Keeping Your Acting Skills Sharp

One thing that I think actors in the performing arts forget is that, because we live in a world where technology is so democratized, you do not have to wait to be given permission to work. In fact, you really, really shouldn’t.

The actors I know who are happiest being actors in the profession go out on auditions and get hired and do work. However, in those times when they aren’t doing that, they’re getting together with friends, practicing self-tapes, and giving each other feedback. They’re writing things, if that’s something that’s interesting to them. They’re using their iPhones or their cameras, or they’re borrowing equipment from a friend or relative, and are working together to make work themselves.

I think the life of an actor entering the profession after completing a performing arts education or an online performing arts education, or someone who’s getting started in the profession, is really somebody who has to be a constant generator of their own success and of their own work. A successful actor is going to be somebody who is spending time every day having conversations with representation or having conversations with fellow actors.

I know actors who get together every week and read plays together, just to continue to explore things and keep their minds working on text. I know actors who get together every week and do self-tape work with other folks so that they can continue to practice that unique skill of auditioning. I know people who make short film after short film. They make web series. They do whatever it takes to keep practicing.

Because unlike, say, somebody who plays a sport, and can maybe go and practice very easily, or play a pickup game, it’s very easy for actors to think about the whole scope of what it would take to do a production or try to get cast. They tend to focus just narrowly on that one task of getting hired to do the job in a particular way, and they miss how much exercising they can do of the skills that will then make them more likely to get hired. They see themselves as somebody who has the power to make themselves, even when they’re not getting hired at that particular moment.

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