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Getting In Television Theater Movies
Television Theater Movies So, you want to be in
motion pictures? Or television? Or theater? Or any visual
arts medium?
This is the dream of many. It all looks so glamorous up on
stage or screen. The money seems to be ample, the work
plentiful as new stations and networks pop up every year.
The truth is that the performing arts is not only hard
work, it’s also hard to find. There’s a lot of competition
from people with the same dream you have. Much of it can
be knowing the right person, securing the important
contact, even being related to someone in the business.
But much of the success achieved is by being in the right
place at the right time. Some of that you don’t have any
control over; but other aspects of it you do and it is here
where this booklet concentrates to point you in the right
direction so that if you have the desire to work hard at
the craft, you can work your way up into the level you
dream of being on.
Acting is a tough profession. The finished product may
look easy up on the screen, but that’s the deceptive
brilliance of the actor or actress. It takes an immense
amount of work to play a role and have it look so natural,
you think it’s easy to bring off. There are hours and
hours of rehearsals, take after take of scene shot, a lot
of standing around and waiting; in short, anything but what
most people think.
It’s also not a question of hopping aboard an airplane and
flying out to Hollywood, walking into a studio and checking
the auditions list to see what parts you can try out for
that day. Acting is an art and there’s much to be learned
and experience to be had -- first!
Acting isn’t the only way to make money in the performing
arts. If you managed to become a contestant on a game
show, you can earn a few dollars. If you can write, you
might be interested in screenwriting. Good scripts are
hard to come by and producers and actors are always on the
lookout for well-written interesting scripts with mass
appeal.
Performing arts is a people business. It also has a great
future. In the United States, 98% of households have a
television set while nearly 100% have a radio. In a
typical week, nine out of ten citizens are exposed to radio
and television. The television is on for an average of 7
hours per day; the radio 2 hours per day! With this type
of demand, there will always be a need for performers and
new material which should be a source of inspiration for
you.
This booklet will be a primer for some of the opportunities
that exist in the performing arts business. Reading this
information will give you a head start into making a dent
in this career path. If you have the desire, you can make
the effort. Wanting to do something bad enough means
you’re half-way to accomplishing your task. That’s the
great thing about America -- dreams can come true if
you’re willing to work for them!
The Acting Bug
From the first time you went into a movie theater or
watched a television show, you immediately identified with
someone in the film or production. Perhaps you thought,
"Yes! I can do that, too!" This idea may have left you
soon thereafter or perhaps the concept has grown larger in
your mind -- to even visualizing yourself walking up on
stage to collect that acting Oscar!
This active thought process has occurred courtesy of being
bitten by the acting bug. It happens to most everyone at
some time or the other. You look up at the big screen and
think -- I can do that!
Perhaps you can. There’s only one way to know for sure and
that’s to try it. You may be in the middle of another
career, though, and you should think twice about pursuing
this dream. Is it a career you can come back to in case it
takes too long to make it? Will you be able to find other
work to sustain you while you are learning the trade and
moving up the ladder of potential? Will you remain focused
with your eye on the prize? Will you take direction well?
Acting is the job everything thinks they can do but
discover only a few have the patience and the talent to see
it through. Do you have this patience? The talent can be
developed. But it is the willingness to take whatever parts
come up for a while to eventually put yourself in the
position of being in the right place at the right time.
If prepared to give acting the time and effort required,
then you’re ready to move on to the next step -- theater!
This is your best chance of building up some acting credits
and learning the job. There are plenty of local, regional,
community, dinner and summer stock theater to try to land a
part or two. Often, if you are good enough, you will start
to hear about parts available and shows that are opening
and looking for people to try out.
Acting is primarily done by union workers. There are
several organizations you can belong to that will place you
in the union, abiding by their guidelines. The most
prominent of these is Actors’ Equity, a labor union of
actors, singers and dancers of the professional theater.
Most just call it Equity. It is affiliated with the
Associated Actors and Artists of America which is a segment
of the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of
Industrial Organizations.
Equity has two primary objectives:
1. To protect the interests of its members by establishing
specific condition of employment that is outlined in a
standard contract for each type of work to be performed;
and
2. To promote the theater as a cultural and recreational
institution.
Equity is based in New York City and has about 40,000
members. This is the theater-based organization. Their
phone number is (212) 869-8530. The Associated Actors and
Artists of America phone number is (212) 869-0358.
This is not the only trade organization. The Screen Actors
Guild (SAG) was formed in 1935 for the film actors. This
union can be contacted at (213) 465-4600. The other
organization of significance is the American Federation of
Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), an outgrowth of the
American Federation of Radio Artists. Founded in 1952,
AFTRA can be reached by phone at (212) 532-0800.
Joining these organizations is not totally necessary,
although it helps. And you can’t join until you’ve secured
your first acting job. Since you will go into your first
production without being a member, having had no
experience, if you read well and secure a part, the
production will request a waiver from Equity to hire you.
Equity will then be in touch to ask if you want to become a
member.
It’s designed to keep the competition limited to union
members. Since you can still get a job without union
membership, though, if you’re good enough, it’s not a must
that you join. However, in the long run, it may be best.
Equity members learn about new parts opening up very
quickly and the productions know that the person who has
Equity membership has experience. The production will also
have to work within Equity’s contractual guidelines as to
salary, length of rehearsal, number of performances per
week (usually no more than 8), working conditions and
benefits.
Since most commercial theaters, most regional and dinner
theaters and many summer stock theaters are union houses,
membership will open up many doors to you vs. non -
membership. Since your goal is to act and accumulate work,
performances and credits, joining should be a part of your
new career path.
Learning the Craft
There isn’t a better way to learn how to act then to --
well, act! The ideal starting places are in live theater.
Open up the Friday weekend entertainment section of your
newspaper. Look at the number of shows running as live
theater in your area. There may be two or three. Or, if
you live in a populated area, there might be twelve to
fifteen or more productions going on at any one time.
That’s quite a lot of theater and potential parts you can
play. Do you have a specific talent? Singing? Dancing?
Or acting? The more versatile you are, the better your
chances of consistent work.
Why theater? Why not just try out for a film role?
For one, film roles aren’t advertised. There might be a
chance to be an extra, a walk-on or play some small role in
a film or television production, but there is a better
chance of landing a bigger role and thus creating both an
improved credit for yourself plus get some more useful work
for furthering your career.
Local theater operations are everywhere. Some pay little
or nothing and you’ll work to accumulate the experience.
Many of the productions and rehearsals are at night, so you
can keep (or find) a day job. You are learning your trade
and, early on, money may not be plentiful in it.
There are other theater operations who do have a budget for
their actors. Initially, you’ll find those highly
competitive (since there is money in it) and not having any
experience will not assist you here. Some producers and
directors like to know you’ve paid your dues so to speak.
The local newspaper will generally list any auditions that
are being held in the Entertainment section of your
newspaper. Usually it’s Friday where the listing of
auditions is marked. Read each carefully to see what type
of actors are being sought. Often there will be a specific
indication as to gender and age, and whether singing or
dancing is required for the role.
You don’t have to wait for the paper! Get a listing of all
the theaters and go around to each of them, preferably in
the early evening when things are happening. Usually,
there is someone responsible there or a production may be
going on. Ask about future tryouts and then stay and watch
the show. You can learn a lot about acting from seeing how
other actors perform. Watch the nuances and subtleties of
their performances. As you understand your craft better,
you will be able to appreciate more the quality of
individual efforts.
The theater director will be able to tell you the
approximate time of tryouts for the next production to be
rehearsed. Once you know that, get a copy of the play.
Read it cover to cover. Then read it again. Try and
determine which part you have an affinity for and read only
those sections. Then list your second or third favorite
role. While most people will ant to read for the lead
parts, only a few get them. It’s best to understand some
of the back-up roles, too, so you can move right into those
and have a head start understanding the importance of that
role in the overall production.
If it’s your very first play, you might choose to read for
one of the lesser parts. You’ll have a better chance of
getting that role and you can learn about the entire
process of acting and theater just by being a part of a
production.
This is not the place to be if you have any inhibitions
about speaking in public. At any time. At any place. In
front of a lot of people. You will have to forget who you
are momentarily. Step outside yourself and let the role
take over your movements and voice. Become the part! It’s
easier to forget about all the people that are out there --
at least initially. Later, you’ll learn how to play to the
crowd -- especially in a comedy. But for now, think only
about the role and that it isn’t you necessarily up on the
stage emoting -- it’s the part you’re playing!
Tryouts are generally a zoo! There are quite a few people
reading for only a few parts. The director may know some
of the people and already cast them or discarded them in
his or her mind. You the director will not know, so this
has its pluses. You will not initially be discarded from
any role simply because you are an unknown quantity. You
may be an excellent actor, so you’ll have the chance to
show yourself. Make it count! First impressions are
everything in the acting profession when it comes to
casting.
If you’re now familiar with the work, you won’t be thrown
by what the director tells you to do. Everyone may be
reading the same part, but when the director reaches you,
you receive a different assignment.
Part of this is to gauge your response. Are you flexible?
Did you expect to read only for the lead? Would you settle
for another part -- if you’re good enough? All of these
thoughts are going through the director’s head. They’ve
all occurred to you already because you came prepared. You
are not thrown by this change of tactics. You simply turn
to the passage requested and take over the role you’re
reading.
Put some enthusiasm into it! Be the part for all it’s
worth! Even if it’s just the servant role with only four
lines in the whole play, act as if it’s the plum part in
the show. This kind of teamwork attitude is going to go a
long way towards helping you secure other parts, perhaps in
this same theater. You will get a reputation as a team-
player and you may even receive calls to have you come to a
theater to read since you would be beneficial to the
overall production.
Don’t look for an immediate reaction after reading the
part. The director probably won’t give you one. You will
be thanked and asked to stay or thanked and asked to call
back in the morning or two days from now when casting is
set. Being asked to stay likely means the director was
initially impressed and wants to hear you again. Study the
book while you’re waiting. Talk to others about their past
credits. Start to make friends!
If you don’t get a role first time out, don’t worry about
it. Rejection is part of the business and you’ll need to
dig in and work harder at it. Keep trying out! It may be
that you weren’t right for any of the parts in one play,
but equally popular in the next one. Some times the
director is seeking a specific look for a role and this may
eliminate you no matter how well you read.
Don’t try to read too much into a director’s choices.
Simply go on to the next tryout and keep practicing your
lines in front of the mirror. Practice! Practice!
Practice! This is how you’ll improve your chances of being
selected for a role.
We told you this was hard work!
Being chosen for a part is a high point, though. The first
one is like a breakthrough, although you can’t be
complacent about tryouts. You have to approach each one as
if it was your first audition and do everything you can to
make a favorable impression, even if it isn’t a first one.
Live theater is the ideal way to learn how to act. There’s
no room for lazy performances that you can re-shoot like
film or television. Here it is - first time only time and
there’s no better way to improve as an actor than through
live theater. For some, it’s the only way they make their
living and they love it! Nigel Hawthorne, the British
theater actor who was nominated for Best Actor 1994 for his
performance of the title character in The Madness of King
George. Hawthorne is near 70 but had never acted in
anything but live theater until this film role. And this
film was the adaptation of the stage play in which
Hawthorne played the same part. A marvelous actor, he
decided long ago to stay plying his craft on the stage
rather than on screen.
You may decide that, too. You can make a living going from
theater to theater after paying parts. It’s a nomadic
profession, but those that love it would not do change
places with anyone. There’s touring companies that play
in a city for a night or two or perhaps a whole week,
before packing it up and taking it on the road once again.
These are the barnstormers, taking the show on the road for
as long as it can still find an audience.
Still got the acting bug?
When you land your first role, never miss a rehearsal if
you can and come to ones even when your part (especially if
it’s small) is not being rehearsed that night. Observe all
the various components of the theater. Watch the set being
built. If you’re handy with your hands, you might be able
to get some additional work as a set builder.
There are plenty of other tasks going on. Lighting, sound,
props, costumes, make-up, these are all an essential part
of the production. You may find an affinity for some of
these other tasks which may bring you some paying work even
faster than acting. There are jobs for technicians in the
theater. The more you know, the better informed you’ll be
should you choose to explore areas other than acting in
your theater career.
The stage manager is the director’s assistant and is
generally responsible for all of the backstage activities
from cueing the lights and sound effects to warning actors
and actresses to get to their assigned positions. It’s a
full-time job on the set and one which requires an
understanding of all the essential elements of a
production. It may be something you’d like if you find
acting isn’t your thing.
Opening nights are exciting for all as the hours of
rehearsals are over and it’s time to entertain! All of
your practice has meant to prepare you for your time on
stage and when the curtain goes up, all of the work will
seem worth it. When you see and hear the audience response
to the work being performed, it will be well worth the time
you spent nurturing your role.
Congratulations! You’ve finished your first production,
maybe even earned a few dollars and joined Equity while
doing it. It’s time to march on to the next rehearsal.
You may have even heard some of the other actors talking
about a new play and when tryouts were happening. It’s a
close knit group of people who tend to keep each other
informed about upcoming opportunities. Once you’re in this
little circle, there’s a chance of staying up on the best
paying and prominent productions going on in your area --
or elsewhere.
Do you need an agent?
Like joining Actor’s Equity, not necessarily. It helps,
but for initial work, not necessary. For theater, it may
not be necessary to work at a local and regional level.
After you’ve built up a lot of credits, you’ll have
something of interest to offer an agent. The agent can
then have a better idea of where to place you and where to
look for places!
An agent can be a lot of assistance in getting you
auditions you wouldn’t have heard of otherwise. There is
an ear to the ground aptitude that the best agents have and
they will try to get you the best possible job that you
never would have been able to obtain yourself. Their
incentive is that they will get a small percentage of your
fee.
If you’re looking for an agent, put together an acting
resume. List your essential background credits -- where
you’ve acted (or stage managed or did lights, etc.), your
union affiliation(s), your personal information such as
age, height, weight, etc. List any special abilities you
might have such as dancing, singing, writing, languages,
etc.
Get a series of photographs done and attach the best of
those to your resume. Check with your local union office
who maintains a list of recommended agents for you to
contact. An agent can’t hurt and might even help.
What the agent can’t do is act for you. You have to create
the opportunities, too, by turning in your best effort
night after night in even the smallest of roles. You’re
not likely to start at the top in film or television,
either, even though you may be an accomplished theater
performer. That’s O.K.! This profession is a one step,
building block process that will eventually trace you a
path to the top. Patience!
In addition to the local theater listings, you can contact
a number of theater organizations around the country who
assist hundreds of theater operations everywhere. Most of
these associations have their own publications, conventions
and written information which can lead you to other theater
groups in your area. The listing of these groups follows:
National and International Groups
American Community Theater Association (ACTA)
815 17th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006
American National Theater and Academy (ANTA)
245 West 52nd Street
New York, N.Y. 10019
Television Game Shows
Interested in other fields in show business other than
acting? One way to appear on television and possibly win
some cash or merchandise is by being a contestant on a game
show. Even if you’ve never really watched them, you’ve
certainly heard of them. Jeopardy is rolling along in its
second television life. Wheel of Fortune has become part
of the cultural landscape. Others like The Price Is Right
and Hollywood Squares have been around for what seems like
the beginning of television.
If you’ve watched the shows, then you know how to send for
contestant application requirements. There’s an address to
write to and you’ll receive an application back that you’ll
need to complete. You can’t be related or even know people
on the show or the show’s sponsors. You can’t have already
been a participant on the show and you must tell about
other shows (and your results) where you have already been
a contestant. And, if you get by those requirements, and
aren’t running for any federal political office at the time
of your entry (and the time during which the show would be
taped and then run), you’ll be eligible.
There are also specific contestant searches across the
country that could stop in your area. If you hear about
this trip to your city or region, call and see if you can
get a contestant interview. Sound as excited as they want
you to be on the show! Your fervor and enthusiasm will be
felt by the people on the other end of the phone. Getting
on these shows is more a matter of excitement than anything
else. The producers want enthusiastic people who act like
they wouldn’t want to be anywhere else on earth at the time
they’re on the show.
That’s your job! You just can’t get away from some acting
in this business! But your vivacity may well open the
doors to you. If you can’t talk to anyone in person, when
you write in to request a contestant form, put your
eagerness down on paper so they’ll share your excitement
with you.
If the show likes your entry form (and exhilaration),
you’ll be sent some questionnaire-type forms to complete.
You’ve made it through step one but step two is just as
important. Here, the show is looking to substantiate
your delight for the game, but also to be sure you
understand the game and all its rules and regulations.
They can’t put you on if you don’t know the first thing
about how the game is played. Watch these games so you
understand not only the basic rules but the best players’
strategies.
Finally, no game show likes a bad loser. There will be
winners and losers and no matter how much you want to win
the game, you must clearly be able to demonstrate good
sportsmanship if you come up short in your quest.
If you’re selected, you will be advised as to the taping
day(s) involved, given instructions on what to do and
whether you will make appropriate reservations or be told,
more likely, the show will make them for you. Legal
contracts must be signed before you appear. You will
probably participate in rehearsals so you can get the feel
of the studio, the game, the other players.
You’ll see where the cameras are, how the equipment (if
appropriate) works, and details like these. Relax during
the rehearsals. If your mind goes blank, get your wits
about you as quickly as you can. If your performance
(read: appearance) is weak, you can still be dropped from
the actual taping.
If you win, the game show will file with the Internal
Revenue Service, an inventory of your cash and merchandise
winnings. You will have to pay taxes on all of it, so be
sure you keep track of it also and tell your CPA about it.
The only magic to being on a game show is to show a
dedicated fervor to the show you’re applying to and
understand how it’s played. You can’t make a career out of
this, but some contestants do quite well, picking up some
astonishing amounts of cash and merchandise.
Screenwriting
Listen to nearly anyone near a big studio production center
and they will universally lament the lack of good scripts
to work with in planning new productions. Scripts are
plentiful to come by but very few of them are of a high
quality. Somewhere, somehow, the script loses its
momentum, story line, a character or two or turns into a
clinched mess.
That’s not to say good screenwriters don’t exist! Not
true! There are some excellent ones laboring away, but the
demand is high! There are two new television stations from
Warner Brothers and Paramount that have just opened up to
compete with CBS, ABC, NBC and FOX and that means more
shows and the need for more scripts.
Think of all the shows you watch and how some of them are
good from week to week consistently and others are hit and
miss -- with great potential but not enough script ideas to
carry them more than a season or two. Have you ever
thought "I can write better than that?"
Maybe you can. If you are not necessarily into acting or
game shows, you can certainly try your hand at
screenwriting if you enjoy the practice of writing and you
have some genuinely sound script ideas.
With television, it’s more a question of understanding the
show’s repeating characters and how they interact. You’ll
need to successfully intertwine a couple of story ideas in
and amongst those relationships that already exist. They
aren’t your original characters, you’re borrowing them!
Performing Arts
It’s what you do with them that count now. Write about a
show you like and that you know. As a writer, certainly
ideas have occurred to you as you’re watching each episode.
This is the time to put them down on paper and see if you
can make a coherent story out of it.
What you need to write first is a treatment of the script.
A treatment is a narrative description of the story line
and could run anywhere from 10 to 25 pages in length. It
details all of the action without dialogue and generally
lets a producer (or, more likely, an agent) understand the
plot without having to spend an entire evening reading the
script. In a way, it’s less demanding then the dialogue
since you must concentrate on all of the action and
interrelated events. Be sure the story has a beginning,
middle and end that go together and make sense. Coherence
is what the agent or producer wants to see.
Once you’ve written the treatment, it’s probably time to
look for an agent if you don’t have one already. The big
studios would much rather work through an agent than deal
directly with the writer. There have been a few very
public lawsuits about writers who claim the studios filmed
their scripts without their permission; indeed, turned down
their script and filmed a similar version of it. Some of
these lawsuits have ruled in the writer’s favor; others
have dismissed the lawsuit as bogus.
Either way, studios would rather work with an agent/writer
since there is an extra party involved in the transaction
who can attest to the script’s authenticity and the
studio’s decisions about it. An agent can usually get you
in the front door -- if you’re careful about your agent
selection.
Some agents charge fees and others don’t -- to read your
treatments/scripts. You find this out by ending a query
letter, much as you would do to a magazine when you have a
work you think they may be interested in publishing. Like
a query letter to a magazine, or a letter asking for a game
show contestant entry form, your mission with the agent
query is to make it look so good it practically places
itself on the top of the pile. The letter must have
excitement oozing out of the envelope with your story idea;
so good the agent can’t resist scheduling an interview with
you.
It should be a one page letter detailing your credentials
as both a writer and (perhaps) an authority on the subject
matter of your script, if appropriate. You should also be
able to sum up your script idea in one paragraph -- two, at
the most. If you can’t, you need to rethink it. Producers
understand concepts in terms of two or three sentences. If
you can’t easily sum it up, the script is probably lousy or
too complex to film.
You don’t have to give away a surprise ending (if your
script has one) in the query letter, but the summary of the
story should leave the agent wanting to know more if you’re
not going to reveal the entire bag of tricks. Your
identification with the show and its characters are also
important, so tell the agent in the letter why you picked
this show to write about.
Of course, you don’t have to write about an existing show.
You can script for a television pilot or a new film.
That’s up to you! There are a lot of opportunities for
dedicated writers.
Include a self-addressed, stamped envelope with the query
to allow agents to respond to you. They may, anyway, but
inclusion of the SASE shows that you are both a
professional and one familiar with the particulars of the
query process.
Here is a list of agents that you can contact if you’ve
written either a script or treatment or both. At the time
of this publication, these agents did not charge fees.
Summary
There is no easy, clear path to success in the field of
performing arts. However, with the desire to succeed and
accomplish your personal goals, you can make it to a high
level of success in this career. It’s hard work, but very
enjoyable work, too, as, especially with live theater, you
can be the recipient of instant feedback on your efforts.
If you follow some of the leads in this book, you will
shorten the time frame to success simply by avoiding the
pitfalls of a bad start or unpreparedness. This booklet
can assist you in taking the best early course of action.
The rest is up to you! Good luck! getting in
Television Theater Movies.
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