Supporting Actors

Sean Dube & Patrick Quinlan

A podcast about the art, business, and craft of acting from working actors.

Выпуски

  1. -4 дн.

    An Actor Prepares: Audition Research, Pacing, and the Traps of Over-Preparation

    Can an actor actually over-prepare for an audition, or are we just falling into the trap of over-rehearsing a fixed result? In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick look at the fine line between deep script familiarity and rigid, robotic performances . We are officially halfway through the year, making it the perfect third-quarter pitstop to audit our habits, build out localized contact databases, and apply a classic exercise physiology principle to the business: a variable monitored is a variable managed . We break down the entire anatomy of script preparation across research, memorization, and performance flow . Sean breaks down a highly creative technical solution he engineered to simulate a sprawling desert action sequence inside a tight self-tape frame, while Patrick shares how a single piece of professional bartending advice completely salvaged a high-pressure, multi-character dialect shoot . We also dissect the modern "shiny objects" of character research—from falling down exhaustive Wikipedia rabbit holes to obsessing over unnecessary physical props—and explain how to pivot away from flat academic facts toward immediate, playable choices . In this episode, we cover: The Mid-Year Audit: Moving acting off the back burner, establishing a minimum effective dose of writing, and auditing reps during dry industry spells . The Trail Horse Pitfall: Recognizing how results-oriented rehearsals completely strip away your organic flexibility when a director drops a sudden redirect . The Context Funnel: Researching showrunners, tone, and network pacing parameters to prove you instantly belong in their specific sandbox . Technical Jargon Hacks: Integrating complex vocabulary scripts into your everyday household routines so they roll out of your mouth automatically on camera . The "Word-Perfect" Scale: Navigating tight, premium scripts like Aaron Sorkin or Mad Men properties versus the fast-and-loose nature of indie comedies . The Playback Diagnostic: Using footage self-reviews to objectively spot missing story layers, framing boundaries, and performance arcs . Timestamps 00:03 - Intro: The third-quarter corporate check-in and summer reflection pacing 01:30 - The Slow Year: Reclaiming self-driven direction when representation queues dry up 03:23 - The Back Burner Reality: Classroom groups, representative transparency, and Q3 targets 06:17 - Minimum Effective Dose: Finding the smallest actions that trigger compounding career habits 07:54 - Variables Managed: Applying exercise physiology tracking metrics directly to industry contacts 08:40 - The Update Outreach: Reaching out to past workshop casting directors without apologizing 10:14 - Six-Month Horizons: Single-look headshot adjustments and committing to one play per month 12:15 - Deliberate Marketing: Shouting out short film achievements without feeling like a systemic nuisance 14:19 - Over-Prepared vs. Over-Rehearsed: Spotting the rigid trail-horse performance trap 16:59 - The Autopilot Illusion: Why absolute word familiarity allows true emotional improvisation 18:41 - Holding Choices Loosely: The distinct operational differences between an audition and a booked job 19:38 - Finely Polished Mistakes: Why corporate perfectionism actively alienates casting rooms 21:13 - Tone & Pacing Research: Tracking producer records and scanning short clips for genre rules 23:29 - The Reaction Asset: Analyzing the structural function of guest casts relative to series leads 24:42 - Technical Framing: Modifying self-tape setups to suggest moody environments or clean multi-cam styles 26:48 - The Silhouette Desert Sequence: Sean's creative light solution for an action-heavy audition stunt 29:38 - The King Concept: Avoiding the "shiny objects" of superficial occupation research 31:55 - Procrastination via Wikipedia: When historical research stops serving the emotional core journey 34:24 - Facts vs. Playable Choices: Identifying structural text clues over flat encyclopedic data 35:38 - The Five-Character Shot: Patrick's intense Boston-dialect bartending continuity challenge 38:06 - Relying on the Machine: Trusting your on-set crew collaborators to sell the physical illusion 39:50 - WordPerfect Properties: The lasting script legacies of Mad Men, Aaron Sorkin, and prestige indies 41:56 - Spontaneous Spontaneity: Allowing the autopilot body mechanism to command character thoughts 43:11 - Teleprompters and Text Geography: Avoiding the trap of reciting a literal visual roadmap 44:06 - One-Act Nightmares: Reflections on drama school blackouts and text preparation failures 45:29 - Genre Leniency: Why horror and situational comedies are more welcoming to spontaneous ad-libs 47:46 - Playback Diagnostics: How to isolate size, speed, and theater-row vocal blasting in self-tapes 51:37 - Planting the Payoff: Shaping the beginning, middle, and end of brief narrative beats 53:09 - Micro Scene Studies: Helping friends diagnose performance anxiety through external adjustments 56:39 - The Precision Curve: Relinquishing intense physical training blocks for precise flexibility 01:00:35 - Stanislavski's Core Trilogy: Clarifying the true legacy of the Russian master's library 01:01:23 - Ad Libs: Finding West Coast World Cup broadcasts and a late-night rewatch of Lena Dunham's Girls

    1 ч. 5 мин.
  2. 26 июн.

    Finding Your Strike Zone: The Real Meaning of Actor Branding & Essence

    Should you lean into a hyper-specific casting type, or are you completely dimming your light by putting yourself in a box? In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick jump into a heated, tag-team debate on the love-hate relationship performers have with the word "Branding". We break down the fundamental difference between an industry that naturally brands you through your baseline essence, and the marketing trap of overspending on courses to manufacture a quirky persona. From running anonymous Google surveys with your friends to utilizing central casting background data as an indicator of your corporate or blue-collar strike zone, we look at the zero-cost metrics you can leverage to command a room. We also contrast the vast text menus of the Cheesecake Factory with elite, pre-fixed restaurant curation to illustrate how a streamlined, cohesive actors access profile builds immediate executive trust. Finally, we talk about the lifecycle of a career, outlining why an entire corporate framework requires an analytical rebrand every seven to ten years as your physical type evolves. In this episode, we cover: The Kensington Launch: A satirical take on abrupt career transformations and why revealing your authentic character baseline wins over a forced niche. The Tomato Metaphor: Reflecting on a classic Chicago agent's warning about selling a clean, singular retail asset instead of a generic mixed salad. The Clipboard Strategy: How a simple, anonymous 200-stranger street poll can provide bulletproof data regarding your visual occupation status. Prestige Streamers vs. Quantity: Curating your resume list to intentionally borrow the branding authority of specific television networks. The Aggrieved Father Hack: Augmenting standard algorithmic clip titles to spark immediate imaginative cues for casting assistants. Failing Cheaply: Applying micro-adjustments and single-look photo sessions to bridge industry disconnects without replacing all your assets. Timestamps 00:00 - Intro: The Kensington rebrand and love-hate relationships with marketing 01:04 - Revealing Yourself: Why every font, sign-off, and photo communicates an authentic brand 03:02 - Salad vs. Tomatoes: Sticking to low-hanging fruit and mastering a definitive strike zone 04:37 - Lane Widening: Borrowing Jeff Ross's advice on expanding from a single track to six lanes 05:30 - Media Variances: Why high-stakes film/TV budgets demand less risk than open-ended theater roles 06:44 - Broadway Milestones: Touring frameworks, type-casting blockades, and predictable leading characters 07:55 - The Astronaut Trap: Managing the psychological hesitation behind locking into one archetype 08:44 - Palette Privilege: Analyzing how industry casting apertures change across gendered lines 10:08 - The Ambulance Turn: How a trustworthy essence translates from a military medic to a Lifetime drama 11:35 - The Marketing Course Trap: Rejecting the call to spend hundreds on artificial branding parameters 12:33 - Impression Asset Metrics: Defining brand value by what remains in the room when you exit 13:46 - Clipboard Case Studies: Gathering high-status job metrics via anonymous urban foot-traffic polls 16:48 - The Yacht-Owner Illusion: Coping with lower-class type adjustments when your baseline screams high-society luxury 18:17 - Chameleons of Hollywood: The early type structures of Christian Bale, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Meryl Streep 19:39 - Activating Imagination: Matching headshot aesthetics with real-world stranger impressions 22:30 - Curation over Clog: Navigating resume lists and deleting old credits to project a specific category 25:39 - The Cheesecake Factory Trap: Why a prefix layout inspires more professional trust than an overwhelming menu of credits 27:24 - B-Movie Longevity: Decoupling from high-concept scripts to build a high-quantity corporate paycheck stream 28:55 - Ingredient Overlays: Labeling clips with emotional complexities like "Aggrieved Father" over flat show names 29:57 - Aspirational Footage: Generating your own targeted scenes to pitch reps for fresh markets 33:07 - Fail Cheaply, Fail Often: Borrowing advice from female filmmaker panels regarding look experimentation 34:01 - Reading the Audition Tea Leaves: Pinpointing material disconnects vs. typical industry dry spells 36:37 - Background Intel: Finding your target pocket via Central Casting designations and office archetypes 41:13 - Google Surveys: Running anonymous adjective clouds with your immediate creative circles 42:29 - The "Suits" Pipeline: Watching target shows to match technical costar tempos and textures 44:35 - Trendy Headshot Pitfalls: Why emulating an A-lister's moody portrait can stall an actor's submissions grid 46:43 - Facing the Outsiders: Letting go of the "brooding tough guy" fantasy when you lack the visual hostility 48:42 - The Material Audit: Challenging your assumptions, checking data, and planning micro-photo sessions 50:41 - The Repetitive Look Error: Spotting dead-eye expressions across uniform photography backdrops 52:14 - The Soda-Fiend Campaign: A quirky branding story that ran out of engine fuel 54:37 - The Ken Jeong Phenomenon: Moving from real-world stethoscope headshots to naked suitcase crime lords 56:05 - The Continuum: Anchoring an authentic point-of-view inside a tight strategic framework 58:09 - The Gift of Yes: Why accepting odd or mismatched roles builds long-term collaborator networks 59:34 - The 7-Year Rebrand Rule: Redefining your creative vision as your facial metrics settle in your 30s 01:01:11 - Ad Libs: Beverly Hills Father's Day Car Shows and the human writing of Hulu's Alice & Steve

    1 ч. 3 мин.
  3. 19 июн.

    Talent vs. Work Ethic: The Three Pillars of a Sustainable Acting Career

    Does raw, natural talent actually keep you employed in Hollywood, or does work ethic ultimately carry the day? In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick dissect the elusive "It Factor" and attempt to define the precise alchemy that drives a lifelong acting career. We unpack the massive behavioral gap between "movie stars" who master the camera as a technical asset and "actors" who treat it as a silent observer of a raw, vulnerable experience. We also introduce our definitive framework: The Three Pillars of Career Longevity (Talent, Professionalism, and Reputation)—and reveal why talent is consistently the least important component of the cocktail as your career matures. From navigating social anxiety at industry networking events to surviving the profound psychological "blocks" of adult embarrassment in late-night drama classes, this episode is an honest roadmap for shifting your mindset away from a desperate desire to "prove your talent" and toward building a bulletproof creative system. In this episode, we cover: The Alchemy of "It": Dissecting charisma, cellular-level emotional accessibility, and Cary Grant's legendary rejection of Sanford Meisner's vulnerability drills. Actors vs. Movie Stars: The psychological differences between players who track the light and mic parameters vs. those who live entirely inside a simulated reality. The Three Pillars Breakdown: How the balance of talent, professionalism, and network value shifts dramatically between your first year in town and your decade as a working actor. Poetic Justice & Reputations: Reflecting on how bad behaviors caught by showrunners behind closed doors quietly alter hiring lists. The 90% Rule: Re-evaluating the illusion of talent representatives and accepting that agents only exist to manage the final 10% of an opportunity you generate. The Maturity Curve: Why classic texts like Chekhov and Shakespeare naturally unlock 20 years later once an artist has lived enough real life to relax into their own skin. Timestamps 00:02 - Intro: Defining the "It Factor" and work ethic  01:31 - Defining Talent: Charisma, personas, and curiosity thresholds  02:56 - Meisner vs. Movie Stars: Cary Grant's vulnerability limits and the Philip Seymour Hoffman standard  04:14 - Tracking the Lens: How Tom Cruise and master stars command physical production equipment  05:43 - The Invisible Glow: Intangible energies and the definition of a baseline "interest" scale  07:54 - Lighting in a Bottle: Recapturing past archetype castings and the cynical logistics of global territories   09:22 - The Bell Curve Reality: How your natural placement in society guides your artistic staying power 11:34 - God-Given Intuition: Reflecting on Jennifer Lawrence's training-free process and self-evaluation  13:17 - Trimming the Text: Steve McQueen and Benicio Del Toro's minimal dialogue techniques  14:13 - 20 Takes of Tying Shoes: Robert De Niro's relentless work ethic and chasing extreme specificity  15:46 - The Superpower of Pretend: Overcoming internal blocks and adult embarrassment in front of professionals  21:46 - Shifting Pillars: Why professionalism and your reputation carry 90% of a working actor's ecosystem  24:27 - Desperation in Auditions: Why trying to "prove your talent" completely derails your process  27:24 - Small Justice: TV writer Jordan Harper on how rumors behind closed doors quietly prune hiring pools  28:51 - Turning it Off: Observing Gene Hackman and Meryl Streep's boundaries between action and cut  30:13 - The Beginner's Cocktail: Finding agents, balancing traffic logistics, and setting up rolling timelines  32:58 - 20 Years Later: Why Chekhov and Shakespeare require a lived life to remove the "try-hard" energy  34:57 - The Discovered Trap: The internal demons that follow premature industry attention  37:30 - Technique vs. Inspiration: Mastering specific line delivery registers without waiting for the muses  41:13 - Evolving Superstars: LeBron James metrics applied to the evolution of a technical actor  52:00 - True Complicity: Transitioning from a therapeutic workspace to an objective mindset  57:20 - Social Anxiety & Networking: Managing the friction of subtext and building conversational skills  01:00:57 - Generating the 90%: Why a representative's commission dictates your individual output  01:01:56 - Storefront Theaters & PA Gigs: Why technical crew assistance makes you a more Visibility-literate asset  01:03:10 - Shortcuts vs. Systems: Moving from UCB credits to a process-driven booking byproduct  01:05:11 - Ad Libs: 3D printing racetracks and mini FIFA World Cup replica milestones in LA

    1 ч. 6 мин.
  4. 11 июн.

    First Day on Set: A Guide to Set Protocols, Etiquette, and the Call Sheet

    You finally booked the job—now how do you survive your first day stepping onto a major production set? In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick pull back the curtain on the logistical train that runs every professional television and film set. Entering a fast-moving, established production crew as a day player or guest star can be one of the most nerve-wracking challenges an actor faces. We break down the complete anatomy of a shoot day—from parking in random dirt lots and filling out digital I-9s in your honey wagon, to the intricate choreography of a block-and-light rehearsal with your stand-in. Patrick shares a cautionary war story involving a desert cop car shootout, confusing advice from a props master, and the ultimate rule of set hierarchy: never change your continuity for anyone but the director. We also lay down a definitive blueprint for baseline set etiquette, explaining why tracking your own timesheets on your phone, staying clear of Video Village, and calling a "Ten-One" over the radio can make or break your professional reputation. In this episode, we cover: The Post-Booking Flood: Navigating the bittersweet wave of relief, immediate dread, and sudden logistical anxieties that hit after a casting win. The Wardrobe Deep Dive: Setting up a permanent sizes catalog in your notes app and resolving creative territory battles between hair and wardrobe departments. Decoding the Call Sheet: Tracking page fractions, estimating complex technical blockings, and understanding why a production owns your absolute entire day. The Moving Train: Stepping onto a studio lot where everyone else has already burned off their first-day performance nerves. The Desert Stunt Prank: Surviving conflicting instructions between a strict props team and an unhappy series producer. Baseline Set Etiquette: Essential survival rules regarding battery packs, cell phone ringers, meal penalties, and blending into the crew background as a gracious guest. Timestamps 00:02 - Intro: What to expect when you're expecting to be on set 00:52 - The Post-Booking Emotional Wave: Relief vs. Dread 03:06 - Tampering Expectations: Celebrating on a text chain and resetting the clock to zero 04:04 - Logistical Friction: Juggling fatherhood, day jobs, and someone else's studio calendar 07:13 - The Day Player Paradox: Entering a machine where everyone else is already comfortable 09:58 - Masters of the Set: Distinguishing sitcom setups from single-camera dramas 10:32 - Sourcing Clothes: Zoom fittings and wardrobe departments looking to save cash 12:14 - Notes App Life Hack: Copy-pasting your exact clothing metrics to wardrobe designers 13:45 - Gathering Intel: Chatting with assistant costume directors about the shoot momentum 15:35 - Trailer Mirrors & Tags: Playing dress-up and trying not to stand rigidly for approval photos 17:44 - Sopranos Hair Disputes: When wardrobe and hair departments go to war over scruff and long curls 19:50 - The Death of Table Reads: How scheduling expenditures phased out pilot rehearsals 21:12 - Call Sheet Delays: Why your call time arrives after the previous day wraps 22:47 - Reading Between the Lines: Gleaning page counts, extras numbers, and timeline tracking 24:04 - Hurry Up and Wait: Dealing with the gap between an 8:00 AM call and an 11:30 AM first shot 26:06 - Packing Your Night-Before Bag: Hard ID passports, headphones, and blood sugar regulation 27:50 - Safe Space Sanctuaries: Using hardcover books to escape society and day-job emails on set 29:37 - Navigating Base Camp: Shuttle camps, honey wagons, and the shift to digital universal vouchers 34:12 - The Universal Lot Experience: Quiet mornings, background milling, and encountering regular leads 37:36 - Pocket Landscape Sides: Marking your emotional guideposts during first blocking rehearsals 39:06 - Affectations & Accents: Why you must perform dialects and physical limps during the tech run-through 41:06 - Rehearsing for the Crew: Giving light, sound, and props a baseline before stand-ins step in 42:30 - Last Looks & New Belts: Meeting your direct team of on-set department assistants 44:42 - Collaboration with the DP: Counter marks, camera operator parameters, and lighting spaces 46:42 - Shorthand and Entitlement: Keeping your head on a swivel as a temporary guest actor 49:18 - Note-less Directors: Coping with cold interactions, department stress, and schedule cuts 50:27 - The Handcuff Continuity Trap: Conflicting orders from a props master in a desert cop scene 52:58 - The Ultimate Golden Rule: Never listen to anyone on set except the director 55:35 - Final Wraps & NDA Etiquette: Post-shoot procedures and dealing with the cutting room floor 56:59 - The "Ten-One" Lingo: Radio protocols, disappearing warnings, and tracking assistant directors 59:44 - Blowing Breakers: Why charging your phone on a lighting circuit can ruin a production day 01:00:43 - Getting Fired on a Nap: Why a simple timer can lead to an immediate dismissal 01:01:35 - Capturing Vouchers: Retaining smartphone records for meal penalties and overtime scales 01:02:07 - Video Village Etiquette: Staying away from executive monitors unless explicitly invited 01:03:00 - Ad Libs: Austin Kleon's Don't Call it Art and the working-class storytelling of PeteyUSA's The Yips

    1 ч. 6 мин.
  5. 4 июн.

    The Psychological Playing Field: Why Acting is (and isn't) Like Sports

    In this episode of Supporting Actors, Patrick and Sean break down the fascinating Venn diagram where jocks and theater nerds overlap. While actors and athletes share a relentless dedication to training, meticulous preparation, and elite energy management, the similarities quickly shatter against the wall of Hollywood's brutal subjectivity. We explore the psychological playing field of performance, compare building a cast to building an NBA "Dream Team," and dissect Willem Dafoe's fascinating multi-take technique in American Psycho. Whether you are tracking your callback percentages or trying to survive the "undrafted free agent" lifestyle of the audition circuit, this episode is a deep dive into putting in the reps when no one is tracking your stats. In this episode, we cover: ·       The Psychological Arena: Shifting the training focus from an objective physical metric to a heavy vulnerability and imagination asset. ·       Energy Management on Set: Maintaining baseline stamina through technical setups, endless fittings, and the crucial seconds between action and cut. ·       The Willem Dafoe Method: How the director of American Psycho layered contrasting takes to intentionally disorient the audience. ·       Ego Death & Free Agency: Reflecting on a classic 2012 New York Times Magazine profile of a fringe NFL athlete and its exact parallels to the self-tape struggle. ·       The "White Mamba" Spectrum: Why the gap between good and great shrinks at the top, and what basketball can teach us about casting around a superstar like Denzel Washington. ·       Unhealthy Competition: Spotting the warning signs of "ball hogs" who manipulate frame coverage or intentionally sabotage a partner's close-ups. ·       The Sales Funnel: Treating your creative output like a long-term sales matrix where producers need multiple touchpoints to become true fans. Timestamps 00:03 - Intro: The jock and theater nerd Venn diagram 01:17 - The Preparation Paradox: Letting go of the drill to trust the moment 01:59 - The Chaos Loop: Pinned, released, and handling vacation schedule conflicts 03:09 - Metrics of Talent: Physical limits of the NBA vs. the psychological field of acting 05:23 - Objective vs. Subjective: Kicking a goal vs. pleasing a single viewer 07:06 - The LeBron Metaphor: Casting a balanced team around a powerhouse like Denzel Washington 09:14 - Tom Brady's Flow State: Observing freedom and instinct in elite performance 10:02 - Running the Clock: Managing personal stamina through multi-hour setups and fittings 11:50 - Guideposts in Rehearsal: Knowing your emotional beats without over-thinking 13:20 - Andre Agassi's Trap: Why hyper-fixating on technical flaws ruins performance flow 14:24 - Layering the Edit: Willem Dafoe's brilliant psychological technique in American Psycho 17:54 - Undrafted Free Agents: The 2012 New York Times profile on ego death and mislabeled tapes 21:16 - The White Mamba Effect: Pickup basketball clips and the narrow margins of excellence 23:23 - Ticket Sellers vs. Trainwrecks: Marlon Brando and navigating the industry "a*****e" ratio 25:51 - Slow Momentum: The career paths of Christoph Waltz and Carrie Coon 26:53 - The YouTube Wave: Low-budget horror breakouts and generating your own sample data 29:38 - The Franklin Leonard Thesis: What global talent scouting can learn from international sports league mechanics 31:17 - Waiting Room Auditions: Handling red hair casting tropes and commercial typecasting 35:23 - Bringing Yourself: Moving past standard "bold choice" advice to find authentic connection 39:50 - Classroom Friction: Focusing on a pre-determined result vs. skill development 42:19 - Sidney Lumet's Fatherly Love Trick: How Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke competed on set 44:46 - Complicity in Clown Work: Mastering cooperative competition to build a scene match 47:11 - Bruce Dern's Mailbox: One-Eyed Jacks, pulling a "Dern," and playing games with Jack Nicholson 49:08 - Weaponized Coverage: Spotting ball hogs, upstaging drama, and ruining another actor's close-up 51:27 - Service of the Story: A college acting professor's lesson on supporting nominations 53:20 - The Professional Off-Season: Funding your own dietitians, trainers, and coaching adjustments 55:11 - Home Run Derby in the Dark: The tracking failure of objective audition data 59:03 - The Seven Touchpoints: Applying real-world sales metrics to producer fanbases 01:01:18 - Ad Libs: Folks Pizzeria at Helms Bakery and Jordan Harper's contemporary LA thriller novel

    1 ч. 4 мин.
  6. 28 мая

    Getting Unstuck: How to Break Out of Acting Career Plateaus and Creative Ruts

    What do you do when your acting career completely stalls and the phone stops ringing?   In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick break down the heavy reality of getting "stuck" in the entertainment industry. From hitting walls with difficult script dialogue to navigating the mid-year Hollywood production slowdown, we define what plateaus look like across your business, performance, and creative mindset. We share a practical roadmap to help you reclaim agency, ranging from subconscious problem-solving tricks to applying real-world corporate strategy directly to your individual acting career.   In this episode, we cover: ·       The Performance Wall: Active strategies for memorizing impossible sentences, analyzing given circumstances, and letting your subconscious untangle a character. ·       The Hollywood Shrinkage: How to mentally survive dry spells when auditions dry up and industry momentum grinds to a halt. ·       The Headshot Dilemma: Handling conflicting notes from reps, evaluating commercial vs. portrait styles, and placing "smaller bets" with photographers. ·       The Actor's CEO Playbook: Borrowing standard corporate tactics—like SWOT analyses and rolling 3-to-5-year plans—to strategically shift your business materials. ·       The Comparison Trap: Why resentment of your peers acts as an industry cancer, and how to redirect that energy back into your own craft. ·       Rapid Fire Solutions: Instant advice for breaking through perfectionism, fear of the unknown, and a total lack of artistic inspiration.   Timestamps 00:00 - Intro: Defining what it means to be "stuck" as an actor 01:20 - Performance Roadblocks: Falling back on technique and troubleshooting script dialogue 20:13 - Career Plateaus: Surviving the calendar-year summer slowdown and industry shrinkage 27:45 - Changing Your Look: Long hair experiments, Westerns, and blue-collar typecasting 36:04 - Speculative Networking: Growing touchpoints, local film festivals, and learning cinematic apps 38:48 - Creative Coffers: Getting out of the system, volunteering for writers' groups, and building community 49:18 - Corporate Strategy for Actors: Setting up a personal SWOT analysis and a structured calendar 54:43 – TLDL: Rapid fire situations. 58:46 - Ad Libs: The beautiful subtext of Widow's Bay and performing Chekhov's Three Sisters at an LA bar

    1 ч. 5 мин.
  7. 21 мая

    Are Casting Director Workshops Worth the Money?

    Is paying for a casting workshop an investment in your career, or just "pay to play"? In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick tackle the complicated history and modern reality of casting director workshops. From the massive 2017 LA City Attorney crackdown to the recent resurgence of in-person rooms, we break down how to use these workshops as a targeted marketing tool without falling into financial pitfalls. We also share a practical framework for selecting the right scene material so you can showcase your "strike zone" and build genuine professional relationships.   In this episode, we cover: Actor Related News: The SAG-AFTRA board approves the historic 4-year deal, including the pension plan merger controversy and long-term healthcare changes. TV Upfronts & Tech Trends: Reboots dominate network lineups, streamers enter the ad market, and AI protections take center stage. The Workshop Evolution: What actually changed after the 2017 sting operation, and why casting directors are returning to rooms between projects. Audition Tactics: Robert Downey Jr.'s wild memorization trick for heavy script jargon and exposition. Scene Selection Blueprint: Why you should skip iconic scripts like Good Will Hunting and target specific, structural second-act transformations. Rapid Fire Scenarios: When to run toward a workshop—and exactly when you need to pump the brakes. Timestamps [00:00] - Intro: The "Pay to Play" debate [00:39] - SAG-AFTRA Contract Updates and industry news [14:39] - Inside Actors Access: How casting offices look at your profile [16:38] - Workshop War Stories [25:18] - Mastering Jargon: Robert Downey Jr.'s backward text memorization trick [28:22] - The 2017 Crackdown: Sting operations and re-branding history [33:19] - Why Casting Directors are returning to the room in 2026 [36:42] - When to approach a workshop (and when to avoid it) [43:47] - Audition Scene Selection: Rules for picking high-transformation materials [50:04] - Where to find workshops [52:44] - Rapid Fire: Scenarios on when to workshop [01:00:04] - Ad Libs: Margo Has Money Troubles and the Cinephile video store

    1 ч. 3 мин.
  8. 14 мая

    Why Every Actor Needs a "Day Job" (and how to pick one)

    How do you afford to be an actor without losing your mind?  In this episode of Supporting Actors, Sean and Patrick dive deep into the reality of "survival jobs." With 97% of the union often looking for work, the "day job" isn't just a backup plan—it's the engine that sustains your art. We discuss how to choose a job that offers flexibility without the burnout, and why being "good" at your survival job might actually make you a better performer. In this episode, we cover: •    Industry News: The impact of Tracker moving to LA, new SAG-AFTRA contract details regarding AI, and a major shift in Oscar eligibility rules.  •    The "War of Attrition": Why staying in the game is often about who can last the longest, not just who is the most talented.  •    Choosing Your Side Hustle: Comparing the pros and cons of the service industry, corporate work, personal training, and private tutoring.  •    The Transparency Debate: When (and how) to be upfront with your employer about your acting commitments.  •    The Post-Show Blues: Navigating the psychological challenge of "clocking back in" after a great performance or a closing night.  Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro & LA Production News: CBS's Tracker 01:04 - SAG-AFTRA Contract Updates & AI Protections 01:40 - New Oscar Rules: Human-Authored vs. AI Work 05:30 - The 97% Reality: Why We Need Day Jobs 11:50 - Flexibility vs. Stability: Finding the Right Balance 18:10 - Private Tutoring & Corporate Creative Work 22:10 - Managing Bosses: To be "The Actor" or keep it secret? 36:30 - When to say "No" to an acting gig for your stability 41:30 - Mourning the "Death" of a Career: Dealing with Post-Show Blues 54:00 - Ad Libs: Travel plans and recovering lost audio files  Connect with us: •    Subscribe for more deep dives into the craft and business of acting. •    Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen!  •    Comment below: What is the best (or worst) day job you've had as an actor? Send us a questions or a longer comment by sending an email to ask@supportingactors.com

    57 мин.
  9. 7 мая

    A Guide to Acting Theories and Contemporary Techniques

    How do you find the line between deep preparation and total spontaneity? In this episode of Supporting Actors, Patrick and Sean break down the most influential acting theories in history and how they apply to the modern actor. From the roots of Stanislavski to contemporary physical theater, we discuss how to build a reliable technique that doesn't get in the way of a "live" performance. In this episode, we cover: The Classics: The evolution of Stanislavski's system into the philosophies of Stella Adler, Uta Hagen, Sanford Meisner, and Lee Strasberg. Modern Approaches: Exploring Lucid Body, Viewpoints, and Clown work. The Audition Room: How to generate authentic, grounded performances for self-tapes without "over-cooking" the material. The Actor's Balance: Finding the sweet spot between rigorous prep and being present in the moment. Timestamps: [00:00] Intro & Industry News. [05:45] Breaking down the Stanislavski System. [15:20] Meisner vs. Strasberg: The Great Debate. [28:10] Using Lucid Body and Viewpoints in rehearsal. [42:35] Why your self-tapes might feel "stale" (and how to fix it). [55:00] Wrap-up & Ad Libs. Connect with us: Subscribe for more deep dives into the craft and business of acting. Follow the show on Apple Podcasts or Spotify and leave us a 5-star review. If you prefer video, you can also find us on YouTube. Ask questions or leave longer comments by emailing us at ask@supportingactors.com. Leave a comment: Which acting philosophy do you find most helpful in the room? #ActingTechnique #SupportingActorsPodcast #Meisner #SelfTapeTips #ActingTheory

    1 ч. 1 мин.

Об этом подкасте

A podcast about the art, business, and craft of acting from working actors.

Вам может также понравиться