The Top 5 Mistakes Actors Make in Shakespeare Auditions

Showing posts with label musical theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label musical theatre. Show all posts

Monday

Is Your Training Serving You?

Let's start with a story:

This may surprise you, but I went to college for tap dancing. (Yes, really.) Twelve days after I graduated high school, I flew across the country to NYC, a city I had never traveled to, and began training in a two-year conservatory musical theatre program.

I chose musical theatre because I knew I wanted to be an actor, and since I can sing and I can dance, it seemed like the best course of action to have training in all of those things. This plan worked out for some time: I got a job dancing at parties and events for a few years, wearing some cool and some bizarre costumes while doing choreographed routines to some of Broadway's biggest hits. Next, I got a job touring the country teaching musical theatre (and improv, mime, and Shakespeare) to children. 

I got back to NYC in September of 2008, just days before the housing market crash and the financial disaster that followed. What a time to be auditioning! No one was buying tickets to shows, so few shows were being produced. I got a restaurant job and weathered the storm.

When work opportunities slowly started to come back, I learned that I didn't like musical theatre anymore. More importantly, I loathed auditioning for musical theatre. I was bitter. I wasn't trying my best. I didn't want to be there, and, therefore, no one wanted to hire me. I realized that classical theatre was much more appealing to me, but I didn't know how to get involved.

I'll tell you what I did, and what I wish I had done sooner. My path may not be what's right for everyone; it certainly came from trial and error.

What I did:


I tried the "be so good they can't ignore you" technique. Honestly, I probably wasn't all that good yet, with minimal training in classical theatre, but I was studious and determined. 

I worked for free. I'm not a fan of being a volunteer actor, but I needed to get some skills. I was cast in a less-than-great production of Medea where my dance/movement skills were a selling point in the audition. Then I played Hermia in A Midsummer Night's Dream. THEN, I started booking paying Shakespeare gigs.

While I'm a big fan of learning as much on the job as you can, I still had to play catch-up when I came in to my first paying Shakespeare job. I didn't understand the basics of verse mechanics, and made a lot of embarrassing, simple mistakes. Thankfully, I had patient people around me who helped point me in the right direction. My own curiosity and desire to not be embarrassed led me to...

What I wish I had done earlier:


Classes. So many classes. And workshops. And lectures. I cannot emphasize enough how much I needed to put my pride aside and get back into class. I was ten or more years out of college, with an education that was not serving me anymore. I don't even put my college on my resume, because it's simply unrelated to what I do now, as much as it would be if I had gone to school to be a mechanic. I took a good, hard look at my resume and realize that my training was lacking, so I fixed it by learning from people in the biz whose work I admire.

 

Is Your Training Serving You?


Do you feel that you have the skills to be competitive in auditions, and to be a rock star if and when you book the role? If not, you need more training. Focus as intensely as you can on the skills you need to master, and master them!

Who is booking the work? What training do they have? Can you get comparable training?

A Master's Degree might be out of the question for you, due to time, money, or any number of other reasons. One potential workaround is to study with the best teachers you can find, either privately or in a group class.

What I hope you take away from this is that if your training isn't serving you any more, that it is okay (and encouraged!) to go get the education you need for where you want your path to go. 



Email ShakespeareCoach@gmail.com to schedule your coaching session!

Tuesday

The Gift of Time

Some years ago, my sister worked a not-quite-soul-sucking day job. One of those jobs where, if there were no customers to assist, the managers would try to cut costs by sending employees home. Not all employees are fans of getting cut, as less hours means less money, but one particular manager framed it in a very memorable way:

"I give you the gift of time."


Although I know it was met with mixed reviews, I have to agree that time is valuable and something that we can never generate more of. Everyone knows this, and yet, it's so easy to forget it!

Today, NYC is hunkered down for a blizzard, which means most of us are dealing with a (mostly unexpected) gift of time today. Might I suggest that, while also using this Snow Day for some relaxation and Netflix, set aside a good chunk of it to do something to further your career or your art in a way that you normally wouldn't have time to do?

Some ideas for how to use your gift of time:


Start writing that webseries you've always wanted to create.

Learn that monologue that you just haven't had time to work on.

YouTube tutorial that makeup look and hairstyle you wanted to try for that audition next week.

Read a play! (None on your bookshelf? Check out an e-Book online, or go to Project Guttenberg for free classics.)

Prep your meals for your busy week ahead.

Clean your apartment (with some great music or a podcast on), so that you have less stress the rest of this week.

Call your family to let them know you're okay!



No matter how you choose to use your gift of time today, I hope it will be productive and fulfilling!

Looking for a Shakespeare Coach to help you prepare for
that upcoming audition or performance?

Monday

My First Broadway Audition

I was 19, and auditioning all the time. This is back when I was attempting to get my "big break" (whatever that is) in the musical theatre scene. I had arrived ridiculously early at the Actors Equity building, and had been waiting all morning with hopes that whatever I was auditioning for would have time to see me. After a few hours on the wooden benches, the monitor came to us to let us know that there would not be time for us to be seen, BUT, the audition for the upcoming Broadway production of Wonderful Town was wide open.

The audition for Wonderful Town was being held at Chelsea Studios, which is 20 blocks (about a mile) from Equity. It was a beautiful day, and I figured I could walk over, which would be faster than the train due to construction. I wanted to be quick, in case word got out that the audition was empty and every actor in New York decided to head that way, too. I didn't even change my shoes, in order to save time.

I walk/jogged to Chelsea, signed in, and was seen right away. As I walked to the piano, the Casting Director was staring at my shoes, which were these tan platform things that were new, clunky, and didn't really match my dress. As I sang, the Casting Director kept looking at my feet, and I was beating myself up about wearing the "wrong" shoes. I don't remember how well I sang or acted or anything... Both the CD and I were clearly thinking about my unfashionable footwear.
Puzzled, I gathered my stuff and got as far as the bathroom when I saw it: thick, crimson, blood was all over the side of my tan wedge shoe, and still continuing to pour out of my left foot, right where the strap and buckle were digging into my flesh. I hope I wasn't making puddles on the floor of the studio as I auditioned. In my excitement to audition for Broadway, the adrenaline pumping through my body, and my knowledge that sometimes shoes need to be broken in, I didn't even feel the tear in my skin that was upstaging me during my audition! I was horrified, but I shrugged it off as a memorable first audition for Broadway; comforted by the thought that my future auditions for the "Great White Way" would probably be less gory.

Do YOU have a crazy/memorable/embarrassing/hilarious audition story?

How Your Musical Theatre Skills Will Make You A Kick-@$$ Shakespearean Actor

If you can "kick your face" and "belt for Jesus", I'll bet you already have a lot of skills that you could use as a Shakespearean actor! Did you know that musical theatre has a lot in common with Shakespeare? I'm not just talking about the adaptations of Romeo & Juliet into West Side Story or The Taming of the Shrew into Kiss Me, Kate. There are skills that cross over between the two art forms that you might not have realized!

Christian Borle as Shakespeare in Something Rotten!
Photo: Joan Marcus

Both Shakespeare and musical theatre contain scenes that have performance elements that elevate the production beyond what the audience experiences in daily life. If someone is singing at you in real life, you'd probably think they were crazy, and that guy spitting rhymes on the subway is probably not the next Kanye, BUT when an audience sees a show, they buy into the world of the play where these situations are normal! These activities would seem ridiculous if they weren't being done onstage, but skilled actors can pull it off. These actors can jump back and forth between normal, everyday speech (aka prose) and singing or speaking in verse at the drop of a hat, and when it's good, it is so good, amiright?

Another skill that artists in both types of theatre need is a facility with rhythm and meter. An actor who can tell a story through a song, where the speed and rhythm of the lyrics are predetermined, while still making it seem as though they are uttering these words aloud spontaneously is probably giving a memorable performance! This isn't much different from Shakespeare's verse, where the structure of the rhythm is given to a performer and it is their job to bring the words to life while maintaining the poetry in the text - it might actually be easier, since the actor may not have to belt a G simultaneously!

Not to be overlooked is the fact that there is often music and dancing in Shakespeare's plays. Performers with a background in musical theatre are at a distinct advantage here, as they are accustomed to telling stories through dance and song! There have been countless productions of The Tempest with Ariel played by a dancer, and although no one says that Ophelia is the best singer in Denmark, it certainly doesn't hurt to have a trained singer playing her when she goes mad!

So whether it's Othello or Oklahoma!, Hamlet or Hamilton, actors with these skills are some of the most versatile (and kick-@$$) around!

Wanna step up your Shakespeare game?