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By Marci Liroff
It’s that time of year again. During the summer break my casting director colleagues get together and celebrate the end of pilot season before episodic casting starts up again. Inevitably, we get to talking about our pet peeves in the audition room. Amid the cocktails, we regale each other with hilarious tales mixed with some scary ones.
In the interest of education, I’d like to share them with you so that you’re not “that guy” who’s making a bad name for himself in offices throughout the town.
Don’t wear perfume or cologne. Year after year this seems to be the #1 peeve from my colleagues. Please remember that we have to sit in an often small and cramped room without ventilation for hours on end. When you come in wearing your girlfriend/boyfriend’s favorite scent we have to live with it for the next several hours. Some of us are highly sensitive and allergic to perfume and get migraines and nausea. Think of the casting office like you would a doctor’s office. Don’t do it!
No weapons, not even fake ones. I’ve had actors pull fake guns and knives on me – it was very traumatic. If a scene asks you to pull a knife out of your jacket … please don’t do that in an audition. Especially if you don’t tell the CD before hand. This could lead to furniture being toppled and a big producer putting you in a choke hold.”
This one is very simple. Wear underpants.
This seems so basic I hesitate to even share it, but, make sure your picture and resume are stapled together before you arrive at the casting office. Don’t ask to borrow my stapler or my assistant’s stapler. Make sure your contact info and agent/mgr. is written on the photos and your resume in case they get separated – which happens all the time. When I ask you for your picture, don’t hand me three different choices and ask me to pick which one – make a choice beforehand.
Excuses. Leave them home. Actors that preface their audition with an excuse, “I was tired, sick – all it says to me is, “get ready, I am going to be really bad today.”
Coming in with a bad attitude. Never underestimate the effect being pleasant has on everyone.
Don’t prop yourself up with props. Don’t use a prop in a scene unless you are totally comfortable with it. I’ve seen props totally befuddle some people. A phone is fine. Just don’t set up a one-person show – unless you’re Carrot Top.
If it’s a driving scene, you don’t have to pretend to actually “drive” the car.
For The Men: I’m not going to have sex with you so don’t even TRY to seduce me into thinking you are a better actor than you are. Charm is good. Wit. Personality. But flirting in a creepy way is…well.. creepy.
Be nice and courteous to everyone. You never know: that receptionist could end-up being a director or producer some day. And the interns definitely “rat-you-out” when you leave. The guy who used to clean my toilets was nominated for an Oscar ten years later.
Don’t slap your sides on your thighs. It’s an unnecessary distraction.
Because producers and directors are rarely in the room anymore, actors feel like they can take their time and work out the material with us as if we’re their coach. As if they don’t have to impress us because we’re not the director or the producers. So they want to stop and start over and over again until they get a take they like. It’s us that you have to impress because we decide if we’re even going to send along your audition. I hear things like “let’s just play” or “let’s just try it a few different ways”.
We’re not your roommate or your acting teachers or coaches. How you are in the room is my only assumption of how you will be on set. So if you start and stop or swear or break down, I have to assume that’s how you will be on set.
Don’t eat during the scene. I auditioned a Julliard grad for a scene taking place during the Vietnam war and he insisted he couldn’t do the scene without also eating an apple. “That’s how I practiced it.” “But you’re under enemy fire.” “But I need the apple.”
When they don’t do the easy homework. The question, “So what exactly is this?” drives me bonkers. Just taking the time to go through all the information on the breakdown, not just their character description, but the names of the producers, the casting team, which studio/network the project is for, googling/youtubing clips helps inform their choices and gives them confidence to just focus on the character and be in the moment. I try to remind actors that if they treat their audition prep like a regular job interview, and go through all of the information that’s provided to them, it’s going to free them up to simply act.
Take a shower first.
If you just got the sides and won’t be ready to audition, then what happens when you get the job and they give you new pages the morning of the shoot?! You’re telling us that you can’t actually do the job even if you get it!
Don’t look around the audition room and ask if anyone else is going to be coming in. If they were, they’d already be here.
Assume that if you’re there it’s for a reason.
Don’t start commenting on how you don’t match the description or people in the waiting room don’t look like you, or ask if everyone is there for the same role. Just focus on the task at hand – which is your audition, right now.
Asking the CD permission to do something during the reading – instead of just making the choice and letting it be fresh and exciting to our eyes.
If your agent sends you an audition for a role with specific needs and you know you are not qualified (i.e. authentic native language, dancing or singing ability) please cancel.
It’s your job to know your conflicts. Do not audition if you know you have a date conflict. Work in partnership with your agent & casting.
If you have a time conflict: it’s one thing to call ahead, find out the time perimeters and ask if you can come earlier/later, that’s fine. But don’t just show up hours early (or late), expecting us to drop what we’re doing in order to audition you.
We have a small office and when you pace outside the door and rehearse your scene LOUDLY, EVERYONE inside that office – including the actor auditioning and the producers/director sitting watching that audition – can HEAR YOU. And it’s RUDE. And please don’t all have GabFest 2015 right outside the door either with your fellow actors.
If you have somewhere to be and we’re running a little behind, don’t just leave. Let us know and we’ll squeeze you in. And please, for the love of god, do not slap the casting director reading with you! Or try to kiss them. Or give them a lap dance. You know what? Just don’t touch the casting director.
If I give you an adjustment, please don’t explain to me why you made the initial choice for the character. I didn’t say that you sucked, I didn’t say you were wrong – You don’t have to justify your choices. Sometimes I’m giving you a note because I know what they are specifically looking for and I want to help you get the job. Sometimes I’m doing it because I want to see if you can take direction.
Please please don’t show up with ANY illness, fevers, coughing, rashes…puking in the trash cans! Yep it happens. Keep your germs at home. If you get can’t get rescheduled then ask to self- tape or you may just have to miss it. Some of us are immune suppressed, pregnant and have kids – or just want to stay healthy(not a big request) NO AUDITION is worth us getting sick over.!
Believe it or not, all of these stories are true (as shared by my casting colleagues). I’ll bet that the actors reading this have equally unprofessional stories to tell about the producer who was on the phone the entire time they auditioned. Or, the casting director who never once looked up from her computer to connect during their audition. (tell me your stories of how YOU were treated unprofessionally, and I’ll do a blog on that!)
Thankfully, these stories are the exception and I’m continually amazed and impressed by the talented actors who come through my door.
Make sure to check out my new online course “How To Audition For Film and Television: Audition Bootcamp”. You can view it on your laptop or your mobile device and your subscription gives you lifetime viewing privileges for this course. I’ll be adding lectures throughout the year.
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Oh man, some of these are painfully obvious. Asking if anyone else is coming in the room? So weird. I think sometimes actors just get nervous and start running their mouths. It’s hard to not walk in the room and be jittery (unless you are lucky enough to audition every week, which most of us aren’t yet).
I’m definitely guilty of thigh-slapping. I didn’t even know I was doing it until someone pointed it out (thank GOD)! Now I usually choose to sit because my nerves get me thigh-slappin’ and shifting all over. Hopefully with practice (yay class!) that will be fixed.
Thanks for the list!
Also, when I interned at a casting office I saw SO many women come in without bras on. WEAR UNDERWEAR. Seriously. :p
Think you can either act or can’t ..some people are great actors till they end in front of a camera…then it all goes out the window
I have to say these are pretty cringe worthy. Yet, dare I admit that I can be found guilty in having committed a few of these? The one that sticks out like a sore thumb, and still gives me shivers to think I went there, is “driving the car.” I knew going in not to pretend as if I’m driving, and then suddenly, after slating, my hands went up to the imaginary steering wheel… they had a life of their own, and began to steer the imaginary car!!! I knew that I could either drop my hands, or commit. So… I committed to staying with where my hands chose to go. Afterwards, I vowed to myself to never do that again. If felt false, made me self-conscious, and I knew if it was distracting to me, how it must have been for the casting director. I don’t enjoy those kind of auditions, but I certainly learned a valuable lesson.
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A really great post! So many of these things are actor pet peeves too! I hate when I can hear someone outside the audition room when I’m auditioning. It’s distracting to me and I’ve lost my place and forgotten lines because I’ve gotten confused on where I was. I also hate when fellow actors wear perfume (or forget to wear deodorant and smell). The smell in the waiting room can be strong and I don’t want to walk into the audition room sniffling or with my eyes watering because of the smell.
I do have one tiny pet peeve that I wish people inside the audition room would do to help actors. I wish that if someone inside the room sees an actor drop or spill something that they would either let that actor know about it or pick it up between auditions. I’ve kicked sides or plastic water bottles that were on the ground in the past. That’s not a big deal but I feel like I need to pick up the other actor’s trash and take it out of the room for them after my audition.
But the worst example of that was at an audition where the actor before me spilled their water bottle on the tile floor as they were leaving. I don’t think the casting assistant saw (so there was probably no way to prevent this from happening) but when I walked in I slipped right in the water. I did a banana peel-style fall and landed hard on my right foot. I did my audition even though it was very painful to stand and the butt of my pants were wet. I limped as I walked out of the room and it turns out that I had broken 2 toes in my fall! I didn’t get the job, but it makes for a good bad audition story!
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