Where’s the Work?

…while the industry is focused on filing and fruit drinks populated with paper parasols what should you be doing? Where’s the work for actors? It’s at your finger tips.

This Week: How to be a Working Actor; When Work isn’t Working

Miss out on snagging summer stock gigs?

Didn’t book a movie for the muggy months of summer play?

Pilot passed upon?

Auditions dried up?

Don’t panic. This is normal for nearly all actors. Especially the absence of auditions. We’re presently in one of two annual doldrums that occur within our industry of entertainment. So relax. It’s not you (unless you haven’t showered in the past week; uhm… then the cause for flee from your presence is definitely you and those creepy-crawly bacteria basking upon your bod).

June to the beginning of August is a time when casting rolls up their beach towels and head to the nearest refuge of water-side solace. Agencies, casting, most L.O.R.T. theaters along with film and theatrical production offices have shortened work-weeks while summer interns they corralled from colleges across the country perform in-house cleaning and organizing. So while the industry is focused on filing and fruit drinks populated with paper parasols what should you be doing? Nearly the same. Where’s the work for actors? It’s at your finger tips.

This is a time when every actor should be compiling and updating land and digital mailing lists. Re-formatting marketing materials. Reaching out to industry prior to the flood of inquiry they receive in the fall. Strategizing your salesmanship. Updating your web-site(s). And if you don’t have an online presence beyond Facebook, Actors’ Access or any other online social media then what the fuck are you waiting for?! An online, non-social media outlet, personal website is a mandatory business tool for every actor as outlined in the marketing chapters of ACTING: Make It Your Business. I was once a techno-boob. If I can create an online presence (I began long ago with a now defunct gay games website) so can you. I now know of a great number of once HTML-averse-actors who no longer worry as to what belongs on their web site because they took to being proactive with their careers having read AMYIB or taken my classes; both of which cover digital marketing. They know what to do. (O.K. enough of that slight slide into shameless self-promotion. Mea culpa. Where’s the shower to sanitize my soul? Back to where else the present work is for you.)

Don’t have an agent? This slow-down slump is prime-time to gain their attention. Talent reps. are literally twiddling their thumbs as they text and tweet to pass the ho-hum days of high-humidity and low-expectations. Go and grab their attention.

Just as your behind-the-audition-table counterparts of the industry are re-organizing and looking to the future; so should you. Don’t let the lazy days of summer make you a lay-about whining “Where’s the work?”. I remind you… it’s at your finger tips, on your computer, and in your files. The ‘work’ — abundantly avail at present — is the labor an actor must toil upon in order to get work. It’s a mandatory element of your job description. You’ll only get a little assist from your blinding smile, smooth deliveries and bending into positions that will require  knee pads. Get to work.

Revamp.

Resurge.

Revitalize.

Don’t force me to beat you over your attractive head that when the acting business sails annually into this calm that it’s your turn to take the helm of acting and make it your business.

Now go. (And don’t forget to enjoy along the way some fruity potables populated with paper parasols.)

HEADS UP!: Because actors have gotten agents (and more importantly) work; Access to Agents is back! Two versions are avail to you: Stage & Screen or Musical Theatre. You and I will work together on your audition and marketing skills, plus interview technique and then I’ll introduce you to a panel of agents for film, TV and Broadway who’ll give you feedback on your audition and potential as a client. Full details @ Access to Agents. Read feed back from some past students.

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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Fair Wages? Are Actor Unions Fairly Serving All Actors?

“The only real way for us to lower costs is to pay artists less, but paying artists is part of the point of the Public,”

Oskar Eustis
Artistic Director – The Public
New York Times Interview – 4/15/2010

There’s been an alarming shift towards lower actor wages within the unions. And the membership of AEA and SAG have been complacent in letting their union reps negotiate less compensation in return for a producer’s promise of expanded employment opportunities. The sweet success winners are the producers. Actors oft remain holding the fuzzy end of the lollipop stick. It’s complacent thespians who are to blame for receivership of the less-than-attractive reward.

SAG began the trend of creating contracts with salary stipends that wouldn’t bust a producer’s budget; SAG Experimental, SAG Modified Low Budget and SAG Ultra-Low Budget. (You begin to wonder when comes the SAG Happy Meal Low Budget?) These contracts were intended for use by the indie film producer. But major studios could not resist the temptation of exploiting these contracts for their own best profitable interests. Paranormal Activity anyone? A mega-hit produced for about $10,000 and grossing for Paramount’s DreamWorks division $22 million (that’s box office alone… DVD and television air-sales not included). The actors’ miniscule salary in the shaking-cam screamer was a small, small percentage of that $10,000.

You do the math of fair and balanced.

Then not long ago AEA leadership in negotiations with producers began devising their own similar sounding paltry payouts; AEA Experimental and the new S.E.T. acronym. The latter contract of which is now being implemented by the theatrical titans; the Weisslers. What’s this new contract? It’s the Short Engagement Touring Agreement. Terms of which went into effect January 5, 2009. How does this new contract affect actors? Let’s take a gander… at an actual situation.

An actor (we’ll tag her as ‘Janice’) was touring as an ensemble member with the long-enduring tour of Chicago produced by National Artists Management Company (i.e. Fran & Barry Weissler). Under past tour contracts with Chicago Janice received a salary of $1,500 per week. The tour went well. Janice made a nice bit of cha-ching for her savings account as did the producers. Then the tour closed as scheduled. Not long after it was remounted to go out across the mountains and prairies once more but under the new S.E.T. contract. Janice was offered to return. Same duties. Salary, $850 per week.

Now, some may say this is not entirely fair. While others may view this as a way for actors and producers to keep producing art in an economy that, as past recessions have shown, is not favorable to the arts.

And it’s not just ‘the economy’ influencing earnings.

As thespians, especially the musically-talented, know AEA employ on the road has been usurped by non-union tours. For awhile AEA appeared baffled for finding a way to stop the loss of employ for its members to the lower overhead, cost-attractive, non-union tours that producers like the Wiesslers licensed out to non-union touring companies. AEA was less-than-brilliant in defense by asking its members to include in their Playbill bios; “Proud member of Actors’ Equity Association”. If that was the best AEA leadership could do to battle, then those actors running the actor’s union don’t understand their audience. The people in the seats could care less about union affiliation. All they care about is what’s on stage before them and how much did it cost to sit and view. If the production and actors look like their interpretation of what a Broadway show on tour should be, and costs far, far, far less than a Broadway hundred-dollar plus ticket; they’re happy. And I’ve seen several of those non-union tours. If I weren’t the picky Virgo I am and was just your average Sagittarius from Scranton I wouldn’t know the difference — on stage — between union and non-union. The uneducated-in-the-arts would just know that they saw a great show that didn’t cost him this month’s car payment. And that he’d have money left over afterwards for wings and beer at Hooters.

So now AEA has found a way to combat the non-union tour at its heart; the bottom line. Who gets caught in the cross-fire? Actors. Both union and non-union. AEA members are now being paid less for the same work labored previously under higher wages. Non union actors may begin seeing less non-union tour opportunities. And this is a trend that began years ago with SAG. What can union actors unhappy do about the less-than-living wage wages? Get involved with your union. Voice your opinion. Get on the boards that negotiate contracts. Rally. Scream. Demand.

If you feel that these changes in contracts are necessary to ensure that there is some form of employ then do similar as those opposed to the wage and contract concessions. Be heard.

What does the non-union actor do? You demand from non-union producers the same earnings, treatment and contract perks (Per Diem, hours, etc) as given to your union card-carrying brethren. Will you get such? HA! (Good luck.) But the more non-union performers continue to ask for equality — the more the producer hears the same requests — then the more likely that the producer (if humane) may change their mind to remain contractually competitive in attracting quality, professional talent.

To all; your silence equals complicity. Be heard.

Upcoming Posts: Coming soon over the few weeks will be “How to Piss-off a Casting Director (Without Being Seen)”, “An Actor Derails Representation”, “Life Titles” and many more including a very personal post I wrote (but never published) back in the fall of ’09 entitled “?”.  If you’re a subscriber already to Answers for Actors you won’t miss a single post (unless abducted — or in Stephen Hawkins’ sci-fi scenario — eaten by aliens). If you’re not already a subscriber whata ya waitin’ for? Choose one of the three feed options on the upper right hand menu bar.

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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