Audition Room Betrayal – Unprofessional Casting Directors | Answers for Actors

Once again the actor’s trust of an auditor’s discretion has been betrayed. The silent sanctity smeared by more online snark.

Paul Russell
Visit Paul @ PaulRussell.net

Audition Room Behavior Rule #1: Don’t abuse the actor.

Audition Room Behavior Rule #2: Remember Rule #1.

What happens in an audition between actor and casting (or talent representation) must remain in the audition room and memory. It’s a trust silently known and honored. There have been breaches of that trust by my colleagues behind the audition table. Most notably Twittergate in which a casting director posted negative audition feedback tweets as actors were auditioning. And now, once again the actor’s trust of an auditor’s discretion has been betrayed. The silent sanctity smeared by more online snark.

A popular entertainment trade outlet recently posted online an agent’s commentary on actors met during a paid audition seminar.

“The first actor smelled like ass. I hope this doesn’t become a trend.”

“Why is the reader always the most talented actor in the room?”

“If you’re over 40 and you still don’t have any professional credits, it might be time to rethink your life.”

How is any of this commentary helpful to actors? And how does this improve the already strained perceptions actors have of casting and talent agents as being beyond pompous, rigid, uncaring-for-the-actor self-involved shits?

Granted our business is based on subjectivity. A screenwriter may be enamored by Auditioning Actor A, but the director would rather be locked for a weekend in a bank vault with Vladimir Putin than spend six weeks working with Auditioning Actor A. Those audition room reactions, positive or negative, stay in the audition room and/or are held to memory or shared in private project related conversations.

Now before you interject, “Paul, hello this is the kettle. You’re black” my audition room observations in my book and this blog offer solutions. The agent’s comment about actors over 40 without professional credits ‘need to rethink your life’ only offers actors despair. Would the agent have said such to Jane Lynch who at 43 had her big break come with the mockumentary Best of Show?

Having been someone who was ridiculed in my youth I give careful consideration before relaying any actor job-seeking anecdotes that may embarrass. All examples of missteps that I share (including my own) must come with an offer of a solution or adjustment for improvement and not be utilized for the sake of entertainment or humiliation. The agent’s public vomiting of his audition notes seems to be more for sensationalism to generate webpage hits than it does to providing substantial solutions to success in an actor’s journey.

What happens in the audition room must stay in the audition room so that artists on both sides of the table can prosper in their craft.

My Access to Agents students often ask that I e-mail or post the audition feedback of the agents. I refuse. I’ll read aloud the agent’s feedback directly to the actor in the class setting. After that, the session sheets are secured in a binder on my desk and never shared with strangers.

Paul's book ACTING: Make It Your Business!In my response to Twittergate I wrote:

“Actors deserve better treatment from those behind the audition table. I was once an actor. I have a great empathy for them. I don’t know if you Ms. Eisenberg were once an actor. If so; you should be damned ashamed of how you have treated those who now stand where you once stood. If you never had the displeasure of auditioning consider yourself fortunate that you never had to endure what actors in your audition room experienced this past week.”

To her credit Ms. Eisenberg publicly apologized and has gone on to have a successful career in casting and I wish her continued success.

If the agent who remains a secret in his online articles were named, his/her name would be justly included in that prior quote.

Color me disgusted.

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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 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 Actors Steal Auditions from Actors | Answers for Actors

Actors are stealing your audition appointments. Actors who mischievously reap resources; yours and my clients’.

Paul Russell
Visit Paul @ PaulRussell.net

Actors are stealing your audition appointments. Actors who mischievously reap resources; yours and my clients’.

Recently my office sought non-union actors for a union project. Hundreds of agent and unrepresented-actor submissions were reviewed. Appointments were given. Every actor confirmed their appointment personally or via representation. Audition day came. Double digit no-shows occurred.

How much did each actor’s absence cost? Sum expenses (casting fee, advertising, studio rental, staff salaries, estimated producer expenses including accommodations and transportation) divide that total by the number of actors scheduled, equals…(drum roll) $535.00 plus per actor.

Adding up to over $6,400 does not account for other costs incurred: scheduling an additional audition session to compensate for the M.I.A. actors, communication costs, time pulled from other projects for all involved, and office expenditures for both the casting office and the producer. Add in those totals and the outlay spent towards each actor’s appointment increases several hundred dollars.

And were you robbed of a great value: an audition? Twelve no-shows meant that twelve other actors could have been seen. And one of those twelve could have won work. This happens often on nearly every audition session: no-show actors who by not attending a confirmed appointment robbed a fellow actor of an employment opportunity. (Although I’ve never incurred a dizzying dozen deficits like this in one session.)

Some restaurants charge the credit card of customers who bail on a dinner reservation. Why not impose similar of no-show actors at auditions?

Outrageous? Not according to one actress I encountered who demanded after being cut from a dance call that I and my client pay for her transportation expenses to and from the audition studio. No go girl.

Paul's book ACTING: Make It Your Business!Doubtful the twelve absent actors were together on a stalled train. And if they were all detained elsewhere why not a single e-mail or call explaining their absence? It’s not a casting office’s responsibility to track down no-show job applicants. Our role is to assist actors who commit to the professionalism of the audition process. Mature, responsible actors know that if detained or foresee their absence to an audition professional protocol is to promptly advise the casting office.

As attributed to Woody Allen, “Eighty percent of success is showing up.” Twelve actors are presently failing their careers. Worse, they’re failing themselves. If only they simply… showed.

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 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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