Why Actors Need to Be Idealistic | Answers for Actors

Idelaism
Paul Russell_HeadshotPaul Russell – author, director & casting director

What was your first role as an actor?

Were you a chorus member in a school musical? Were you costumed in a cardboard carpet roll representing an elm in a grade school pageant? Did you find yourself running towards the glowing circle of a spotlight’s beam cast upon the boards?

Or were you dragged, like me, unwilling, shy, and scared to place yourself before the public?

However you evolved into an actor your journey was soon propelled by a simple four letter word; love. Passion births idealism. Grasping firmly onto that fascination invokes our individual desires for success.

And with idealism, like the early romances of our youth, comes expectations of how things will be.

We see golden auras in each pursuit. Flaws are diminished by our doting on the excitement of the positives. As reflected when Sondheim scored: “Everything was possible and nothing made sense” when he wrote of elders reminiscing upon youthful aspirations in the musical Follies.

Holding onto that initial wonderment of freedom and barriers be damned is the greatest challenge to an actor. Lose your idealism and you lose yourself. Game over.

Idealism is both a burden and burro in our journeys as artists. We must lug the load of enthusiasm upon our backs when the trail rises. And we ride idealism’s joys on leveling plains and gentle rolling downgrades. The latter is the easier. The struggle to haul idealism over forbidding pathways is the swiftest and most destructive potential to ending one’s travels.

Dismissive civilians, un-supportive family and friends, and criticizing peers often weigh down our idealism by loading on our backs disparaging comments:

“What’ve I seen you in lately?”

“How come you don’t have an agent?”

“Why don’t you have a better agent?”

“Why aren’t you famous?”

“When will you grow up and get a real life?”

I endured those doubts dropped upon me when I was an actor. I still hear similar in my current work as an author, director and casting director. But mostly the damaging comments that lead to self-despair come not from others but from within ourselves:

What is my career? Where am I going? How much longer until I reach… wait… what am I reaching for? Do I know? I think so. But my sight is sometimes blurred by a blizzard of doubt.

Doubt from and to you kills idealism. You must murder the assailing dissent before it murders your dreams. Kill the doubt. To keep your idealism alive—that joy you had when first beginning your career—you must bring death to thoughts, words and actions that plot to annihilate your wonder for obtaining your goals.

If any of us are to succeed we must stop and recall during times of doubt why we first began our journey. What was the lighted joy that sparked our imagination so that we could see ourselves forward beyond perceived limitations? You need to shield that light close to you. Nurture its wick. Protect the flame from crosswinds that threaten to extinguish its glow. Once the light puffs out leaving a thin tendril of gray trailing there’s little chance of a rekindle. The flame may flicker during gales of despair. It’s then that idealism’s glow must be most guarded. Idealism is a beacon within your heart.

Often I’ve been battered by professional and personal tragedies. And with each new assault that leaves me nearly in fetal position I sort through the dark doubts and discover a tiny light flickering its glow upon a thought; ‘You’ve no other choices discovered yet that bring you the same happiness… get up, push forward and find the fourteen year-old you who was pulled unwillingly onto the stage and found a home.’  That adolescent’s discovery was and remains my idealism.

What’s yours?

Do you still have it?

Is it flickering? If so, guard it.

No one else but you will lantern the light that is your idealism.

My best,
Paul

For many, many more actor marketing tips plus audition room technique, and how to best find and keep agents get that vital information from the people who know it best: Broadway and Hollywood actors, agents and casting directors speaking to you from the pages of the book the casting director for Hamilton, The Intern, The Wiz – Live hails as:

“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
(The InternHamiltonNBC’s The Wiz – LIVE!, Wicked)

Get Paul Russell’s best-seller for actors; ACTING: Make It Your Business – How to Avoid Mistake & Achieve Success as a Working Actor

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Paul Russell’s career as a casting director, director, acting teacher and former actor has spanned over 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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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!

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 to Audition and get Cast in Your Sleep | Answers for Actors

Without your ever knowing… you may have auditioned for me. I saw you but you didn’t see me. Or… Without your ever knowing I may have sought your talents but you shunned my interest and so I moved onto to another actor/actress. How are both or either possible you wonder?

Paul Russell
Photo Credit: JackMenashe.com

Without your ever knowing… you may have auditioned for me. I saw you but you didn’t see me.

Or…

Without your ever knowing I may have sought your talents but you shunned my interest and so I moved onto to another actor/actress.

How are both or either possible you wonder?

The Internet is where much of the modern casting process begins for a number of casting personnel. Talent agents, directors (and occasionally producers) also surf online like casting directors seeking something that every actor must have for career momentum. What is it? Think you know the easy answer? Could it be….; a website?

Bzzzt! Wrong answer, thanks for playing. (But a website is mandatory if you’re to be considered a serious business actor who is a true professional in all aspects of your craft; i.e. talent, marketing, and training.)

The correct answer to what casting directors like myself along with directors and talent agents are seeking when searching online for talent is…: the actor’s online media.

Economics are forcing casting directors to forgo live pre-screen auditions because our clients (producers) are curtailing casting budgets. Thankfully technology allows anyone nearly anywhere on this globe to upload digital media of themselves to an online server. A boon to bypass casting budget restraints of holding live pre-screen auditions (full chapter on this type and other auditions like pilots  in ACTING: Make It Your Business). And producers who control our purse string now know this and will not go back to old cash burning ways of allowing casting to hold oodles of live pre-screens. So now casting must explore talent that is unfamiliar to us by not traipsing into a costly audition studio but by going online to see what an actor has representing them out in the electronic ether.

The first points of such exploration by a casting office, like mine, when seeking your recorded talents online without your knowledge, often follow the order below:

Actors Access

YouTube

Google

Your Website

Facebook (Personally I’ll begrudgingly relent to Zuckerberg’s constantly changing online carnival when desperate because the actor I seek has been inept and/or lazy at providing their own online offerings.)

For my office; that’s the order and limit. (The first three choices are nearly tied for first priority of our digital pursuit of you.)

If I want to see just your picture and resume my first stop is Actors Access.

If I want to explore more of your talent offerings (i.e. act and/or sing) my next step is YouTube. If after entering your name in the ‘Search’ field there are zero returns I’ll move onto Google and hope (as I irritably poke and punish my laptop’s keys in frustration towards an actor’s avoidance for digital marketing) that you have a website.

Every actor needs a website. Every actor needs, needs, needs digitally recorded examples of their work online. Preferably on their website.

But there remain generations of agoraphobic-like actors — Baby-Boomers to Millennials — who stubbornly abandon digital self-advocacy. The stubborn sloths remain mired in the antiquated, pound-the-pavement mindset of… “If I just keep dozing while waiting in 6 AM open calls lines I’ll be a stah-ar one day.” (Barf bag, please.)

You’re a business. Recorded digital media online of one’s trade is a supportive business tool. If you feel that having such a valuable tool in your arsenal of being an actor is:

A. Too much work

B. Unnecessary

C. A waste of your time, pain in the ass, et. al.

… do yourself a favor and tumble out of the f-ing audition line right now. You’re not a smart business actor. You’re a shyster fooling only yourself.

Don’t think online media does an actor good?

Wrong!

On one recent project in which agents submitted their clients, and actors submitted themselves, I perused through the nearly one thousand delivered pictures and resumes (hard copy and digital). When I culled the actors I already knew from those submissions — who I believed right for the project — I offered them an appointment. I was left with a precious dozen empty slots in my live auditions for the creative team. I went back to the actors I had an interest in but did not know. I then went online seeking recorded media of those actors in performance.

Actors who I found easily online who had digital media representing them, and their talents matched what I sought; they got appointments.

Actors who I could not find anything representing them online (not even a website); received absolutely no consideration for an appointment. Yes, I had their picture and resume. But they had nothing online like their peers to support the P&R.

And for one actor on this project he’ll never know how close he came to an appointment but failed because he was not a good business actor.

On a dark morning as I readied myself to go into New York for the day of live auditions I received from the producer-client a forwarded e-mail from an actress. She was scheduled to come into the auditions but asked if her boyfriend could be seen. The call was mine.

I had fifteen minutes to jump into my Honda and drive to the train that would take me into the day’s auditions. But before doing so I wanted to check on this actor. Did he have online media? A website?

I first went to Actors Access. My fingers typed his name into the search field. The web page refreshed. The message returned? ‘No matches found.’

(Grrrr.)

I then quickly Googled the actor’s name. Several results returned but none of which were a website for said actor. Just his name attached to cast lists and reviews. No help there.

I tried YouTube, Google videos, Vimeo (why the hell am I doing so much god damned work for one f-ing actor who is being un-actorly and hiding his face?!?!?!) No results returned.

(Double grrrr.)

My train would arrive soon several traffic lights and school bus stops away.

I abandoned myself to a Facebook search.

Yes, the actor had a profile.

No information of his work other than ‘Occupation: Actor’.

No links to media.  (But if I’d the time I could investigate further on his wall his postings about what last night’s enchiladas had done to his bowels. I, like he, moved on.)

The actor did not get an appointment. He did not have himself represented digitally online.

What an opportunity missed. Not just my audition but the opportunity for the actor to have his work online working for while he slept, showered, did his survival job or was waiting in line at an EPA for the next TV star Broadway vehicle of which no roles (not even understudies) are avail.

Sometimes actors have websites (yea!). Sometimes actors have websites which don’t offer media (not so yea). Or sometimes (and this happens too often) an actor will have a media page on their website but instead of casting finding reels or vocal demos we find a single sentence on the page ‘Under Construction – Coming Soon!’ (I’m all out of ‘yea’). And so we move on.

Have a website with reels or demos of your work? I’m a captive audience hoping you have the solution to my casting puzzle.

Your digital media can be any or all of the following:

Your reel (No more than three minutes… would you watch five minutes of me typing??)

A video recording of your cabaret act and/or graduating scene showcase

Union sanctioned recordings of your stage work

Recordings of non-union stage work

Voiceover demos

Singing demos

Be a smart business actor. Have yourself represented online with digital media of your work/skill set.

And puh-leeze… have that media be better than what one misguided ‘actress’ who sent me: Her, alone on her bed, singing a capella Defying Gravity.

(Oh sweetie… you ain’t even defying that JC Penney bedspread.)

Next!

My Best,
Paul

ACTING: Make It Your BusinessSide Note: FREE subscriber to Answers for Actors? If not, then you’re not getting Answers for Actors delivered directly to your in-box. Each new post (once every two weeks) gets you industry info. I and my office do not view your e-mail address when you subscribe (the techno-elves do all that).  We just know you’re on-board and happily sharing in your journey. To subscribe for free use one of the subscription services either in the upper left corner (the plus sign ‘follow’ in the black band) or the gray ‘Follow Answers For Actors’ button to the lower right.

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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