Arts & Humanities: Theater & Acting: “Question: What are some good audition songs for legally blonde the musical?” plus 5 more |
- Question: What are some good audition songs for legally blonde the musical?
- Question: Audition Songs for Legally Blonde?
- Question: Good comedy monologues to read for an audition?
- Question: Musicals that use these settings?
- Question: Where to start off of having a acting career?
- Question: Could anyone help me with my resume and what it should consist of if I have no experience?
| Question: What are some good audition songs for legally blonde the musical? Posted: 24 Nov 2015 07:25 PM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: Audition Songs for Legally Blonde? Posted: 24 Nov 2015 05:51 PM PST |
| Question: Good comedy monologues to read for an audition? Posted: 24 Nov 2015 01:22 PM PST I really like the opening monologue from shadow of a boy by Gary Jones. It's a bit weird and technically the character is lie 7 but out of context it's very playful. |
| Question: Musicals that use these settings? Posted: 24 Nov 2015 01:22 PM PST I'm trying to figure out what our school musical may be these year- I know there is a scene that takes place in a bar and another in a house/ Does anyone know of musicals that have both of these scenes? |
| Question: Where to start off of having a acting career? Posted: 24 Nov 2015 11:02 AM PST If you're asking "where" as in location - you can start almost anywhere. The basic steps include: 1. Get realistic. Give up the fantasy that actors are "discovered". It's a business, not a lottery. People (even very talented ones) just wait around hoping someone will notice how great they are and tell them what to do next. There's no one way to be an actor. No one is going to tell you what to do every step of the way. It'll be up to you to take responsibility for your career. If you're a minor, you have to talk to your parents first and make sure they're willing to do the work necessary to make good decisions for any career you may attempt. 2. Get quality training from well respected instructors. Not only does it improve your skills but it's one way to start to network and make connections in the industry. Where you study and who you study with matters.nit can help open doors. Good actors continue to get training throughout their careers. 3. Get experience. Audition for what you can - school plays, community theater and the like. You can try contacting local film schools and ask how the find actors for student films and check those sources. You need to make sure you're passionate about the work of acting - not just the idea of being an actor. And you have to see if you're any good. Training and experience is how you do that. 4. Learn the business end of things. You need to understand things like the casting process (casting directors, agents, breakdowns, etc); legal requirements (contracts, unions, taxes, etc); effective marketing strategies (head shots, resumes, show reel, website, social media, etc); networking. Attempting an acting career is like running a company and you are the product to be marketed and sold. 5. Plan. Not only do many actors not make it big - most professional actors don't support themselves by acting a lone. Every acting job is temporary, so you always have to worry about when (and if) you'll get another job. That means you need to plan how you're going to support yourself and how you're going to approach your career. Like I said, there's no one way to be an actor. |
| Question: Could anyone help me with my resume and what it should consist of if I have no experience? Posted: 24 Nov 2015 08:51 AM PST Without an experience you really don't need a resume. For things like community theater you really don't need one. But some general information about acting resume: First it should be 8x10 paper since it's usually stapled to your head shot (which is an 8x10 picture) You list you name in bold letters at the top. Then put the heading "TRAINING" and list any acting, voice or dance lessons you've taken. Include the name of the class, where you took it and who taught it. Then put the heading SPECIAL SKILLS and list any special skills you have - if you sing, include your vocal range. If you dance, list the specific type of dance you're experienced in (ballet, tap, jazz, ballroom, hip hop). Other things to list - foreign languages you are fluent in. Sports you play. Instruments you play. Things like that. Here's an article with some more information: http://bizparentz.org/gettingstarted/res... |
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