Vision8Studio Portland, OR Acting Classes and Film Production Studio
  • Home
  • TEAM
    • Instructors >
      • Tristan David Luciotti
      • Aimee Smith
      • Todd A. Robinson
      • Marc Steele
      • David Alexander
    • Film Crew >
      • Tristan David Luciotti
      • Myles Lawrence
      • Steven Sroba
      • Christiann Burch
      • Lacy Todd
      • Brent Lucas
      • Randy Kovach
  • ACTING CLASSES
    • Breaking Out Series
    • Character Voice Acting
    • Class FAQ's
    • Enrollment Policies
  • Services
    • 1-on-1 Coaching >
      • Coach Tristan
    • Self-Taped Auditions
    • Demo Reels
    • Website/Social Media
    • Film Production
    • Freelance Crew
    • Marketing/Advertising
    • Portfolio
    • Current Projects >
      • Adventures in #Adulting
      • All Around Us
      • Stella and Rocky
      • Between Two Rooms
      • The Layers of Living
      • Feast of Bodies
      • Stuck in Park
      • Life is Strange
  • EVENTS
    • Event Photos >
      • AIA Premiere
      • 6/9/18 Red Carpet Mixer
      • 9/30/17 Open House
      • 2/11/18 Industry Showcase
  • Contact

10 Audition Tips To Get A Callback

11/1/2017

2 Comments

 
Picture
Your dream is to be a working actor. You’ve always been told you “have it,” but you're not getting many (if any) callbacks.

What separates professionals from wannabe talent show prodigies isn't inspiration. It's preparation and execution. Take control of your audition with these ten helpful tips to improve your skills.

1. Confidence. It sounds simple but it takes practice. Walk in the door with your held head high. Be wary of shuffling feet. You don't get sympathy points if you're nervous, not feeling well, or having a bad day. Leave it outside the door. You are being sized up the minute you walk in, so practice good posture and body language before you arrive. And don’t forget to smile – that's the lasting impression you want to leave.

2. Personality. Let it shine through. Don’t give one-word answers when having a conversation with the casting director. Ask questions! 

3. Connection. Make one with the reader. Memorize the material or be familiar enough with it to maintain eye contact. Knowing the dialogue is important, but making a connection with the reader is what will make the scene natural and believable.  

4. Character. Know the character. Read the entire script beforehand - if it was sent to you - to pick-up as many clues as possible. We know about a character by the following:
  • What they about themselves
  • What other characters say about them
  • What the playwright or screenwriter says about them

5. Objective. Go underneath the dialogue. What does this character want from the other characters? What is the character’s purpose in the scene/story?

6. Obstacle. What's in the way of the character getting what they want? Acting is what happens to you as you TRY to get your objective met, in spite of the obstacle.

7. Opposites. Yelling isn't the only way to show hatred or anger. Sometimes being quiet as you make your point is a powerful display of emotion. Playing opposites is a much more interesting choice than the obvious.

8. Love. Find the love in the scene. Even nasty characters should be likeable on some level. Find a moment in the scene where the love can show through.

9. Act. Acting means TO DO, not to talk. Find your actions and play them! (A wonderful resource is the book “Actions: The Actor’s Thesaurus” by Marina Caldarone & Maggie Lloyd-Williams.)

10. Variety. Feel the levels and dynamic in the scene. Don’t play one emotion. If the character is angry or tough, when might this character show some vulnerability?

Interesting, memorable auditions will start to happen for you when you dig into scripts with these thoughts in mind before and during your auditions.  

Master your craft! Empower yourself! Enjoy the journey...

Inspired by this post? Check out our upcoming classes!
2 Comments
Ellie Davis link
5/16/2018 03:18:03 pm

Thank you for suggesting that when you audition you should always be confident and walk in with your head held high. I would imagine that auditioning over tape could be harder. Hopefully, people that are using the audition tapes as their audition would look into getting a company to help them create the best one.

Reply
Jade link
1/14/2021 09:30:47 am

Great read thaank you

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Author

    Vision8Studio Team 

    Archives

    January 2018
    November 2017
    May 2017

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Copyright 2014 - 2019 - Vision8Studio LLC

Portland, Oregon Acting Classes (also available in Vancouver, WA), Acting Workshops, 1-on-1 Acting Coaching & Services for Actors
Demo Reels | Self Taped Auditions | Video Production

Secure Checkout accepts Credit Cards, Apple Pay, Android Pay and PayPal.
​Contact Us if you would like to pay by cash or check.
​
​
Vision8Studio Blog | Acting Classes FAQ's | Class Enrollment Policies | Privacy Policy | Vision Collective

Vision8Studio classes and workshops are non-refundable, but are transferable.
vision8studio | vision 8 studio | vision8 studio | vision 8studio | vision 8 studios
CONTACT US

Proud Member of:
Picture
  • Home
  • TEAM
    • Instructors >
      • Tristan David Luciotti
      • Aimee Smith
      • Todd A. Robinson
      • Marc Steele
      • David Alexander
    • Film Crew >
      • Tristan David Luciotti
      • Myles Lawrence
      • Steven Sroba
      • Christiann Burch
      • Lacy Todd
      • Brent Lucas
      • Randy Kovach
  • ACTING CLASSES
    • Breaking Out Series
    • Character Voice Acting
    • Class FAQ's
    • Enrollment Policies
  • Services
    • 1-on-1 Coaching >
      • Coach Tristan
    • Self-Taped Auditions
    • Demo Reels
    • Website/Social Media
    • Film Production
    • Freelance Crew
    • Marketing/Advertising
    • Portfolio
    • Current Projects >
      • Adventures in #Adulting
      • All Around Us
      • Stella and Rocky
      • Between Two Rooms
      • The Layers of Living
      • Feast of Bodies
      • Stuck in Park
      • Life is Strange
  • EVENTS
    • Event Photos >
      • AIA Premiere
      • 6/9/18 Red Carpet Mixer
      • 9/30/17 Open House
      • 2/11/18 Industry Showcase
  • Contact