Conversation with casting director and director of Barter’s upcoming Mamma Mia. Paul talks about how he started as a casting director, the skills of casting, and working on the regional premiere of Mamma Mia.
(via)
DISCOVER YOUR REAL POTENTIAL
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube
Conversation with casting director and director of Barter’s upcoming Mamma Mia. Paul talks about how he started as a casting director, the skills of casting, and working on the regional premiere of Mamma Mia.
(via)
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

DON’T DO WHAT YOU THINK THE CASTING DIRECTOR WANTS – DO SOMETHING THEY WOULD NEVER HAVE IMAGINED!
Be bold. Follow your instincts and act on them. Make yourself memorable. Go against the grain and take risks!
Instead of planning your responses, allow yourself to connect naturally and act instinctively.
Show some personality in the room, the casting directors want you to be at your best, they are not against you, they brought you in because they like something about you- show them who you are. You’re not a robot…You are an incredible individual who is full of creativity and passion. Just be yourself!
Think of one thing you can bring to every audition piece that nobody else will have thought of.
Photograph by UON Library, University of Newcastle.
(via)
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Former MCB dancer Ezra Hurwitz is part of a new generation of dance filmmakers who are doing more than just filming beautiful steps. He’s using his unique insights as a professional dancer, combined with a keen eye for the conceptual and the unique, to elevate the medium.
One of my first real experiments was Heatscape, a film promoting Justin Peck’s first major commission for MCB. Justin and I are longtime friends, having trained in the same class at SAB. When he was in Miami, he approached me to direct and produce a short for the premiere of his work. Visually, there was the potential for an arresting piece, drawing on the stimulating mixture of Justin’s choreography with the work of visual artist Shepard Fairey. I jumped at the opportunity! Personally, it also represented a tribute to my time at MCB, which has so defined my career. Since then, I’ve been able to return a few times: I just filmed there recently for the production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Photograph by Teen Vogue.
(via)
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

They’ll tell you that 90 percent of filmmaking is casting. What they don’t mention is that even if you get the casting right, you can still really screw it up if you don’t know how to work with your actors. Here are 25 thoughts about directing actors, in no particular order.
Photograph by Museu del cinema.
(via)
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube
The Red Shoes, 1948.
Dirty Dancing, 1987.
Black Swan, 2010.
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

SACRIFICE
In many ways, being an actor is just like any other job – in a zero-hours-contractsort of way – with no guarantee that there will even be minimum wage at the end of the run; remember this next time that you go to a “fringe” production.
There is nothing to stop you realising your dream as long as you are prepared to invest huge amounts of energy (and a fair amount of hard cash) in learning and honing your skills on a continuous basis and you don’t mind sacrificing a secure roof over your head, the car, regular holidays abroad and an income that you can live on comfortably. Be prepared to apply continually for jobs in competition with hundreds of others and deal with constant rejection – week in, week out.
SUDOKU
Get used to early mornings and late nights. There is no luxury of being an owl or a lark. You have to be both, and be fit at all sorts of times of day to produce deep emotions or light-hearted frivolity at the drop of a hat, whatever you actually feel. Ten or 20 times over if required. There is a lot of sitting around at auditions, in rehearsal and sometimes in performance. Doing the crossword and sudoku begins to feel as much as part of the job as acting.
SEXLESS SEX SCENES
Sex scenes? Par for the course, and I promise you, there is nothing remotely sexy about them. Really. Other performers and crew are generally very supportive as they know how awkward it can be, although don’t expect them to show you this in an obvious way. The first time that I rehearsed a scene in a play with no clothes on, I suddenly realised that the curtains were open on to the road, and that I and my onstage lover were in full view of passersby and a stream of traffic. Once the curtains were drawn we recommenced, only for a light to blow above our heads just as we got to a clinch, whereupon we were showered with fragments of glass. I have never seen a light do that before or since. In the dress rehearsal, the techies painted the surface of the stage where I was lying so that I ended up with a green stripe down my back.
Photograph by Dan Anderson.
(via)
By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube