Arts & Humanities: Theater & Acting: “Question: I want to audition for korean entertainment.(several questions) help?!?” plus 5 more |
- Question: I want to audition for korean entertainment.(several questions) help?!?
- Question: In scenes in movies where the actress gropes the actor.is he wearing protection or is she really grabbing his dick and balls?
- Question: How can I get started in acting?
- Question: 35 yrs old actor meeting with a talent agency?
- Question: How come i didnt get called back. did i blow it?
- Question: Advice/tips in acting?
| Question: I want to audition for korean entertainment.(several questions) help?!? Posted: 07 Apr 2015 11:13 PM PDT |
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| Question: How can I get started in acting? Posted: 07 Apr 2015 09:50 PM PDT Here is my best advice: 1) Really figure out if you want acting as a legitimate career for yourself instead of just figuring that you like it. Because once you get started and once you get popular—fame is a very hard thing to leave. If you do wind up figuring you want this, then shoot! But acting takes hard work. 3) Work! Acting is hard, hard work. Go for all the school's musicals, take classes et cetera. Look up things on the internet. 2) Audition! You hear about a new movie coming out—it used to be your favourite book, maybe you liked this certain character and you could see yourself playing this character really well. So go for it! Send up a video on YouTube, read out some lines and call it something along the lines of: 4) Never stop trying, because you'll never make it if you do. Life will take you as far as it can, but you have to work time to time! I wish you tons and tons of luck! I really hope this works out for you! :* |
| Question: 35 yrs old actor meeting with a talent agency? Posted: 07 Apr 2015 08:14 PM PDT I am an aspiring actress and I have received a call from a talent agency after i have sent my picture. I have done my research and they are reputable. Only takes 15percent once booked. My question is three part: 1. My mom wants tag along the meeting, would that be unprofessional if she comes with me? Given that I am already 35yrs old? 2. When I spoke to the agent, she said just to being myself because she wants to meet nothing else. Do I still need to prepare a monologue??? 3. She mentioned right away workshops that she would like to send me to FREE of charger and how the agency works (charging only 15percent once booked) Your help would be greatly appreciated! |
| Question: How come i didnt get called back. did i blow it? Posted: 07 Apr 2015 07:41 PM PDT Yes, you are overreacting. There's no way we're going to know the mind of the AD. If could be the mistakes, or it could be that you didn't have the right look that they wanted for the other scene. Maybe the needed Union extras. It really doesn't matter - don't take it personally. Honestly - you were just breathing sceney and it's no reflection on you as a person or you as an actor. You got the experience - hopefully you had some fun and learned some things, just enjoy this for what it was. Taking your picture is not a guarantee that they'll use you for future scenes. It's more that they'll be ready to refilm the scene (or add to that scene) if needed. And with calling you again, it's like everything in acting - maybe they will and maybe they won't. If you want to be an actor you need to be able to handle rejection better and not take it so personal. On the bright side - now you have time to focus on actual acting and that can be good too! |
| Question: Advice/tips in acting? Posted: 07 Apr 2015 07:05 PM PDT If you love acting – and I mean love it for its own sake, not with any silly notions of ever becoming famous and making loads of money - you have three choices. 1) You can get a year or so's acting classes at a good acting school, then join a good community theatre purely as a hobby and have fun being part of a great bunch of people, set-building, costume making and altering, scenery-painting, working front of house, helping backstage and if you have any talent, you'll soon start getting small roles. After a while, you may get bigger and better ones and could even try directing. You'd be able to work your ordinary job in the daytime and earn a normal living, have a steady income, your own home maybe, have a family – all the normal things of life. 2) You can start off the same way, but carry on with the classes while getting the same experience, take singing and dance lessons too, and then try for a place at a really advanced acting school. (In the UK it would have to be a top drama school for three years). Only after several years' training and loads of leading roles at the theatre and also in student/short/indie films might you be able to get a good agent, who would try to get you some auditions for professional work. But you'd have to accept that you'd probably be like almost all actors, never get more than 5 to 15 days paid acting work a year, in small roles, in small productions. You'd probably never become well-known. You'd have to forget the idea of a steady home, a family, the same group of friends for more than a month or two. And all the time, you'd have to be working an 'ordinary' job for maybe 40 hours a week whenever you could fit it in, ideally working from home, in between auditions, rehearsals, unpaid acting work, workshops, masterclasses, travelling, etc. It's exhausting, stressful, and often depressing and lonely. But if you have huge talent and really love to act, and consider it's worth all the hassle, maybe you could deal with it all. 3) You can forget the whole idea, decide that you don't really love acting and all you were interested in was the fantasy of fame and fortune, and instead get an ordinary, well-paid job and live a normal life. |
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