Acting
Audition
Excellence Is the Goal
George Leonard wrote a classic book called ‘Mastery’
that talks about what the difference is between people that never
get good at anything, and those rare individuals that rise to the
level of mastery in their chosen craft. One pattern he recognizes
among every masterful artist was that they had a long term commitment
to regular practice. The question is, how the idea of mastery apply
to the art and science of acting auditions.
First things first; set specific auditioning goals that will allow
you to maintain a regularity of practice. George Leonard had it
easy because he practiced Aikido. He joined a dojo near his home
that had a regular schedule of classes and then he settled into
practicing three to five times a week. (Perhaps more if you count
his solo practice time) When it comes to auditioning though, I’ve
noticed that most actors leave it up to chance. You’ll realize,
if you take the time to look, that you don’t have to rely
entirely on your agent to book auditions. This applies to people
early in their acting career. For those of you more advanced I have
other suggestions to follow. For those of you relatively early in
your acting career, there are a ton of auditions that you can attend
for local community theater, student films, musicals, etc. If you’re
young, audition for some graduate or undergraduate programs even
if you probably wouldn’t go. Just preparing an audition that
is good enough to get you into Yale school or drama or NYU’s
undergraduate musical theater branch will stretch your audition
preparation skills to the limit. As an individual artist you can
apply to Shakespeare festivals and submit your headshots at different
agencies; even if you already have one. Go read for a different
agency, let them know you are just shopping around and thinking
perhaps it might be time for a move and you just want to get to
meet the other options around town until you could find one that
is a great fit. This “audition everywhere you can” idea
graduate school audition will work until you actually get in and
have to turn it down. This principle of “keep auditioning
until you can easily land the part” goes for everything I’ve
mentioned. After a certain point you’ll get so good at auditioning
that you’ll get 80-90% callbacks to your auditions, you’ll
learn to adapt to any situation and learn to do your best work in
situations you’d normally resist and resent. Action is the
best medicine for incompetence. It always strikes me as funny that
we are all “actors” and the one thing that keeps many
of us shackled in mediocrity is our inability to take long term
committed and focused “action”.
Go to it! Audition everywhere you can! And remember…
“Consistency, before intensity, is the path to long term
mastery and eventually, a legacy!”
James Wagner
PS- if they offer you the part and you don’t want it, be
cordial. Tell them that you have to think about it because there
are a few other offers on the table right now for that period of
time and that you’ll get back to them. If you tell them you’re
taking another project offer, not only will they respect that, but
your status has just gone up because you are polite, amiable, professional
and in demand. |