| "How
Do I Get Into Acting?" |
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The
first step in launching a professional acting career is to set
some goals. If you don't have some place to go when you get
in your car, you're just going to drive around, right?
Here are some major issues you should consider:
(1) What do you want to be doing acting-wise five years from
now? Seven years? Ten years? Will you be happy to act in local
productions for no money? Or do you want to be paid to act?
If you are considering a professional career in acting (i.e.
if you want to be paid to do it), then you'll have to get
on a dedicated career track.
2)
Would you be willing to move to Los Angeles or New York? Though
there is much you can do to get started regardless of where
you live, if you want a professional career, you will almost
definitely have to move at some point. LA and NYC are the
sun and earth of the theatrical universe.
3) How old are you? While there is no "right" age for a person
to come into acting, your options -- particularly regarding
training -- will be different the older you are.
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Options for
Acting Training
Age
15-17
Finish
your basic schooling. Enroll in a good liberal arts program
at a respected university. There is no such thing as a dumb
good actor, and the more you know about the world, history
and philosophy, the better off you will be when you turn pro.
While in high school and college, take as many acting technique
classes as you can fit into your schedule and see as many
plays as you can. Act in local and school productions. Join
the Drama Club. Become a serious student of acting, not just
a fan. When you watch movies, study the actors' technique.
After you get your B.A., consider a graduate program in theatrical
training, such as that offered by Yale, Julliard or NYU. Major
Hollywood and New York talent agents and casting directors
are greatly impressed by this type of background, and it will
definitely grease your track once you turn pro.
Age
18-25
If
you are under twenty-five, you should carefully consider following
the recommendations for people 15-17 years old -- but your
choices in training are somewhat more optional. Perhaps you
do not want to spend more time in the university system, or
perhaps you just can't wait to start knocking on the agents'
doors. That's okay, too. Actors like Sissy Spacek, Gary Busey
and Sandra Bullock have not had university training in acting.
If your goal is to immediately enter the professional marketplace
then, at minimum, you should sign up for a professional-level
acting-technique class (scene study)
such as the one I teach in San Francisco. And you would be
smart to take a workshop in audition
technique for commercials, since that is the cash cow
of professional acting and many talent agents are primarily
motivated by your potential to book commercials. (Members
of Screen Actors Guild earn upwards of $400 million each year
from television commercials.)
Age
26 +
University
training is pretty much out of the question if you are already
in your mid-to-late 20's. Your best bet is to immediately
orient yourself to the professional marketplace. Do you live
close to a major city? If you are planning a professional
acting career, and even if you do not want to move to LA or
NYC for a while, there is a lot you can do in your own back
yard. Atlanta, Dallas, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Chicago,
Seattle, Phoenix, Detroit and Boston are just a few of the
cities that have well defined theatrical communities.
Enroll in a la carte professional level acting training --
a scene study workshop, a commercial
audition class, perhaps an improv workshop.
If you live in Chicago, Ed Hooks' Acting Classes would be
a very good option for you. For links to all of my courses,
click here.
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Tools You Will
Need to Get Started Professionally
At
minimum, you need a good 8x10 headshot. Go to a photographer
who specializes in this kind of thing. Theatrical photography
is vastly different from the kind of pictures you had taken
at school, which sit on mom's piano now. A good theatrical
photograph is communicative, will define you as a theatrical
"type."
Once you have your head shot, you will need to "seek representation",
i.e. organize an approach to local talent agents. Contact
Screen Actors
Guild for a national list of union-approved agents. If
there are no SAG franchised agencies in your area, check the
Yellow Pages to find non-franchised agencies. In general,
it is better to have a SAG-franchised agent if you have the
option.
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