There Is No “t” In My Surname.

2006-07-21

Casting Directors Tell All!

Filed under: Nerd — Jonathan Harford @ 18:41

And by “Casting Directors”, I mean Jon Dorfman & Lucy Cummins. They cast (while also performing other duties) Gingerbreed and they had a few very nice things to add to my previous post. Jon’s advice on emailing your headshot:

I would also suggest that people avoid sending insanely hi-rez headshots. During the pinnacle of our casting, I received many oversized headshots that took forever to load, inch by inch. I disregarded many people based solely my impression of their foreheads, for the sake of saving time. Obviously tiny headshots are also bad news. Have a friend who knows something about image editing make you a nice, screen-appropriate, well-compressed jpg- unless you think you’ve got a damn sexy forehead.

I do have a damn sexy rubenesque forehead. Lucy’s not internet-specific advice:

I’ve only helped with the casting on one film, but after reviewing approximately 1000-1500 headshots and then participating in the auditions, I made a few observations which might be helpful. My three tips to getting attention of the casting director when there’s such a volume of actors submitted are:
  1. If you can afford it, get a color headshot. It seems superficial, but these did totally jump out when we were sorting through stacks and stacks of grey headshots.
  2. Make sure your headshot is up-to-date. Plenty of girls with pretty faces submitting for ingenue-type roles and mysteriously wearing Cross-Colors t-shirts and Hammer pants whilst leaning up against posters that read “Free Nelson Mandela” are immediately thrown into the crap pile during a casting. It’s certainly okay to not be 19, but it’s not good to bother casting directors with irrelevant headshots that will make you a disappointment in person.
  3. Include a five word note that shows comprehension of the project you’re applying for, and those casting can’t help but be flattered by the attention you’ve paid. Honestly. I still remember how cool it was to find people who seemed genuinely interested in our project or genre (even if they were just successfully faking). Even a post-it will do.

That last note I find particularly compelling. There’s a temptation to be terse and “businesslike” so as not to look like you’re grovelling for a part, am I right?

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