Bite-sized coaching
•
Real-world strategies
•
Sharper auditions
•
Stronger choices
•
More confident performances
•
Bite-sized coaching • Real-world strategies • Sharper auditions • Stronger choices • More confident performances •
Should You Look at the Camera?
"Never look at the lens" is a rule actors follow without ever asking why. Eye line is a storytelling tool, and the right answer changes with every scene.
Working with a Reader: Audition Rooms
If the reader doesn't actually affect you in the room, the scene stops moving, and casting can see it instantly. Real connection can't be faked.
Working with a Reader: Self-Tapes
Your self-tape rarely falls apart on camera. It falls apart just off it. The person reading with you is shaping more of your performance than you think.
“Do Less”
"Do less" is one of the most common notes in the room, and one of the most misunderstood. It was never an instruction to disappear.
What Do They Want?
There is no hidden answer key behind the audition table, and even if there were, it would change before you walked in. Chasing it is a losing strategy.
Changing Keys
The idea that your audition song's key is untouchable is a myth Broadway itself doesn't believe. Here's when transposing helps, and when it works against you.
How to Start Your Self-Tape
Casting directors are scanning your tape, not watching it start to finish. If your first ten seconds don't land, the rest may never get seen.
Sheet Music Non-Negotiables
Your music is talking before you sing a single note. Here's what your pages need to say to prove you're prepared before the accompanist even plays.
Season Auditions
Trying to prove you fit an entire season in one audition usually means you don't clearly fit any single show in it. Specificity wins every time.
Auditioning Is an Infinite Game
Treating every audition like a game you either win or lose sets you up to feel like you're failing constantly. There's a healthier way to keep score.
Targeting a Role: Part 2
Picking the right song only gets you halfway there. How you style it is what tells the room exactly which role you're gunning for.
Targeting a Role: Part 1
A song that sounds good on you isn't the same as a song that gets you cast. There's a four-letter system for finding out which one you're actually holding.
8 Bars
Thirty seconds feels impossible to work with, until you stop trying to summarize your whole range and start building one clear arc instead.
Re-Copy Your Sheet Music
Pianists read left to right, top to bottom, always forward. If your cut forces them to jump backward, you're the one losing time in the room.
Keep Your Eyes Open
Closing your eyes might feel truthful, but it reads as absence. What feels like intensity on your end can look like disappearing to everyone watching.
Moment Before & Moment After
The strongest moments in your song might be happening before you sing a note, and after you've finished the last one. Most actors skip both entirely.
What You Control in the Audition
You will never control whether you book the job. But there's a short list of things that are entirely yours, and that's where your energy should go.
What Your Accompanist Can & Can’t Do
If it's not written on the page, your accompanist can't read your mind, no matter how clearly you explain it beforehand. Here's exactly what's safe to ask for.
32-Bar Cuts
"32 bars" hasn't meant actual measures in decades. Counting them is the wrong math entirely, and there's a framework that matches what casting is really asking for.
Cursing
Swapping out a curse word to sound polite isn't professionalism, it's dishonesty. The real question was never whether you're allowed, it's whether the character would.