DON’T KNOW WHAT THE CHARACTER DOESN’T KNOW
Most actors play scenes like they already know how the sentence ends. The words come out clean, efficient, pre-planned. And that’s exactly why it feels rehearsed instead of alive.
OVERDONE SONGS
Most actors have been trained to fear the “overdone song.” The whispered lists. The warnings. The idea that certain material is off-limits. It sounds authoritative, but it’s not rooted in how casting actually works.
SCHEDULE YOUR CONCERT RIGHT NOW
Most actors wait until everything is ready before they book their solo show. The set list. The theme. The banter. The perfect concept. And that’s exactly why it never happens.
GIVING A TEMPO (Part 3)
Most actors panic when the tempo comes in wrong. They try to “fix it” mid-performance, or worse, they push through and hope no one notices. That’s not control, that’s survival mode.
GIVING A TEMPO (Part 2)
Most actors treat tempo like a suggestion. Something loose. Something the accompanist will “figure out.” And that’s exactly how you end up starting your song in the wrong world.
GIVING A TEMPO (Part 1)
Most actors think they’re giving a clear tempo. They’re not. They’re approximating. Guessing. Hoping the accompanist interprets it correctly. And that gap is where things fall apart.
NEVER MISS A BEAT
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