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How Keep Your Performance Dynamic

We all know that a good performance is a carefully connected dance of need driven actions.  But sometimes, it can be hard not to refer back to our favorites time and time again.  When you need a little something to spark the imagination, this slim little volume of action words will do the trick.  It helps you find the perfect description for every beat so that your performance remains dynamic and unpredictable.  Why just “tempt” when you could allure, attract, bribe, cajole, coax, entice, induce, influence, lure, seduce… Why “stop” when you could curb, block, confound, constrict, constrain, control, dampen, delay, discourage, encumber, fetter, gag, hamper, handicap, halt, hinder, hold, impede, inhibit, moderate, muzzle, obstruct, oppress, quieten, repress, restrain, silence, stifle, still, subdue, suppress, throttle, trammel…

You can see how each word subtly influences the way you would enact your performance.  As an exercise during rehearsal, try using at least three variations of each word then pick the opposite word and try three variations of that.  For example, antonyms for “Oppress” are: aid, assist, comfort, help, make happy, please, soothe, benefit, calm, compliment, delight, encourage, give in, inspirit, let go, praise, release, yield, surrender, boost, and gladden.  Often when you try the opposite of what you think your action should be, you’ll end up with something that’s unpredictable and layered.

Our art is made up of words and actions. The more you have in your toolbox, the more varied you’ll be.

Go ahead and give it a try.

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Want Casting Directors to Know Who You Are?

You wonder how casting directors are going to find you. Of course you do! Whether you have an agent or not, you’re out there ready to go to work and you want casting directors to know how great you are. You send us postcards. You e-mail us newsletters. You follow us on Facebook. You self-submit. You even send along Starbucks gift cards around our birthdays. You go to casting director workshops and wait two hours for your five minutes in the room with us. But nothing happens. Why is that? It’s disheartening. It’s frustrating. What more can you do?

First of all, don’t despair. Know that we very well may acknowledge your efforts without you even realizing it. If we’ve seen you do great work somewhere, you’re likely in our “favorite actors” files. There may not be a job or a role right this minute for you. We may not even be working at the moment. But your talent is deeply appreciated.

That said, don’t wait around until we open that file. And don’t rely on the mailings. If we know how wonderful you are, remind us with consistent great work. If we don’t have a clue, produce wonderful work that we’ll discover. What’s going to get our attention is the strong work you’re doing all over the place. You’re bringing the house down on stage. You’re in class working out consistently. You’re creating content in your own short films, videos, and webisodes. You’re writing scripts and articles. You’re putting up a comedy sketch show every week. You’re doing exceptional work when you attend workshops. You’re out there doing the best work of your life. Casting directors, directors, writers, and producers will hear about it. We’ll see you. We’ll support you. We’ll bring you in for a role. Hell, we might even cast you.

There’s still the fable in L.A. (and other towns) that you’re meant to showcase your work on the stage primarily to get hired in film and television. While the L.A. theater scene has evolved over the past several years, some still believe that stage work is a vehicle for getting screen work. Getting a job this way may be a byproduct of doing excellent work on stage. But you must be doing your best work in a production, in class, and in a workshop because you love to act and you’re compelled to be in the work all the time—not because your goal is to book a guest star on a show. You have to wake up and fall asleep craving the artistry of it. You have to love it for its own reward. You’ll be doing better work. You’ll be happier. And those people who can hire you elsewhere will be drawn to your talent. Audiences and professionals alike are desperate to experience extraordinary work, to celebrate it, and to ultimately reward it.

We truly are one large (and sometimes not-so-large) community of artists and professionals. We track down the fantastic work you’ve created, get excited about it, write about it, tweet about it, and hire it. We want to be a part of it. It’s exciting.

A couple of years ago, I went to see John Pollono in the incredible play he wrote and starred in, “Small Engine Repair.” The play had some buzz around it. Jon Bernthal was in it, and it was my kind of theater. So I trekked to Pico from the Valley, hopeful that I wouldn’t be disappointed. John’s work, the play, and the production were extraordinary. I was blown away. I instantly engaged in a steadfast working relationship with John and have cast him in “Masters of Sex” two years later and championed him and his play, which is now in rehearsal in New York at MCC Theater.

John works hard. He’s incredibly talented, but for him it’s about the doing his best work whenever he can. And he’s finally getting the accolades he deserves. What’s really interesting is that he just wants to continue creating dynamic, spirited work. He cares most about doing personally rewarding, challenging theater. That’s why he’s succeeding.

Not everybody appreciates that rolling up your sleeves and getting down to the hard work daily is imperative. Here’s the real secret: If you’re willing to work tirelessly, you’ll outrun everyone else. If you’re willing to engage in the work with passion and conviction, you’ll be dancing triumphantly atop the Rocky steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. And the people who need to find you will. After all, who else is jumping up and down at the top of those steps in the cold every morning at dawn?!

Risa Bramon Garcia is partnered with Steve Braun in The BBG Studio, dedicated revolutionary acting and auditioning training. New career changing classes and workshops are happening now. Career and audition coaching and taping are in full swing. For more go to www.bramongarciabraun.com.

For the past 30 years Risa has worked consistently as a director, producer, casting director, writer, and teacher, collaborating with some of the most groundbreaking artists in the world. Having directed two feature films ‐ the cult classic, “200 cigarettes,” and “The Con Artist” in Canada – Risa’s also directed for television, including multiple episodes of “The Twilight Zone” for New Line/UPN, and shows for HBO, Lifetime, and Comedy Central. She’s directed dozens of plays in New York (The Ensemble Studio Theatre, Second Stage, Manhattan Theatre Club) and in Los Angeles. Risa’s casting resumé includes more than 65 feature films, classics such as “Something Wild,” “At Close Range,” “Angel Heart,” “Fatal Attraction,” “Wall Street,” “Talk Radio,” “Jacob’s Ladder,” “Born on the Fourth of July,” “JFK,” “The Doors,” “Sneakers,” “The Joy Luck Club,” “True Romance,” “Speed,” “How To Make An American Quilt,” “Dead Presidents,” “Twister,” “Benny and Joon,” and “Flirting With Disaster;” and numerous television shows, including “Roseanne,” “CSI:NY,” “The Cape,” and most recently “A Gifted Man” for CBS and the pilot “Rewind” for Syfy. ” Risa served as a producer on Oliver Stone’s films “Heaven and Earth” and “Natural Born Killers,” which she also cast. She’s currently casting the new Showtime series, “Masters of Sex.”

 

Thanks to Backstage.com for the wonderful article from Risa Bramon Garcia.

Michael Fassbender by Nino Munoz for GQ 2012-000

Yes You Are (good enough)!

In the HBO documentary, Casting By, the late casting director Marion Dougherty, talks about how it didn’t really matter to her if actors bombed auditions. Or sucked. Or weren’t great all the time. What mattered is that she saw something in them and knew that eventually there would be a role that would come along to match the essence of that particular person. She should know as she discovered all kinds of talent from Al Pacino and Jon Voight to Glenn Close and Diane Lane. All of these varied and different human beings whose careers she helped start certainly are originals. That’s the common denominator. (And also that she always trusted her gut about people.)

And it sort of raises the question . . . What is talent? Does everyone have it? What is “it”?

From a scientific standpoint; yes, we all possess innate, inner talent. We all have vast resources of potential and possibility within us waiting to be uncovered and utilized. The process for actors (and for all people, really) is about discovering, cultivating, nurturing, harnessing, and finally expressing that talent. And that takes work. Technique is simply a vehicle for letting your talent be expressed. Emotionally, instinctually, physically. And talent is simply how you do what you do.

Ultimately, it’s you.

Your approach, your style, your intuition, your physiology, your tendencies, your physicality, your hopes and fears, your blood and guts, your passion and pain. What you bring to a role is unlike anyone else. It doesn’t mean it’s necessarily better – but it is uniquely yours, because of the unique life that you are living. And that’s all you’ve got. Ever. This one life.

Talent, then, becomes about unapologetically bringing yourself to the work (and being shown how to do that). And the only way you’re going to do that and get there (besides having great casting directors ultimately see that quality) is by giving yourself permission. You simply have to stop doing it for other people. For acceptance. For someone to love you. Or get you. Or acknowledge you. Or validate you.

It’s tough because we live in a world where we’re constantly seeking validation through the external: Facebook acknowledgments, twitter mentions, casting callbacks and agency acceptance.

Michael Fassbinder had a watershed moment in his career when he finally decided that he was “good enough”.

He most certainly is.

And so are you.

You’re good enough to get the job and have an agent and be on a show and get paid for your work and have an amazing career. You’re good enough to lead by example and inspire others and tell your own unique story and trust that people will want to listen. You’re good enough to stop second-guessing everything or stop doubting yourself continuously or listen to the advice of hundreds of other people or take thousands of different classes feeling like you’re always in search of “something missing”. You’re good enough to be loved and be happy and have your dreams come true and not always feel like you have to have it all figured out and still be okay with being a continuous work-in-progress.

That’s talent. That’s good enough.

In fact . . . it’s outstanding.

 

Thanks to Anthony Meindl for this wonderful article.  Please check out his website – its just filled with informative and inspiring articles like this one.