Acting Tips, Audition Tips
Ways to Maximize Your Acting Opportunities
April 20, 2009 by Julie · 7 Comments
Okay, so you have a dream to be on the Disney Channel, in a Disney movie or just want to desperately get your acting career off the ground right? Well, there are so many things that you can do to get you one step closer to that dream. You need experience, you need to look and be professional and you need some help.
Here are a few ideas on maximizing your acting opportunities and creating the opportunities in the first place.
Get an Agent
I get asked this one question more than any other one and that is: “ Do I need an agent?” When I am asked that, I always say yes, that it is a good idea. You don’t HAVE to have an agent, but it is a HUGE foot in the Disney door if you do.
An agent can get your face seen in places that you alone could not. This increases the likelihood of you getting work. The more swings you make the more balls you hit! But there are many acting opportunities to be found without an agent. Though nearly all Film, TV, Broadway and Off Broadway productions will exclusively use agent submissions, you can still find work without an agent. Community and Dinner Theatre, student and some Indie films will take unrepresented actors.
For Disney Channel opportunities, I say “Get an agent”.
The more experience and skills you have the more likely it is that an agent will take you on. An agent makes money when you work, so they will be keen to sign you up if you can show what an asset you will be to them. There is nothing wrong with sending a Resume and Headshot (more on those later), but it’s essential that you send follow-up cards letting the agent know where and when you will be working, so they can see for themselves what a good actor you are.
RESUMES and HEADSHOTS
Resumes help in getting an agent but once you have one, your agent will use it to get you Disney Channel auditions and others of course. There are some rules for resumes, here are are the major ones.
Keep it to one page (8.5 x 11), if its more than one page the pages might get separated and details lost.
Make it neat. People have been known to get around the above restriction by using a small font size, it’s a judgment call, but if the type is too small it will be hard to read.
The Headshot should be recent, but use a photograph that shows you at your absolute best.
Make sure that all your contact information is correct. It’s also a good idea to set up an email address specifically for your acting correspondence, this may stop you deleting essential emails. You do not want to make that mistake!
The big tip for resumes is DON’T LIE! We have all exaggerated something on an application form at some time, but you should be very careful about what you say you can do on your resume. Future opportunities could be endangered if you lie and you will look foolish if you’ve put motorcycle riding down as a skill and on your first day on set you have to admit you just to get the part.
Hey, Lucas Till got the role in “Hannah Montana: The Movie” and the guy didn’t know a thing about horseback riding. Guess what? They taught him and now it’s one of his favorite things to do AND he can add “horseback riding” to his resume. Nice.
LOCAL COMMERCIALS
The majority of acting opportunities are focused around the major cities like New York and L.A. But other opportunities crop up all over the country. The most lucrative can be commercials for local car dealerships, restaurants and large local stores. These are usually produced by local agencies who will normally use local talent because it’s easier and cheaper than flying in someone from L.A. The director will still only hire actors with the relevant skill and look, but you can improve your opportunities if you have a diverse or “ethnically ambiguous” look, i.e. if you can pass for more than one type of race.
When asked how they got started in the business, many Disney Channel stars will tell you print and commercials. I can not express enough how important it is to get that experience under your belt. A few print ads and a commercial or two will take you a long way in getting an audition.













Interesting site for tips on getting roles in disney productions. I may not be interested in Disney, but I can apply the tips to other areas.
i am so desperate to have my own disney cshow.I also wanna act in a movie with vin diesel and i really want this. Really bad and I dont wanna have doubts in myself becuz sometimes i dont feel confident. Anyway I really want this….
i am desperate to be an actress and a singer. i want to find anyway possible that i can pursue that dream. i live in new york, so it’s hard for me to get to california for shows and auditions. almost impossible for me to get there. so i need to find places in new york, or pennsylvania, or new jersey. anywhere near here.
please inform me with anything you can. disney isn’t the only channel i perfer to be on. literally anything.
I am beginning to break into the buisness and I dont know exactly where to start…I am 15 years old and I have taken one acting course but it was a couple years ago, and I will be attending the New York Film Academy in L.A. this summer. I have had a few photoshoots for headshots but I know that in order to get an agent I must have a resume, I am wondering how do I make a resume without having any jobs yet? Do I list some of my basic skills? Such as I am a cross country runner…ect? I am in need for advice! please help!!!
my dream has always been to act. i’ve even wrote my own scripts for future benefits. i try to perform an act scene with my sister and brothers a lot of times to keep up guard. i hope i’ll be the next young actress on screen. and if i may say “perfomance is my specialty!”.
Hi, my name is Samantha but people call me Sam! I’m also 13 years old. My life’s dream is to be an actress or to atleast guest star on Disney Channel! I am going to start taking classes in the summer when there is no school in the way. These tips are very helpful but where can I get an agent? Please email me back at suse_samantha@yahoo.com.
Thank You!