The Excellent
Audition Guide
Andy Johnson
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
For Roger Vellacott
A mentor and inspiration to many
Introduction
Winning a place at drama school is difficult. Really difficult. Way more difficult than getting into Oxford or Cambridge and Oxbridge offer many thousands of places. The competition is fierce!
My research reveals that, for a typical three-year acting course, some schools have over two thousand people chasing sixteen yes, sixteen places. A couple of institutions report that they accept less than one per cent of the candidates they see. There are tens of thousands of auditionees out there every year, chasing very few offers.
However you tally the figures, the odds are extremely slim, and stacked against most applicants. But you dont need to fall into the dreary catalogue of most applicants.
To get in, you are going to have to stand out.
You are going to need to be original, really creative, highly disciplined and totally positive. |
You will have to be calm, courageous, truthful and completely focused. |
You are going to have to know stuff and do stuff that most applicants dont know and dont do. |
Tall order? This book will show you exactly how to harness and tap in to all these winning ways.
Youll be strong, confident, brave, inventive and articulate.
These pages will arm you with all the essential weapons and the mental stamina for what might turn out to be a sustained campaign. You will know how to access that crucial edge at your auditions and in your thinking, because of your preparation.
An audition is over in a flash. You only get one chance once you are in the room. Many people blow it because they are underprepared and unfocused. This means they make mistakes, in the audition room and in their own heads.
Your work and thinking will be enhanced at all times, especially when in front of the dreaded audition panel. You have to give a performance that is mature, engaging, watchable, believable and not inevitable or predictable. Your audition wont be full of the basic errors in taste and style that most applicants will be committing. It will be tellingly different.
You will know what you are doing. You will be in control of your work and your thoughts.
The panel will be able to concentrate on you and only you. The auditioners wont experience your fear, anxiety or bad habits. Neither will they focus on inner voices, or the strange commentator that plagues the heads of so many applicants the instant they start their speech.
If you want to apply for drama-school training, this is what you will have to do:
Research schools, fill forms, write personal statements and CVs; spend money on applications, audition fees and travel; choose up to eight contrasting pieces, work on them, get better at acting, brush up technical and vocal skills, learn about Shakespearean verse; do auditions, interviews and then recalls.
This book will guide you through every step and give you a major edge.
Mantras
Your drama-school campaign will be all about courage, persistence and self-esteem.
Sticking to the following mantras will give you all of this and more. They are the underlying philosophy of this book and they need to become a part of your mindset from now on. Some of the mantras are about positive thinking; others are for your work.
Although I shall return to these and other maxims time and time again, please visit these pages often throughout your auditions and during your rehearsal period. If you can embrace and ingrain the ideas below, you will be armed and protected throughout your preparation and for the auditions.
1. Mantras for your head
Its all good and nothing bad! No matter what your confidence levels are, or where you are or how you feel, always remember, Its all good and nothing bad! This will help to keep you positive and confident. These are the two major weapons that you will need. Youll obviously have to be objective in your observations on what you are doing, but by remembering all good and nothing bad, you ensure that you dont beat yourself up or allow situations to overwhelm you and/or your work. Use this in all aspects of your life from now on. Get and stay positive.
Make fear your friend We all run on fear, every day. Its part of nature: Darwinian, if you like. There will be times when you are going to be afraid, nervous, worried, even feeling the tingly onset of panic. Embrace these instances and accept that you are nervous, but then use this force to help your focus, or to aid productive work, honestly and with confidence. If you make fear your friend, you can utilise the fear to gain an edge over those who are merelyscared, especially during the actual audition and interview. If you are just scared, or only nervous nothing can be done! So banish panic and get focus: be a Warrior, not a Worrier.
I am not here to get into drama school! I am just here to do my best work Tell yourself, I am not here at the audition to be judged, or scared, or even to get into drama school; just to do my best, most focused, in-the-moment work. That way, there is much less to think and worry about. Hold on to this notion throughout your campaign, from now on its not about getting into drama school, its about calmly doing everything you can to allow you to do your best work, every day. Think about all this as you prepare; it will make you stronger because you can then operate without fear and without judgement as to whether your efforts are any good or not. Let this idea spur your spirit to experiment in search of better performance always.
You only get one shot So dont blow it! One shot may sound a bit scary, but theres no need to be scared: its all good and nothing bad because fear is your friend and, besides, you are only there to do your best work.
So on the day, youll be free to take a second or so before starting your speeches to remind yourself of what it takes to do your best work and then go for it! But make sure you can accomplish everything you aim for. Get used to hitting the bullseye in one shot. Be ready to start well every time, because for a focused, connected and effective audition, you have to start your speech well.
Be you, be true Its all you can do. Be you in the interview, be you in the room; be you as you work, be you as you perform. These last two notions may sound odd, since you are planning on being other people in your monologues. However, the panel will also need to see a calm, focused you within that character. This may be tricky to get your head around, but stick with the idea for now. They need to encounter you when you talk to them too. This is who they are going to have to live and work with for three years. So dont forget to have fun.
These ideas will liberate you and your aim will be true, allowing you to be mentally strong and cool-headed enough to step up to the plate, ready to do your best work.
2. Mantras for working
Its all about the words The words are all you have. Your job is to deliver them with credibility and clarity. Explore them. Respect them. Let them affect you. You should not try to affect them.
Change is good You are doing a two-minute show here. Therefore, you have to employ range, depth and journey in terms of needs, moods and tone, in order to keep the panel engaged and interested. Keeping the panel in the zone requires you to supply changes in pace, gear, mood, tone and even rhythm. Use change and use it often. Dont stay locked on to one thing, or on one level. Change is good.