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Acting Industry in 5 years time (2028)

Acting Industry in 5 years time (2028)

Posted on Mar 28th

Considering the slump in acting jobs at the moment and the oncoming recession we're heading into (or are currently in), where do you see the industry for actors such as yourselves being in five years time? Back to normal? Better than pre-pandemic? I know there are a thousand factors to this but just wondering what people's versions of returning to actual normality are.

Is it possible to be an actor(trees) without college?

Is it possible to be an actor(trees) without college?

Posted on Mar 28th

Hope this doesn't sound like a dumb question. I mean I was curious if it is still possible without a formal degree other than high school.

How much did you have to learn/unlearn when going from theatre to film?

How much did you have to learn/unlearn when going from theatre to film?

Posted on Mar 28th

I have a theatre background and while I've gotten a good handful of roles in film, a TV credit and a national commercial under my belt, I'm realizing how much of my theatre days I haven't left behind. I have a naturally loud voice (partly because of my theatre training) which have been deemed too big for the camera so I'm looking to sign up for an on-camera class in the future. I've taken a few of them in the past, and each have been different so I'm curious to know what all you had to unlearn in these classes. I ask because even though I'm trying to focus more on film and TV, I would like to get back into occasionally doing theatre again (provided my career's in a good spot) and I don't wanna lose what all I learned in that area. I know there's the saying of 'stick to one medium' but I don't wanna leave theatre behind. I mean, some of the most versatile actors I know can do both theatre and film.

Actors who work regularly: How important has networking been to your career?

Actors who work regularly: How important has networking been to your career?

Posted on Mar 28th

I've been thinking more about the networking side of things lately and I'm wondering; is it absolutely vital? Or is it just helpful and not a necessity in order to make a modest/good living. Thanks for any insight.

Will turning down Tisch hurt my chances of becoming an actor?

Will turning down Tisch hurt my chances of becoming an actor?

Posted on Mar 28th

Hello. I’m a senior in high school, and I just got into NYU’s acting program for the fall of 2023. I’m going to be completely honest, I didn’t expect to get in. The acceptance rate this year was like 8% just for academics. I applied on a dream, and I was prepared to be rejected. When I got accepted, I freaked out then promptly realized that I can’t afford it. I’m devastated that I will have to turn down one of the best programs in the country, but I can’t justify that amount of debt for an undergraduate degree. It’s truly hard though, since the connections and training are top notch. My second choice is Ohio University, which I love, but I am worried about the reputation of the program, and if I’m able to achieve the same level of training. Sorry if this sounds ignorant; I’m just trying to make the right decision.

Since this question gets asked a lot on here...

Since this question gets asked a lot on here...

Posted on Mar 28th

Casting director Erica S Bream tweets: > Actors, in case you need someone to say it: >>Yes, it's far quieter than normal right now. No, it's not just you. And yes, it's been this way for a few months now. >>Take a breath. Don't make any rash decisions re: reps/materials. And trust that it will pick up again at some point. [https://twitter.com/ericasbreamcast/status/1640777268388659201](https://twitter.com/ericasbreamcast/status/1640777268388659201)

How do agencies with 100s of actors work?

How do agencies with 100s of actors work?

Posted on Mar 28th

I'm with a pretty small agency, where it's feasible for one agent to keep every actor in mind - their profile, preferences, quirks, etc. How do agencies with 100s of actors do it? Do they split actors between a handful of agents, so that each agent represents a manageable number of actors? Do the top actors in the agency get submitted a lot and the rest are mostly neglected?

First role

First role

Posted on Mar 27th

Dear actors and actress of reddit. What were some of your first roles?

stavin’s talent

stavin’s talent

Posted on Mar 27th

hello! i was wondering if any chicago actors know anything abt stavin’s talent? if you’ve heard/experienced anything good or bad with them, pls lmk! thank u

Changes to Casting Process

Changes to Casting Process

Posted on Mar 27th

Anyone else feel like there’s changes to the casting process that we haven’t really caught onto yet? Wanted to create a thread of things we’ve been “told” function a certain way (and maybe they did pre-pandemic) but experience is telling us otherwise. Here’s what I’ll start the list off with- - callbacks and producers sessions before any booking- almost every role I’ve booked has been directly off tape, from co stars to guests to recurs. I’ve had producers sessions for large lead/series reg roles but that’s about the only instance I’ve seen them happen. - only a small number of actors are sent to producers- I don’t think this is true any more with how common self tapes are now. I think because the pool of people casting is seeing is larger, the selects pool is larger too. Before I’d hear about 4-8 actors per role were sent to producers- now I’m hearing 15-20. - don’t exactly know how to phrase this one, but I think casting was more involved in the decision making process before. Definitely feels like now since everything is virtually done (and more specifically over email) they don’t really have the same insight into production’s conversations the way they used to. So the feedback we get is vaguer. Any thoughts/things to add?

Best SAG event advice/observations

Best SAG event advice/observations

Posted on Mar 27th

We try to attend as many sag screenings as we can because we have learned that the actor panels after the screening are some of the most insightful we have ever seen. The actors on stage know that they are talking to an audience of actors, so the things they have to say are often very tailored to that audience and aren't things you'd normally see them talk about in an interview. You really get to hear some inside baseball from both actors and directors with some details about the craft that I've never really heard anywhere else. I'm curious if others that attend those events feel the same way and, if so, what advice or observations you've heard that were the most impactful. For us, it was probably a screening of Dune where Oscar Issac was talking about his role as Leto. The moderator was saying that when the casting was announced, he couldn't picture Oscar Issac as Timothee Chalamet's dad, but when he watched the movie, he was blown away by the performance and completely believed it. He was asking what Oscar did to make that work. Oscar's answer was that it wasn't his job to convince people that he was Timmy's dad. (yes, he called him timmy ;) ) It was Timmy's job to treat him like he was his dad. He said that an old acting coach of his had asked them once, "If you walk into a royal court, how do you know who the king is?" It's not the person that claims to be the king, it's the person that everyone else treats like the king. So he sees it as his role to reinforce everyone else's performances and for them to reinforce his. So if he was believable as Timmy's dad, it was because Timmy sold it, not because he did. It stuck me as such a generous way to look at acting and a way to take the pressure off ourself and to think about your role as primary helping other people. Most of us are better at helping others than we are at helping ourselves, so making your acting focused on helping others takes a lot of the pressure off of thinking about having to carry yourself. Not sure why that stuck with me so much, but it has helped a lot with the kids booking roles and working on set as part of a team. ​ Any other thoughts that jump out at other attendees?

Is this excerpt from Uta Hagen's Respect for Acting true?

Is this excerpt from Uta Hagen's Respect for Acting true?

Posted on Mar 27th

To quote from her book: "If you are affected in your daily life, calculatingly self-aware in your relations with others, you will undoubtedly be a bad actor, because your attention is narcissistic. If you have acquired these affectations in your teens and have not shaken them by the time you are twenty, you are in trouble. After all, if you possess borrowed behavior in life and focus on it rather than on others, how can you be really active on stage?" When she says "affected", she means self-consciousness that is applied to an awkward or "affected" person. I suppose I am, in Uta's terms, "affected" because I am socially awkward with others and I worry about what people think about me a lot, I'm very self-critical, and self-loathing. (I mean, if you take a look back through my post history you'll see what I mean). I am 22, which means in Uta's words "I'm in trouble". I personally feel like what she's saying is wrong, and I kind of take offense to it. I mean, I'm sorry I haven't shaken my emotional baggage and self-loathing off yet, but I don't think that's the right criteria that will determine whether or not I am and will still be a bad actor. Is what Uta Hagen is saying in the passage above true that someone like me will undoubtedly be a bad actor? Or is it just another great influential acting teacher spewing bullshit in the name of her own ego that only certain people can become actors?

What does it mean to stretch yourself as an actor?

What does it mean to stretch yourself as an actor?

Posted on Mar 27th

What does stretching yourself as an actor mean? I want to stretch myself as an actor, artist, and human being, but I’m plagued with self-doubt. I’m wrestling with the fear of it being too scary, too hard, that I’m not capable of stretching as far as I’d like to. Any advice for not being affected by this doubt/fear AND stretching myself as an actor and artist? Those who have stretched and played roles they thought they were not ready for or incapable of doing, how did you overcome that wall and succeed? Or how did you overcome a challenge or step outside your comfort zone for your art and how did it affect you?

HELP! Fear I'm deficient in empathy and imagination for acting

HELP! Fear I'm deficient in empathy and imagination for acting

Posted on Mar 27th

I've taken a couple of online empathy tests and quizzes over the past couple of months, and I've received low scores...lower than what I'd like on most of them. I'm not a sociopath or a psychopath, just to clear that up right now. But I'm seriously afraid that I have lower empathy than necessary to be as good of an actor as I can be. How can I inhabit the life of another person when I don't have as high of empathy as I want? I don't know what has blocked or decreased my empathy but I need to fix it. What do I do?!! Second, I'm afraid I'm lacking in high amounts of imagination. I just have this feeling that my imagination is not as strong and as rich as I feel it needs to be for my acting. I'm seriously internally worried and freaking out guys. I worry that my lack of empathy will not only lead me to not being a very good actor but that it will cost me future relationships. (Being an introverted, cerebral loner with ADD and anxiety disorder, I don't have that many strong relationships or friendships anyway.) How do I fix this? What can I do to solve my imagination problem?! Please help!

If I were to die or get shot or something y’all think the news outlets would call me “aspiring actor”

If I were to die or get shot or something y’all think the news outlets would call me “aspiring actor”

Posted on Mar 27th

I’m from the rough bad part of Philadelphia anything could happen at any given moment I’ve been in 4 movies & tv shows one of the shows had my name in the title you google my name it’s the first thing that pops up What you think would be the criteria for me to have Actor associated next to my name? Or would it just be “20 year old from north Philadelphia”

Who else is glad that the way of thinking and certain views have changed

Who else is glad that the way of thinking and certain views have changed

Posted on Mar 27th

I read an article about how film/theatre were more prestigious than TV (or any other combination they could think of), and I hated the way of thinking. How can you compare them when at the core, essentially, they are all the same thing (acting)? That's why this new golden age of TV and TV now being considered just as prestigious as any other medium makes me happy because let's be honest: TV is a very exciting medium. But also I just don't think it makes sense to compare film and theatre and TV when they're all acting. And also they each provide their own pros/joys and cons/annoyances but who cares? It's acting. It's fun. TV is great because you get to act in a "longer" story where the characters grow in every episode, and you have opportunities to be a big role but not necessarily be in every episode and still have the flexibility to audition for other roles (aka recurring roles), and you're doing something different every day, and usually you're filming several scenes in a day so there's a whole lot less downtime. Film is great because there are so many great films outside the Hollywood blockbuster spectrum that tell the most amazing stories in anywhere from like 20-120 minutes and just like film, you're working on something different every day. And if you really want to you also get to really pay attention to other aspects of filmmaking due to the long set-up times. Theatre's awesome because you get to perform live and get to experience things as they go. And who doesn't like an audience? Cons is that for TV if you're a series regular you might be tied down to that one show for years, for film they just shoot so slow lol, and for theatre it gets boring doing the same show every night (at least for me). Personally I think that not every film you work on will be better than every TV show you work on or vice versa, and not every film will be better than theatre and vice versa, and not every theatre show will be better than TV and vice versa. TL;DR- Basically I'm happy that the old way of thinking is scrapped and no medium is necessarily considered more "prestigious" anymore and us actors have the luxury of bouncing between TV theatre and film because let's be honest: I don't want to stick to one when I can do all three.

Why Does Everything I Record Sound Terrible?

Why Does Everything I Record Sound Terrible?

Posted on Mar 27th

(Sorry if this is the wrong flair, I wasn't sure which I should use.) Hey there, folks! I'm a high school junior amateur working on my demo reel right now. I've done theatre for all of high school, and it's my dream to do voice work as a career. Problem. I'm recording some work (context: I know someone who works at USC in the School of Cinematic Arts who offered to send in my reel when I record it), but everything I record sounds terrible. Not the sound quality, the voice and acting themselves. According to my classmates and director, I'm a good actor, but everything I record just doesn't sound good, even after tens of takes. Is it a matter of rehearsal? Am I just being too hard on myself? Any advice?

A controversial opinion: Scene Study is not necessary for Film & TV

A controversial opinion: Scene Study is not necessary for Film & TV

Posted on Mar 27th

I've been taking an on-camera class for Film & TV for the last year and my teacher has emphasized that scene study should not be the focus, but rather creating character first. Character is the #1 thing that as actors, we need to focus on creating. It's the personality of the character and what they're dealing with on the inside that pulls us in. Not their beats, moments and transitions and saying each line in a different tone. While great for foundations, scene study is not necessary and will not work on camera as it's very manufactured and the consistency of your character may not show. We don't use beats, moments, or transitions when talking to people in life. You first need to get down your character before even looking at the script. Think of one or two personality choices for your character that the CD's have given you. Then see if there is something you can bring to the chatacter and scene that was not written. Playing the scene the way its written can be a death trap. As one of the CD's from Euphoria said "don't fall into the trap.". Well what's the trap? "Playing the scene the way its written". How important is scene study to your actors process? Personally for me, character must come first before I go through the script/audition sides. Then see if there is something that I can add that will help my character standout that works appropriately.

What show has the best casting?

What show has the best casting?

Posted on Mar 27th

not the show you most want to appear on, but the show that if you know you make it through their casting process, it says something about you as an actor?

I’m frustrated and agitated to being screwed over

I’m frustrated and agitated to being screwed over

Posted on Mar 27th

As an actor who is currently finalizing their materials to make sure they stand out professional and show great acting capabilities, it pisses me off how filmmakers fail to communicate with the cast and crew on how on the cast and crew on how their project is coming along and update it. I’m going to share an experience. Back in 2021 I auditioned for a short film which was low budget 30 minute shit in a black magic. I did the self tape and never got the audition. Weeks pass by and the guy needs a replacement on set ASAP. I went out of my way and messaged him about wanting to do the project and he offered me role on the spot. I got the script last minute which was long , the director said it was a 3 day shoot back to back in the night , and on top of that it was unpaid but that was the least of my concern. I didn’t know any of my lines at all whatsoever so I had to learn them as I went along. We wrapped filming and the director said it would IMDb credited , go to festivals , and we get the footage. The weekend ends and we don’t hear back from him which is normal. But then those weekends turned into weeks and then months and we didn’t hear back from until fall 2022. He then responded to the entire cast and said that reason he didn’t get back with us was due that he had a family emergency and that it required his full attention. He then asked me if I knew any editors who would be fine editing his short film for free. I spoke to to countless editors and explained to them the situation and even told them that I wouldn’t mind paying for it because editing is time consuming. I sent them all to the director and go figure the director then said “ I appreciate looking out for me but I’ll let you know when I get a director “ and just left me on read. I then told him that everyone needed the footage for their reels and etc and he didn’t bother to listen. Fast forward to 2023 , one of the cast messaged him and he said he was waiting on his tax return transcript to help pay for the editor and he would immediately give us the footage. We haven’t heard back from him at all. Then a costar who I was good friends with then told me that by mid March we would have the footage but by mid March we would have it but mid March passed already. Then , he had the audacity to post another casting call of another film he is currently working on filming only for the same issues to happen with the the previous film we did. He needed extras to show up on his set asap and quick to help film urgently. I really need that footage to help me make my demo reel before submitting to agencies

Voice actors, if you were suggested to make a YouTube channel with narrating some interesting stuff from Reddit, how would you react?

Voice actors, if you were suggested to make a YouTube channel with narrating some interesting stuff from Reddit, how would you react?

Posted on Mar 26th

I have such an idea, and I'm ready to do everything else: video editing, posting, sounds, preview picture etc. The only thing you should do is voicing sone interesting posts/answers. What do you think?

Looking for voice actor

Looking for voice actor

Posted on Mar 26th

So I want to hire person to do the voice for youtube video. Video is about movie analysis. It's around 1000 word. I can pay 10 USD/Hour and as I researched it's around 2-3 hour work to do 1000 word speech voice over. If anyone interested please contact me.

In school thinking of changing my major to acting.

In school thinking of changing my major to acting.

Posted on Mar 26th

My husband and I want to become actors. Well actor and actress. We are majoring in criminal Justice. What do we need to do to be able to get to the right school for acting here in Texas. Don’t know the first thing to do. Any suggestions would help us out a lot. Have no idea what to do I feel so lost.

Where’s the best place to live for an aspiring actor?

Where’s the best place to live for an aspiring actor?

Posted on Mar 26th

I know Los Angeles, but any specifics?

A Lesson Learned From A Failed Audition / An Advice for Newcomers

A Lesson Learned From A Failed Audition / An Advice for Newcomers

Posted on Mar 26th

It's about my previous post that was deleted - I shouldn't have added my voice sample (sorry about that). I didn't do it intentionally. For a brief moment in 2015 I was considered by Capcom for a motion/performace capture role of Leon in RE 2 Remake. From what I now know, I lost the part early on. But here's the mistake I did: I have a formal vocal training, but at that time I was more focused on pure mo cap. I completely failed to advertize myself as someone who could provide voice over work in addition to motion capture. In the end, Capcom hired a Romanian model for mo cap and an American voice actor to create the character of Leon. I should have presented myself from the start as someone who potentially could do both (just as Eric Johnson did in SP Blackist). I was lucky to be considered but luck isn't just luck; it's preparation meets opportunity; well I had my opportunity but I was completely ill prepared; I had no monologues recorded at that time that I could send them just in case. It may sound trivial but we got only one chance to make a first impression - it's true in life and it goes double for auditions. Also, it's always good to list your set of skills and experiences, we never know which one will give us an upper hand during an audition. Thanks that I could share my story.

What are small things you like to do every day as an actor?

What are small things you like to do every day as an actor?

Posted on Mar 26th

Things that you feel help connect you to your craft even if you’re not actively auditioning or help your overall mentality in this crazy industry.

What do rehearsals look like for understudies in a smaller production (not Broadway/West End)

What do rehearsals look like for understudies in a smaller production (not Broadway/West End)

Posted on Mar 26th

Hiya, I was wondering what rehearsals look like for understudies in smaller productions. Do they use people from the ensemble, and then redistribute any lines from that actor's characters amongst the rest of the ensemble? Or do they have someone just hanging out backstage/on speed dial to cover the role? With smaller productions you wouldn't be able to afford swings to cover understudies who are also a part of the ensemble, so I wonder where they would get the understudy from. Furthermore, what would their rehearsal schedule look like? In an ideal world, they would attend all of them and get to practice in some run-throughs so that they have the show down solidly, but with smaller productions I understand that they probably couldn't afford to do that. I like the idea of all the understudies running through a show together, as to me that works in a practical sense, but I'm not sure if it's common practice. If someone could help me out and perhaps even provide their own experiences, I would really appreciate that! I am just about to go to bed, so if you're confused about anything that I've said, please ask and I will clarify/clear things up. Thank you so so much! EDIT: What happens about costumes? Do the understudies get their own (if slightly shittier) versions, or do they just pray that they fit into the original actor's? If it's the latter, what happens if they don't fit? Thank you!!

ARMY COMMERCIAL PULLED- Please Cheer me up

ARMY COMMERCIAL PULLED- Please Cheer me up

Posted on Mar 26th

So, I was recently featured as a SAG principal performer in a massive commercial for none other than the US Army. Principal performer on broadcast and digital, playing in movie theaters, and probably playing for a long, long time. Expecting some serious $ Fast forward to this morning. I wake up, and apparently the star of the commercial, Jonathan Majors, was accused of domestic assault. The Army Pulled the commercial today, put it on 'pause' according to official statements. You guys can imagine the thoughts racing through my mind. What do you guys think will happen? Has any of this happened to anyone here, in terms of acting in something that gets SHELVED? Can payroll switch the cycle length for my payment and make it really small, like retroactively go from 13 weeks to 4 weeks? It literally aired for like 2 weeks ;-( Do you think that there's a chance the commercial will be used again? I am reading that there seems to be a huge legal effort to clear his name, but... damage in the court of public opinion has been done, this being 2023 and not 1776.... the Army has spent 100s of millions on these spots to bolster recruitment numbers, I can't imagine the hit their effort would take if they couldn't air any of their tentpole spots for the months it would take them to film something else. And that's not even getting into Disney's vested interest in this guy. I'm just one of the many small players in a massive machine, but I selfishly am hoping that somehow these spots come back on air. Of course, I'm also hoping that justice is served. TLDR: I was a principal actor in a US ARMY commercial which was just pulled because Jonathan Majors- the star of the spots was arrested and accused of assault. Crazy times

I want back in. Advice please!

I want back in. Advice please!

Posted on Mar 26th

So I was an actress (lol) in college and a bit beyond. I left because I like money and I had another viable career choice- and now I am 50 and I want back in. I need your advice. How do I get an agent. What do I do? Super stardom has passed me by, but would love to get some character actor roles!

do we really need more white actors?

do we really need more white actors?

Posted on Mar 26th

I am a white female in my 20s. Maybe my perspective doesn’t need to be elevated. Part of me wants to stop doing the whole thing because there are women I know that have NEVER SEEN someone like them in a leading role.

Best Actors in History: the ones who went to Acting School versus the ones who didn’t. What list do you prefer?

Best Actors in History: the ones who went to Acting School versus the ones who didn’t. What list do you prefer?

Posted on Mar 26th

Keep in mind that the ones who didn’t go to Acting School still took classes or had private coaching, it’s rare to find an actor who hasn’t received any kind of training. And everyone’s needs and wants are different when it comes to acting education, so if you feel pressured to major in acting in college or spend many years in a program just know that you don’t have to do that. Lastly, there is probably more actors who deserve to be in either list but I don’t want to make them very long. **Went to Acting School** * Denzel Washington - American Conservatory Theater * Tom Hanks - Chabot College and California State University * Robert De Niro - HB Studio, Lee Strasberg’s Actors Studio, and Stella Adler Conservatory * Al Pacino - HB Studio and Lee Strasberg’s Actors Studio * Daniel Day Lewis - Bristol Old Vic Theatre School * Marlon Brando - American Theatre Wing Professional School * Cate Blanchett - National Institute of Dramatic Art * Gene Hackman - Pasadena Playhouse * Dustin Hoffman - Pasadena Playhouse * Viola Davis - Rhode Island College and Juilliard School * Alec Guinness - Fay Compton Studio of Dramatic Art and the London Theatre Studio * Michael Caine - Westminster Repertory Company * Greta Garbo - Royal Dramatic Training Academy * Meryl Streep - Vassar College and Yale School of Drama * Philip Hoffman - NYU * Anthony Hopkins - Royal Academy of Dramatic Art * Frances McDormand - Bethany College and Yale School of Drama * Ingrid Bergman - Royal Dramatic Theatre School * Morgan Freeman - Pasadena Playhouse * Paul Newman - Kenyon College, Yale School of Drama, and the Actors Studio * Charles Laughton - Royal Academy of Dramatic Art * Laurence Oliver - Birmingham Repertory Company * Mahershala Ali - NYU’s Graduate Acting Program * Christoph Waltz - Max Reinhardt Seminar * Kevin Spacey - Juilliard School * Helen Hayes - Academy of the Sacred Heart Convent * Jack Lemmon - HB Studio * Jane Fonda - Actors Studio * Jessica Lange - HB Studio * Maggie Smith - Oxford Playhouse * Sally Field - Actors Studio **Did not go to Acting School** * Bette Davis * Natalie Portman * Leonardo DiCaprio * Joaquin Phoenix * Heath Ledger * Katharine Hepburn * Tilda Swinton * Toshiro Mifune * Humphrey Bogart * Jack Nicholson * Christian Bale * James Stewart * Brad Pitt * Sean Penn * Russel Crowe * Jean Gabin * Sidney Poitier * Jodie Foster * Renee Zellweger * Anthony Quinn * Hilary Swank * Amy Adams * Julia Roberts * Tommy Lee Jones * Javier Bardem * Johnny Depp

Acting Classes: Required or Helpful?

Acting Classes: Required or Helpful?

Posted on Mar 26th

I've made a previous post here about stage names mostly out of the blue, but I'm finally taking real steps to get the ball rolling. As stated before, I am a teen actor looking to get in the business but I'm not sure what steps to make first. I'm not at all trained when it comes to acting, save for lead roles within school productions. The idea of getting acting classes sounds amazing, but much of the classes in my area are pretty expensive. Is there a way to make do without them? Are there good alternatives you know of?

I'm starting to finally get jobs thanks to some of y'all!

I'm starting to finally get jobs thanks to some of y'all!

Posted on Mar 25th

So a while back, I made a post asking about an agency I thought was a scam (which it totally was btw), and some of y'all gave me advice on how best to find small jobs on my own. Thanks to y'alls advice, I got cast in a commercial for "a popular fruit beverage company's new alcoholic seltzer" (I still don't know if I'm technically allowed to say it since it's not on market), and I just got cast to have a speaking role in a statewide mental health campaign. I just wanted to generally thank all who helped by giving advice, and this sub in general for being fantastic for new actors wanting to start a career!

Actra Apprentice membership advise

Actra Apprentice membership advise

Posted on Mar 25th

Hey awesome acting people! I recently was asked to perform in a theatre organizations concert that was live-streamed through Actra. I got my first Actra credit through this concert, and last week received a letter informing me that I could join actra as an apprentice. I have 5 weeks to decide if I want to join and wondering what ya’ll think my best course of action would be. A bit about myself, I’m an actor in Canada, 28F, non-union, in the process of finding representation, and I’ve only done theatre work at this point but want to make the jump to film work. I know I will lose my ability to work on non-union jobs, and given that I have no film experience on my resume, I’m wondering what I should do. Would having an apprentice membership harm me more than benefit me when I don’t have any film experience (besides bg work)? Would I be better off waiting until I have more film experience? Thanks in advance for your insight and guidance!

Audiobook Sample - Looking for a little guidance

Audiobook Sample - Looking for a little guidance

Posted on Mar 25th

Hey everyone. Over the past few weeks, I have been exploring the voice over world. During COVID, I was able to accumulate audio equipment due to working from home and became interested after stumbling upon a YouTube video where an audiobook narrator described her experience getting into the industry. There is still plenty for me to adjust, but I wanted to receive some feedback and guidance, if possible. I'm not sure if one type of VO work is "better" than the others. For instance, I have heard audiobook narration is quite arduous and many VO actors stay away from it. I like reading, so that is where I went naturally. I'm also not sure what my voice fits better, if that makes sense. I do have some acting experience, but this was years ago at this point so anything that remains would be degraded, at best. I have also done some very minor VO work as of last year, recording official training material for the company I work for. [Here is a link](https://soundcloud.com/wdrogers93/dracula-reading-sample) to a 1 minute audio sample of me reading Dracula. What are your thoughts, and is there a specific type of VO work that you think I would be better at than another? Thanks in advance.

Canadian actors!

Canadian actors!

Posted on Mar 25th

Hi everyone If you’re a Canadian actor (union or non) can you please go sign the petition on ACTRA’s website to ask the government to fire Cossette. We’re in a lockout for our commercial work and we need all the help we can get! Share with your friends and family too! Non union actors we want you to get the best wages too! If they break our union this isn’t good for anyone. Link: https://www.actra.ca/nca/firecossette/?utm_campaign=later-linkinbio-actranational&utm_content=later-33937845&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkin.bio

Completed 100 AUDITIONS

Completed 100 AUDITIONS

Posted on Mar 25th

I'm an actor based in Mumbai, India and I've been auditioning since the last 3-4 years. I'm a college student and I started auditioning from the very start of college and I'm going to graduate this May. This feels like such an interesting journey and I am so excited for what lies ahead! My booking stats: Total Auditions = 100 (For film, TV, web, commercials) Shortlisted / Second round = Approximately 20-25 Booked = 8 (Out of which 6 were professional and 2 were local or projects made by acquaintances) Out of the 6: 5 commercials (of which 1 didn't release) and 1 cameo speaking role in a web show.

What does Daniel Kaluuya mean by showing the audience you’re lying while also telling the truth?

What does Daniel Kaluuya mean by showing the audience you’re lying while also telling the truth?

Posted on Mar 25th

This morning I was really enjoying this “In The Envelope” podcast episode https://spotify.link/z7x5U2bPsyb interviewing Daniel Kaluuya (Get Out, Nope, Judas & The Black Messiah) which really is a treat for actors. The host asked a lot of really great questions, but what really struck out to me was around 12:50-13:00, where Daniel says that what an actor does while in character, is signal to the audience that they’re “lying,” in order to keep them engaged but to do that while coming from a place of truth. Can anyone elaborate on that?

Looking for Bluey Voice Actors

Looking for Bluey Voice Actors

Posted on Mar 25th

[https://www.castingcall.club/projects/bluey-animation-paid-opportunity](https://www.castingcall.club/projects/bluey-animation-paid-opportunity) Looking for 1-4 singers for an animation about the show Bluey. Payment ranges from 30$-75$ USD due to some roles having more lines than others. Follow the link if interested. \*\*\*EDIT\*\*\* The audio will be used in a parody of "The Duck Song" Here's a link to it: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtN1YnoL46Q](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtN1YnoL46Q) Here are some sample lines and videos to get an idea for the voices: Bandit voice sample: [**https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O87w8xy-g-c**](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O87w8xy-g-c) (The following lines are sung in the tune of the duck song) \-"No we just sell coconuts, but they're tasty and cheap and you don't need cups!" \-"No, like I said before, we just sell coconuts at this store, why not give it a shot?" \-"Ok look, whats your deal? I mean, coconut's are all that we sell here! They have little umbrellas" Chilli voice sample: [**https://youtu.be/jFp8Dvm3BPA?t=84**](https://youtu.be/jFp8Dvm3BPA?t=84) (The following lines are sung in the tune of the duck song) \-"The ducks walked up to a coconut stand And they said to the dad runnin' the stand." \-"Then they waddled away (waddle waddle)" \-"'Till the very next day (bom, bom, bom, bom, bom babom) ​ Bluey voice sample: [**https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlOIzz-GIxk**](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlOIzz-GIxk) \-(In the tune of the duck song): "Hey! Got any grapes?" \-(Spoken normal): "Can you read this story? We made it for you at nana's!" ​ Bingo voice sample: [**https://youtu.be/aqsWtxYzQ0o?t=55**](https://youtu.be/aqsWtxYzQ0o?t=55) \-(Spoken Normal): "Yeah can you and dad read it?" \-(In the tune of the duck song): "Hey! Got any grapes?" https://preview.redd.it/15mzracfdvpa1.png?width=712&format=png&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=64f00cc42ac5f48481c875d2ec7facdcf6dbdb78

Games/Activities for a trio of would-be voice actors?

Games/Activities for a trio of would-be voice actors?

Posted on Mar 25th

I have a couple of buddies that are pretty quick with a joke and are halfway decent at coming up with voices on the fly. One of them has mentioned a few times they would love to "break into voice acting" What would you recommend a trio of goofballs do to strengthen our voice acting brain meat?

Any U.K. Actors here? What’s your story so far?

Any U.K. Actors here? What’s your story so far?

Posted on Mar 25th

No disrespect to our US family, this subreddit is predominantly from experience a US audience. But as r/actinguk doesn’t get much traction I thought there could be more here :-) Just wondering if we have any U.K. Actors here and what’s been your path away so far? Education, training or winging it and learning on the job and booking some jobs?

YouTuber transitioning to the acting scene in LA

YouTuber transitioning to the acting scene in LA

Posted on Mar 25th

Hello folks. I am making this thread as a non-actor and mean it with the most respect. I've always wanted to be an actor/writer. I love comedy in particular- Adam Sandler, Judd Appatow, Seth Rogen, truly heroes of mine. I come from a lower-middle class background (not much money, not a nepo baby) and didn't go to acting school. But I got (lucky I guess) and managed to blow up on social media. I grew 500,000+ subscribers on YouTube, 50,000 on instagram, etc. Verified everywhere (blue checkmark). And I did all of this doing comedy content. Now, with that being said, I do NOT think I am a great actor or unbelievable talent. It comes natural to me but I am by no means good. My strength is comedy, funny movies ideas and entertaining people online. I am great at socializing as well so networking would be pretty fun. I am aware that Hollywood don't care much about social media presence. They don't pay attention to follower counts, numbers of subscribers or whatever. But I (naively) thought that if I grew big on social media I could maybe, network with the right people, get connected to someone behind the scenes. I just decided to build a following online, thinking it could help me crack in. I look at it like more of a "backdoor" approach. I also believe writing may be easier to break into than acting- so I have a bunch of films/shows I have written that I believe would be easier to pass on to someone than say, getting an audition. And I have put together short film concepts that have achieved millions of views online which, could maybe show the ideas have potential? My plan is to spend 6 months in LA attending acting classes and meeting people organically. I know it will take longer to get good at acting obviously but, I've saved up enough money I could live in LA for probably 2-3 years without working. I have many "successful" friends but they are all YouTubers, influencers, etc. None of them are in the 'industry". So I am truly an outsider. But at the same time I have been told that is "refreshing" because I'm the odd man out. I apologize if this is the wrong place to be asking this. Do producers/agents or anyone in the industry give chances, meetings or opportunities to the new generation of youtubers/instagram people? I have a bunch of screenplays to pitch (movies, tv shows etc) and presume it would be easier to get in that way. Probably a lot more demand for good ideas than another funny guy in his 20s auditioning for funny guy roles. What do you all think?

Acting reel advice?

Acting reel advice?

Posted on Mar 25th

Im putting together my first acting reel so I can start submitting through backstage and actors access. I don’t really have an previous work to show. Any recommendations?

Actors who went to Acting School vs Actors who did not. Which list do you prefer?

Actors who went to Acting School vs Actors who did not. Which list do you prefer?

Posted on Mar 25th

This is just for fun! Also, keep in mind that the actors went to college for acting graduated or at least spent more than a year in the school. And this doesn’t mean that the actors who didn’t go to school haven’t gotten any kind of training, arguably all actors have taken some sort of class or training. **Actors who went to School** • Adam Driver - Juilliard School • Jessica Chanstain Juilliard School • Adam Sandler - NYU • Miles Teller - NYU • Robin Williams - Juilliard School • Daniel Day Lewis - Bristol Old Vic Theatre School • Robert de Niro - HB Studio, Lee Strasberg’s Actors Studio, and Stella Adler Conservatory • Al Pacino - HB Studio and Lee Strasberg’s Actors Studio • Marlon Brando - American Theatre Wing Professional School • Ana de Armas - National Theatre of Cuba • Denzel Washington - Fordham University and American Conservatory Theater • Oscar Isaac - NYU • Pedro Pascal - NYU • Bradley Cooper - The New School • Andrew Garfield - Royal Central School of Speech and Drama • Julianne Moore - Boston University • Viola Davis - Rhode Island College and Juilliard School • Cate Blanchett - National Institute of Dramatic Art **Actors who did not** • Leonardo DiCaprio • Austin Butler • Jennifer Lawrence • Margot Robbie • Emma Stone • Brad Pitt • Johnny Depp • Tom Cruise • Heath Ledger • Joaquin Phoenix • Javier Bardem • Ryan Gosling • Diego Calva • Tom Hardy • Jim Carrey • Christian Bale • Robert Pattinson

I just made my new character reel! any feedback or criticism would be highly appreciated.

I just made my new character reel! any feedback or criticism would be highly appreciated.

Posted on Mar 25th

I’m a 16 y/o voice actor with one year of experience. I made this demo from my home studio and i’m looking for some feedback! I’d love to hear any insight as to what I did right or wrong!

Your weekly /r/VoiceActing roundup for the week of March 17 - March 23

Your weekly /r/VoiceActing roundup for the week of March 17 - March 23

Posted on Mar 24th

**Friday, March 17 - Thursday, March 23** ###Interesting | score | comments | title & link | |--|--|--| | 0 | [2 comments](/r/VoiceActing/comments/11wohju/taxes_skip_to_43_minutes/) | `[interesting Link

How did they get John Dimaggio for the english dub of Drifting Home?

How did they get John Dimaggio for the english dub of Drifting Home?

Posted on Mar 24th

John Dimaggio is an A list voice actor with very high rates, how could they afford him when he probably costs at least 50k, don't dubs have low budgets normally?

Co-starring w/Eric Roberts was GREAT!

Co-starring w/Eric Roberts was GREAT!

Posted on Mar 24th

I was on-set for 10 days filming the psychological thriller ”Intent Unknown” with some amazing local Iowa actors, as well a Academy Awards & Golden Globe actors Eric Roberts and Julianna Michelle

Actors, you don't ever need to meet up with a producer/director in person to get a role.

Actors, you don't ever need to meet up with a producer/director in person to get a role.

Posted on Mar 24th

I'm not talking about in-person auditions, I'm talking if a director wants to meet up with you alone either for dinner or at their house to "get to know you." A bunch of actresses I know and I who have a resume but are not celebrities have all dealt with a creepy producer who has a medium sized show on amazon prime (isn't very good). It has some c list and d list actors in it though so I guess he uses this to try to get newer actresses to meet with him I guess thinking they might be desperate or something. The show isn't very good looks like it isn't coming out even though it was filmed years ago, etc. Just wanted to share this though as it's really creepy and predatory behavior. I asked both my agent and manager about this and they said do not meet with this guy. I also found his Instagram and he has tons of pictures of actresses he worked with sitting on his lap or putting his arms around them and it's extremely disturbing. This guy has to be at least 50.Even if I was single, I would rather not work for years than put my safety possibly at risk. I know I can get roles without having to meet up with producers alone. Be careful out there ladies! lots of creeps in the industry trying to take advantage of young women out there.

Are large project open calls for real, or just to increase awareness of projects?

Are large project open calls for real, or just to increase awareness of projects?

Posted on Mar 24th

I don’t mean to sound jaded, but I feel like every time there’s a “nation wide search” they end up casting someone already well in the industry. Is this ever real, or just a marketing ploy that gets young actors hopes up?

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