Saturday, February 22, 2014

Send me you questions!

This week I want to hear your questions about the business!
Write your questions on my facebook page wall- www.facebook.com/cmckennacasting, or email me at cmckennacasting@gmail.com.
Try to keep the questions general, i.e. so that the answer would interest and benefit other actors out there. NOT- look at my headshot/resume/reel- are they good? The question would be- what do casting directors look for in headhots/resumes/reels?
I will take a selection of questions and post the answers in a new blog.
Looking forward to hearing from you guys!

Saturday, February 15, 2014

The Audition Room Part 1

This week I had the pleasure of helping find talent for a Shakespeare classic, OTHELLO.
We cast in a studio in New York, and this audition was on Thursday. I was convinced the audition was going to be a disaster schedule wise; as there was blizzard-like weather outside. I was pleasantly surprised when only 3 out of my 30 appointments were cancelled due to weather related issues. On top of that, the caliber of auditions were very high, and the overall professional gloss this left over the day made the terrible weather and all commuting woes feel more than worth it.

Here are a few audition room pointers.

1) You have an appointment, turn up.
When Auditions are by appointment only (as it tends to be for union theaters), the appointments are very carefully put together. You were submitted by your agent, or you sent in a submission via mail or email, and you were selected out of more than a hundred people (conservatively) to be in the room. A lot of people would love your opportunity, so turn up, regardless of the weather. If it's bad weather outside think of it as a plus- a less professional actor would not turn up. Also apply this logic- if I could make it to my survival job, I can definitely make it to this audition.

2) Do the homework*
Read the play. Try to get off book. Make choices. If you don't, another actor will. The more familiar you are with the work the more at ease you will feel, your choices can be grounded, the work will be more connected.

3) *Then, let the homework go!
The director will have done his or her homework too. They will know the character, and sometimes their idea will not match yours. Don't be afraid to let go of your idea and play with another!

4) Don't try to judge the director or producers reaction.
Trust me, this will drive you insane. You do not know what the director is thinking. A great example of this is this weeks auditions- the wonderful director in the room stopped almost very actor during their audition, and asked them to do it another way. Furthermore, after he gave the new direction, he often stopped the scene halfway anyway. Sometimes he got the actor to read all the sides available, sometimes he just wanted to see one. If there was any pattern to it, being stopped throughout, being given direction and only doing one side actually meant he REALLY enjoyed the work, and genuinely didn't feel he needed to see more.

5) Be polite to the other people auditioning, to the reader in the room, and the assistant "running the room".
The truth is, a lot of casting professionals start of as interns, because Casting is not a skill they teach at school. I started as an intern working the doors of auditions at commercial appointments. Sometimes actors were rude to me about the waits to be seen, who was going next, if they could skip the actors signed in before them. I always remembered the polite talent, and I never forgot the rude actors. Guess who I call in now. Assistants make appointments, pencil you into schedules, pre-screen self-submits for the casting director. Sometimes, they become Casting Directors!!! A good rule of thumb- you don't know if you will meet these people again. What impression do you want them to have of you?

6) Dress appropriately.
Dressing AS the character- creepy. Dressing appropriately so that to give a suggestion of the character is smart. Using this week as an example- the character Desdemona, she is beautiful, elegant, lady-like. High Status in her society. She would wear makeup, her hair would be done, she would wear heals, she would wear something floaty and classy, probably a dress. She wouldn't wear combat boots or jeans, we wouldn't we able to see her tattoos. You get the idea.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Hard Copy Submissions v Electronic Submissions

When should you use a hard copy submission and when should you go with electronic? Should you do both? This weeks blog is focused on submission formats.

It all depends on what you are submitting for.

Commercial/print/music videos work like this- a job comes into a casting director, they release the breakdown and it's cast in 2-4 days. All Cast. As in auditions, callbacks, and cast.
Theatre- jobs tend to be in a casting directors calendar for months, as theaters plan their entire season in advance.
TV/Film- casting can last from weeks to months, especially for pilot season, when they try to work out the jigsaw puzzle of ensemble casts.

As a consequence, to be considered, commercials/print should be electronic submissions.
Use websites like castingnetworks.com, actorsaccess.com, nycastings.com, backstage.com.

Theatre and film/TV are a mix of electronic and hard copy submissions.
Here is what I recommend:
- Check audition dates. All breakdowns should have the casting dates included. Is it still relevant to apply?
- Do NOT send unsolicited submissions via Fed Ex, Express Mail or any other way but the mail. It breaks my heart when an actor spends $20 on a sending a single submission, it doesn't make the submission any stronger.
-Include a cover letter that mentions what role you would like to be considered for. If your resume speaks for itself you can keep the note brief, i.e you have training, you have roles that are relevant to the role you are submitting for (i.e. Shakespeare credits help with a Shakespeare job).  If your resume is a little light, write a letter. Outline your experience to date, your teachers (if you have any), your passion.

Most union jobs (both SAG-AFTRA and AEA) are released privately to agents on Breakdown Express, the sister website to Actors Access. You can not access them unless you are an industry professional, i.e a talent agent, manager or casting director. Union theatre breakdowns will be released on playbill.com and in BackStage (in accordance to union regulations) but TV and Film casting is rarely released to the public at all.

General Submission note-
I repeat this all the time, and will do until everyone has the message!
Do not cold call a casting office! We are busy people and bottom line, it's very not professional!!!



Sunday, February 2, 2014

The Art of Self-Taping your Audition


This week I was asked by an agent if it was really worth putting their talent on tape for a theatre audition. At first, I was slightly annoyed by this question- Why would I waste the agent and the talents time if I didn't think it was worth self-taping?
 On second thought, it's only really the past few years that taping has become so accessible to everyone (who doesn't have a video enabled phone) and due to the better quality, and the inevitable tide of change, theaters are taking this submission method seriously.

Here are the ways to make your self-tape stand out.

1) Get the tape in ASAP.
 Simply put- IF they find it in the room, they will not look at the videos. IF they get the tape before the audition, they will definitely consider it.  Don't sacrifice the quality of the submission, but the early submissions will be sent and viewed and discussed before the audition. Get it into the office on the audition date, or after, and the likelihood of it being viewed and taken seriously diminishes.

2) Prepare like it's a real audition.
Do as much homework and preparation as you normally would if you had an actual audition. The Director, producer and the casting team will see this!

3) Get ready for your close up.
Pick a background that is as plain as possible. No distractions!
Get a good reader that works off you well.
Check the lighting- can I see your face? If you are doing great work but your face isn't visible, it isn't worth it.
How's the sound? can I hear you?
The beauty of taping is that you can have a number of takes! Experiment with a few different viewpoints and choices, watch them back and send the most interesting one. Take this opportunity to flex your acting muscle.

4) Make it easily accessible.
Ask the casting director their preferred method of submission. My office prefers YouTube or Vimeo, or in Dropbox  format where you can click on the link and immediately watch it. Downloading is time consuming and inconvenient.  Also- don't make you video private, if it means I can't see it, or can't send it to people to view. I promise, if it's public, your audition is not going to be the next viral sensation- we are looking at it professionally.

5)  Be presumptuous.
 If you have access to it, tape the callback. If they want to see it, they probably won't give you a lot of notice- so to have as much preparation time as possible, tape it in advance.