Skip navigation

Tag Archives: promotion for actors

I have found two new sites that I like. One is Actor Rated.Com They seem to allow users to rate different things in relation to acting, just another great site, that helps to show you not only the bad things to stay the hell away from, but some great services that you may find very useful.

Also Breaking Legs They provide a great service at a great price. Taped auditions in HD quality, and other cool services to help your career.

Also have to again give my pitch for these guys My Acting Site Just a glorius way to get yourself your very own website for REAL, and use your own name for the address (domain name) its amazing, and way to inexpensive for what it does, and they answer the phone when you need help. Try that with the other services on the Internet.

Hope this helps,
-Frank

I saw an interview last night with an actor, that was once at the top end of the TV world. Then the show eventually got cancelled. The actor said, it took nearly six years to get another job. Mostly this was due to the actor turning into a Diva, and not really making any friends along the way, and mostly upsetting everyone all of the time around them. This was the actors full admission.

After six years this person realized they had really done a bad thing for their career, and then started working on how to fix it. The actor did and eventually got back to work, doing guest starring roles on TV. This person may never again get a a lead in a show or film… but they did fix things enough to get the proverbial bone throw at them here and there.

This is sad but true, and happens more often than one would think. Do yourself a favor, treat everyone with respect! Todays craft service person, could be tomorrows Oscar winning director. It has happened.

Food for thought…
-Frank

This more boils down to what kind of attitude should one have in the business of acting, but it has become so blatant as of late that I had to come up with something on this particular issue.

Look, if you are a MAJOR “A” List Celebrity, do what you want… no one cares… well kind of, but if you are an “A” lister, it will not matter all that much.

If you are starting out, and start with the “Diva” complex… you will fail, I promise you.  There is no fine line between ass kissing and being a all out “Diva”.  

If you have read this far and have no idea of what I am saying, you need to take another look at what Emily Post wrote about manners, as this is what I am speaking of.  Remembering the “Magic Word” is totally important in this business, and you need to treat everyone as a professional.  Yes that even means being nice to extra’s when you are on the set.

You are not god’s gift to everyone else on the planet, and I am strong believer that being nice and courteous, will make you a better person and help you to achieve your goals.

Diva’s suck IMHO!  There is no need for it at all.  

People notice, I have been on many sets and have heard the talks of producers, directors, make up artists, etc.  They all complain about the Diva’s on the set, and the really dislike them.  This is why people fall from grace as it were, and were once big and now they are small.

A great, positive, helpful attitude will take you far!

-Frank

MANAGER’S are generally more focused on the talent’s more broad term goals as an artist. To use an analogy, from a painter, the manager is responsible for the whole canvas, they ensure that from many yards away all the pieces fit together with each other, the colors are right together, and as a whole the canvas is a complete work of art, they may ask the artist to fine tune some section, give a note about what they think might be the next right thing to do, add in anything they think they have a better chance at selling the art work etc.

The AGENT’S role would be to provide the various paints for the canvas, the brushes, they would make sure that each individual small part of the canvas was complete as a single piece, and they would consider their job a well done one each time one small section was done.A manager is a more PERSONAL person to the artist. They should have tens of clients not hundreds. An agent is more about booking many projects for the hundreds of people they represent rather than handholding a small group. There are many other parts to this that I could go on about, legal, commissions etc, but I think this gives the basics.

Hope this helps!

-Frank

Hello Actors!  

I hope all of you found the idea of asking for help… well, helpful. :)  

In this article I want to talk about agents. The right agent and agency is one of the most important factors in building your career as an actor, so finding the right one is also very important. Here is the most common way to be successful when pursuing an agent. 

First, go to your local Theater Arts bookstore (or a bookstore with a Theatre Arts section) and buy a directory of the local talent agents.  In Los Angeles for example (or NY, London, or Toronto), you could go to Samuel French bookstores.  They have directories which are regularly updated and published.  And if you already have an old one laying around – go get a new one!  Agents, like many other professionals, will move from agency to agency and you want to get the most current information.  

Once you get your listing, look through the descriptions and find the specialties of the different agencies, such as children, models, character actors, leading women or leading men. You want to target the agents who fit your type. Remember in the earlier article about how you should find out your type? This is one reason why.  When just starting out you generally want to submit to Boutique (smaller) or mid-level agencies.

Also, if you are just starting out as an actor, my suggestion is to start with commercials. Target the commercial department of an agency first, especially if you are non-union (not a member of SAG or AFTRA). That way, once you get in with the commercial department, your chances of being seen by the theatrical department increase greatly. 

Once you have narrowed down your list to agencies that would cater to your type, find out if any of your friends or contacts know any of the agents you’re targeting or are represented by them. Ask them about their experiences with the agency and if they can give you a reference. 

Next, submit your headshot and resume to the agent, with a brief cover letter introducing yourself. Be sure to do your homework on the person you are submitting too and address them by name if possible. Be creative and enlighten them on your type and what makes you different from all the other actors they come in contact with. 

Once you’ve submitted your “pack” you’ll want to: 

    * Follow up with a call and a postcard in a couple weeks if you haven’t heard from them. Sometimes agents get busy and they let submissions pile up on their desk (they get a lot of them) so it takes a while to look through all of them.

    * Send invitations to all of your performances to agents whom you have targeted.

    * Perform in carefully selected showcases.  They can be expensive so be sure to find out which agents are attending first.

    * Be persistent but not annoying. Update agents on your activities every 2 to 3 months. That means you have to be active so you’ll have things with which to update them.

Now go get em!

If you have a web site, you need to have a bio page which tells the world who you are and what you do, and why you are special.  It is often very overlooked, but the truth of the matter is people read this as they want to know more about you.  An acting resume is just that – what you have done.  The bio is the story of you!

Again this place, where my web site is hosted does a great job of incorporating this page onto your website included in the small price.  Click here.  And they also allow up to three demo reels and unlimited pictures, in a cool flash photo gallery.

The Acting Bio is SERIOUSLY important, do not overlook this when creating your website, or having your web designer do it, or doing it yourself.  Its all about telling the world your dreams, and one day they will happen!

Take care, and write a great bio about you, and why you need to make it in your dream!  And then publish it on your web site, and get busy getting jobs!

Frank

This is a serious topic that you need to pay attention to.  You  need to register your name as a domain name ASAP!  I got reminded of this while working on a show last week.  One of the stars of the show was complaining that someone bought his name… and he was being asked to pay $25,000.00 to get it back.  He is in the process of getting a very high end web site developed for himself, and this is what happened.  Now he is being extorted out of $25K to get his web site done.  Not COOL, but not illegal either.

You see there is a thing on the internet called IMDB.  And these bastards troll it, every single day… looking for people that have one or two credits to their name, and as soon as they find one… they check to see if that domain name is available and if so they buy it for $20.00… then when the actor wants a web site… they hold this domain name hostage for as much cash as they can get.

They are called Vampires!  And are just betting that if someone has enough chops to get a couple of jobs… then one day they will make it bigger and have more money to give to them to buy their name back.

The solution is simple, GET YOUR OWN DOMAIN NAME NOW!  Your name is your name… BUT REGISTER IT BEFORE ONE OF THESE VAMPIRES DO!!!

You can do it here, and also get your very own website  while you are at it.

This will save you tons of money, and is more than worthwhile.  If you do not have a web site now, one day you will, and the best name for it… is your own! After all, it all about you!

Its a small price to pay, to save yourself a ton of future aggravation. This is the digital age, and you need a presence on the Internet for absolute sure.

 

Take care,

Frank

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.