditions in ACTING: Make It Your Business; then you’re several steps ahead of those who haven’t picked up that tome dedicated to advancing an actor’s career.

My Best,
Paul

AMIYB_AmazonRead advice from legendary talent agents,
plus Hollywood & Broadway actors in Paul Russell’s Best-Selling Book ACTING: Make It Your Business!

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 writes a column for Back Stage and 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.

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How to Lose an Agent & Manager in 10 Minutes

The following is a true story. No actors, agents or animals were physically harmed during the debacle.

Bruised egos are another story…

I was recently sitting in the office of a talent agency doing what I do when I take a break from work. Write about work.

As my digits were drubbing the keys of my HP with Windows Vista (grrrrr) I overheard one of the agents next to me call out to an assistant;

“Make sure you put in the cover letter that he got an M.F.A. from NYU. Because [casting director’s name withheld] is snobby.”

Prior to this the agent had received a phone call from a new client who was fresh out of school. The actor had heard — through the thorny thicket that is the actor-grapevine —   that [well-known director’s name withheld] was casting a major production of a language play and that final auditions would be held the following day. The actor requested the agent push the casting director for an appointment.

O.K. All systems normal. Until…

Chutzpah we have a problem.

Once the push had been made the agent called the actor to inform him that she had requested — on his behalf – he be squeezed into the schedule for an audition. An audition, if granted, that would occur the very next day. Of which the actor, you’ll recall, was very aware of when he requested the push.

Unfortunately the actor had a sudden case of amnesia (which came over him in less than ten minutes). He balked to his agent that if he got the audition he would not go in because,“I wouldn’t have enough time to prepare.”

Excuse me? Did he just nod off from reality?

An argument between actor and agent ensued. That’s when my fingers stopped. My ears (blog-material-seeking-whores they are) heard an opportunity for keystroke tapping.

I listened as the agent reminded the newly minted client that it was he who had requested the push while knowing the audition would be the next day. The actor would not relent and remained resolved informing the agent he would not go in for the audition if the casting director (who is a tough-to-convince buyer) welcomed the actor to read for the industry-respected director.

That’s when the relationship-guillotine-blade began it’s ascent in what was surely to be a bloody business demise for the belligerent actor.

The agent warned the actor, “I don’t like the way this relationship is developing between us. This is not something I’m comfortable with.”

After a few more back-n-forth exchanges during which the actor still registered his intent to reject an appointment for the next day (if it were presented) the conversation ended without pleasantries. One could almost imagine hearing the swoosh of the sharp blade as it slid down la guillotine to severe service of agent to actor. But there was a momentary reprieve.

The agent turned to me for my reaction. Before she spoke I, as an observer, simply said, “Drop him.”

The agent then called the actor’s manager and related what had just transpired. The manager revealed that they too had been having similar problems with this actor. This was not the first rumblings of trouble between actor and talent rep. Prior; another agency dropped this same actor for bad behavior. It was then the manager who had to sell the damaged goods to another agency and hope for the best. Now that problems were happening again, and within just two weeks of being at this new agency, the manager unknowingly agreed with my observation and promptly then-and-there dropped the actor. The agency followed in kind.

Now you may think this to be odd, rare, extreme, or a happens-not-too-often scenario of bad actor behavior. It’s not.

I know not why some actors decide to commit professional suicide. And while performing hara-kiri, profusely put forth that they are in the right for their actions and the rest of the world is wrong. I could go into lengthy analyses of personality disorders. But the life-clock is ticking and I need my morning muffin.

The best answer for the actor’s actions detailed prior (and others like him) may simply be – and in short – stupidity.

Next!

My Best,
Paul

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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 writes a column for Back Stage and 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.

 

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