With the End of the Holidays…

I know it has been a few months since my last entry in October, but things are beginning to pickup again. What I did not want to do during the fourth quarter of 2005 was: 1. miss out on my family vacation in December and 2. Spend the Christmas Holidays in a play. So I took November and December off.

I am so ready to do another play. I have been since October, but… see above. One of the plays I have been looking forward to auditioning for is Play On, which last I heard, is a play selected by and will be directed by Lane Teilhaber. If you remember, Lane directed Beau Jest. I would love to work with Lane again. A great director he be.

Audition Notice: Play On

Kudzu Playhouse announces auditions for Play On, a behind the scenes comedy in the tradition of Noises Off. A theatre group is trying desperately to put on a play in spite of the maddening interference from a haughty authoress who keeps revising the script. Auditions will be held on Tuesday, January 17, and Wednesday January 18 at 7:30pm at 608 Holcomb Bridge Rd, Roswel 30076. Seeking 7 women (late teens to late sixties), and 3 men (mid twenties to late sixties). Performances will be March 3-April 18, 2006. Audition requirements: Cold readings from the script. Non-Equity. Stipend Paid. For more info contact Jeannie Hinds at 770-594-1020 or kudzuplayhouse@aol.com.

First Film Audition

This was for Two If By Sea Pictures who’s last film, Replacing George, won best picture at this year’s Art Within 72hr Film Challenge. Two brothers: Josh and Jeremiah Daws.

I arrived about 15 minutes before my audition at 5 PM at this huge church. The building was very large, huge and after wondering down a few halls I found where the auditions were being held. It was a vastly huge place.

Signed in, received a small packet that had all the male parts and was ushered into a very large room. This room was a multipurpose room. It had a large stage, professional lights, a bar on the opposite side, lots of seating and was very cozy. It was a vision of a rec room that I would not mind having if I ever win the lottery.

The packet I was given had sides for all three male parts, a brief description of who each male person was and what environment the movie would take place in. I read all three parts and was able to do a little who, what, where, when, why and how does that make you feel, before being called in to audition.

Josh, Jeremiah and about a half dozen others were in a small room with a table separating me from everybody else. On the table was a camera which was hooked up to a recorder and a small TV. I could not see the TV screen.

After a brief introduction to Josh and Jeremiah, I was asked to stand on a T shaped tape on the floor and face the camera and for the record state my name. I was asked to read two sides: The first was the lead TOM with his wife. And the Second was GEORGE interacting with TOM. GEORGE was the more dramatic, upset and drunk over the events of the day.

I do not think I did very well with TOM. There were times when it sounded, to me anyway, that I was just reading the lines. GEORGE I felt that I did better on. GEORGE was a challenge. His wife had her illegal pregnancy terminated that morning by TOM and later that day his wife killed herself. GEORGE was angry at TOM, upset over loosing his wife and kid, and drunk. It was, I felt, a good read. 10 minutes total and I was done.

When I was done all I received was a Thank You and I left. No “will call you” or a note about call backs, no appraisals. But that is what you get for most auditions. The auditioners are busy and usually only have time to call people they want. This is nothing new, but always frustrating. Never knowing how you did.

I always want to know how I did. Did I do well but not what they are looking for, or did OK and need lots of work or did they just laugh at me when I left. I won?t know unless they actually call me.

Oh and don’t wear glasses for the camera. Not good. Camera can’t see your face very well. Well it can but with a small obstruction. I did because my contacts were bothering me, but I should not have. If they want glasses on a character, they will provide glasses as part of the costume.

Audition Notice: Short Film

Two If By Sea Pictures will be holding auditions for a short film to be shot in November. Our last film, Replacing George, won best picture at this year’s Art Within 72hr Film Challenge. (http://www.428productions.com/videos.cfm) Possible pay available based on experience, but credit and a copy of the film will be provided.

Auditions will take place Tuesday and Wednesday, October 11 & 12 from 4 to 9 PM in Alpharetta, GA. Shooting will most likely take place during the first week of November.

The short is a 20-30 minute dramatic thriller that is thematically similar to Minority Report. We are looking to cast the following parts:

Lead Male (Late 20’s to 30’s): A police officer and husband who is conflicted about what his job requires him to do and eventually breaks the law to protect his family.

Pregnant Woman (Late 20’s to early 40’s): Very dramatic role. Must be able to scream for your life and convey great sorrow. Pregnancy belly not required.

Pregnant Woman’s Husband (Late 20’s to 40’s): Heartbroken and bitter over the death of his wife, he must choose whether or not to help the man who he believes caused her death.

Cop (Male Late 20’s to 40’s): Next door neighbor and coworker of our lead. He is a by the books cop who takes his job seriously and believes in what he does.

Cop’s Wife (Female 20’s to 30’s): Best friend to Lead female (lead male’s wife). She is the neighborhood gossip and has a pivotal role in the climax of the film.

Please contact us at dawsbrothers at hotmail dot com to schedule an audition time. Or call 404-232-0016.

Thanks,

Josh & Jeremiah Daws

* Various other minor roles of various races and ages (think featured extras) also need to be cast. If interested in one of these roles, please send headshots to dawsbrothers@hotmail.com or Two If By Sea Pictures, 702 Brighton Ln, Winder, GA 30680.

5 W’s in Acting Class

Acting class started last night. Delayed by one week to allow for additional registrations. The class consists of 8 people: Kelly Howell and I, (sister and brother), Matt and Jeff McGahren (brothers), Jayne Jacobs and Ryan Bauer (mother and son) and two others unrelated to anybody else in the class. A real family affair mostly.

It’s good being back in class again. A refresher is never a bad idea. Questions I had forgotten that I need to remember during auditions when doing a cold reading or a monologue:

Who
What
Where
When
Why

Followed up by the second question: How does that make me feel?

Some are unknowns. Items not provided in the context of the script but that could help in understanding the character, in providing a “back life” for the character. The questions more specifically:

Who am I? How does that make me feel?
Who am I talking to? How does that make me feel?
Who/What am I talking about? How does that make me feel?
What is/was the event? How does that make me feel?
Where am I now? How does that make me feel?
Where was the event I am talking about? How does that make me feel?
When was the event I am talking about? How does that make me feel?
Why am I talking about it? How does that make me feel?

And any other Who, What, Where, When, Why that can be asked. You can and probably will provide the incorrect answers to these questions, but that?s ok. Make a decision and play the character with those answers.

Pay Attention! Listen to what the other character is saying. Act and React to the situation. A lot of what acting is is reacting to your fellow actor. To do that you need to pay attention. It’s not good enough to just spit out the next line when there is a pause.

I do know this, but it’s funny because Tammy and I were watching Inside the Actors Studio and Robert Redford was the guest. Mr. Redford was talking about his first acting class and having to do a scene with another student. The other student refused to listen and just spat out his line whenever Redford paused. When they went to perform the scene for the class, Redford finally had enough, grabbed the other student, shook him and then sent him sliding across the stage. That is a reaction, but I am sure it is not the one the other student was looking for. Well the other student was not looking (listening) at all.