Thursday, October 31, 2013

Figuring out breakdowns without breakdowns

So maybe you get them. Maybe you don't. They're helpful sure. Maybe you see a role you're right for, you can bug your agent. maybe you see a CD you used to know really well moved to a new office. Great. But it doesn't matter what roles they have it matters WHO THEY CAST.

How can you figure that out?

One of the best untapped resources out there is still IMDB Pro.

Any time I'm deciding whether or not to take a worksop one of the first things I"ll do is go to IMDB Pro. I'll look at the show they're casting and look at every guest and co-star actor they've cast in as many episodes as I can have access to. I'll look at their credits, I'll look at their representation, you look at enough episodes you'll get a sense, "are they bringing in people like me?"


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Spending Money on Auditions

A very interesting thing is happening in the world of actors now.

More and more you can continue to pay more money to have a better audition.

What do I mean by that?

You can tape yourself in your living room. Or you can go to the place down the street, or have a friend film you.

Or you can spend the money and go to a professional place, work with a coach, be lit, miked, and turn in a professional level tape for an audition.

So what do you do? Part of you is like - why am I PAYING my own money to audition? That doesn't seem right.

You're right. But neither does not getting the role even if you were fantastic because you remind the producer of their second cousin they no longer speak to. There are a lot of things that "aren't fair" about this business, and we do it anyway.

And here's the truth: once people do start spending the money on coaches, and professional tapes, etc. let's be honest - their tape is just gonna look better.

So what's a girl to do?

If you're going to spend the money - make sure it's well spent - make sure it's at a place who puts out good quality, make sure it's a place where you feel comfortable, if you're going to put something on tape, make sure it's a place where they'll let you do it 30 times if you want because why not, make sure there's a mirror, make sure they have what you need to make it the best possible tape it can be.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Finding Good Scenes for Prepared Reads

What works:

1. A scene with an arc, with a beginning, middle and end.
2. A balance in dialogue
3. A character that is not only reacting but also actively involved in the scene (ie. interrogation scenes are fine, but don't pick one where all they are doing is reacting, pick one where they have an active objective in the scene ie. hiding something, trying to manipulate someone etc)
4. A nice opening beat, and a good button at the end
5. Levels
6. A clear relationship

What doesn't work:

1. "overly charactery" it runs the risk of putting you in a very very sharp box, it should highlight a side of you, and capture some of your essence, where you can bring yourself not allow the CD to box you in
2. multiple people in the scene. keep it simple.
3. any hospital scene (it's fine if you're just sitting in a bed, or they draw blood, but not something that involves the words "stat" etc.)
4. where the reader starts and establishes the pace of the scene, unless you trust your reader you could be setting yourself up for failure. you should be the active character in the scene.
5. an interrogation scene that is designed to further the arc of the series regulars not you. because then you're just exposition.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Getting Feedback: Is it Worth it?

So you had a great audition. After 20 hours or so you haven't heard. Then you start to do the dance. Is it worth it calling to get feedback? You don't really want feedback, you just want a reason to call your agent and remind them about the audition and maybe spur the gods into giving you the role.
So you call.
And say: "hey it went great, would love to hear what they thought."
Then you think: wait, that was dumb. What if it wasn't good? What if they tell my agent something bad? What if I was going to get it but now they think I'm needy and they're going to give it to someone else?
After about a day of worrying (by the way, you have definitely by now not gotten the part)
You still haven't heard.
Your agent isn't calling you because it's bad. You're positive.
So you call and say: "hey did you get that feedback?"
And they say: "Yes, they thought you were great, you just weren't the right fit."

So. Was it worth it?


Tuesday, October 22, 2013

New Guests

We all know the steadfast workshop rule. Take workshops with guests that are working on projects that you'd be right for, bla, bla, bla.

Well I wanted to take a minute to talk about the exception to that rule. Because there are always exceptions to rules.

ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS take a workshop with a NEW guest. Always. ESPECIALLY if you haven't seen them frequently around town in other places. Even if they are doing something that not in a million years you would be right for.

WHY? You say.

Because it's probably one of their first workshops, or one of their first ones in a long time, so before they get inundated with a million postcards, a gazillion phone calls and pitches and emails of "I met you at... blank" be the one they'll remember. Those first few people they meet. They'll remember you, and that can make all the difference.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Great Audition Days

I'm curious. We've all had them. Really really great audition days. It's been awhile, and then you get the call, or maybe two calls, and you think, WOW it's all happening.

You're pumped, you're prepped, your hair looks great, you nail one after the other.

And then you wake up the next day.

What does everyone else do?

How do you spiral down into depression? Stay up? Stay distracted? "MOVE ON"

Someone once told me that Bradley Whitford would go to the bathroom after every audition rip up his sides, throw them in the trash can and literally "wash his hands" of it. I've tried it. It doesn't quite work for me.

What do you guys do?

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Nuns?

Did anyone see the new pilot that was just bought? About a nun / lawyer?  Yeah....

Alexa's New Plan for How to sell a network TV show:

1. Take two jobs and combine them together. nun/lawyer, doctor/mob member, shoe store/lawyer, ghost/cop
2. Call it a "new kind of procedural"
3. Grab an aging movie star
4. Promise ideas about having viewers choose endings and plot lines while still promising really engaging stories.
5. Get a mega star to guest star as your victim in the first episode
6. Sell it for lots and lots of money.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Why Trophy Wife is Going to Get Canceled - And Why That's Wrong

Anyone watch Trophy Wife last night?

Normally I don't watch episode #2's of new shows. It's the first episode they shoot once they've been picked up, everyone's coming in with their own baggage, things have been reshot, roles recast, everyone had a summer off, maybe they were hoping it wouldn't get picked up, maybe they were, anyway, it's usually a mess.

By accident my DVR recorded episode #2 of Trophy Wife. I said, "eh I'll watch it" then I said: "But what if I do and it's a standardly awful episode #2, and then I won't stick around for #3?" But there was nothing else on, so I pushed play.

And guess what? Not only was it pretty good for a episode #2 of a new show, it was actually just pretty good in general.

It has great actors, top to bottom, a really cute kid, Marcia Gay Harden and Bradley Whitford just being fabulous, and Malin Ackerman is endlessly like-able, and there's some really genuinely sweet moments, and some actually genuinely funny not trite, predictable, overplayed, classless or gross moments.

And I was so excited, and I said, my God, this is really cool, this show actually has potential, I mean with pretty good writers, great actors, imagine where it could go?!

And then I thought, oh right. That means it's going to get canceled. Because that's what this town does. Instead of allowing a show to grow and develop and find its audience, which it will take time for Trophy Wife to find its audience, because it's not hit you over the head "categorize it as this or that kind of show" with "this or that kind of humor" the network isn't "going to get it" and it'll be gone.

Now, look, I really hope for their sake, and the sake of the future of network television that that doesn't happen, but who out there thinks I'm right?

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Episodic Season in Full Swing

How to Make the Most of Episodic Season:

First of all, watch EVERYTHING on television. I watch at least one episode of every single show on television that is casting in the fall season, and keep one additional episode stored on my DVR. (Tones in shows can change from pilot to episode 3 or 4, always valuable to have a later episode, especially with new shows)

Theoretically you could wait until you have an audition to go find the show and watch it, but there are two problems with this:

1. You get the audition on Monday you have to be there Monday afternoon. Do you really want to spend your time scrambling to sign up for 30 days on Hulu because the show isn't available on Netflix or On Demand and there's only clips available on the website, or, wait, maybe if I go to YouTube then I can- no, just have one on your TV.

2. If you watch one episode of every show on TV when they come out at the beginning of the fall season, then you know which casting directors to target for workshops, because you can pretty quickly figure out, I fit on this show or I don't.

Do you have an episode re-airing? Or something new that you just booked? As the season gets busier and busier, and scripts start coming later and later CD's turn more and more to their files, it's a perfect time for a targeted mailing.

Try to stay in town over the major holidays, so many people leave town, that even if you weren't top of their list for an appointment for a role, if you're in town you just might get in the room, seems silly, but it totally works!

Be in class. Have a coach. As the turnovers get shorter and shorter, because scripts are later and later you don't have a lot of time to prep, sometimes they may be day of. Have a class that you are taking so you are fresh and prepped and tuned up, and have a coach lined up for those last minute emergencies in your back pocket that you can call at a moment's notice. (And have a back-up in case they're busy) Find it ahead of time, you don't want to spend your audition prep time, looking for someone who can help you.

Further - have someone lined up that you can go and put something on tape with, again so you don't have to spend your audition prep time calling around finding someone who can squeeze you in. (And have a back-up in case they're busy.)

Good luck!