Lies On An Actor’s Resume

Did a profane playwright suggest to NYU-Tisch acting students to lie on their resumes by creating false credits?

Resume Lies…

Did a well-known playwright celebrated for buffaloing text with curses suggest to NYU-Tisch acting students to lie and create false resume credits? I hope the speedy plowman of dialogue, who honors the four-letter word as much as I, didn’t f**k with the emerging artists’ minds by encouraging falsified work history.

As told to me by a collective group of NYU students, allegedly the profane playwright suggested misrepresentation on the resume. Being that this startling information came to me second-hand I assume that the playwright’s comments were misconstrued and/or taken out of context. But… if the black belt of f-bombs did instruct the impressionable young admirers to lie, fib, stroke, misrepresent…someday when those students are in an audition room they potentially must answer an awkward inquiry about a falsified credit on the resume. Only then will they quickly learn what it is to be fornicated by the anarchist of American theater.

While casting at an open call I read the resume of an actress standing before me. My name as director was married to a past credit. Yes, I directed the production. Yes, it was at the theater listed. No, she didn’t play the lead role as her resume indicated. Nor was she cast as the understudy or in the ensemble. Possibly she was an usher? I don’t know. But if someone suggested to her she lie on her resume, where was that adviser instructing her how to skillfully handle that very uncomfortable and unfortunate moment of ‘gotcha?’

An actress wrote me that a past agent of hers instructed she lie on her resume creating false film credits. Allegedly the agent asserted to the actress that doing so would help the agent get the actress seen for TV and film projects. The actress inserted on her resume a friend’s basement-budget home movie. (The actress has since left ill-advising agent. Smart move.)

In the first years of my acting career when ignorance, insecurity, and youth blinded me from making productive, honest choices I foolishly created a resume falsehood regarding my education. I was embarrassed for not having a secondary arts education. But shame is no excuse for an untruth. When work continually kept coming my guilt and growing maturity forced the fib from my resume. I felt freed from my nagging conscious once I obliterated the deceit. And I never, ever, embellished again. Nor should you. Have more respect for yourself.

BookMoreWork_TelseyQuoteWhen any of us create falsehoods the damage done is not in the moment of ‘gothcha’ as like when the actress with a resume lie baring my name sheepishly stood before me. No, it’s your self-esteem that suffers a near-fatal blow. Lies like honesty cannot be permanently erased. Like the pictographs on cave walls etched millennia ago, a trace will remain. Somewhere. Or with someone. Most prominently with your conscious.

Be better to yourself. Be honest. We all begin with a blank page. Best to keep the page clean than mar it with falsehoods.

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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How Not to Be a Background Actor for Life

Do you have that Extra smell? I certainly hope not. Both for the sake of your career success and its longevity. What is that Extra smell? Discover if you have it or not in this week’s Answers for Actors…

Do you have that Extra smell? I certainly hope not.

For the sake of your career’s success and its longevity I trust that if you engage in Extra employment as an actor that you’re doing so for the enjoyment of being on set with fellow actors, networking and/or for financial survival. If you believe being an Extra will lead you to the Hollywood Walk of Fame…sorry, you have that Extra smell.

Extras (or Background Actors, a politically correct term dictated by SAG-AFTRA) are of course the actors required to fill-out the background of a screen story. Without Extras the world of film and television would look as empty as a movie theater playing a double feature marathon of Heaven’s Gate and Ishtar.

Some actors utilize being an Extra as their civilian job; an occupation to pay life’s bills while strongly pursuing elsewhere through training and auditions their art of story-telling. Great! No problem there.

Some actors are full-time Extras. This is their occupation. Year-after-year full-time Background Actors are able to stitch together a living wage. They enjoy the on set camaraderie. And they are content with the status of an Extra. They have no delusions that their participation in our business as a Background Actor will propel them to above-the-title talent. Fine-n-dandy.

But… then there are the actors who have that Extra smell.

Possibly you’ve encountered them on your journey. You may recognize these ‘actors’ who believe their stunning beauty or unusual look, once glimpsed on the screen for less than a nanosecond, will have a director or producer shout, “Get me that actor! That’s the star of my next budget-busting-blockbuster!” These Extra smell actors are often deeply mired into conspiracy theories thinking Disney is gaining global domination via KFC buckets. They’re Glenn Becks without the chalkboard.

What further defines an actor with that Extra smell?

If you have on your resume a plethora of credits which read like the following actual credit from an actor’s resume: “Professional business man on the park bench reading The Wall Street Journal as Jennifer Anniston jogged by”, you have that Extra smell.

If when you open your closet you refer to your wardrobe by project name such as, “For my date tonight I think I’ll wear The Lovely Bones.” You have that Extra smell.

If on your smart phone there’s an application listing of all the public bathrooms that can be used as a changing room while on location, you have that Extra smell.

If you have more autographs of the principals you’ve “worked with” than principal credits on your resume, you have that Extra smell.

If you have a composite card that displays you in various costumes from your ‘roles’ as an Extra and send that as a headshot to casting for principal work consideration, you have that Extra smell.

If you send your picture and resume to a casting office that casts only principals and you ask to be considered for Extra work, you have that Extra smell.

If you were a non-union background actor on a union film (meaning SAG Extras got seconds of screen-time while the audience saw the back of your head as a blip) and you list the credit on your resume as ‘Featured’, you have that Extra smell.

If you find yourself proposing sexual favors to a nineteen year-old PA for a chance he/she/it will introduce you to the DP, you have that Extra smell.

If when at craft services you complain to the caterer that their tri-colored pasta salad has been deteriorating in quality over the past several years, you have that Extra smell.

If you think the director happens to silently notice you (whether on-set or by your exiting the location’s Port-O-Potty) he will instantly, without hearing you speak, catapult you to principal…you have that Extra smell.

If while on set in the Extra’s tent/holding shamble you find yourself gazing dreamily at a nearby honeywagon and fantasize it’s an oasis of stardom, you have that Extra smell.

If while dressed uniformly like your peer Extras for a scene you notice that your robe has a silver buckle upon its sash while the Extra standing aside you has a sash with a gold buckle and this ‘slight’ in lower metallic grade upon your costume causes you ire, you have that Extra smell.

If you go to set, as an Extra, with a backpack bulging with screenplays you’ve written (to star yourself in) and your sole intent for the day is to distribute them to anyone on set who might get your puss and opus on screen, you have that Extra smell.

If you’re working on a James Cameron film (as an Extra) and the closest you’ve gotten to Mr. Cameron is the third AD but when speaking to fellow Extras you find yourself saying, “James thinks I would be fantastic for the president alien who stops the oil tanker from plowing into the Statue of Liberty”, you have that Extra smell.

If you claim to have been a screen actor for more than twenty years but while on set someone mentions Mali Finn and Mary Colquhoun and you respond with, “I caught their act in Vegas”, you have that Extra smell.

If when watching a movie, that you did not participate in, you find yourself ignoring the principals and watching the Extras to evaluate their performance, you have that Extra smell.

If you’ve been lobbying SAG-AFTRA, The Academy of Motion Pictures & Sciences and The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences that each has an award category ‘Best Extra in a Comedy, Drama or Musical’, you have that Extra smell.

Having that Extra smell is being the delusional actor who foolishly believes that by solely being a repetitive Extra they’re preordained for: above the title billing, limousines, paparazzi, invites to Jay Leno’s couch, a sex scandal leading to drug re-hab, and then a career rebirth as they’re welcomed back with a warm embrace by Oprah.

There’s nothing wrong with working as an Extra if the work is put into proper perspective by the participant. Look upon the experience as a paycheck and networking opportunity. If Extra work is approached with self-fantasies of leading to your eventual fame, well… you have that Extra smell.

I and my talent representation and casting colleagues continually advise actors who want to seriously pursue principal work on screen to minimize or delete entirely their Extra credits from the resume sent to principal casting directors and Legit talent agents.

Now before some actors misinterpret that statement and post on an online message board misinformation stating, “Paul Russell said….” let me re-state more plainly: Take the paychecks. Remove or minimize the Extra credits upon the resume if you want to be considered for principal work on screen. Have a separate resume listing your history as an Extra for casting directors who cast background actors.

Extras are the underdog necessity of our creativity but if you as an actor wish to elevate to the next level of principal work best you pursue and then promote on your resume Under Five (U/5) employ and above.

And what if Extra credits are all an actor has listed under the Film/TV header of their resume and you want to grow beyond an Extra? Minimize. Actors with that Extra smell who want to be principals will often put every walk-on upon their resume. Which in turn leads the purveyor (casting, directors and talent agents) of the actor’s work history to ponder, “Has a look bur probably can’t act.” Or worse, “What mental deficiency within this actor is keeping directors from trusting him/her with an Under Five or better?”

There’s nothing disgraceful about being an Extra (other than the sometimes disgraceful treatment of Extras on set). Being an Extra produces a paycheck. The work provides you new contacts. The temporary employ won’t be an end-solution for becoming a star. Which by-the-by, fame should never be the reason for being an actor and if that is your sole intent for being in the arts…you have that Extra smell.

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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