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Solid Advice for Professional Theatre (Music, Theatre & Dance)

By September 12, 2016News

From Dr. Rosine: This blog has good advice for how to behave as a professional in any kind of performance setting!

Rehearsal/Performance Protocol (aka DO THIS IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO BURN EVERY BRIDGE AND HAVE EVERYONE HATE YOU):”

1. Rehearsals start at EXACTLY the time specified on the schedule! PLEASE be attentive and ready to work at call time, which means do everything you need to do ahead of time BEFOREHAND (getting water/food, printing out rehearsal materials, calling your ex-boyfriend to yell at him for messaging your friends again, etc.).

2. Turn off your phone and your mouth unless you are granted permission to use either of those things or they are 100% necessary in a given situation. They are distracting, they prevent you and your fellow actors from hearing important notes or instructions, and they slow down the rehearsal process entirely. Your story about that trip to the Hamptons last summer can wait. Also, please keep them turned off backstage during performances. (One might think that goes without saying. Apparently not.)

3. As soon as you know you cannot attend rehearsal, will be arriving later than call time, etc., you must immediately contact the stage manager. If you regularly fail to do so, a responsible actor will replace you. Yes, it is that serious.

4. No guests at rehearsals unless you have informed the director about them ahead of time. More often than not, they prove to be utterly distracting.

5. PLEASE DO NOT BRING OBNOXIOUS FOODS TO REHEARSAL.
*Note: Adriana’s definition of “obnoxious” = smelly, sticky, and/or loud to open, like a pungent tuna salad sandwich or a bag of Nacho Cheese Doritos (these are my personal favorite chips, but WE ALL SUFFER FOR OUR ART, PEOPLE!)

**Note: I performed in a production of The Vagina Monologues at my college this past February (which, at certain points, touches upon horrifying, traumatic experiences such as rape) and a jerk that was sitting in the fifth row literally decided to chomp on chips throughout the second half of the play. This had the potential to destroy every ounce of hard work poured into that production, completely draw the audience out of the story, and spoil the emotion the piece is intended to evoke. If we disrupt our own rehearsal processes by doing this, not only do we distract everyone involved and affect the work negatively as a result; we are not setting an example of how we’d like to be treated while performing.

6. There is no better way to instantaneously bring a show to a halt than by spilling Throat Coat all over your costume, the props table, and everything on the props table. ABSOLUTELY NO FOOD OR DRINK BACKSTAGE DURING PERFORMANCES!

7. ALL LINES/SONGS MUST BE MEMORIZED BY THE DATE ON WHICH YOU HAVE BEEN INSTRUCTED TO BE OFF-BOOK. I have worked with actors who have literally tried to step onstage with their scripts during dress rehearsal after having put off memorization throughout the process because “it’s not a big deal.” First of all, this is a gigantic pain in the ass and slap in the face in the eyes of everyone else involved with the production, and hinders literally everything. Second of all, maybe it ISN’T a big deal to YOU, and if so, do NOT pursue a professional theatrical career. It is not for you. You do not have the necessary, all-consuming drive, and you will never be hired.

8. The way to ask for a cue when you drop a line is by saying “Line.” Simple enough. Do not say, “Um, I know this one,” “I totally had this last night when I was practicing,” “I’m so sorry, give me one second,” or “I’m just so off today, my throat hurts and I think I might have nodes and I’m going to go on vocal rest forever starting tomorrow.” Just. Say. Line. Above all, keep character, keep it moving, and stay in the scene!

9. Every time you receive a note, WRITE IT DOWN AND APPLY IT TO YOUR WORK. It is exceedingly frustrating for directors to act like broken records when it is time for notes because you were too lazy to commit your notes to memory the first time they were given. It is also exceedingly frustrating for your fellow performers who have actually come prepared, because your laziness slows down the rehearsal process significantly. And no one cares about how wonderful your memory supposedly is. No one feels like risking the possibility of jeopardizing the quality of the show just so you can try to prove a point.

10. If you have a problem with another actor, member of the production team, or anyone/anything that could be getting in the way of your having a successful rehearsal process, talk to the stage manager or assistant director, who will then bring the problem to the attention of the director. They will keep things confidential and help in any way they can/see fit. Do not post passive aggressive social media statuses that you know will pop up on everyone’s News Feed. You are no longer in high school, so stop acting like it.

11. Don’t give other actors notes, and don’t accept notes from other actors. The ONLY people who should be giving notes are the director, assistant director, and stage manager. If another actor offers you notes, simply say, “Thank you, but we should hear the director’s opinion.” You are a cast member, same as them, and deserve respect, too; behavior that is both condescending and undermines authority figures within the production should not be tolerated.

12. Wear the costume assigned to you unless it is choking you to death or has spontaneously caught fire. Your personal opinion of it does not matter.

13. During performance weekends, THE. SHOW. IS. YOUR. LIFE. YOU LIVE AND BREATHE IT. Additionally, being present at all times during tech week is non-negotiable unless there is a rare circumstance that the production team was informed about WAAAY in advance or a life-altering emergency.
*Note: Needing to be home to watch the Game of Thrones season finale is not a valid excuse. I’ve actually heard people try to cite this as an acceptable excuse. I’m not kidding.

14. Tech rehearsals can be grueling, so be patient while the crew fine-tunes cues and equipment. Give them the respect they deserve: pay attention, stay quiet, and be ready for instructions as they move from scene to scene. Just because a specific part of the process might not directly involve you does not mean it should be treated with disrespect, not to mention the fact that the crew’s work WILL directly affect you later.

15. The members of your show’s backstage team are beautiful, wonderful gods. Remember that. And don’t forget to thank the stage manager when she gives you a call time (“15 minutes!” “Thank you 15!”). She MUST hear a “thank you” to know that you have heard the call and are ready to go.

16. NEVER touch someone else’s prop unless specifically instructed to do so, and DO NOT BRING PROPS HOME WITH YOU. I don’t care how cool the electronic cigarette you get to use in the second scene is; the props master must know where that one cigarette, along with every other prop, is at all times!

15. Unless you must improvise in a given situation or improvisation is part of your show, don’t ad-lib. The show is written the way it is for a reason. Also, do not spontaneously decide that you are going to do a prank show, pretend to be drunk throughout, and throw everyone’s hard work out the window. The words of the writer(s) should never be messed with, and neither should the vision of your director.

16. If the production team tells you that actors’ attendance and assistance at strike is mandatory, then actors’ attendance and assistance at strike is mandatory. It is simple. It is not optional. It does not mean that you are excused from strike because you have “the woooorst hangover” after taking too many shots at the cast party last night. (News flash: Almost all of us have that hangover, and yet we’re still present. You are not special.) It does not mean that strike is only mandatory for people who have fewer lines than you do (yes, I’ve encountered dreadful people with this sort of superiority complex). It is mandatory for EVERYONE, so get with the program. Also, I never thought I’d say this (before my first year of college, that is), but if you try to fake an injury during strike in the hopes of going home early, people will know. You’re not clever.

17. Always give 110% and keep your focus, even if an audience member decides to plug their phone into a seemingly real outlet that is actually a part of your set (sorry you had to deal with that, Hand to God)! It is your time to shine.

18. Always stay positive, patient, and respectful of everyone you work with: the staff, the crew, the directors, the designers, the other actors, and yourself! If you don’t, you simply will not get cast again in the future, and no one will bother to work with you. The theatre world is chock-full of talent, and is also rather small, so people WILL remember your antics. And I’m sorry, but the only person who can do whatever she wants is Barbra Streisand. You are not Barbra Streisand. Unfortunately, none of us are.

 

Dr. Rosine

 

http://www.onstageblog.com/reviews/2015/7/10/how-to-be-the-actor-everyone-wants-to-work-with-a-list-of-well-intentioned-sassy-suggestions