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Archive for August, 2010

How to Become an Actress

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Many women aspire to become actresses because acting allows them to use their creativity. Others seek acting careers because they seek fame and fortune. Many women want to learn how to become an actress as successful as Halle Berry or Julia Roberts while others simply want to perform. Although the path to becoming an actress varies, many famous actresses modeled before beginning acting careers. Others starred in school plays. Some actresses were born into the entertainment industry because their parents were entertainers. Still other actresses were discovered while they were busy doing something else. Some auditioned for a role and won the role that put them on their career path. Others enrolled in acting classes, which is a viable path for women seeking to begin an acting career.

A woman who wants to know how to become an actress may begin by enrolling full-time or part-time in an acting school. When choosing a school to learn how to become an actress, women should research the school, faculty members, and alumni to make sure the school is the best place to develop their skills and move them toward their career goals. In acting school, students learn various acting techniques, such as the Stanislavinski technique or the Meisner technique. Enrolling in acting school will give aspiring actresses the opportunity to work on character and scene study. Depending on the curriculum of the school, an aspiring actress should be able to take courses in speech, script development, and improvisation among other courses.

While learning how to become an actress, a drama student should be developing relationships with faculty members and other students. Acting school provides the opportunity for students to begin establishing a network of current industry professionals and future industry professionals. Drama instructors or professors will be able to provide audition leads, career advice, or recommendations when that time comes. The student relationships nurtured in acting school possess the possibility to provide future career opportunities. Students practicing improvisation together in a classroom, for instance, may find themselves in a position to make actor recommendations to directors or writers in the future, or they may be the writers or directors looking for actors themselves. Since the entertainment industry thrives on relationships and connections, developing networking skills while in drama school will inevitably help the aspiring actress when she begins seeking roles in the entertainment industry.