5 Tips to Find the Perfect Acting Class

by ActingClassFinder.com

For many aspiring actors––and for those who have worked in the industry for some time––the right acting class is an essential tool for developing and fine-tuning their craft. Acting is an incredibly personal occupation, so knowing how to find the right acting class for you is an important skill all its own. The best acting class should be an organic fit with your creative goals, schedule, and budget––and can make the difference between plateauing and thriving in your acting career.

Here are a few tips to help you find the class that will push you creatively, advance you professionally, and not break the bank.

FORECAST YOUR SPENDING

While actors are meant to explore all the realms of imagination, we exist in a world with realities, and one of those realities is financial. On average, an acting course can run anywhere from $200-600 dollars per month, with private sessions and workshops ranging from $25-100 or more per hour. Budgeting with an eye on your goals and income is an important first step in the process of choosing a class.

Miata Edoga, professional actor, President and Founder of Abundance Bound, a financial education service for actors and creatives, offers this: “The choice of a class really needs to be approached from your ability to sustain that choice.”

Edoga suggests coming from a place of clarity, not self-denial, when prioritizing the financial commitment to an acting class. “Ongoing training and honing of my craft is important, and I have to find a way to do that than I can financially sustain for the long haul. We must become people who forecast our spending. A forecast is when I say, ‘These are the resources I have, and this is how I am choosing to allocate those resources.’ This is how I am choosing to spend my money––and getting really clear on what those choices are and then holding myself to that.“[Financial forecasting] is different from budgeting,” says Edoga. “That’s a more powerful way of looking at it than ‘you can’t have this or can’t have that.’”

OUTLINE YOUR GOALS

Jim Carrey famously wrote himself a check for 10 million dollars in his starting days, using visualization as a method to outline goals for his acting career. Choosing the right acting class requires a similar commitment to goal setting, and while writing a million-dollar check may not be your style, writing down your goals is a fantastic way to reverse engineer the steps you’ll need to take to achieve them. One fantastic tool for goal setting in any industry is the S.M.A.R.T. system: setting goals that are specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and time-bound. 

Read the rest of the article at ActingClassFinder.com…

5 Tips for Heading Back to Acting School After a Break

by Ajarae Coleman

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Photo Source: Photo by Anthony from Pexels

Even if you’ve been out of traditional school for a while, there is something magical about this back to school time of year. The laid-back vibes of summer vacation are at an end, our days are getting shorter and cooler (in the northern hemisphere anyway), and we feel a little more motivated to buckle down and get to work.

If you’re an actor who has taken some time off from your training, you may be itching to get back to it. So, how do you decide where to go? Acting classes are a huge investment of time, money, and creative energy, and you deserve the best training for where you are in your career right now. Here are five steps you can take to decide what training is a good fit for you.

1. Determine your current career goals.
There are countless categories of acting training available—scene study, script analysis, improvisation, stage combat, audition technique, on-camera classes—these are just a few! When you’re researching the landscape of options, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. So it’s imperative that you spend some time getting clear on your desired next step in this phase of your career. If your goal is to land a co-star on a television sitcom, then comedy and improv training could be great choices. If you want to book a national commercial, it’s time to find commercial technique classes in your area. If your dream is to work as a performer on Broadway, musical theater training might be a smart move. Narrowing your focus doesn’t limit you. Rather, it gives you much-needed clarity.

2. Get clear on your non-negotiables.
Once you pick a category for your training, it’s time to get even more specific. What other characteristics of your new acting school are important to you? Maybe you want to study with a teacher who also offers private coaching for auditions. Perhaps there is a specific technique you want to learn, like the Alexander Technique or the Linklater voice method. Or you’d like to find a large community of ambitious actors who are busy creating their own projects and inspiring one another. Dive a bit deeper and consider the full experience you wish to have with your next training.

Read the rest of the article at Backstage…