Tuesday, May 11, 2010

You Are An International Phenomenon


THE WORLD IS YOUR STAGE.


I teach a series of workshops for emerging professional actors to learn how to establish and maintain their acting career. The series includes workshops on marketing and promotion, and preparing for auditions. In one class, I present a series of maps to the actors and ask them to identify their target market. The first is a map of their city, the next their province, then Canada, then North America and, finally, the world. The presentation speaks for itself.  There is no "local" market for a professional Canadian actor. I haven’t yet met a full time professional actor who only works as an actor, only in one city.  Narrow your market that much and you’ve probably diversified into other fields besides acting...

Google any significant film or TV production that’s been shot in the last decade and you’ll get thousands of hits from around the world.  I just tried it and I found a French website about “Less Than Kind”, A Greek website about “Degrassi” and a Portuguese website about Gary Yate’s “High Life”.

It may feel great to be a comfortable, safe, relaxed, part-time Canadian actor, but when we audition for any significant Film or TV project, we are competing with actors from other Canadian and American cities and often actors in other countries and continents.

If you audition for a lead, supporting or principal role on an ACTRA production, you should assume you are competing against actors in Toronto, Vancouver, New York and L. A.  If they’re looking at six people for the role in Winnipeg, there are probably another eight actors auditioning in Vancouver, eight in Toronto, eight in New York and twelve in LA - and the L.A. actors probably have whiter teeth. An international co-production may have you auditioning against actors in Britain, Belgium, New Zealand or France.

Even if the role you are auditioning for is a small “Actor” role that is likely to be cast locally, the director and producers are still comparing your work to all those other actors in all those other cities.  Make sure they’re seeing you at your best.

In a busy centre like Toronto or Vancouver, actors have many opportunities to audition.  I’ve heard different statistics, but it’s reasonable to say that actors in a busy centre may audition for twelve or fifteen roles for every job they book. When I worked in Vancouver, I auditioned anywhere from two to ten times a week in the busy season.  An actor in a larger centre auditions more often in three months than a Manitoba actor auditions in three years.  That’s a lot of practice.  That’s what you’re competing against.

There are advantages to being a “local” actor. If the project is being shot in your town, the producers want to take advantage of provincial tax credits by hiring as many locals as possible.  They also save on airfare, hotels and per-diems by using local talent.  It makes sense, financially to hire a local actor for a locally shot production.  That’s your advantage over the out-of-town actors. It cost less to hire you.  But, it’s only an advantage if your audition is as good or better than the actors in other cities.

Remember the directors, the producers and the casting directors all want you to succeed. They want the next actor that comes into the room to be the one they cast.  They want to say yes to you. You just have to ensure them that they are saying yes to the right actor.

All you have to do to succeed is to do the work and be prepared for EVERY audition.

Read the script, do your homework, learn your lines, be professional, be focused and, most of all, be excellent.  See you at the next audition.

John B. Lowe

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Collaborate + Compromise = Collabromise


A long time ago, I had the good fortune to work with a group of actor’s to create an original piece of theatre for a fringe theatre festival. Our primary motivations were to have fun working together to create an original, entertaining play.


All of us had some experience with producing independent theatre and knew how the stresses of collective creation could negatively impact personal and professional relationships. As a kind of preemptive strike against the potential damage to our own relationships, we had a long, frank discussion about all of our bad collaborative experiences so we could make plans to avoid the same problems. It was a healthy sharing of experience and stories of collaborations gone wrong.


During this very long conversation, the word “compromise” came up and the discussion turned into an argument about the meaning of that word. The argument got heated as we each had our own understanding about the meaning of the words compromise and collaboration. None of us thought to get out a dictionary. I think we were too busy enjoying the debate. I know I was.


I argued that the phrase “compromise my integrity”, which we agreed was a bad thing, has been abbreviated over time to the single word “compromise”, This has skewed the meaning of that word towards the idea of losing something or giving up something valuable. I also argued that the best meaning of the word compromise is an exchange that results in a gain. I believe to compromise is to exchange one thing for something better and greater. Compromise is the foundation for the “win-win” scenario. Compromise is the key element of any healthy relationship; marriage, family friendship, business...


Someone else argued that I had just described collaboration and that good collaboration shouldn’t require anyone to compromise because compromise is always a bad thing. So, I repeated my argument that compromise is a good thing and is the foundation of collaboration.


And so it went, round and round. It is not. It is so. Is not. Is so. Not. So. No. Yes. No! Yes! Shut up! You shut up! Who’s gonna make me? And not a dictionary in sight.


Finally, for the sake of peace, the level headed member of the group, Stephanie Wolfe, a smart lady and talented actor, made an excellent suggestion.


Stephanie suggested we find a new word that described the ideal working environment and relationship we were trying to create so we could get back to work. Ever the diplomat, Stephanie ingeniously combined the words collaborate and compromise and coined the brand new word, “collabromise".


I thought that was an excellent compromise!


Col lab ro mise: [kuh-lab- ruh-mahyz]


–verb (used without object), -rated, -rating.


1. to work, one with another in an ideal collaboration; cooperate, through mutual concessions; and agreement reached by adjustment of conflicting or opposing claims principles, etc., by reciprocal modification of demands.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Everything Is Possible


Inspiration and Creativity are the progeny of possibility.
Don't worry about what's impossible - you can't know that - nobody does. 
You won't succeed if you assume you'll fail. 
Live, Act, Create as if anything's possible - because it probably is.

Go ahead and "dream the impossible dream"... 
but when you awake, pursue your possible quest.


Friday, February 20, 2009

Lowe's ACTORNYMS 3

A Good Performance is:

Active - Play actions. Pursue objectives. Don't Show. Do!
Connected - Connect to moments, to others, to body, to emotions.
Truthful - Don't pretend. Be in the moment. Act. React. Really.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Lowe's ACTORNYMS 2

An Actor is:

Artist
Craftsperson
Technician
Orator
Responder

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Lowe's ACTORNYMS 1

I like to be called an actor.
I'm not keen on being called an artist.
Acting involves more than art.
Art enriches, but the audience needs to be engaged and the story needs to be told.

Acting is:

Art
Craft
Technique

Acting Is Easy


Acting is easy.
Writing is difficult.
Writing about acting is harder.