The Actor's Survival Kit: Fifth Edition
By Miriam Newhouse and Peter Messaline
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About this ebook
The Actor’s Survival Kit is required reading in Canadian theatre schools and is a constant resource for its many readers across the country. This fifth edition gives actors fresh research from today’s experience, new lists of Canada-wide contacts, and input from success stories. It speaks to a new generation of artists, giving them an up-to-date guide to the business of acting.
The book addresses a range of new issues: performer websites, video self-production, and sending rmand networking on the Internet. It also takes a fresh look at old ones: agents, self-promotion, and work opportunities for women and minorities. The authors learn by constantly talking to emerging artists about the problems they face in the business in Canada. Often those conversations begin with, "You wrote the book!" The authors are still receiving thanks from grateful artists who have been guided by this irreplaceable book over the years.
Miriam Newhouse
Miriam Newhouse has acted in and directed theatre worldwide and across Canada. She has appeared in film, radio, and television and is the labour co-chair of the Ontario Advisory Committee for Health and Safety in the Live Performing Arts.
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Book preview
The Actor's Survival Kit - Miriam Newhouse
The Actor’s
SURVIVAL KIT
The Actor’s
SURVIVAL KIT
Fifth Edition
Miriam Newhouse and Peter Messaline
Copyright © Miriam Newhouse and Peter Messaline, 2010
First published by Simon & Pierre in 1990. This 2010 edition is published by Dundurn Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purposes of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.
Copy Editor: Jennifer McKnight
Design: Jennifer Scott
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Newhouse, Miriam, 1944-
The actor’s survival kit / by Miriam Newhouse and Peter Messaline. -- 5th ed.
Includes bibliographical references.
Issued also in an electronic format.
ISBN 978-1-55488-783-5
1. Acting--Vocational guidance--Canada. I. Messaline, Peter, 1944-
PN2055.N48 2011 792.02’802371 C2010-902687-X
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and Livres Canada Books, and the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishers Tax Credit program, and the Ontario Media Development Corporation.
Care has been taken to trace the ownership of copyright material used in this book. The author and the publisher welcome any information enabling them to rectify any references or credits in subsequent editions.
J. Kirk Howard, President
www.dundurn.com
Dundurn Press
3 Church Street, Suite 500
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5E 1M2
Gazelle Book Services Limited
White Cross Mills
High Town, Lancaster, England
LA1 4XS
Dundurn Press
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U.S.A. 14150
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1 — Overview: Taking Charge
Chapter 2 — Some Career Problems: Gloomy Reality
Chapter 3 — Improve the Product: You’re Selling Yourself
Chapter 4 — Publicity: Working to Get Work
Chapter 5 — Promotion: Show and Tell
Chapter 6 — Casting: The Art of Auditioning
Chapter 7 — Be Prepared: Get Ready … Get Set …
Chapter 8 — Work Schedules: Get Set … Go!
Chapter 9 — Job Etiquette: The Golden Rule
Chapter 10 — Agents: The Ten Percent Solution
Chapter 11 — Performer Unions: All for One, But Is It for You?
Chapter 12 — Indie Media and Theatre: The Actor as Producer
Chapter 13 — Income Tax and GST/HST: The T
Word
Chapter 14 — Bureaucracies: Grownups
Envoi
Addresses
Glossary
Bibliography
Introduction
This is a book about being an actor in Canada. It’s not about how to act — there are plenty of ways to learn that — and it’s not about working in the States — plenty of people have written about that. The Actor’s Survival Kit is about the problems of being an actor, but it is mainly a celebration of the fact that so many people overcome those problems. If you are interested in being a professional actor in Canada, we are talking to you.
We have made all the mistakes it is possible to make, and we aren’t afraid to pass them on to you as Awful Warnings. We have both worked in the United States, England, and Canada. Teaching Acting as a Business across the country, we have listened to the questions and concerns of hundreds of people in just your situation. Most important, we have survived almost forty years in the business.
There is no one way of getting into this profession. Later on you’ll read about the options that are open to you.
This book won’t make you a success. What it will do is help you discover what success is. We have a friend who can’t walk down the street without being recognized because of his television series. We know actors who work nine to five, doing commercial voice-overs and earning six-figure incomes in complete obscurity. An ex-student who was determined to be a stage actor now finds himself deep in the producing side of the film industry. Who is a success? All of them, of course. Deciding what you want is your first step to success. If you don’t know where you’re going, how will you know when you get there?
We’re not offering you a miracle method. If you are at the beginning of your career, we can save you some time. Instead of making all your own mistakes, you can read about ours. If you are further along, you can bounce your ideas off ours and perhaps get ammunition for a specific problem.
There are no easy answers here. But there are some hard questions you should be asking yourself. We can’t take legal or moral responsibility for your career — that’s your job. We can show you some problems and offer some advice, but the solutions are up to you.
We can only talk about what we know. Unfortunately, that means we have had to ignore the francophone side of the business. We hope that someone with knowledge and experience in that area will fill the gap.
Writers have yet to solve the he/she/they hassle. We try to steer clear of the problem where possible, but we’ve decided to call directors he
and agents and stage managers she
because that has been the usual pattern in our experience. Actor
is generic. Indeed, many female actors will not be called anything else.
We try to avoid jargon, but the business is full of it — if the meaning of anything isn’t clear, you should find it in the Glossary.
With each edition of this book, the larger picture both changes and remains the same. In theatre, there has been an upswing in modest commercial productions, with a few large commercial ventures on one side and small artist-driven projects on the other. Film and television work is well established in the Maritimes and is on the increase in the Prairies; agents are part of the picture outside Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. On the other hand, women and visible minorities are still treated unfairly; actors as a group still contribute most to producers’ funds, still remain some of the worst paid professionals — and still consider themselves blessed in their career choice.
We were blessed by the generosity of the hundreds of people we interviewed and by the support of Marian Wilson and Jean Paton of Simon & Pierre. Twenty years ago, they welcomed our audition speech collections and we discovered we couldn’t have chosen a better home for our work. The first edition of The Actor’s Survival Kit followed, and when Kirk Howard and his Dundurn Group adopted S&P and us, we were delighted to find another warm supporter, wildly different in style, but just as interested in Canadian theatre.
Without people like these, producing Canadian material and keeping Canadian culture alive, we would all be the poorer. As long as they are ready to work harder and longer, and for less money, than in for-profit ventures, the south’s cultural imperialism will not take us over.
A rich man would never give anything to panhandlers. He would lend them a dollar and say, Pass it on when you see someone who needs it.
In the early days we had people who were our mentors, whom we can never really thank. This is our way of paying forward what we have been given. Take what you know and pass it on in your turn.
CHAPTER ONE
Overview: Taking Charge
You can’t hope to be lucky — you have to prepare to be lucky.
Timothy Dowd, NYPD
In a profession where employment depends so much on other people’s tastes and biases, it is easy to feel that we have no control over our own affairs. We do have control — not much, but some — and the sooner we start using it, the better.
Acting is not only an art; it is also a business. Even today, there are too many drama students and their teachers who feel that actors are artists and shouldn’t have to deal with hardcore realities. Not so. Andy Warhol as quoted in the New Yorker: Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art.
There is no point in being an artist if you cannot practise your art. No matter how good you are, who cares if you aren’t working?
Certainly the actual execution of our craft demands an artistry and a sensitivity that is at odds with the grown-up world of business. Eve Brandstein writes in The Actor: Performing is childlike and joyous. Being an actor is a profession. You act from the Child. You do business from the Adult.
Being an adult means doing things you’d rather someone else did. It also means knowing what has to be done. The business side of acting involves three main responsibilities, and not one of them is any fun: marketing, decision-making, and self-discipline.
MARKETING
Actors sell a product. Not pets or vinyl tiles or packaged holidays — they sell themselves. You are selling the way you look, the way you sound, the way you move. To do so effectively, you need a hide tough enough to bear constant rejection and the sensitivity and vulnerability to do the job you have been trained to do. The reality is if you don’t have the first, you won’t need the second.
From Marketing for the Not-For-Profit: Marketing is like going on a diet. It is good for you. It takes discipline. It requires a balanced approach. Meaningful results are not immediate.
Richard Nelson Bolles writes in What Color Is Your Parachute?, The person who gets hired is not necessarily the one who can do the job best but the one who knows the most about getting hired.
Like any business, you have to know what you’re selling and who is buying. You learn about your market by reading plays, watching movies and television, going to the theatre, talking to other actors, and attending workshops. Your market is any possible engager in theatre or the media:
• Theatre — musical, regional, dinner, children’s, summer, commercial, alternative, fringe, lunchtime, cruise ships, industrial, specialist (audible/visible minorities, handicapped)
• Film — feature, documentary, in-house (training, industrial), student, independent
• Television — soap opera, sitcom, action, educational, made-for-TV movie, animation/voicing
• Multimedia — webisodes, podcasts, streaming video, games
• Commercials — on-camera, voice-over, radio, web
• Radio — drama, storytelling, docudrama, books
So, those are the markets. Now, what is your product? Your product is yourself: what you are and what you can do. It is not easy to know how you come across to the rest of the world. Inside, you may feel like a delicate flower, but if you weigh 350 pounds and have a five o’clock shadow by noon, you are unlikely to get cast as Ariel; go for Caliban. This is not to say typecasting is inevitable, but it is getting more and more likely, in theatre as well as in film and television. Carole MacDonald, EMI marketing director: Image doesn’t have to be a completely calculated thing. It’s like anybody dressing for a night out, or even going to the office; we all think about how we feel, who we think we are, what we want to project.
Finding out what you project is never easy. When we look in the mirror we exaggerate some things and minimize others according to how we feel about ourselves. Talk to your friends and teachers; they can give you an idea. Ask what they see you cast as; that’s sometimes easier for them to answer. Your agent, when you have one, has less reason to give you a polite lie, and more knowledge on which to base professional advice.
You do not have to look or sound like the popular actors of the day. Discover what makes you unique. Bill Cosby, as quoted by Arsenio Hall: I don’t know the key to being successful. But the secret to failure is trying to be like everyone else.
Once you know the market and know your product, you have to be able to put the two together. Self-promotion is both tedious and time-consuming. It is also essential.
DECISION-MAKING
Throughout your career, you will have choices to make. Every time you make a choice, you open one door and leave another closed. You will never find out what was really behind that closed door. Whatever opportunities you might have had will be lost to you. How do you choose? How will you know if your choice was right? Who do you blame if your choice was wrong?
How do you choose? Find out as much as you can about the problem. Talk to people with knowledge and experience, but consider the sources. Many of your mentors from drama school have not kept up with the changes in the business and are out of touch with the profession as it today. And beware: people on the cutting edge also make assumptions. Don’t assume that strong assertions are fact. Do your own research. The more facts you have, the better your chances are of making an adult, informed decision. Don’t deny your instincts. Don’t let anyone else make the decision for you. However tempting it is to let your agent or your best friend or even this book’s authors tell you what to do, do not yield. It is your career and your decision. You are the one who has to live with the results.
How will you know if your choice was right? You won’t. It is impossible to predict what might have been. Why waste your time?
Who do you blame if your choice was wrong? You have already worked out the answer to that one, haven’t you? That’s right: you have no one to blame but yourself. That is why being an adult is such a drag. But why blame anyone? Once you have made your decision regrets and recriminations simply get in the way of doing the job. Play the hand you’re dealt.
SELF-DISCIPLINE
Acting is a full-time job looking for part-time work.
There is not much excitement in keeping files up to date, few laughs in writing engagers and agents, and no joy in being put on hold by endless receptionists. Logging phone conversations and looking up casting directors are not right up there with curtain calls and great reviews, but they are far more frequent. Thriller writer Dick Francis had this to say about jockeys: The grind, the frustration, the constant failures, the long hours and the poor pay aren’t obstacles in the way of the job. They are the job. The applause, the big fee, the award, the triumph — all these are simply occasional bonuses to be enjoyed when they happen.
Just like acting.
THERE’S NO BUSINESS LIKE SHOW BUSINESS
Very true. In other businesses you start at or near the bottom and work your way up. You may not reach the top, but you move steadily towards it. In the business of acting you can start at any point on the ladder and spend your whole career climbing up and down. That is a puzzling not to say foreign concept for most people. You may be lucky enough to leave drama school and go straight into a leading role in a feature film or at a prestigious theatre (don’t hold your breath). Or your first job will come after several months and you will earn $545 as a day player in a series. And so it goes on throughout your career. Success does not breed success.
Success does, however, breed self-confidence. So does knowledge. Having a clear understanding of what you have to do in the job market, and the tools you need to do it with, will give you that confidence. The courage you will need to get through the next chapter you’ll have to find for yourself. Read on.
CHAPTER TWO
Some Career Problems: Gloomy Reality
Fie upon this quiet life! I want work.
Shakespeare
Caution: The career of acting contains insecurity, unemployment, and rejection and is hazardous to your health.
Unfortunately, acting addicts, like cigarette addicts, ignore the warnings and insist on continuing the habit. So we will not try to put you off with gloomy admonitions; we will simply present the facts. Here are the professional realities you will encounter. At the end of the chapter, if you haven’t given up in despair, you will have a better idea of the hurdles you face. The rest of the book shows you how to clear them.
When you decided to become an actor, you didn’t worry that statistics say you are likely to fail. We all believe that we are going to be the successful ones, the ones who will beat the odds. Here’s what those odds are.
MONEY
Unfortunately, figures showing actors’ earnings always lag behind current activity, but it is interesting to note that the figures in the latest Statistics Canada survey have barely changed from those of ten years earlier. The latest figures we have show:
• The average Canadian personal income was $23,200.
• The average for the self-employed was $23,000.
And in 2007–2008:
• The average of those ACTRA members who worked at all was $11,269.
• The average of Equity members who worked at all was $12,222.
Statistics Canada gave the low-income cut-off for a single person in a community of 500,000 as $22,171. Working full-time at Ontario’s minimum wage would bring in $19,000.
There is no question that people do not become actors because of the money. Just as well. The same survey shows that the number of actors more than doubled over the previous ten years, but their average overall income went up by less than 10 percent.
There are performers, even in Canada, who earn over $150,000 a year, but they form a minute proportion of the acting population. If you are planning to go into the acting business for the big bucks, think again. You will be doing unusually well if you support yourself solely by your acting.
Greg Ellwand is a Dora-award-winning stage actor with lead and guest star roles in major series and features, but he has worked part-time for years as a meat cutter to support his family.
UNEMPLOYMENT
All actors experience the see-saw of periods of intense work followed by aching gaps of unemployment. Even if you have a secondary job, you still feel unemployed. Even if you are busy training, promoting yourself, and preparing, you still miss the actual acting. When you work you have a structure and a meaning to your day imposed upon you by your engager. It is difficult to structure your unemployed time. You will have a flurry of activity where you are going to auditions every day, followed by long silences where you keep checking your phone for the dial tone.
Those periods of work were gratifying to your artistic ego; they also paid your rent. It is easy to fool yourself into thinking that the $200 or $450 or $1,500 you get per week or per day is going to continue forever. It never does. It lasts as long as the job. In Canada, the Canadian Actors’ Equity Association (Equity or CAEA) and the Alliance of Canadian Cinema Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) surveyed their members’ work in 2007–08: 80 percent of Equity members and 40 percent of ACTRA Toronto’s members did not work.
And remember, acting work doesn’t qualify for unemployment benefits in Canada.
MIGRATIONS
If you think you have a better chance in the United States, think again. Lehman Engel, in Getting Started in Theatre, advises that a person of average weight and height, with good vocal or dance technique and some ability in the other regular skills, with something special to offer that few others have, will find it normal to attend classes regularly, go to sixteen Broadway and thirty off-Broadway auditions in one season plus all the summer theatre auditions, send pictures and résumés to stage managers of all the shows (for replacement casting) — and get no work. Certainly, there are more jobs with very high fees in the States, but the competition for any work at all is intense.
There is a lot of film work in Los Angeles and a lot of stage, television, and film out of New York, but both cities have a whole lot of actors. And both cities have film and theatre that people do for the exposure, not the money. Some warnings:
Bob Fraser: In L.A., workshops, Equity waiver theatre, experimental films … can quickly become a way of life. In New York, one can be in a tiny 99-seat theatre and still have the pleasure of watching Eli Wallach or Brian Cox.
Katherine Bedoian: We have managed to pay actors for rehearsal time … in many small L.A. theatres actors have to pay the producer to be in the company.
SEX
No, we haven’t finally got to the good stuff. Women get a bad deal in most careers — less pay for the same work, less access to senior jobs — and things aren’t changing quickly, regardless of the lip service being given to equality. Our profession should be free of this unfairness, but read on and weep.
Women make up 52 percent of Canada’s adult population, but feature in media and stage casting much less, and typically as secondary, supporting characters that are defined by their relationship with a male character. It is still unusual for women to be offered pivotal roles and to be cast in parts where gender is irrelevant.
It is surprising to see that in the Statistical Profile of Artists in Canada, women earn 92 percent of men’s income (71 percent in the overall labour force).
From a Screen Actors Guild (SAG) news release, November 2005: Role distribution by gender in 2004 continues the well-established patterns of the prior four years, whereby males garnered the lion’s share of roles; however, the total percentage of roles for female actors increased marginally.
Without a Canadian survey, but given the nature of the industry, we can safely assume the Canadian industry moves in lockstep.
One piece of entirely good news: Rina Fraticelli surveyed the Playwrights Canada catalogue in 1981 and found only 36 percent of the plays had casts where the women outnumbered or were equal to the men. Our survey of the casts in the considerably larger 2003–2005 catalogue showed 45 percent female roles. Looking at the plays identified as new to the 2003–2005 catalogue, we found 47 percent of the total roles were female. Clearly, playwrights are writing and selling plays with more balanced casting; however, the majority of theatres are still working mainly from an older canon, weighted towards men.
As long as the proportion of artistic directors in Equity theatres remains overwhelmingly male (76 percent in 2010), the plays chosen will tend to have a male bias. We assume that classical theatre companies will have to engage considerably more men than women; however, even within the restrictions set by traditional classical casting, the artistic director’s gender makes a difference. Among the three Ontario classical theatre companies — Stratford Festival, Shaw Festival, and Soulpepper Theatre Company — the two companies with male artistic directors, Stratford and Soulpepper, engaged 42 percent and 31 percent female actors respectively in their 2010 seasons. On the other hand, Shaw Festival, with a female artistic director, engaged 48 percent female actors in the same season.
MINORITIES
There are no universally accepted terms for people who aren’t obviously white bread or who have physical disabilities. We use visible minorities
and disabled
for lack of better alternatives.
There is still a far smaller proportion of visible minorities on stage and screen than in society. We know that younger actors are a more diverse group than older actors, and we know that casting breakdowns regularly say all ethnic groups,
but we see that visible minorities are still cast like women — less often, rarely in pivotal roles, and rarely where the character is not specifically written as ethnic.
There is no one group to blame. Agents may not give their visible minority clients equal opportunity to be seen. Brian Levy, casting director, said