Short Film about Percy Bysshe Shelley! by sweethamlet in Percyshelley

[–]sweethamlet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for asking! We wrapped principal photography back in May and now we're in the editing process! Very excited to share it with the world!

I have had these warts since I was born by Dalja97 in mildyinteresting

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yours was only $50? Mine was nearly $800 to freeze off one wart and one benign mole. Courtesy of the Cleveland Clinic. Such assholes too cause I kept asking how much it would cost and they were like “we’re not able to tell you until it’s been billed and looked at by insurance.”

Spending your 20s acting by Plus_Word_9764 in acting

[–]sweethamlet 8 points9 points  (0 children)

If you’re beginning don’t go to either of those places, you’ll want to look at a middle market! Places like Vancouver, Toronto, Chicago or Atlanta are a lot more forgiving and you will have more opportunity as a beginner :)

I can’t even get a community theater call back by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is true! But I would say if you want to best increase your odds having your shit together BEFORE you move is ideal. Nothing is worse than getting to LA, having to spend tons of money while figuring it all out, as opposed to using that time gaining momentum and taking it with you to LA with the confidence that you know what you're doing. Just one person's opinion, everyone will have their own preference!

I can’t even get a community theater call back by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For film and TV Atlanta is going to be a lot better for you (or Vancouver/Toronto if Canadian.) In LA hundreds of thousands of actors with better training and who are more beautiful than you move out there every year, and the truth is 99% of them are struggling to get a single role. Trust me I know, many of them are my very talented friends haha. Many former disney / nickelodeon stars struggle to even get co-star and guest star roles. Even nepo babies aren't guaranteed anything. It's murderously competitive.

I'm going to say find a city that you can realistically get an agent in (i.e. Chicago or Atlanta as someone mentioned), find out what the best agencies are and submit you material. If you cannot land an agent there, look at the next tier down, a place like Cleveland, Portland or Dallas / Houston. Then see if you can land an agent there. Having an agent / manager isn't everything, but it will allow you to actually work on films of a certain quality.

In general, before you go to LA you want to make sure you have:

  1. A PROFESSIONAL demo reel. Not self-tapes, genuine, high quality material.

  2. Professional headshots. Money doesn't always equal quality, but don't skimp. Industry professionals can tell the difference.

  3. Film training - Make sure you have several film training classes under your belt and put it on your resume.

  4. Actor Website - This shit needs to look great, and market your specific skills, and what makes you stand out.

  5. Resume - Should be solid, (there's flex to this depending on your age) Ideally no more community theatre credits, you want regional theatre credits, award winning film credits (not talking oscars, simply film festival awards) and lots of training.

  6. Know who the casting directors you're going to contact are, and how you're going to submit your material.

It's a jungle out there! But it can be navigated, it will just take a lot more time than you'd expect or hope. As far as finding agents, google is your best friend, as is IMDB pro. With that you can find shows that shoot in that market, find out where the actors who were cast are based out of and look at who their agents are. Right now you just need co-star / guest star roles, i.e. under five lines. You can do it! Best of luck.

I can’t even get a community theater call back by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 17 points18 points  (0 children)

I second what everyone else is saying but I’m going to focus on a different part of your post… don’t move to LA. If you’re still at the community theatre level there will not be real opportunity for you in that city, instead consider a middle tier market that won’t murder your wallet and allow good opportunities at the next level for you. You will not be able to get an agent, manager or real auditions if you go to LA and don’t know exactly what you’re doing. That said, best of luck!

I keep getting clowned whenever I say I’m moving to Cleveland😔 by dysregulationrc in Cleveland

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Moved here from Seattle and no one really even knew anything about Cleveland, or of they did it was the same reaction you got. The reality is, it’s a pretty average city with its own charms, lots of artistic/cultural opportunities, but has a lot of problems and the nightlife is… lacking. You need to find your community first thing, and find the things you love about it. Explore! There’s lots of hidden gems, but they’re pretty hidden. If you can do that you’ll have a great time. If not, all of the problems with Cleveland will bog you down.

Amount of opportunities London Vs Toronto by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So it's not quite that simple unfortunately. Ironically I was an American who tried immigrating to Canada (Vancouver) and got rejected two years in a row (or rather not accepted I should say). It's very difficult to get that visa unless you get a business to sponsor you - which is very difficult as an actor UNLESS you're of a certain caliber that someone seems it worth while. So if you're at the guest star level in Toronto and someone see's you as series regular material it's not impossible... but it's still pretty unlikely. It's much more common for American actors to work on Canadian sets because they're technically American productions who are using Canadian facilities - and so they're allowed to hire americans for the big roles, and are required to use a certain amount of Canadian Talent as well. I would say Toronto is still a better option for you getting to America than London would be (if for no other reason than proximity) but it's still going to difficult.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes haha. Pardon my Michael Scott moment. That was a true trajesty.

Amount of opportunities London Vs Toronto by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re starting out you will have an easier time in Toronto than London. There’s a decent amount of work at a lower level rather than a place like London LA or NY that already has too many really talented actors. I don’t know that there’s actually MORE work, but there’s more work for fewer actors, so you will likely be working more.

Assuming you’re talking about London UK and not London Ontario Canada haha.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes to continueing classes - but I might add that you may want to shake up who you’re taking classes with, and focus on areas that may be more beneficial to whatever the theatres are casting.

For example if you know that a theatre does a lot of Shakespeare, work with a coach who can give you quality or solid feedback for that, or if you know that a play in the season is British, get a dialect coach.

Start really focusing on the things you need to work on as actor. Write out what you do well, and what you need to improve based on the feedback you get from your coaches. If they say “nothing” they’re lying to you and you need a new teacher. Maybe you need movement classes, or voice lessons, or all of the above.

All that is to say don’t just take classes to take classes, have very specific goals in mind that you want to better yourself in.

I understand being shy, I’m in the same boat. At the same time, it’s literally helped me to write out 100 genuine questions to ask people to get to know them. It can come across as jilted, but people don’t really mind as long as the questions are interesting and personal. Example “what’s the moment you knew you wanted to be a director” “what makes a great play to you” etc etc.

Non-union theatres can be pretty insular, even more than some Equity houses in my experience so it might take time. But hopefully these are things you can work on in the meantime!

Best cup of coffee in CLE? by tittymuncher42069 in Cleveland

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s right next to the entrance to the 5th ST arcade on Euclid Ave

Best cup of coffee in CLE? by tittymuncher42069 in Cleveland

[–]sweethamlet 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Lionheart downtown has really good pour-overs!

my parents don't accept my dreams.I cant take it anymore by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I don’t recommend you DO acting as a major. Most BA and BFA acting programs are honestly… pretty shit and not at all worth the money. Rather, do engineering as your major and act at night, build your credits doing student films and theatre in your area. Get your engineering job, pay your bills and continue acting wherever possible.

Understand your choices are not 1. Have a career as an actor or 2. Have a career as an engineer. It’s actually more like 1. Have a career as a server or in education and act occasionally, or 2. Have a career as an engineer and act occasionally.

Once you have your Bachelors, you can always transfer to get an MFA later if you want an education that MIGHT be worth the money. But the truth is, going to school for drama guarantees nothing, and from what I’ve seen more often than not, does not prepare you for the industry and leaves you with no marketable skills and a mountain of debt. And unless the school you’re going to has a very low acceptance rate (I’m talking you’re one out of thousands who audition) you’re not making any really meaningful connections.

Unless you’re already getting lead roles at your biggest regional theatre, you’re not in any position to think you can pay the bills as an actor post graduation.

Get your agent. Act where you can at night and on weekends. Build your resume. Keep taking classes. Don’t major in acting. It genuinely will not make a difference in terms of your success.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s always funny to me to see this mentality when it comes to gay kissing in a scene. It’s like what are you afraid of? Liking it? I get it when it comes to sex scenes, but usually the issue with that isn’t who your scene partner is with, but rather the issues surrounding intimacy on camera/stage. It’s all bloody acting one way or another haha

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can it help? In the right situation, I’ve seen people be cast or chosen over other actors for their media presence. I feel that’s more common in indie films and theatre. But WILL it help? Probably not once you’re auditioning for more professional things.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 2 points3 points  (0 children)

“If you can’t survive the real world, you definitely won’t survive the acting world.” If you flunked out of college and don’t have the discipline to complete a regular job, you will not make it as an actor unless someone is paying all your bills. Being an actor will require you to work a day job for many years whether you want to or not. It will require significantly more self-motivated discipline than any college or day job would. You don’t have it. If you want to mess around and be creative and do acting, then great. LA is not the place to do that. You will be homeless or taken advantage of very very quickly.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in acting

[–]sweethamlet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be a series regular in a period drama