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With projects like Send Help, Disney\u2019s live-action Moana, and the Tom Hiddleston-led Tenzing on the horizon, Danny Long Casting is having into one of its biggest years yet.
\n\n\n\nShe spoke to us from her office in Sydney.
\n\n\n\nA lot of casting directors start as actors, and there\u2019s inevitably a moment of clarity when you realize you want to be behind the camera instead of in front of it. Did you have that?
\n\n\n\nI think I loved it immediately. As soon as I started reading and just playing with actors and having all the joy and none of the stress of it, it was like playing tennis with people. You’re riffing on ideas. I immediately wanted to be a casting director. I just chopped off the acting part of myself, and stopped cold.
\n\n\n\nWas there anything in particular that made it so special for you, besides the playing with actors?
\n\n\n\nI just found it really freeing. I think my strongest suit is I have a lot of empathy for actors, so I really enjoy making people feel comfortable in the room, and trying to get the best out of people, and also just making it a really collaborative process. I don’t think I received that so much when I was an actor, so I wanted to break the mold.
\n\n\n\nA bit less of a power play between the casting director and the actor, and make it a little bit more equal. Auditioning should be an enjoyable process. Joel Edgerton actually said the best thing to me about auditioning. When he used to come in and audition for me, he was just flawless. Casual. Relaxed. I asked him his secret, and he said he just treats every audition like a workshop.
\n\n\n\nI agree. It should be collaborative. No one can operate from a place of fear. To get the best out of someone, you need to make them feel comfortable. And I really enjoyed that part of the process.
\n\n\n\nAre you able to do that with the way things have shifted to online and self tapes?
\n\n\n\nWe offer both. Always. Actors often prefer self tapes now because they get to do a gazillion takes and they get all the time in the world to perfect it. I give feedback on self tapes I make people re-tape. If I see a kernel of something in there and I think they’ve just missed it or misinterpreted something, I will say you need to go again with these notes.
\n\n\n\nI love both. I love being in the room and I love getting self tapes, because you get to see what an actor will organically bring without any interference, instinctually. It’s pretty fascinating, and sometimes when you get self tapes, you’re like, \u201cOh shit, that’s the way it’s supposed to be.\u201d
\n\n\n\nI don’t know that I would have got that in the room, but then you have the inverse to happen when they are in the room and you you tweak something, and you know that wouldn’t have been possible with a self tape.
\n\n\n\nDo you think your background as an actor gives you an advantage?
\n\n\n\nIt\u2019s definitely helpful, for sure. You understand the craft. You’ve been in their shoes. Yeah, you have a better language base to be able to direct from, but you can learn that as well without having been an actor. You could be working with someone for six years, watch them and learn by via osmosis.
\n\n\n\nI think having been an actor, it’s definitely a bonus.
\n\n\n\nWorking on a studio film like Send Help, do you find your reach as a casting director has extended beyond Australia?
\n\n\n\nWell, [Dylan O\u2019Brien and Rachel McAdams] were cast by the studio and Nancy Nayor, but the rest of the roles are all mine. But obviously, boots on the ground in the territory that you’re working in is the best way to cast so yes, we all cast globally. We all come up with ideas globally.
\n\n\n\nI think if you’re actually in that territory, of course, you’re going to have greater knowledge, greater capacity to come up with ideas than somebody who’s on the other side of the world. I do like working collaboratively with another casting director. I find that really useful.
\n\n\n\nI worked on a film called Tenzing, about Tenzing Norgay, which is all Tibetan and Sherpa speakers. So we did a global search for that during COVID, my associate Ryan Madden and I, auditioning in a foreign language. Casting in communities is my favorite thing. I think people know me for that. Moana was another one where we cast globally in the Pacifica community all around the world.
\n\n\n\nThat was fun. We just did a series last year [where] everyone in it is living with a disability. That was amazing. You get to learn so much about the communities. It’s probably my passion \u2014 research and learning about different cultures, and different people with different backgrounds and trying to find the unicorns to be in series that are telling stories that are different [from] the mainstream.
\n\n\n\nUnicorn finder is a good reputation to have.
\n\n\n\nI guess so. I think that’s project related, though. I don’t think you can cast unicorns in everything. You often need to attach a name, and in a way that’s tougher when you’ve got a clean slate and you’re finding a Tibetan man to play Tenzing.
\n\n\n\nHow many Tibetan actors do we all know? We probably auditioned over 1,500 people globally for 10 roles in that project. In a way, that’s easier, because when you’re casting attaching names, it’s availability and money, all of that juggle.
\n\n\n\nIt’s a completely different stress to wide searches.
\n\n\n\nThat seems like a good segue into our final question, which is what piece of advice, or wisdom, would you give to somebody coming in to audition for you?
\n\n\n\nLook, I don’t think I’m going to tell you anything you haven’t heard, but one of my pet things is to make sure you know the genre that you’re taping for. Bring your authentic self to the role. When I say authentic self, I don’t mean the homogenized, shiny version of yourself that you think we want to see.
\n\n\n\nWe want to see the warty, real human aspects. That’s what’s going to set you apart, what makes you you. It doesn’t have to be pretty. Sometimes, it can be left of center, and that’s what makes us sit up and notice your tape or watch you in an audition room where you’re like, \u201cWhat? What just happened there?\u201d
\n\n\n\nThat’s fresh, but it’s also truthful and authentic.
\n\n\n\nLooking for auditions in your area?
\n\n\n\nBrowse casting calls in:
\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe post Casting Director Danny Long Shares Audition Tips Every Actor Needs to Know appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "With projects like Send Help, Disney\u2019s live-action Moana, and the Tom Hiddleston-led Tenzing on the horizon, Danny Long Casting is having into one of its biggest years yet.\n\n\n\nShe spoke to us from her office in Sydney.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nDanny Long believes the best auditions happen when actors stop performing perfection and lean into authentic, truthful choices.\n\n\n\nSelf tapes have transformed casting, giving actors more control while still requiring strong instincts, genre awareness, and emotional honesty.\n\n\n\nSuccessful casting depends on collaboration, empathy, and extensive global searches to discover fresh talent and underrepresented voices.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nA lot of casting directors start as actors, and there\u2019s inevitably a moment of clarity when you realize you want to be behind the camera instead of in front of it. Did you have that?\n\n\n\nI think I loved it immediately. As soon as I started reading and just playing with actors and having all the joy and none of the stress of it, it was like playing tennis with people. You’re riffing on ideas. I immediately wanted to be a casting director. I just chopped off the acting part of myself, and stopped cold.\n\n\n\nWas there anything in particular that made it so special for you, besides the playing with actors?\n\n\n\nI just found it really freeing. I think my strongest suit is I have a lot of empathy for actors, so I really enjoy making people feel comfortable in the room, and trying to get the best out of people, and also just making it a really collaborative process. I don’t think I received that so much when I was an actor, so I wanted to break the mold. \n\n\n\nA bit less of a power play between the casting director and the actor, and make it a little bit more equal. Auditioning should be an enjoyable process. Joel Edgerton actually said the best thing to me about auditioning. When he used to come in and audition for me, he was just flawless. Casual. Relaxed. I asked him his secret, and he said he just treats every audition like a workshop. \n\n\n\nI agree. It should be collaborative. No one can operate from a place of fear. To get the best out of someone, you need to make them feel comfortable. And I really enjoyed that part of the process.\n\n\n\nAre you able to do that with the way things have shifted to online and self tapes?\n\n\n\nWe offer both. Always. Actors often prefer self tapes now because they get to do a gazillion takes and they get all the time in the world to perfect it. I give feedback on self tapes I make people re-tape. If I see a kernel of something in there and I think they’ve just missed it or misinterpreted something, I will say you need to go again with these notes. \n\n\n\nI love both. I love being in the room and I love getting self tapes, because you get to see what an actor will organically bring without any interference, instinctually. It’s pretty fascinating, and sometimes when you get self tapes, you’re like, \u201cOh shit, that’s the way it’s supposed to be.\u201d\n\n\n\nI don’t know that I would have got that in the room, but then you have the inverse to happen when they are in the room and you you tweak something, and you know that wouldn’t have been possible with a self tape.\n\n\n\nDo you think your background as an actor gives you an advantage?\n\n\n\nIt\u2019s definitely helpful, for sure. You understand the craft. You’ve been in their shoes. Yeah, you have a better language base to be able to direct from, but you can learn that as well without having been an actor. You could be working with someone for six years, watch them and learn by via osmosis. \n\n\n\nI think having been an actor, it’s definitely a bonus. \n\n\n\nWorking on a studio film like Send Help, do you find your reach as a casting director has extended beyond Australia?\n\n\n\nWell, [Dylan O\u2019Brien and Rachel McAdams] were cast by the studio and Nancy Nayor, but the rest of the roles are all mine. But obviously, boots on the ground in the territory that you’re working in is the best way to cast so yes, we all cast globally. We all come up with ideas globally. \n\n\n\nI think if you’re actually in that territory, of course, you’re going to have greater knowledge, greater capacity to come up with ideas than somebody who’s on the other side of the world. I do like working collaboratively with another casting director. I find that really useful. \n\n\n\nI worked on a film called Tenzing, about Tenzing Norgay, which is all Tibetan and Sherpa speakers. So we did a global search for that during COVID, my associate Ryan Madden and I, auditioning in a foreign language. Casting in communities is my favorite thing. I think people know me for that. Moana was another one where we cast globally in the Pacifica community all around the world. \n\n\n\nThat was fun. We just did a series last year [where] everyone in it is living with a disability. That was amazing. You get to learn so much about the communities. It’s probably my passion \u2014 research and learning about different cultures, and different people with different backgrounds and trying to find the unicorns to be in series that are telling stories that are different [from] the mainstream.\n\n\n\nUnicorn finder is a good reputation to have.\n\n\n\nI guess so. I think that’s project related, though. I don’t think you can cast unicorns in everything. You often need to attach a name, and in a way that’s tougher when you’ve got a clean slate and you’re finding a Tibetan man to play Tenzing. \n\n\n\nHow many Tibetan actors do we all know? We probably auditioned over 1,500 people globally for 10 roles in that project. In a way, that’s easier, because when you’re casting attaching names, it’s availability and money, all of that juggle. \n\n\n\nIt’s a completely different stress to wide searches.\n\n\n\nThat seems like a good segue into our final question, which is what piece of advice, or wisdom, would you give to somebody coming in to audition for you?\n\n\n\nLook, I don’t think I’m going to tell you anything you haven’t heard, but one of my pet things is to make sure you know the genre that you’re taping for. Bring your authentic self to the role. When I say authentic self, I don’t mean the homogenized, shiny version of yourself that you think we want to see. \n\n\n\nWe want to see the warty, real human aspects. That’s what’s going to set you apart, what makes you you. It doesn’t have to be pretty. Sometimes, it can be left of center, and that’s what makes us sit up and notice your tape or watch you in an audition room where you’re like, \u201cWhat? What just happened there?\u201d \n\n\n\nThat’s fresh, but it’s also truthful and authentic.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLooking for auditions in your area?\n\n\n\nBrowse casting calls in:\n\n\n\n\nHollywood\n\n\n\nAtlanta\n\n\n\nChicago\n\n\n\nSydney\n\n\n\n\n\nThe post Casting Director Danny Long Shares Audition Tips Every Actor Needs to Know appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-22T09:10:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-22T12:06:20-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/DANNY-LONG-BLOG.jpg", "tags": [ "Casting Directors", "Interviews" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=330126", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/acting-in-new-york-what-you-need-to-know-to-succeed/", "title": "Acting in New York: What You Need to Know to Succeed", "content_html": "\nActing in New York is a tough market with lots of competition, and if you want to make it, there are a lot of factors that go into it.
\n\n\n\nActress Christina Villa, studied acting at the Actors Studio Drama School in New York and learned first-hand what it takes. She has since relocated to Los Angeles, but that New York mentality never left her.
\n\n\n\nIt\u2019s that mentality that has led to her casting in the 2025 Dolph Lundgren action Netflix film Wanted Man, as well as the sci-fi thriller Spark, currently playing on Amazon Prime. She still carries the lessons she learned in New York, lessons that have served her well.
\n\n\n\nShe spoke to us from her home in LA.
\n\n\n\nWhat first got you into acting?
\n\n\n\nMy mom was a singer, and so she would perform at local venues and stuff. Sometimes she would have us come on stage with her. I was actually a pretty shy kid, but there was something different about performing. [I said to myself], \u201c\u2018Oh, I have to do what mom’s doing,\u2019 which is, \u2018Don’t get nervous, and don’t be shy, and just do it.\u2019\u201d My mom eventually stopped singing, and I put it aside around middle school age.
\n\n\n\nI went to [college] in Austin, at UT. I got my degree in communications, specifically PR, and I just started seeing people actually be artists as they’re in their lives, and going to different improv shows, and there’s music venues everywhere. Upon graduation, I was just not excited about becoming a publicist.
\n\n\n\nWhen I was interning, I would sometimes be on commercial sets and think, I want to be that person in front of the camera.
\n\n\n\nWhat changed?
\n\n\n\nI took my first acting class, and I just loved it. I loved being on set. Then I just decided I’m gonna pursue this. I don’t come from money or anything, so I have to support myself. I\u2019ll keep working with a full-time job, and while I’m doing that, I’ll also do theater.
\n\n\n\nI found a book called Breaking Into Acting for Dummies, and that’s where I learned what a demo reel was and what a casting director was. I knew I could do student films to get footage for my reel, and I need to go do theater so that I can sharpen my skills.
\n\n\n\nI started doing that, acting any way that I could, wherever I was, and that eventually led me to applying to grad school in New York, and I got my MFA there in acting at the Actors Studio.
Was there more to your education?
It’s definitely an industry where you can’t do it by yourself. You have to have community and reach out to people and ask questions and just be out there knocking on doors. Whenever I met somebody doing what I wanted to do, I\u2019d invite them for coffee, ask them how they got their start, where they’re going and what they’re doing, and just learning along the way. It’s really been one foot in front of the other.
Why the Actors Studio?
\n\n\n\nWhen I started taking acting classes and actually learning the craft of it \u2014 Strasberg, Stanislavski, Stella Adler, Meisner, they all originated in New York. That lit a little bit of a match there. It really culminated for me when I saw Al Pacino speak at the Plaza Classic Film Festival in El Paso.
\n\n\n\nI reached out to an acting teacher that I had in Austin, Amber DuPuy, who gave me a list of schools that she thought I could do well at. One of them was Pace University, and I saw that they had the Actors Studio Drama School.
\n\n\n\nOnce you got to New York, what was that experience like?
\n\n\n\nI was focused on my studies. I did a couple of little student films here and there, just to start developing my reel. But that program was very intense. It wasn\u2019t something you could just phone in. You had to immerse yourself, and then I was also working part time. I started to realize that the students doing the best were the ones constantly working.
\n\n\n\nAfter class, I was constantly booking studio space so that I can go and take my two-hour block to create different elements of whatever scene I was working on. The method gets misconstrued, but what it\u2019s really about is basically building a house.
\n\n\n\nYou have to have a good foundation. You have to know who your character is, but also building from the outside in, too. You had to put a lot of time into your work, and that\u2019s definitely laid down a foundation for me.
\n\n\n\nWhen you finished the program, did you find representation?
\n\n\n\nYeah, so I when I graduated, I found that I had to really look within and say, \u201cHow bad do you want this?\u201d Because I wasn’t one of the students that got called into a meeting after our showcase. That realization, that everybody was getting calls, and I wasn\u2019t, knocked the wind out of me.
\n\n\n\nWell? What did you do?
\n\n\n\nI had to hit the pavement on my own and just figure it out. I bumped into some walls, but it was really just Actors Connection, One on One, The Actor\u2019s Green Room, doing all those things to get to know casting directors, doing showcases.
\n\n\n\nI did plenty of showcases. I worked full time at a mattress store on East 60th, and that’s how I was able to fund all these different things, but I was able to meet agents and casting directors by doing everything I could.
\n\n\n\nSo it was just always saying yes, anything that got you in front of people, got you on stage, and it might get you in front of the right person who’s going to notice you and put you in something?
\n\n\n\nI was called in for FBI for a costar [role] and Jonathan Strauss\u2019 office was casting. [Casting director] Alexis Atkinson was there for my audition, and I got a callback. I didn’t get the part, but I got an email from her asking if I would be interested in working with her.
\n\n\n\nShe’d check out my headshots, my reel, and then we\u2019d work on self tapes together, because at the time I had an agent that I submitted to, and she would get me auditions. It really was just one foot in front of the other.
\n\n\n\nThis person giving me a tip over here, this person over here a referral. I definitely was not shy about asking for help. I feel New York was definitely planting all the seeds.
\n\n\n\nHow did you get the agent?
\n\n\n\nI had seen that somebody booked a costar [role] on one of those procedural shows. I thought, \u201cWell, I fit that world, because I’ve been called into that world, so let’s see who their agent is.\u201d I submitted to their agent, and she got back to me within minutes. She was looking for my type.
\n\n\n\nI think that serves as such a good example for anyone who might be reading this, about doing research and pounding the pavement.
\n\n\n\nYeah, and sometimes you feel overwhelmed because you\u2019re not sure and think, \u201cWell, what do I do?\u201d It’s not linear. Again, put that foot in front of the other, and then just see what happens. If you’re doing something and it’s right for you, then the door will open, and if it’s not, the door will close, and then you’ll just have to walk down the hall and see if any doors open over there.
\n\n\n\nThere\u2019s no formula where it’s A plus B equals C. I’m still trying to meet more people and knock on more doors, but it’s helpful that now others are willing to go to bat for me with the people that they know, and I think that’s something to really keep in mind, is that when people go to bat for you, you need to be able to show up.
\n\n\n\nSomebody who’s on time, somebody who does their part, and who’s constantly working on their craft.
\n\n\n\nDo you still find you think of yourself as a New York actress?
\n\n\n\nI think I always will. It has community. People were always so open to lend a hand. Just reach out and say, \u201cHey, why don’t you come to this workshop with me?\u201d Or, \u201cCan you come to this event with me?\u201d So I try to make sure that I pay that forward as well. I think a big aspect of being a New York actor is really desiring and creating community in artistic spaces.
\n\n\n\nWhen somebody is your friend in New York, they’re really your friend, and that’s super valuable. And obviously in New York, you can go into a small theater and see amazing work, and I think that\u2019s just something to always strive for, that you’re working at that level, no matter where you’re at.
\n\n\n\nLooking for acting opportunities in New York?
\n\n\n\nBrowse current:
\n\n\n\nThe post Acting in New York: What You Need to Know to Succeed appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "Acting in New York is a tough market with lots of competition, and if you want to make it, there are a lot of factors that go into it. \n\n\n\nActress Christina Villa, studied acting at the Actors Studio Drama School in New York and learned first-hand what it takes. She has since relocated to Los Angeles, but that New York mentality never left her. \n\n\n\nIt\u2019s that mentality that has led to her casting in the 2025 Dolph Lundgren action Netflix film Wanted Man, as well as the sci-fi thriller Spark, currently playing on Amazon Prime. She still carries the lessons she learned in New York, lessons that have served her well. \n\n\n\nShe spoke to us from her home in LA. \n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nBuilding an acting career in New York requires persistence, community, and a willingness to consistently put yourself in the room.\n\n\n\nChristina Villa credits her growth to intense craft training, continuous self-development, and learning directly from working actors and casting professionals.\n\n\n\nSuccess came not from one breakthrough moment, but from years of networking, showcases, self-tapes, and showing up professionally at every opportunity.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWhat first got you into acting?\n\n\n\nMy mom was a singer, and so she would perform at local venues and stuff. Sometimes she would have us come on stage with her. I was actually a pretty shy kid, but there was something different about performing. [I said to myself], \u201c\u2018Oh, I have to do what mom’s doing,\u2019 which is, \u2018Don’t get nervous, and don’t be shy, and just do it.\u2019\u201d My mom eventually stopped singing, and I put it aside around middle school age. \n\n\n\nI went to [college] in Austin, at UT. I got my degree in communications, specifically PR, and I just started seeing people actually be artists as they’re in their lives, and going to different improv shows, and there’s music venues everywhere. Upon graduation, I was just not excited about becoming a publicist.\n\n\n\nWhen I was interning, I would sometimes be on commercial sets and think, I want to be that person in front of the camera.\n\n\n\nWhat changed?\n\n\n\nI took my first acting class, and I just loved it. I loved being on set. Then I just decided I’m gonna pursue this. I don’t come from money or anything, so I have to support myself. I\u2019ll keep working with a full-time job, and while I’m doing that, I’ll also do theater.\n\n\n\nI found a book called Breaking Into Acting for Dummies, and that’s where I learned what a demo reel was and what a casting director was. I knew I could do student films to get footage for my reel, and I need to go do theater so that I can sharpen my skills.\n\n\n\nI started doing that, acting any way that I could, wherever I was, and that eventually led me to applying to grad school in New York, and I got my MFA there in acting at the Actors Studio. Was there more to your education?It’s definitely an industry where you can’t do it by yourself. You have to have community and reach out to people and ask questions and just be out there knocking on doors. Whenever I met somebody doing what I wanted to do, I\u2019d invite them for coffee, ask them how they got their start, where they’re going and what they’re doing, and just learning along the way. It’s really been one foot in front of the other.\n\n\n\nWhy the Actors Studio?\n\n\n\nWhen I started taking acting classes and actually learning the craft of it \u2014 Strasberg, Stanislavski, Stella Adler, Meisner, they all originated in New York. That lit a little bit of a match there. It really culminated for me when I saw Al Pacino speak at the Plaza Classic Film Festival in El Paso. \n\n\n\nI reached out to an acting teacher that I had in Austin, Amber DuPuy, who gave me a list of schools that she thought I could do well at. One of them was Pace University, and I saw that they had the Actors Studio Drama School. \n\n\n\nOnce you got to New York, what was that experience like?\n\n\n\nI was focused on my studies. I did a couple of little student films here and there, just to start developing my reel. But that program was very intense. It wasn\u2019t something you could just phone in. You had to immerse yourself, and then I was also working part time. I started to realize that the students doing the best were the ones constantly working. \n\n\n\nAfter class, I was constantly booking studio space so that I can go and take my two-hour block to create different elements of whatever scene I was working on. The method gets misconstrued, but what it\u2019s really about is basically building a house. \n\n\n\nYou have to have a good foundation. You have to know who your character is, but also building from the outside in, too. You had to put a lot of time into your work, and that\u2019s definitely laid down a foundation for me.\n\n\n\nWhen you finished the program, did you find representation?\n\n\n\nYeah, so I when I graduated, I found that I had to really look within and say, \u201cHow bad do you want this?\u201d Because I wasn’t one of the students that got called into a meeting after our showcase. That realization, that everybody was getting calls, and I wasn\u2019t, knocked the wind out of me.\n\n\n\nWell? What did you do?\n\n\n\nI had to hit the pavement on my own and just figure it out. I bumped into some walls, but it was really just Actors Connection, One on One, The Actor\u2019s Green Room, doing all those things to get to know casting directors, doing showcases. \n\n\n\nI did plenty of showcases. I worked full time at a mattress store on East 60th, and that’s how I was able to fund all these different things, but I was able to meet agents and casting directors by doing everything I could.\n\n\n\nSo it was just always saying yes, anything that got you in front of people, got you on stage, and it might get you in front of the right person who’s going to notice you and put you in something? \n\n\n\nI was called in for FBI for a costar [role] and Jonathan Strauss\u2019 office was casting. [Casting director] Alexis Atkinson was there for my audition, and I got a callback. I didn’t get the part, but I got an email from her asking if I would be interested in working with her. \n\n\n\nShe’d check out my headshots, my reel, and then we\u2019d work on self tapes together, because at the time I had an agent that I submitted to, and she would get me auditions. It really was just one foot in front of the other. \n\n\n\nThis person giving me a tip over here, this person over here a referral. I definitely was not shy about asking for help. I feel New York was definitely planting all the seeds.\n\n\n\nHow did you get the agent?\n\n\n\nI had seen that somebody booked a costar [role] on one of those procedural shows. I thought, \u201cWell, I fit that world, because I’ve been called into that world, so let’s see who their agent is.\u201d I submitted to their agent, and she got back to me within minutes. She was looking for my type.\n\n\n\nI think that serves as such a good example for anyone who might be reading this, about doing research and pounding the pavement.\n\n\n\nYeah, and sometimes you feel overwhelmed because you\u2019re not sure and think, \u201cWell, what do I do?\u201d It’s not linear. Again, put that foot in front of the other, and then just see what happens. If you’re doing something and it’s right for you, then the door will open, and if it’s not, the door will close, and then you’ll just have to walk down the hall and see if any doors open over there. \n\n\n\nThere\u2019s no formula where it’s A plus B equals C. I’m still trying to meet more people and knock on more doors, but it’s helpful that now others are willing to go to bat for me with the people that they know, and I think that’s something to really keep in mind, is that when people go to bat for you, you need to be able to show up. \n\n\n\nSomebody who’s on time, somebody who does their part, and who’s constantly working on their craft.\n\n\n\nDo you still find you think of yourself as a New York actress?\n\n\n\nI think I always will. It has community. People were always so open to lend a hand. Just reach out and say, \u201cHey, why don’t you come to this workshop with me?\u201d Or, \u201cCan you come to this event with me?\u201d So I try to make sure that I pay that forward as well. I think a big aspect of being a New York actor is really desiring and creating community in artistic spaces.\n\n\n\nWhen somebody is your friend in New York, they’re really your friend, and that’s super valuable. And obviously in New York, you can go into a small theater and see amazing work, and I think that\u2019s just something to always strive for, that you’re working at that level, no matter where you’re at.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLooking for acting opportunities in New York?\n\n\n\nBrowse current:\n\n\n\n\nNew York City Casting Calls\n\n\n\nNYC Background Actor Jobs\n\n\n\nTheatre Auditions\n\n\n\nNew York TV Series Casting Calls\n\n\n\n\n\nThe post Acting in New York: What You Need to Know to Succeed appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-21T09:10:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T15:06:35-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/CN-BLOG-TEMPLATE.jpg", "tags": [ "Acting 101", "Acting Advice", "Actors", "Interviews" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=330120", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/how-to-become-a-background-actor-get-started-extra-advice/", "title": "How to Become a Background Actor: What Casting Directors Actually See", "content_html": "\nWhat does it really take to get noticed, booked, and rehired as a background actor in today\u2019s film and TV industry?
\n\n\n\nThere are some general misconceptions about background acting. Legendary casting director Rose Rosen walks us through the process of how you can become a background actor.
\n\n\n\nThe First Step: How To Get Into Background Acting
\n\n\n\nDepending on where you live, do some research about who hires background. Is it agents? Is it casting directors? \u201cFollow them on social media,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cGet involved. Then sign up. We all love a list. This is how we live.\u201d If there\u2019s more than one such service, sign up for all of them. \u201c
\n\n\n\nThere’s no exclusivity on this,\u201d she reassures. \u201cNobody cares. If you happen to live in a bigger city and there’s more than one or two of them, sign up with all of them. Go deep.\u201d
\n\n\n\nKnow How To Dress
\n\n\n\nPlain wardrobe is your friend here. Anything with a logo? Lose it. Can\u2019t use them. \u201cI was at a film festival,\u201d Rosen recalls, \u201cI’m watching the shorts block, and in this cute little movie, the girl had a Barbie T-shirt on in featured background. I thought, \u2018Really? You couldn\u2019t turn that inside out?\u2019\u201d
\n\n\n\nWhat You Should Be Thinking About With Your Headshots
\n\n\n\nThe simple truth is that they should look like you. Not too airbrushed or altered, just nice photos of you, as you really look. \u201cPlain is your friend here,\u201d Rosen says. \u201c
\n\n\n\nAnd make sure it represents you well. When I was working with Tim Burton, we were choosing featured background, and had these photo arrays. He wanted to pick them out one by one, because these people would recur at their homes. Mowing their lawn, doing the things people do. He would literally sit there, look at the photos, then at the people, and say, \u2018Wait, is this you?\u2019 So many people don’t look like their headshots, and that’s a big problem.\u201d
\n\n\n\nThis was a bigger problem before, when headshots cost a lot of money. Now, you can take quality shots with your phone. \u201cUse a plain background, look like yourself, wear something clean and nice, a simple outfit, that’s it,\u201d she advises.
\n\n\n\n\u201cAs light makeup as you can and still be comfortable. No characters, nothing. We want to just see that you’re you, and then the proof is in the pudding when you show up, right?
\n\n\n\nShowing Up: Know the Rules of Being on a Set
\n\n\n\nOne of the best ways to be noticed on a set is to not be noticed. Ask your agent or casting directors what the rules are before showing up, but also use common sense. Don\u2019t eat before the principal actors. Don\u2019t take up the director\u2019s time with questions.
\n\n\n\nFind out the rules ahead of time, and follow them, and understand that they want to move you out, so go there as quickly as possible. \u201cSometimes you’re going to be pissed because you don’t get the same food as other people,\u201d she says.
\n\n\n\n\u201cThey’ll brown bag the extras if there are a lot of them, and serve hot food to the crew. It\u2019s common sense, mostly, but definitely have somebody run you through this stuff ahead of time. Once you\u2019re there, the less questions, the better. Show up and do your job. If they’re calling for you on set and somehow you’re not available, or not within earshot [and] nobody can find you, that\u2019s a problem.\u201d
\n\n\n\nUsing Background as a Springboard To Something Bigger
\n\n\n\nBackground acting and principal acting are, in fact, two different kind of skills and two different kinds of trajectories, so you should approach it in two different ways. \u201cI love the retired people who just decide they want to do background. They get with some agents and certain casting companies that hire background. They’re in a proper city that needs that.\u201d
\n\n\n\nOf course, if you\u2019re in a smaller community, the opportunities might not be as plentiful, but even if you\u2019re in the middle of nowhere, a movie or TV show could come to town, so you can keep your eyes open for those kinds of things. \u201cThat would be a fun day for you, but typically in a bigger city that’s doing some movies, you could figure this out anyway,\u201d Rosen observes.
\n\n\n\nFor a person who wants to be a speaking actor, starting out in background is an excellent educational opportunity. \u201cYou get to see what everybody does on set,\u201d she says. \u201cYou get to see set etiquette and make sure you are an observational person, not a participating one. Because you need to watch what [everyone] is doing on the set. This is huge, and I recommend every actor do it a couple of times at the beginning, at least.\u201d
\n\n\n\nAlso, if you need money, keep doing it, but don\u2019t put it on your resume if you want to get speaking roles. \u201cI know people trying to make their insurance are doing some background,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cNone of it matters. If you want to be a background actor, great. Do that. If you want to be a principal actor, there are different skill sets to learn, but learning how to be on set is a huge skill set that is the best vantage point.\u201d
\n\n\n\nThe Best Way To Build a Consistent Career in Background Acting
\n\n\n\nDo all the things: sign up with the agents, follow the casting directors that do that in your area, read the newspapers, or whatever passes for them these days, which will tell you when something is coming to town. \u201cEvery time something happens locally here, people reach out to me,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cThose jobs are out there. Apply for them and show up.\u201d
\n\n\n\nBuilding a career, or even an avocation as a background actor is like any other creative endeavor. It takes discipline and attention to detail. It also takes the ability to follow direction and do what you\u2019re told. It\u2019s not for everyone, but if it strikes you as something you want to do, there are plenty of chances to do it in most states.
\n\n\n\nOne way to keep on top of things is with the help of Casting Networks, where your profile could help you get work as well.
\n\n\n\nReady to get started in background acting?
\n\n\n\nExplore current:
\n\n\n\nThe post How to Become a Background Actor: What Casting Directors Actually See appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "What does it really take to get noticed, booked, and rehired as a background actor in today\u2019s film and TV industry?\n\n\n\nThere are some general misconceptions about background acting. Legendary casting director Rose Rosen walks us through the process of how you can become a background actor.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nCasting directors care more about reliability, professionalism, and adaptability than trying to \u201csteal the scene.\u201d\n\n\n\nYour behavior on set, wardrobe choices, and ability to follow direction directly affect whether you get booked again.\n\n\n\nSuccessful background actors treat extra work like a real industry job and use it to build connections, experience, and opportunities.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe First Step: How To Get Into Background Acting\n\n\n\nDepending on where you live, do some research about who hires background. Is it agents? Is it casting directors? \u201cFollow them on social media,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cGet involved. Then sign up. We all love a list. This is how we live.\u201d If there\u2019s more than one such service, sign up for all of them. \u201c\n\n\n\nThere’s no exclusivity on this,\u201d she reassures. \u201cNobody cares. If you happen to live in a bigger city and there’s more than one or two of them, sign up with all of them. Go deep.\u201d\n\n\n\nKnow How To Dress\n\n\n\nPlain wardrobe is your friend here. Anything with a logo? Lose it. Can\u2019t use them. \u201cI was at a film festival,\u201d Rosen recalls, \u201cI’m watching the shorts block, and in this cute little movie, the girl had a Barbie T-shirt on in featured background. I thought, \u2018Really? You couldn\u2019t turn that inside out?\u2019\u201d\n\n\n\nWhat You Should Be Thinking About With Your Headshots\n\n\n\nThe simple truth is that they should look like you. Not too airbrushed or altered, just nice photos of you, as you really look. \u201cPlain is your friend here,\u201d Rosen says. \u201c\n\n\n\nAnd make sure it represents you well. When I was working with Tim Burton, we were choosing featured background, and had these photo arrays. He wanted to pick them out one by one, because these people would recur at their homes. Mowing their lawn, doing the things people do. He would literally sit there, look at the photos, then at the people, and say, \u2018Wait, is this you?\u2019 So many people don’t look like their headshots, and that’s a big problem.\u201d \n\n\n\nThis was a bigger problem before, when headshots cost a lot of money. Now, you can take quality shots with your phone. \u201cUse a plain background, look like yourself, wear something clean and nice, a simple outfit, that’s it,\u201d she advises. \n\n\n\n\u201cAs light makeup as you can and still be comfortable. No characters, nothing. We want to just see that you’re you, and then the proof is in the pudding when you show up, right?\n\n\n\nShowing Up: Know the Rules of Being on a Set\n\n\n\nOne of the best ways to be noticed on a set is to not be noticed. Ask your agent or casting directors what the rules are before showing up, but also use common sense. Don\u2019t eat before the principal actors. Don\u2019t take up the director\u2019s time with questions. \n\n\n\nFind out the rules ahead of time, and follow them, and understand that they want to move you out, so go there as quickly as possible. \u201cSometimes you’re going to be pissed because you don’t get the same food as other people,\u201d she says. \n\n\n\n\u201cThey’ll brown bag the extras if there are a lot of them, and serve hot food to the crew. It\u2019s common sense, mostly, but definitely have somebody run you through this stuff ahead of time. Once you\u2019re there, the less questions, the better. Show up and do your job. If they’re calling for you on set and somehow you’re not available, or not within earshot [and] nobody can find you, that\u2019s a problem.\u201d\n\n\n\nUsing Background as a Springboard To Something Bigger\n\n\n\nBackground acting and principal acting are, in fact, two different kind of skills and two different kinds of trajectories, so you should approach it in two different ways. \u201cI love the retired people who just decide they want to do background. They get with some agents and certain casting companies that hire background. They’re in a proper city that needs that.\u201d \n\n\n\nOf course, if you\u2019re in a smaller community, the opportunities might not be as plentiful, but even if you\u2019re in the middle of nowhere, a movie or TV show could come to town, so you can keep your eyes open for those kinds of things. \u201cThat would be a fun day for you, but typically in a bigger city that’s doing some movies, you could figure this out anyway,\u201d Rosen observes. \n\n\n\nFor a person who wants to be a speaking actor, starting out in background is an excellent educational opportunity. \u201cYou get to see what everybody does on set,\u201d she says. \u201cYou get to see set etiquette and make sure you are an observational person, not a participating one. Because you need to watch what [everyone] is doing on the set. This is huge, and I recommend every actor do it a couple of times at the beginning, at least.\u201d \n\n\n\nAlso, if you need money, keep doing it, but don\u2019t put it on your resume if you want to get speaking roles. \u201cI know people trying to make their insurance are doing some background,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cNone of it matters. If you want to be a background actor, great. Do that. If you want to be a principal actor, there are different skill sets to learn, but learning how to be on set is a huge skill set that is the best vantage point.\u201d\n\n\n\nThe Best Way To Build a Consistent Career in Background Acting\n\n\n\nDo all the things: sign up with the agents, follow the casting directors that do that in your area, read the newspapers, or whatever passes for them these days, which will tell you when something is coming to town. \u201cEvery time something happens locally here, people reach out to me,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cThose jobs are out there. Apply for them and show up.\u201d\n\n\n\nBuilding a career, or even an avocation as a background actor is like any other creative endeavor. It takes discipline and attention to detail. It also takes the ability to follow direction and do what you\u2019re told. It\u2019s not for everyone, but if it strikes you as something you want to do, there are plenty of chances to do it in most states.\n\n\n\nOne way to keep on top of things is with the help of Casting Networks, where your profile could help you get work as well.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nReady to get started in background acting?\n\n\n\nExplore current:\n\n\n\n\nBackground Actor Casting Calls\n\n\n\nLos Angeles Extras Auditions\n\n\n\nNew York City Background Acting Opportunities\n\n\n\nAtlanta Extra Jobs\n\n\n\n\n\nThe post How to Become a Background Actor: What Casting Directors Actually See appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-20T09:05:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T09:51:35-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/iStock-2230248715-scaled.jpg", "tags": [ "Acting 101", "Acting Advice" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=328674", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/how-to-get-your-child-into-acting-guide/", "title": "How to Get Your Child Into Acting: A Parent\u2019s Real-World Starting Point", "content_html": "\nWhen a child wants to act, the most important job for parents is learning how to support that dream safely, realistically, and without losing sight of the fact that kids should still get to be kids.
\n\n\n\nThere are plenty of do\u2019s and don\u2019ts that are helpful to know as you encourage your child to pursue their dream.
\n\n\n\nLegendary casting director Rose Rosen has lots of experience in this area, and discusses it in her podcast, \u201cCasting Confidential.\u201d She dedicated a 2025 episode of the podcast to this subject, and was more than happy to talk to Casting Networks about everything parents should know about their child\u2019s journey and, of course, their own.
\n\n\n\nTruthfully, the buffer between that talent agent and the job is what you need to make sure you’re not getting scammed. Avoid schools for children that advertise they\u2019ll turn your kid into a star. \u201cIf you want to take theater [classes] depending on your age, that’s fine,\u201d Rosen advises, \u201cbut don’t ever take from a place that says they’re going to make you a star. That’s ridiculous.\u201d
\n\n\n\nHow do you get an agent? Well, for starters, avoid anyone who wants to charge you money for anything. \u201cThat’s scam 101,\u201d she says. \u201cThe best thing you can do is go to the SAG-AFTRA site, then find your area and check the list of agents. Then only go to those agents because at least they’re vetted.\u201d Those approved agents will usually have portals for kids and offer specific ways for you and your child to sign up with them.
\n\n\n\nIf it seems crazy that this is an actual sentence, it\u2019s because some headshots are airbrushed into something not even resembling a real human person. Your child\u2019s headshots should properly represent your child\u2019s look, and make them as current as possible, even if that means updating them every few months.
\n\n\n\n\u201cThe quality doesn’t matter nearly as much as exactly what they look like today, exactly what their age is, exactly what their height is, so we have an idea what we\u2019re getting,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cWe love a smaller child, an older kid who plays younger, because they have a bit more maturity and sometimes they can work a couple more hours.\u201d
\n\n\n\nDo your due diligence and check your local ordinances. \u201cI know Florida has a very good site for that,\u201d says the Florida-based Rosen, \u201cand you want to make sure that the production is is adhering to these laws. This is so important.\u201d Teams are important, but you cannot expect anyone else to do this for you.
\n\n\n\nBabies get hired for photo shoots, commercials, TV shows and films, but if you\u2019re talking about cognizant acting, kids as young as five can start to understand what they\u2019re doing and be brilliant at it.
\n\n\n\n\u201cEvery kid is different,\u201d Rosen says about the desire to perform. \u201cI’ve seen kids hit their marks and do the thing, but that is completely dependent upon the director and the environment they put these kids in.\u201d That\u2019s why having an agent is important, and also why it\u2019s good to have a casting director attached.
\n\n\n\n\u201cWe do a lot of vetting to make sure that the kids are taken care of,\u201d she says. \u201cParticularly a commercial that comes in for a day, and they need kids, and they want this, that and the other, and I tell them, these are your rules, these are the things you must do, you must avoid. I think it’s really, really important. Point is, try to have different layers of protection for your child, regardless of their age.\u201d
\n\n\n\n\u201cI think if they want classes, then they should have them,\u201d Rosen says. But she also cautions, \u201cI really think kids needing anything in this process is a problem. I think we have to let kids be kids, and if they want to do anything within the scope of theater and acting, they should lead this train. Once I see the mom leading the train and the kid clearly not wanting to do it, I won’t hire him. I won’t even put that audition forward, to be quite honest.\u201d
\n\n\n\nDon\u2019t push when they don\u2019t want to be pushed. Don\u2019t make it be more important to you than to them. Don\u2019t be an issue with casting directors or agents who will then take it out on your child.
\n\n\n\n\u201cI’m very into enabling kids to do things \u2014 go ride that bike, take a chance, you know what I mean?\u201d Rosen advises. \u201cWhen it comes to that stuff, it\u2019s okay to push, obviously. But if it comes to acting, that has to come from them, because I feel like there’s a lot of parents that have their own issues to work out through their kids.\u201d
\n\n\n\nMost importantly, those kids with problem parents don’t generally get that far. \u201cIf the parents are terrible, we as professionals see that and somehow throttle it,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cSometimes bad parents get through and the kid’s a good actor, but it\u2019s rare.\u201d
\n\n\n\nDon’t make booking the job the goal. Instead, make it about the audition itself. \u201cIt’s how you frame it,\u201d Rosen suggests.
\n\n\n\n\u201cWe are going in to act for some people on Zoom, or possibly on self tape. The goal is to do the audition. That’s the fun part. Okay, if you get the job, you get the job. The parent needs to not focus on the job, they need to focus on the audition and make sure that kid is having fun and enjoying the process. And if they are not, they need to tap into that and let them stop.\u201d
\n\n\n\nThat way, if the child doesn\u2019t get the job (and odds are that they won\u2019t), there\u2019s no sense of rejection, or being made to feel like they\u2019re not talented or don\u2019t have something that someone else does.
\n\n\n\n\u201cNone of this is rejection,\u201d Rosen reiterates, \u201cand if you\u2019re using that word, or if that child is feeling that somebody in the process is mishandling the discussion or the situation, it has to be turned around to focus on fun.\u201d
\n\n\n\nAt this age, it has to be about fun. That\u2019s far and away the most important thing. It\u2019s about creating the right conditions for opportunity, to learn, and to enjoy performance. It\u2019s not about creating a career.
\n\n\n\nLooking for acting opportunities for your child?
\n\n\n\nBrowse current:
\n\n\n\nThe post How to Get Your Child Into Acting: A Parent’s Real-World Starting Point appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "When a child wants to act, the most important job for parents is learning how to support that dream safely, realistically, and without losing sight of the fact that kids should still get to be kids.\n\n\n\nThere are plenty of do\u2019s and don\u2019ts that are helpful to know as you encourage your child to pursue their dream.\n\n\n\nLegendary casting director Rose Rosen has lots of experience in this area, and discusses it in her podcast, \u201cCasting Confidential.\u201d She dedicated a 2025 episode of the podcast to this subject, and was more than happy to talk to Casting Networks about everything parents should know about their child\u2019s journey and, of course, their own.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nLegitimate child acting opportunities start with vetted agents, not expensive \u201cstar-making\u201d schools or upfront fees.\n\n\n\nParents should focus on supporting their child\u2019s enjoyment of acting rather than chasing bookings or careers.\n\n\n\nSuccessful child actors thrive in safe, well-managed environments where authenticity, protection, and fun come first.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe First Step Is Finding an Agent\n\n\n\nTruthfully, the buffer between that talent agent and the job is what you need to make sure you’re not getting scammed. Avoid schools for children that advertise they\u2019ll turn your kid into a star. \u201cIf you want to take theater [classes] depending on your age, that’s fine,\u201d Rosen advises, \u201cbut don’t ever take from a place that says they’re going to make you a star. That’s ridiculous.\u201d \n\n\n\nHow do you get an agent? Well, for starters, avoid anyone who wants to charge you money for anything. \u201cThat’s scam 101,\u201d she says. \u201cThe best thing you can do is go to the SAG-AFTRA site, then find your area and check the list of agents. Then only go to those agents because at least they’re vetted.\u201d Those approved agents will usually have portals for kids and offer specific ways for you and your child to sign up with them. \n\n\n\nHeadshots Should Look Like Your Child\n\n\n\nIf it seems crazy that this is an actual sentence, it\u2019s because some headshots are airbrushed into something not even resembling a real human person. Your child\u2019s headshots should properly represent your child\u2019s look, and make them as current as possible, even if that means updating them every few months. \n\n\n\n\u201cThe quality doesn’t matter nearly as much as exactly what they look like today, exactly what their age is, exactly what their height is, so we have an idea what we\u2019re getting,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cWe love a smaller child, an older kid who plays younger, because they have a bit more maturity and sometimes they can work a couple more hours.\u201d \n\n\n\nMake Sure You Know Local Child Labor Laws\n\n\n\nDo your due diligence and check your local ordinances. \u201cI know Florida has a very good site for that,\u201d says the Florida-based Rosen, \u201cand you want to make sure that the production is is adhering to these laws. This is so important.\u201d Teams are important, but you cannot expect anyone else to do this for you. \n\n\n\nThere Is No Right Age To Start\n\n\n\nBabies get hired for photo shoots, commercials, TV shows and films, but if you\u2019re talking about cognizant acting, kids as young as five can start to understand what they\u2019re doing and be brilliant at it. \n\n\n\n\u201cEvery kid is different,\u201d Rosen says about the desire to perform. \u201cI’ve seen kids hit their marks and do the thing, but that is completely dependent upon the director and the environment they put these kids in.\u201d That\u2019s why having an agent is important, and also why it\u2019s good to have a casting director attached.\n\n\n\n\u201cWe do a lot of vetting to make sure that the kids are taken care of,\u201d she says. \u201cParticularly a commercial that comes in for a day, and they need kids, and they want this, that and the other, and I tell them, these are your rules, these are the things you must do, you must avoid. I think it’s really, really important. Point is, try to have different layers of protection for your child, regardless of their age.\u201d\n\n\n\nClasses Can Be Good, But Are Not Necessary \n\n\n\n\u201cI think if they want classes, then they should have them,\u201d Rosen says. But she also cautions, \u201cI really think kids needing anything in this process is a problem. I think we have to let kids be kids, and if they want to do anything within the scope of theater and acting, they should lead this train. Once I see the mom leading the train and the kid clearly not wanting to do it, I won’t hire him. I won’t even put that audition forward, to be quite honest.\u201d \n\n\n\nDon\u2019t Be the Problem\n\n\n\nDon\u2019t push when they don\u2019t want to be pushed. Don\u2019t make it be more important to you than to them. Don\u2019t be an issue with casting directors or agents who will then take it out on your child. \n\n\n\n\u201cI’m very into enabling kids to do things \u2014 go ride that bike, take a chance, you know what I mean?\u201d Rosen advises. \u201cWhen it comes to that stuff, it\u2019s okay to push, obviously. But if it comes to acting, that has to come from them, because I feel like there’s a lot of parents that have their own issues to work out through their kids.\u201d\n\n\n\nMost importantly, those kids with problem parents don’t generally get that far. \u201cIf the parents are terrible, we as professionals see that and somehow throttle it,\u201d Rosen says. \u201cSometimes bad parents get through and the kid’s a good actor, but it\u2019s rare.\u201d\n\n\n\nTake the Sting Out of the Rejection That Goes With Acting\n\n\n\nDon’t make booking the job the goal. Instead, make it about the audition itself. \u201cIt’s how you frame it,\u201d Rosen suggests. \n\n\n\n\u201cWe are going in to act for some people on Zoom, or possibly on self tape. The goal is to do the audition. That’s the fun part. Okay, if you get the job, you get the job. The parent needs to not focus on the job, they need to focus on the audition and make sure that kid is having fun and enjoying the process. And if they are not, they need to tap into that and let them stop.\u201d \n\n\n\nThat way, if the child doesn\u2019t get the job (and odds are that they won\u2019t), there\u2019s no sense of rejection, or being made to feel like they\u2019re not talented or don\u2019t have something that someone else does.\n\n\n\nUltimately, the Best Thing To Do Is Stress the Show and Not the Business\n\n\n\n\u201cNone of this is rejection,\u201d Rosen reiterates, \u201cand if you\u2019re using that word, or if that child is feeling that somebody in the process is mishandling the discussion or the situation, it has to be turned around to focus on fun.\u201d\n\n\n\nAt this age, it has to be about fun. That\u2019s far and away the most important thing. It\u2019s about creating the right conditions for opportunity, to learn, and to enjoy performance. It\u2019s not about creating a career. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLooking for acting opportunities for your child?\n\n\n\nBrowse current:\n\n\n\n\nKids Casting Calls\n\n\n\nCommercial Auditions\n\n\n\nLos Angeles Casting Calls\n\n\n\nFeature Film Casting Calls\n\nThe post How to Get Your Child Into Acting: A Parent’s Real-World Starting Point appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-19T09:43:36-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T09:43:39-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/iStock-1601514686-scaled.jpg", "tags": [ "Acting 101", "Acting Advice", "Career and Craft" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=328667", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/netflix-black-rabbit-casting-director-alexa-fogel-interview/", "title": "Alexa Fogel on Casting Netflix\u2019s \u2018Black Rabbit\u2019 and Building Complex Characters", "content_html": "\nAlexa Fogel has been nominated for 15 Emmys and won three, and it won\u2019t be a surprise if she\u2019s nominated again this year for her work in the Netflix limited series Black Rabbit.
\n\n\n\nStarring Jason Bateman and Jude Law, the show follows a restaurateur who sees everything he\u2019s built threatened when he lets his troubled brother back into his life. Bateman plays against type as the bad seed brother, while Law shines as a man fighting his own demons.
\n\n\n\nFogel spoke to us from her home in Maine.
\n\n\n\nAs I understand it, Jude brought it to Jason’s company. I think they figured out internally who’s gonna play which brother. It flipped on the heads of people’s expectations in the best way.
\n\n\n\nThe world is my oyster. (Laughs)
\n\n\n\nI went into Oz and The Wire with that idea. Idris Elba and Eamonn Walker and Dominic West. For a long time, I\u2019ve just tried to look at the essence of characters through the essence of what actors can bring to it, whether they’re mostly theater actors or whatever. It was harder to do then, because crossing oceans, tapes having to go in the mail, but it’s a little bit easier now.
\n\n\n\nI think because Jason and I talked about certain things, Sope’s character, because he was an international star, could be almost anything, and he’s an actor I’ve loved for ages. Slow Horses, Gangs of London and the Nigerian film, His House.
\n\n\n\nInterestingly, Amaka had never auditioned for me before. I knew her work, but she was always working. And I think again, [for] a chef, you’re looking for certain qualities, She can come from anywhere to be successful. Once we had both of them, we also talked about the fact that they couldn’t both be British.
\n\n\n\nSo we had to decide which one of them was going to be the American character, and I felt like the the rock star of it all lent itself to the British of it all. Also, Amaka\u2019s American accent was really good. (Laughs)
\n\n\n\nIt depends entirely on the role. In the case of Sope, his presence is so singular, that’s what that character needed. And Amaka\u2019s real female strength, being someone who’s running a kitchen, it’s like casting someone in the military.
\n\n\n\nIt’s hard to find. I’m not targeting somebody who’s foreign. I didn’t just see people from [far] away. I just know the qualities that I need to find.
\n\n\n\nWe had Don Harvey on The Deuce. The great thing about working with Jason is he loves actors and he appreciates careers, and so if you show him somebody like Don and you correlate between the work and my enthusiasm, he gets it.
\n\n\n\nI also think when you’re working on gritty piece like this, and you’re looking for a level of heightened authenticity, you need people who can really do that. Don is a master. For Forrest Weber, that role as well as the role of Lou, there was a sign language component to that audition process, so that separated people out very quickly, because we also sent auditions to Troy and his consultant to make sure that things were authentic.
\n\n\n\nI didn\u2019t, and he\u2019s wonderful. It\u2019s just my good luck. I mean, it’s never lightning in a bottle. It’s a process. Like anything that is specialized, you’re going in a direction that’s very specific, so you see a lot of people, and you need one part of it to work, and then you also need another part of it to work, which is acting, and all these things have to alchemize.
\n\n\n\nIt’s not really about, \u201cI can’t believe I didn’t know him before.\u201d It’s that all of these things in this moment in time met. I say this all the time, but you only need one.
\n\n\n\nForrest had less actual experience than a lot of other people coming in, but he had all of those qualities. He was teamed up with Chris Coy, who I\u2019ve cast many times. He’s so seasoned and he’s so generous, and they were really partners in this.
\n\n\n\nThat was an amazing professional marriage, and I think Chris’ part got a little bit bigger, as I understand it, but for Forrest, I’m sure it was a great ongoing lesson of how to work on set, how to do everything.
\n\n\n\nOne of the things that works well on the show are the smaller parts. One specific example is the Wall Street Guy in episode 2, whose behavior at the blackjack table costs Vince $150,000.
\n\n\n\nI did this with Kathryn Zamora-Benson, and we take that really seriously in terms of maintaining tone, [and] everything we do. Some of it’s instinctual. You know that when it’s right, it’s right. You see people, and I try to never show people to my collaborators, that I wouldn’t be happy with them being cast. Y
\n\n\n\nou want it to be a range, but it can work in one way or another within the tone of the show. I think that’s what you’re doing with the one to five lines in the scene, and really understanding what the scene is trying to say.
\n\n\n\nSo much of acting seems to be about persistence. Have there been actors who auditioned for you multiple times before finally landing the right role?
\n\n\n\nA long time ago, I used to be a little embarrassed about bringing actors in for for tiny things, small roles. I feel like we’re always respectful, we’re always happy to have them there.
\n\n\n\nThe reality is, people want to work on good stuff, especially in New York. I don’t feel that way anymore. Because we’re all there to do a job.
\n\n\n\nThere\u2019s so many different worlds in this story, some of which never really overlap.
\n\n\n\nThat was really fun about it for me. I was casting the kitchen, and then I was casting the front of house, and then I was casting upstairs, and they do interact, but they’re slightly different worlds. Then there’s the creepy people, and Anna [played by Abbey Lee] and the people that interact with her.
\n\n\n\nIt’s a big cast, but you have to understand the function of character and tone. All of the ways the characters fit in with each other is critical. But each component of the restaurant world, and then obviously what happens in the criminal aspect, is really fun.
\nThe post Alexa Fogel on Casting Netflix\u2019s ‘Black Rabbit’ and Building Complex Characters appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "Alexa Fogel has been nominated for 15 Emmys and won three, and it won\u2019t be a surprise if she\u2019s nominated again this year for her work in the Netflix limited series Black Rabbit. \n\n\n\nStarring Jason Bateman and Jude Law, the show follows a restaurateur who sees everything he\u2019s built threatened when he lets his troubled brother back into his life. Bateman plays against type as the bad seed brother, while Law shines as a man fighting his own demons.\n\n\n\nFogel spoke to us from her home in Maine.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nAlexa Fogel prioritized authenticity and emotional specificity over nationality, casting actors based on the essence they brought to each role.\n\n\n\nBlack Rabbit blends emerging talent with seasoned character actors to create a grounded, layered world across the show\u2019s many intersecting social circles.\n\n\n\nThe casting process emphasized collaboration, chemistry, and tone in roles involving sign language and highly specific character dynamics.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWere Jason and Jude on board before you came to cast it? I know they\u2019re both EPs on it.\n\n\n\nAs I understand it, Jude brought it to Jason’s company. I think they figured out internally who’s gonna play which brother. It flipped on the heads of people’s expectations in the best way. \n\n\n\nI noticed that there is a distinctly foreign aspect to the cast. There’s a lot of Australian and British people in it. \n\n\n\nThe world is my oyster. (Laughs)\n\n\n\nI’m fascinated by the international scope of casting now. Do you go into it with the idea of, let’s just open it up to the world?\n\n\n\nI went into Oz and The Wire with that idea. Idris Elba and Eamonn Walker and Dominic West. For a long time, I\u2019ve just tried to look at the essence of characters through the essence of what actors can bring to it, whether they’re mostly theater actors or whatever. It was harder to do then, because crossing oceans, tapes having to go in the mail, but it’s a little bit easier now. \n\n\n\nLet\u2019s start with Sope and Amaka, both of whom really pop off the screen.\n\n\n\nI think because Jason and I talked about certain things, Sope’s character, because he was an international star, could be almost anything, and he’s an actor I’ve loved for ages. Slow Horses, Gangs of London and the Nigerian film, His House. \n\n\n\nInterestingly, Amaka had never auditioned for me before. I knew her work, but she was always working. And I think again, [for] a chef, you’re looking for certain qualities, She can come from anywhere to be successful. Once we had both of them, we also talked about the fact that they couldn’t both be British. \n\n\n\nSo we had to decide which one of them was going to be the American character, and I felt like the the rock star of it all lent itself to the British of it all. Also, Amaka\u2019s American accent was really good. (Laughs)\n\n\n\nDo you find that international actors bring something extra to a role?\n\n\n\nIt depends entirely on the role. In the case of Sope, his presence is so singular, that’s what that character needed. And Amaka\u2019s real female strength, being someone who’s running a kitchen, it’s like casting someone in the military. \n\n\n\nIt’s hard to find. I’m not targeting somebody who’s foreign. I didn’t just see people from [far] away. I just know the qualities that I need to find.\n\n\n\nOne of the things that\u2019s really interesting about the cast is the mix of new faces and more established ones.\n\n\n\nWe had Don Harvey on The Deuce. The great thing about working with Jason is he loves actors and he appreciates careers, and so if you show him somebody like Don and you correlate between the work and my enthusiasm, he gets it. \n\n\n\nI also think when you’re working on gritty piece like this, and you’re looking for a level of heightened authenticity, you need people who can really do that. Don is a master. For Forrest Weber, that role as well as the role of Lou, there was a sign language component to that audition process, so that separated people out very quickly, because we also sent auditions to Troy and his consultant to make sure that things were authentic. \n\n\n\nDid you know Forrest before? \n\n\n\nI didn\u2019t, and he\u2019s wonderful. It\u2019s just my good luck. I mean, it’s never lightning in a bottle. It’s a process. Like anything that is specialized, you’re going in a direction that’s very specific, so you see a lot of people, and you need one part of it to work, and then you also need another part of it to work, which is acting, and all these things have to alchemize. \n\n\n\nIt’s not really about, \u201cI can’t believe I didn’t know him before.\u201d It’s that all of these things in this moment in time met. I say this all the time, but you only need one. \n\n\n\nForrest had less actual experience than a lot of other people coming in, but he had all of those qualities. He was teamed up with Chris Coy, who I\u2019ve cast many times. He’s so seasoned and he’s so generous, and they were really partners in this. \n\n\n\nThat was an amazing professional marriage, and I think Chris’ part got a little bit bigger, as I understand it, but for Forrest, I’m sure it was a great ongoing lesson of how to work on set, how to do everything.\n\n\n\nOne of the things that works well on the show are the smaller parts. One specific example is the Wall Street Guy in episode 2, whose behavior at the blackjack table costs Vince $150,000.\n\n\n\nI did this with Kathryn Zamora-Benson, and we take that really seriously in terms of maintaining tone, [and] everything we do. Some of it’s instinctual. You know that when it’s right, it’s right. You see people, and I try to never show people to my collaborators, that I wouldn’t be happy with them being cast. Y\n\n\n\nou want it to be a range, but it can work in one way or another within the tone of the show. I think that’s what you’re doing with the one to five lines in the scene, and really understanding what the scene is trying to say.\n\n\n\nSo much of acting seems to be about persistence. Have there been actors who auditioned for you multiple times before finally landing the right role?\n\n\n\nA long time ago, I used to be a little embarrassed about bringing actors in for for tiny things, small roles. I feel like we’re always respectful, we’re always happy to have them there. \n\n\n\nThe reality is, people want to work on good stuff, especially in New York. I don’t feel that way anymore. Because we’re all there to do a job. \n\n\n\nThere\u2019s so many different worlds in this story, some of which never really overlap. \n\n\n\nThat was really fun about it for me. I was casting the kitchen, and then I was casting the front of house, and then I was casting upstairs, and they do interact, but they’re slightly different worlds. Then there’s the creepy people, and Anna [played by Abbey Lee] and the people that interact with her. \n\n\n\nIt’s a big cast, but you have to understand the function of character and tone. All of the ways the characters fit in with each other is critical. But each component of the restaurant world, and then obviously what happens in the criminal aspect, is really fun.\nThe post Alexa Fogel on Casting Netflix\u2019s ‘Black Rabbit’ and Building Complex Characters appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-15T09:20:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-22T11:21:32-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Black-Rabbit-Jude-Law-Jason-Bateman.jpg", "tags": [ "Casting Directors", "Interviews" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=327268", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/netflix-beef-casting-director-jeanie-bacharach-season-2/", "title": "Jeanie Bacharach on Casting Netflix\u2019s \u2018Beef\u2019 Season 2, Korean Talent, & Creative Risk-Taking", "content_html": "\nJeanie Bacharach is a three-time Emmy-winning casting director whose credits include The Bear, Black Mirror, and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.
\n\n\n\nShe joins Season 2 of Beef following the show\u2019s breakout Emmy-winning first season. The season follows a pair of couples, one played by Oscar Isaac and Carey Mulligan, the other by Charles Melton and Cailee Spaeny. The show also stars Oscar-winning Youn Yuh-jung, Song Kang-ho, Seoyeon Jang, William Fichtner, and Mikaela Hoover.
\n\n\n\nAll episodes are streaming on Netflix. Bacharach spoke to us from her LA office.
\n\n\n\nIt always just comes back to character, and can I relate to these characters? Can I see the humanity in these characters? What are they saying about the world we’re living in, or the world we once lived in? If I’m going to do a good job casting the show, I have to have a way into these characters and understand them, even if they do awful things.
\n\n\n\nSonny’s just such a beautiful writer, and as terrible as these characters might be to each other, I think the thing that makes people uncomfortable watching the show is [that] there’s truth in what they’re doing, and things that we can see in our own lives that make us uncomfortable. I think that relatability and humanity is really key for me.
\n\n\n\nSuccess is a magnet, but it’s also tremendous pressure, and the expectations are so high, but it certainly makes casting easier. People responded so strongly to the first season, and the way Sonny works is also so collaborative that I think that’s a huge draw for creative talent. Charles and Cailee were already on board when I came on, and the conversation with Oscar had begun. And then Carey\u2019s as well.
\n\n\n\nYeah, they\u2019re just dream actors and I can\u2019t take any credit. But when I talked to Sonny about possibly joining for the season, he had told me that there were going to be some Korean characters that were very important to the storytelling. But again, that’s where the success of the first season certainly comes into play, and people wanting to be part of it.
\n\n\n\nSeoyeon Jang was someone who came through the audition process. The Eunice character is a tricky one, because you have to believe both that Chairwoman Park would choose this person to represent her, to speak for her, to interpret for her, to be the face of her, and yet there needed to be something you weren’t quite sure about. Seoyeon just brought this wonderful sort of mystery. You’re drawn to her, and yet you don’t really quite know who she is.
\n\n\n\nThat was a fun list of actors to come up with, because Troy is just such a great character. And yes, tonally, it’s tricky. Both he and Mikaela did a lot of exploring and working with Sonny on those characters.
\n\n\n\nHonestly, that’s the wonderful, collaborative experience you hope for. Sonny is so open, and so loves the process that we just developed a trust right away, and that is key to any creative relationship. Most people I\u2019ve worked with are open to it, but you have a studio and a network that are, as well.
\n\n\n\nIdeally in a collaborative relationship, you can say, \u201cI’m going to try something wild here. It may not work, but are you open to seeing it?” And, at the same time, I have to also be willing to hear, \u201cInteresting thought,\u201d or, \u201cNice, but it doesn’t work for A, B or C reasons,\u201d or, \u201cYeah, it’s fun here, but where the character is going, or what the story is that I need to tell, it doesn’t serve it right or it takes you out.\u201d
\n\n\n\nBut that give and take is, again, what you hope for and dream for in a creative environment. So, yes, I think so.
\n\n\n\nIt maybe started to happen when there was so much being produced that the more known quantities were being taken, and there was so much being made that people had to maybe become more open to newer faces and lesser-known people.
\n\n\n\nBut I’d like to think that people who are making things want to be open to it. It\u2019s also dependent on the studio or the network you’re working with in terms of how supported you’re feeling that way and how much pressure you’re under to deliver something.
\n\n\n\nOr how much you’re being squeezed in a different area, whereas you just have to get this done in order to do the 50 other things that you have to get to.
\n\n\n\nI mean, there’s no greater thrill than having this kind of crazy idea that actually comes to fruition. Or seeing an actor do something that you never really thought they could do, or haven\u2019t gotten to do that maybe they are capable of, but no one’s given them the opportunity to explore.
\n\n\n\nOr championing someone who’s been kicking around for a long time. The saying, \u201cRight role, right time\u201d is so great. They’ve so earned that moment, and they’re ready for it when it happens, too.
\nThe post Jeanie Bacharach on Casting Netflix\u2019s \u2018Beef\u2019 Season 2, Korean Talent, & Creative Risk-Taking appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "Jeanie Bacharach is a three-time Emmy-winning casting director whose credits include The Bear, Black Mirror, and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.\n\n\n\nShe joins Season 2 of Beef following the show\u2019s breakout Emmy-winning first season. The season follows a pair of couples, one played by Oscar Isaac and Carey Mulligan, the other by Charles Melton and Cailee Spaeny. The show also stars Oscar-winning Youn Yuh-jung, Song Kang-ho, Seoyeon Jang, William Fichtner, and Mikaela Hoover.\n\n\n\nAll episodes are streaming on Netflix. Bacharach spoke to us from her LA office.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nJeanie Bacharach says successful casting always starts with finding the humanity and relatability within even the darkest characters.\n\n\n\nThe massive success of \u2018Beef\u2019 Season 1 helped attract top-tier talent like Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, and acclaimed Korean actors to Season 2.\n\n\n\nBacharach believes the best creative collaborations happen when directors, studios, and casting teams stay open to unexpected actors and bold casting choices.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nKnowing the subject matter and how difficult it is, how does that affect your work?\n\n\n\nIt always just comes back to character, and can I relate to these characters? Can I see the humanity in these characters? What are they saying about the world we’re living in, or the world we once lived in? If I’m going to do a good job casting the show, I have to have a way into these characters and understand them, even if they do awful things. \n\n\n\nSonny’s just such a beautiful writer, and as terrible as these characters might be to each other, I think the thing that makes people uncomfortable watching the show is [that] there’s truth in what they’re doing, and things that we can see in our own lives that make us uncomfortable. I think that relatability and humanity is really key for me. \n\n\n\nComing off the success of the first season, is there something to that success that makes your job easier?\n\n\n\nSuccess is a magnet, but it’s also tremendous pressure, and the expectations are so high, but it certainly makes casting easier. People responded so strongly to the first season, and the way Sonny works is also so collaborative that I think that’s a huge draw for creative talent. Charles and Cailee were already on board when I came on, and the conversation with Oscar had begun. And then Carey\u2019s as well. \n\n\n\nWas there a conversation about what kind of Korean actors you were looking for?\n\n\n\nYeah, they\u2019re just dream actors and I can\u2019t take any credit. But when I talked to Sonny about possibly joining for the season, he had told me that there were going to be some Korean characters that were very important to the storytelling. But again, that’s where the success of the first season certainly comes into play, and people wanting to be part of it. \n\n\n\nSeoyeon Jang was someone who came through the audition process. The Eunice character is a tricky one, because you have to believe both that Chairwoman Park would choose this person to represent her, to speak for her, to interpret for her, to be the face of her, and yet there needed to be something you weren’t quite sure about. Seoyeon just brought this wonderful sort of mystery. You’re drawn to her, and yet you don’t really quite know who she is.\n\n\n\nAny time Bill Fichtner shows up, I\u2019m thrilled. Especially as a character like Troy, who walks a delicate line that almost dips into parody. \n\n\n\nThat was a fun list of actors to come up with, because Troy is just such a great character. And yes, tonally, it’s tricky. Both he and Mikaela did a lot of exploring and working with Sonny on those characters.\n\n\n\nHow much leeway do you have in bringing in lesser-seen talent?\u00a0\n\n\n\nHonestly, that’s the wonderful, collaborative experience you hope for. Sonny is so open, and so loves the process that we just developed a trust right away, and that is key to any creative relationship. Most people I\u2019ve worked with are open to it, but you have a studio and a network that are, as well.\n\n\n\nAren\u2019t we seeing more of that from creators? The willingness to see things outside of what they\u2019d envisioned?\n\n\n\nIdeally in a collaborative relationship, you can say, \u201cI’m going to try something wild here. It may not work, but are you open to seeing it?” And, at the same time, I have to also be willing to hear, \u201cInteresting thought,\u201d or, \u201cNice, but it doesn’t work for A, B or C reasons,\u201d or, \u201cYeah, it’s fun here, but where the character is going, or what the story is that I need to tell, it doesn’t serve it right or it takes you out.\u201d \n\n\n\nBut that give and take is, again, what you hope for and dream for in a creative environment. So, yes, I think so. \n\n\n\nWhen do you think that started happening?\n\n\n\nIt maybe started to happen when there was so much being produced that the more known quantities were being taken, and there was so much being made that people had to maybe become more open to newer faces and lesser-known people. \n\n\n\nBut I’d like to think that people who are making things want to be open to it. It\u2019s also dependent on the studio or the network you’re working with in terms of how supported you’re feeling that way and how much pressure you’re under to deliver something. \n\n\n\nOr how much you’re being squeezed in a different area, whereas you just have to get this done in order to do the 50 other things that you have to get to. \n\n\n\nDo actors come in with bold choices and make you rethink what you had in mind?\n\n\n\nI mean, there’s no greater thrill than having this kind of crazy idea that actually comes to fruition. Or seeing an actor do something that you never really thought they could do, or haven\u2019t gotten to do that maybe they are capable of, but no one’s given them the opportunity to explore. \n\n\n\nOr championing someone who’s been kicking around for a long time. The saying, \u201cRight role, right time\u201d is so great. They’ve so earned that moment, and they’re ready for it when it happens, too. \nThe post Jeanie Bacharach on Casting Netflix\u2019s \u2018Beef\u2019 Season 2, Korean Talent, & Creative Risk-Taking appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-13T09:24:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-22T11:21:45-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/beefs2.webp", "tags": [ "Casting Directors", "Interviews" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=324631", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/how-to-audition-internationally-casting-advice-luci-lenox/", "title": "How to Audition for International Casting with \u2018The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon\u2019 Casting Director Luci Lenox", "content_html": "\nLuci Lenox has been a staple of Barcelona\u2019s film scene for nearly 30 years, and has an international profile that most professionals would kill for.
\n\n\n\nShe\u2019s worked on shows as diverse as The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon, The Crown and Victoria, and movies like Den of Thieves 2: Pantera and Hustle. One of her latest projects, the crime thriller Islands, hits theaters January 30. She spoke to us from her home office in Barcelona.
\n\n\n\nI’m very much a product of my time and my generation. I’m Irish. Ireland was not a wealthy European country like it is now. I went to college in the U.K., and then I did my junior year abroad in Barcelona in the \u201980s, and it was an amazing city. It still is, but it was a really fun time. It was just before the Olympics had come here, there was a real buzz, and it was meant to be just one of those great years of your life.
\n\n\n\nI finished my degree, and had a very clear idea that I wanted to work in NGOs and make the world a better place. But there was no work, and I didn’t realize that I wanted to help people who were poor, not become poor, but I quickly found out that what I was going to do was going to make me poor, which had never entered into my plans.
\n\n\n\nI ended up living in Italy for a bit, then came back here. I didn’t really want to teach English, which is what a lot of the people do when they move to another city, so I started running nightclubs, which I did for a long time. I set up some clubs with some other friends of mine, and they were very successful.
\n\n\n\nI was very lucky, because I got to know everybody in the city. I did the guest list, and I was also allowed to give as many free drinks away as I wanted, so I was very popular. That’s when I met actors. I met filmmakers. I met people in the film industry.
\n\n\n\nI love problem-solving, the idea that every project is a problem to be solved. I like people. I also like weird people. I like brave people. I feel that people who work in the film industry usually are brave in the sense that they’re not doing something that’s logical. That’s why I love actors, and I love people who are left fielders.
\n\n\n\nAn actor is somebody who everybody told them, \u201cDon’t do that,\u201d and they do it anyway. And they have passion. I love story. I love narrative, and I really enjoy reading scripts. I’m also quite nerdy. I like technology, and I like Excel. I actually like putting lists together and doing the deals. I’m so happy because I actually love every single part of my job, except two bits.
\n\n\n\nOne is letting actors know that they didn’t get the role. I find that very difficult, because I believe, and I really wish that actors knew this, that we as casting directors never put forward anybody who we don’t believe in. I’m happy with whoever gets the role, and I think they forget that we’re not over them. The second one is when I don’t get paid and I have to chase production companies.
\n\n\n\nYeah, totally. I mean, I’m very lucky. I always say that I owe my entire career to the fact that Pep didn’t speak English, and still doesn\u2019t, because his generation studied French here. If he had [spoken] English, he wouldn’t have made me a joint casting director with him as early in my career. It was a door opener.
\n\n\n\nThere are plenty of other people who speak English now, but there weren’t so many when I started. It’s also an advantage to have a different perspective. I know who an American thinks is good looking, and that’s very different from who a Spanish person thinks is good looking. Or humor, or energy. It’s also the ability to know the different worlds, see things in different ways.
\n\n\n\nIt depends. I know actors from all over the world. There are some fundamental differences in terms of how people are trained. For example, Russian actors, when they go to drama school, they go eight hours a day, and they have to learn lines outside of those eight hours.
\n\n\n\nThey come out extremely well trained, but they’re always looking for somebody to tell them that they’ve done a good job. Whereas American actors are much more independent, more self validating. I’ve asked actors from over 75 countries their origin story, and it nearly always is the same. It goes back to childhood. It goes back to wanting to be seen. It goes back to be wanting to be heard.
\n\n\n\nThe other thing is anxiety, which is something that I think we need to talk more about in the industry. I think a lot of actors suffer from anxiety, but they found peace at that moment when they’re acting, because once you’re properly acting, that external voice is switched off, and you’re in the moment. I think it’s very important that if you are an actor who suffers from anxiety, you think, \u201cOh, I found this thing that gives me joy and peace,\u201d [and] to treat the anxiety as well, because [it] makes it worse when you get rejected for a role.
\n\n\n\nIt doesn’t matter whether they’re in Hawaii, Russia, France, Mozambique. It’s the same thing, and it’s very important for people to know that I think actors from all over the world have so much in common, but it’s their differences that make them interesting.
\n\n\n\nThat’s what I meant. It’s because you’re not you anymore, so it’s all switched off and you’re just 100% being somebody else, and that’s great, but you can’t take that home. You can’t take that into your relationship with your friends, your family, your partners. That’s where some actors struggle. Find the balance, so that you remember the joy.
\n\n\n\nWhen they receive the audition from me, sit for 10 minutes before they start preparing, before they start investigating, before they do all the work that needs to be done. Just sit, have a coffee, have a tea, do something, and think, \u201cWhy am I right for this role?\u201d
\n\n\n\nWhat is it that made Luci’s office ask me to come in, and connect with why they’re totally perfect for the role, because then all the preparation will be done from a position of self confidence, and when you do it from self confidence, you’re not out there trying to prove something.
\n\n\n\nRemember, you don’t have to prove to me that you can act. You just have to connect with this wonderful world and this character that I have invited you to play with.
\nThe post How to Audition for International Casting with ‘The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’ Casting Director Luci Lenox appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "Luci Lenox has been a staple of Barcelona\u2019s film scene for nearly 30 years, and has an international profile that most professionals would kill for. \n\n\n\nShe\u2019s worked on shows as diverse as The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon, The Crown and Victoria, and movies like Den of Thieves 2: Pantera and Hustle. One of her latest projects, the crime thriller Islands, hits theaters January 30. She spoke to us from her home office in Barcelona. \n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nWhen auditioning internationally, anchor yourself in why you are the right fit, because confidence travels further than trying to match someone else\u2019s idea of the role.\n\n\n\nYour cultural background and perspective aren\u2019t obstacles, they\u2019re often the exact lens casting is looking for in global projects.\n\n\n\nFocus on clarity, presence, and emotional truth, since those are the universal currencies that connect with casting directors across languages and borders.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHow did you get into casting in the first place?\n\n\n\nI’m very much a product of my time and my generation. I’m Irish. Ireland was not a wealthy European country like it is now. I went to college in the U.K., and then I did my junior year abroad in Barcelona in the \u201980s, and it was an amazing city. It still is, but it was a really fun time. It was just before the Olympics had come here, there was a real buzz, and it was meant to be just one of those great years of your life. \n\n\n\nI finished my degree, and had a very clear idea that I wanted to work in NGOs and make the world a better place. But there was no work, and I didn’t realize that I wanted to help people who were poor, not become poor, but I quickly found out that what I was going to do was going to make me poor, which had never entered into my plans. \n\n\n\nWhen did you end up back in Barcelona?\n\n\n\nI ended up living in Italy for a bit, then came back here. I didn’t really want to teach English, which is what a lot of the people do when they move to another city, so I started running nightclubs, which I did for a long time. I set up some clubs with some other friends of mine, and they were very successful. \n\n\n\nI was very lucky, because I got to know everybody in the city. I did the guest list, and I was also allowed to give as many free drinks away as I wanted, so I was very popular. That’s when I met actors. I met filmmakers. I met people in the film industry. \n\n\n\nWhat was it about casting that spoke to you?\n\n\n\nI love problem-solving, the idea that every project is a problem to be solved. I like people. I also like weird people. I like brave people. I feel that people who work in the film industry usually are brave in the sense that they’re not doing something that’s logical. That’s why I love actors, and I love people who are left fielders.\n\n\n\nAn actor is somebody who everybody told them, \u201cDon’t do that,\u201d and they do it anyway. And they have passion. I love story. I love narrative, and I really enjoy reading scripts. I’m also quite nerdy. I like technology, and I like Excel. I actually like putting lists together and doing the deals. I’m so happy because I actually love every single part of my job, except two bits.\n\n\n\nWhich are the two bits?\n\n\n\nOne is letting actors know that they didn’t get the role. I find that very difficult, because I believe, and I really wish that actors knew this, that we as casting directors never put forward anybody who we don’t believe in. I’m happy with whoever gets the role, and I think they forget that we’re not over them. The second one is when I don’t get paid and I have to chase production companies.\n\n\n\nDo you find that you have an advantage working in Barcelona and being multilingual?\n\n\n\nYeah, totally. I mean, I’m very lucky. I always say that I owe my entire career to the fact that Pep didn’t speak English, and still doesn\u2019t, because his generation studied French here. If he had [spoken] English, he wouldn’t have made me a joint casting director with him as early in my career. It was a door opener. \n\n\n\nThere are plenty of other people who speak English now, but there weren’t so many when I started. It’s also an advantage to have a different perspective. I know who an American thinks is good looking, and that’s very different from who a Spanish person thinks is good looking. Or humor, or energy. It’s also the ability to know the different worlds, see things in different ways.\n\n\n\nDo you find that Spanish actors are different from English-speaking actors?\n\n\n\nIt depends. I know actors from all over the world. There are some fundamental differences in terms of how people are trained. For example, Russian actors, when they go to drama school, they go eight hours a day, and they have to learn lines outside of those eight hours. \n\n\n\nThey come out extremely well trained, but they’re always looking for somebody to tell them that they’ve done a good job. Whereas American actors are much more independent, more self validating. I’ve asked actors from over 75 countries their origin story, and it nearly always is the same. It goes back to childhood. It goes back to wanting to be seen. It goes back to be wanting to be heard. \n\n\n\nThe other thing is anxiety, which is something that I think we need to talk more about in the industry. I think a lot of actors suffer from anxiety, but they found peace at that moment when they’re acting, because once you’re properly acting, that external voice is switched off, and you’re in the moment. I think it’s very important that if you are an actor who suffers from anxiety, you think, \u201cOh, I found this thing that gives me joy and peace,\u201d [and] to treat the anxiety as well, because [it] makes it worse when you get rejected for a role. \n\n\n\nIt doesn’t matter whether they’re in Hawaii, Russia, France, Mozambique. It’s the same thing, and it’s very important for people to know that I think actors from all over the world have so much in common, but it’s their differences that make them interesting.\n\n\n\nThere\u2019s also the escape and being able to inhabit the world of someone else.\n\n\n\nThat’s what I meant. It’s because you’re not you anymore, so it’s all switched off and you’re just 100% being somebody else, and that’s great, but you can’t take that home. You can’t take that into your relationship with your friends, your family, your partners. That’s where some actors struggle. Find the balance, so that you remember the joy.\n\n\n\nWhat piece of advice would you give to somebody coming in to audition for you?\n\n\n\nWhen they receive the audition from me, sit for 10 minutes before they start preparing, before they start investigating, before they do all the work that needs to be done. Just sit, have a coffee, have a tea, do something, and think, \u201cWhy am I right for this role?\u201d \n\n\n\nWhat is it that made Luci’s office ask me to come in, and connect with why they’re totally perfect for the role, because then all the preparation will be done from a position of self confidence, and when you do it from self confidence, you’re not out there trying to prove something. \n\n\n\nRemember, you don’t have to prove to me that you can act. You just have to connect with this wonderful world and this character that I have invited you to play with.\nThe post How to Audition for International Casting with ‘The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’ Casting Director Luci Lenox appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-05-05T09:05:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-05T12:43:46-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Luci_Lenox_03.jpg", "tags": [ "Acting Advice" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=322414", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/how-to-spot-ai-casting-scams-protect-likeness/", "title": "AI and Acting: How to Spot Casting Scams and Protect Your Likeness Before You Sign", "content_html": "\nThere\u2019s a lot of talk around AI and how it’s going to impact the industry. With a lot of noise out there, I did a deep dive so you don’t have to.
\n\n\n\nThe potential of AI replacing actors, such as background roles and extras, was a major part of the last round of SAG-AFTRA contract negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Pictures and Television Producers (AMPTP).
\n\n\n\nThis raises another important question: How will Hollywood protect the people lower down the ladder, whose jobs could be more vulnerable to artificial intelligence? Actors need to be proactive and raise their awareness of how to protect themselves.
\n\n\n\nKnow Your Rights
\n\n\n\nLegally, no one is allowed to use your image unless you have given them consent to do so. Thus, every contract you sign must be examined closely to ensure there is no AI language in it, and that you are not signing away license to use your image.
\n\n\n\nAcquire Legal Representation When Needed
\n\n\n\nWhenever possible, have a lawyer look over your contract. There are plenty of attorneys who are willing to work with actors for discounted rates. Simple internet searches can help you connect with someone who will help. However, if for some reason you are unable to work with an attorney, the following suggestions can help you stay protected:
\n\n\n\nBe On The Lookout For
\n\n\n\nLanguage might include phrases and clauses like, \u201ctechnology now known or hereafter devised,\u201d \u201cdigital simulation,\u201d or something similar, including requests to allow your page to be scanned. Any reference to technology at all should be red-flagged and checked to make sure there is nothing hidden that might lead a performer to unknowingly sign their rights away.
\n\n\n\nCheck in with SAG-AFTRA
\n\n\n\nThe union can be a valuable resource for actors, advising members on how to protect themselves from the encroachment of artificial intelligence. They also sure that producers and production companies do not cross a line into phasing out human performers.
\n\n\n\nSAG-AFTRA said in a statement, \u201cOur commitment is simple and our position is unwavering: performance must remain human-centered. AI can enhance creativity, but it must never replace it. AI use must be transparent, consensual and compensated.\u201d
\n\n\n\nThe Three Cs
\n\n\n\nWritten into the new agreement between SAG-AFTRA and the AMPTP are certain protections and guardrails, known as Consent, Compensation, Control. Clear consent to use a member\u2019s name, voice and likeness. Fair compensation for the use and using economic equivalency as a deterrent to synthetic performers. Control over performances and replicating, to the best extent possible, the in-person work experience.
\n\n\n\nBe Specific
\n\n\n\nIf you do enter into a job that involves a digital likeness, make sure contracts have clear limitations. This means the scope of use, with a defined project, on defined platforms and campaigns. It also means time limits, approval rights before any likeness is repurposed, and separate compensation for AI training, reproduction or derivative works.
\n\n\n\nProtect Yourself
\n\n\n\nWhen it comes to protecting yourself, SAG-AFTRA advises you never to allow a digital replica of your likeness to be used for any performance or union-covered purpose unless a SAG-AFTRA agreement is in place. If you\u2019re uncertain about whether something is covered, contact SAG-AFTRA for guidance.
\n\n\n\nThat includes making sure a standard contract does not include any clauses about digital replication and perpetuity, and never lose control over the use of your likeness. In other words, if someone offers you the chance to sell your digital likeness for any purpose, the answer should be \u201cno.\u201d
\nThe post AI and Acting: How to Spot Casting Scams and Protect Your Likeness Before You Sign appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "There\u2019s a lot of talk around AI and how it’s going to impact the industry. With a lot of noise out there, I did a deep dive so you don’t have to.\n\n\n\nThe potential of AI replacing actors, such as background roles and extras, was a major part of the last round of SAG-AFTRA contract negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Pictures and Television Producers (AMPTP).\n\n\n\nThis raises another important question: How will Hollywood protect the people lower down the ladder, whose jobs could be more vulnerable to artificial intelligence? Actors need to be proactive and raise their awareness of how to protect themselves. \n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nMany fake casting calls and talent agency scams now hide risky AI clauses that can give away your digital likeness without proper consent or pay.\n\n\n\nSAG-AFTRA protections center on Consent, Compensation, and Control, making union guidance critical when reviewing contracts.\n\n\n\nSticking to legitimate casting websites such as Casting Networks is one of the strongest defenses actors have against casting scams.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nKnow Your Rights\n\n\n\nLegally, no one is allowed to use your image unless you have given them consent to do so. Thus, every contract you sign must be examined closely to ensure there is no AI language in it, and that you are not signing away license to use your image.\n\n\n\nAcquire Legal Representation When Needed\n\n\n\nWhenever possible, have a lawyer look over your contract. There are plenty of attorneys who are willing to work with actors for discounted rates. Simple internet searches can help you connect with someone who will help. However, if for some reason you are unable to work with an attorney, the following suggestions can help you stay protected: \n\n\n\nBe On The Lookout For \n\n\n\nLanguage might include phrases and clauses like, \u201ctechnology now known or hereafter devised,\u201d \u201cdigital simulation,\u201d or something similar, including requests to allow your page to be scanned. Any reference to technology at all should be red-flagged and checked to make sure there is nothing hidden that might lead a performer to unknowingly sign their rights away.\n\n\n\nCheck in with SAG-AFTRA\n\n\n\nThe union can be a valuable resource for actors, advising members on how to protect themselves from the encroachment of artificial intelligence. They also sure that producers and production companies do not cross a line into phasing out human performers.\n\n\n\nSAG-AFTRA said in a statement, \u201cOur commitment is simple and our position is unwavering: performance must remain human-centered. AI can enhance creativity, but it must never replace it. AI use must be transparent, consensual and compensated.\u201d\n\n\n\nThe Three Cs\n\n\n\nWritten into the new agreement between SAG-AFTRA and the AMPTP are certain protections and guardrails, known as Consent, Compensation, Control. Clear consent to use a member\u2019s name, voice and likeness. Fair compensation for the use and using economic equivalency as a deterrent to synthetic performers. Control over performances and replicating, to the best extent possible, the in-person work experience. \n\n\n\nBe Specific\n\n\n\nIf you do enter into a job that involves a digital likeness, make sure contracts have clear limitations. This means the scope of use, with a defined project, on defined platforms and campaigns. It also means time limits, approval rights before any likeness is repurposed, and separate compensation for AI training, reproduction or derivative works.\n\n\n\nProtect Yourself\n\n\n\nWhen it comes to protecting yourself, SAG-AFTRA advises you never to allow a digital replica of your likeness to be used for any performance or union-covered purpose unless a SAG-AFTRA agreement is in place. If you\u2019re uncertain about whether something is covered, contact SAG-AFTRA for guidance.\n\n\n\nThat includes making sure a standard contract does not include any clauses about digital replication and perpetuity, and never lose control over the use of your likeness. In other words, if someone offers you the chance to sell your digital likeness for any purpose, the answer should be \u201cno.\u201d\nThe post AI and Acting: How to Spot Casting Scams and Protect Your Likeness Before You Sign appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-04-30T09:11:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-04-30T10:03:06-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/sag-aftra-new-logo.webp", "tags": [ "Acting Advice", "Scams and Safety" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=321892", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/task-casting-director-avy-kaufman-interview-audition-tips/", "title": "Audition Preparation Tips from Avy Kaufman: Inside \u2018Task\u2019 and Her \u201cRelentless\u201d Push for Tom Pelphrey", "content_html": "\nA three-time Emmy winner (and 10-time nominee), Avy Kaufman has also been recognized by her peers with 52 Artios nominations and nine wins, over a career spanning more than three decades, and nearly 400 films and TV shows.
\n\n\n\nThe odds of her earning another Emmy nod this year are pretty high, judging from her work on HBO\u2019s Task. Created by Mare of Easttown\u2019s Brad Ingelsby and starring Mark Ruffalo, Tom Pelphrey and Emilia Jones, the show follows an FBI agent heading up a task force to put an end to a string of violent robberies led by an unsuspected family man.
\n\n\n\nKaufman talked to us from her New York office.
\n\n\n\nKey Insights
\n\n\n\nI was relentless. That’s the tricky thing about casting. I speak for myself only, but you read something and you get a feeling for it. It was important for me to have different voices tell this story, and Pelphrey was not a new name in the world, but I was relentless. I just felt like he could go toe to toe with Ruffalo.
\n\n\n\nAt first he wasn’t going to read, but they said he had to, so I begged his team. And he did. It was that simple.
\n\n\n\nI don’t think it’s an attitude, per se, for everybody. I feel that when some people feel like they’ve done it before. I feel that way sometimes if I’m asked to take a meeting and I’ve done it. It’s a tricky thing. I never say this, and I’m going to say this is now, you need an agent or a manager or whomever it is that\u2019s taking care of the talent to have a good conversation.
\n\n\n\nI was able to speak clearly with his team just to say why it’s important for this reason.
\n\n\n\nI had seen Alison in two British shows, and at first I was like, \u201cWait, is that the same person?\u201d Because she’s a chameleon. She read on a Zoom and everyone loved her. Same thing with Phoebe. Sam as well. If I’m lucky enough to get visas, I love to look at talent from all over the world.
\n\n\n\nIf they can have the proper accent and we can get a visa, that’s just fun for me personally. People don’t want me to do that most of the time, but it makes my job a lot of fun and curious and imaginative.
\n\n\n\nI’m going to recommend doing whatever you feel comfortable with. I just feel like that’s the one beautiful thing in seeing actors, is we can all feel when they’re comfortable. They just mold into the role.
\n\n\n\nYou never want to say this out loud, but there were choices, and the team really loved Emilia. When I saw what she did, I was so deeply proud of her. I mean, the relationship between her and Tom was so interesting and strong.
\n\n\n\nYou never know what it’s going to be like, y\u2019know? You read something and then they go off and shoot it for nine months, and then we get to see it two years later. Sometimes I’ll look at shows I’ve worked on and I’m going, \u201cGod, I don’t remember that character \u2026 \u201d (Laughs)\u00a0
\n\n\n\nIt\u2019s interesting, because I’m here to talk about one show, but there’s a show I worked on last year, where an actor in the movie passes on a role. I used to get upset, and I’m sure I still do because I take everything too personally, but if an actor passed on a role, I didn’t even want to share it with the director. I didn’t want to feel it.
\n\n\n\nIt’s taken me many years, but I feel that I have to trust if an actor passes on a role or accepts a role they’ve never done, it’s what they need to do. I have to trust that they know. We don’t know. It’s so hard to be an actor!
\n\n\n\nI don’t know how other people work. We just love actors because that\u2019s what we do.
\n\n\n\nIt’s interesting because I had done a show with Wagner Moura and Brian Tyree Henry [in Dope Thief] right before I did Task, and we were looking for similar characters [for the] motorcycle gangs. Bad boys. Dark characters. So it was just a deep search because I couldn’t use the people I had just used. Just auditioning a thousand people.
\n\n\n\nAnd the kids! I’ve [cast] a lot of kids in my time, and I love casting kids. You’ve got to cast close to the bone. You have to understand who this kid is. And even for Sam, I like to talk to the kids for a long time to get to know them to see if they are actually ready to do something like this.
\n\n\n\nThese are tough roles for a kid. Sam, especially because, to be kidnapped? But kids \u2026 it\u2019s about love. I think, hopefully, [with]\u00a0 human beings, animals, we follow the love. Hopefully, we follow the love and keep trust in there because he had to have some trust as well.
\n\n\n\nAnd life. You have to trust, you have to love, you have to do all of it, and it\u2019s all part of the same thing.
\nThe post Audition Preparation Tips from Avy Kaufman: Inside \u2018Task\u2019 and Her \u201cRelentless\u201d Push for Tom Pelphrey appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "A three-time Emmy winner (and 10-time nominee), Avy Kaufman has also been recognized by her peers with 52 Artios nominations and nine wins, over a career spanning more than three decades, and nearly 400 films and TV shows.\n\n\n\nThe odds of her earning another Emmy nod this year are pretty high, judging from her work on HBO\u2019s Task. Created by Mare of Easttown\u2019s Brad Ingelsby and starring Mark Ruffalo, Tom Pelphrey and Emilia Jones, the show follows an FBI agent heading up a task force to put an end to a string of violent robberies led by an unsuspected family man. \n\n\n\nKaufman talked to us from her New York office.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nCasting decisions are driven less by credits and more by whether an actor feels authentic and fully \u201cmolds\u201d into the role.\n\n\n\nKaufman emphasizes trust on both sides, believing actors know when to take risks, pass on roles, or step outside their type.\n\n\n\nAccess, persistence, and communication matter, as seen in her relentless push to get Tom Pelphrey to read for Task.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLet\u2019s start with [your decision to cast] Tom Pelphrey as Robbie.\n\n\n\nI was relentless. That’s the tricky thing about casting. I speak for myself only, but you read something and you get a feeling for it. It was important for me to have different voices tell this story, and Pelphrey was not a new name in the world, but I was relentless. I just felt like he could go toe to toe with Ruffalo.\n\n\n\nWhat was it that made you so relentless about him?\n\n\n\nAt first he wasn’t going to read, but they said he had to, so I begged his team. And he did. It was that simple. \n\n\n\nDo you find there are more actors now who won\u2019t read? Or are reluctant to?\n\n\n\nI don’t think it’s an attitude, per se, for everybody. I feel that when some people feel like they’ve done it before. I feel that way sometimes if I’m asked to take a meeting and I’ve done it. It’s a tricky thing. I never say this, and I’m going to say this is now, you need an agent or a manager or whomever it is that\u2019s taking care of the talent to have a good conversation.\n\n\n\nI was able to speak clearly with his team just to say why it’s important for this reason.\n\n\n\nThere are at least three major actors, Alison Oliver, Sam Keeley and Phoebe Fox, who are either English or Irish, and I\u2019m curious about how you found them and brought them in for this very American story.\n\n\n\nI had seen Alison in two British shows, and at first I was like, \u201cWait, is that the same person?\u201d Because she’s a chameleon. She read on a Zoom and everyone loved her. Same thing with Phoebe. Sam as well. If I’m lucky enough to get visas, I love to look at talent from all over the world. \n\n\n\nIf they can have the proper accent and we can get a visa, that’s just fun for me personally. People don’t want me to do that most of the time, but it makes my job a lot of fun and curious and imaginative.\n\n\n\nIs that one of the things that you would recommend to any foreign-born actor? To get their American accent down?\u00a0\n\n\n\nI’m going to recommend doing whatever you feel comfortable with. I just feel like that’s the one beautiful thing in seeing actors, is we can all feel when they’re comfortable. They just mold into the role. \n\n\n\nEmilia Jones plays something I hadn\u2019t seen her do before, which is always good to see from an actor. \n\n\n\nYou never want to say this out loud, but there were choices, and the team really loved Emilia. When I saw what she did, I was so deeply proud of her. I mean, the relationship between her and Tom was so interesting and strong. \n\n\n\nYou never know what it’s going to be like, y\u2019know? You read something and then they go off and shoot it for nine months, and then we get to see it two years later. Sometimes I’ll look at shows I’ve worked on and I’m going, \u201cGod, I don’t remember that character \u2026 \u201d (Laughs)\u00a0\n\n\n\nShould actors be trying as many new things as possible?\n\n\n\nIt\u2019s interesting, because I’m here to talk about one show, but there’s a show I worked on last year, where an actor in the movie passes on a role. I used to get upset, and I’m sure I still do because I take everything too personally, but if an actor passed on a role, I didn’t even want to share it with the director. I didn’t want to feel it. \n\n\n\nIt’s taken me many years, but I feel that I have to trust if an actor passes on a role or accepts a role they’ve never done, it’s what they need to do. I have to trust that they know. We don’t know. It’s so hard to be an actor!\n\n\n\nIt goes hand in hand with what you said before, about an actor needing to do whatever makes them comfortable.\n\n\n\nI don’t know how other people work. We just love actors because that\u2019s what we do.\n\n\n\nTwo of the things that stood out for me were the motorcycle gang (the Dark Hearts) and the kids. Let\u2019s start with the Dark Hearts. \n\n\n\nIt’s interesting because I had done a show with Wagner Moura and Brian Tyree Henry [in Dope Thief] right before I did Task, and we were looking for similar characters [for the] motorcycle gangs. Bad boys. Dark characters. So it was just a deep search because I couldn’t use the people I had just used. Just auditioning a thousand people.\n\n\n\nAnd the kids? Especially Ben Lewis Doherty as Sam.\n\n\n\nAnd the kids! I’ve [cast] a lot of kids in my time, and I love casting kids. You’ve got to cast close to the bone. You have to understand who this kid is. And even for Sam, I like to talk to the kids for a long time to get to know them to see if they are actually ready to do something like this. \n\n\n\nThese are tough roles for a kid. Sam, especially because, to be kidnapped? But kids \u2026 it\u2019s about love. I think, hopefully, [with]\u00a0 human beings, animals, we follow the love. Hopefully, we follow the love and keep trust in there because he had to have some trust as well.\n\n\n\nI think that applies to acting in general.\n\n\n\nAnd life. You have to trust, you have to love, you have to do all of it, and it\u2019s all part of the same thing.\nThe post Audition Preparation Tips from Avy Kaufman: Inside \u2018Task\u2019 and Her \u201cRelentless\u201d Push for Tom Pelphrey appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-04-27T09:10:00-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-22T11:22:36-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/task-tom-pelphrey_2.jpg", "tags": [ "Acting Advice", "Casting Directors", "Interviews" ] }, { "id": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/?p=314231", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/casting-director-ian-bender-interview-undertone-audition-advice/", "title": "Casting Director Ian Bender on Championing Uniqueness and Breaking the Mold", "content_html": "\nIan Bender has not been a casting director for that long, but he\u2019s made the time count. The Canadian professional only started in the field eight years ago, but in that time, he\u2019s been part of dozens of productions, with much of his work in the indie world. His scope is widening, as he is, along with Ashley Hallihan and Nancy Nayor, one of the casting directors for the very buzzy recent horror flick Undertone. The film, about a podcast host whose latest project turns dark, stars Adam DiMarco and Nina Kiri and hit theaters earlier this month. He spoke to us from his office in Toronto.
\n\n\n\nHow did you get into casting in the first place?
\n\n\n\nI started as an actor, just taking workshops and classes as a kid, doing community theater stuff, and then I went to college for that, and did my best at trying to pursue it. Musical theater was my goal. Around the time I turned 30, I started to think, okay, what can I do with all this passion that I have for this industry and acting in general? I was lacking stability, and every time I would book a job, it would be, pack your bags. You’re going away for a few months at a time. A few friends of mine suggested casting. So I started working for Ashley Hallihan with Hallihan Casting here in Toronto, as her assistant. It was a really great opportunity for her to take me under her wing and show me the logistics behind casting, because it really is a very different job than acting.\u00a0
\n\n\n\nYeah, no kidding.
\n\n\n\n(Laughs) You get the creative muscle, of course, but it really is quite clerical. Heavy paperwork.
\n\n\n\nBut that tends to appeal to a lot of people, too, being able to do both.
\n\n\n\nYeah, exactly, and that’s how I feel, because I’m very type A, so it really fits me nicely. I love organization and have just as much fun with the business side of things as the creative side, where I get to brainstorm and think of people who would be great in a part, or auditioning actors and finding a new face that I haven’t seen before, seeing what interesting choices they bring to the table. It’s really nice to be able to flex both and to work on both sides.
\n\n\n\nDo you find that because you’ve had an acting background, that’s given you an advantage in working with actors in the room, or even by giving them feedback with self tapes?
\n\n\n\nYeah, I’d like to think so. I still think of everything as an actor. Everything that I do, the way I release my breakdowns, the way I conduct my auditions, all of that, I really am trying to keep the actor in mind, because I think of things that were pet peeves of mine as an actor growing up, or things that I wish casting directors would know. I really love getting to meet actors in person as well, and hear what their thoughts are and what their challenges are.
\n\n\n\nIs there a checklist of things you go through in that regard?
\n\n\n\nYeah, for sure. For example, there are a lot of factors that go into helping you get seen and recognized by casting directors. I had a lovely team of people helping me, but I wasn’t with the biggest agent in town, and I didn’t have those opportunities. So I keep my mind open when I’m going through my submissions from the very beginning, and considering everyone that gets submitted to me, and taking the time and due diligence to look at their resumes and consider them seriously for the part. Also, I love a wild card. So if there’s an actor that may not seem like they’re visually right for the part, I want to explore that to see if they give me something a little bit different. Those are the people that really make it far or get booked in some of these roles. It really forces the creative team as well to think outside of the box, and opens up new ideas for them. Sometimes I wish that had happened to me when I was an actor. I was a queer dude trying to find opportunities in the early to mid-2000s, and a lot of [them] just weren’t there. There’s only so many gay best friends that you can put in a series or film. (Laughs) I’m always thinking about that, trying to keep it as open as I can, because you never know.
\n\n\n\nThat’s the thing that you can pass along to actors, that you make sure they understand that their uniqueness is a benefit, even when it sometimes doesn’t necessarily feel that way to them?
\n\n\n\nAbsolutely. It’s your superpower, really.
\n\n\n\nLet\u2019s talk about Undertone, which received the kind of pre-release buzz that a select few horror films get. That must be very exciting.
\n\n\n\nI’ve been very lucky. Because I’m so interested in the industry, I continue to improve and learn. I was basically a student every day. So, to have an opportunity like Undertone, I worked with Black Fawn Films, Cody Callahan and Dan Slater before, and they’re really great guys. The writer-director, Ian Tuason, was new to me, but that script, when I first got it, was so wild, so interesting. It’s exciting when I get the tingles and start brainstorming right away. It’s a whirlwind. I don’t know what it’s going to look like for me. I still have that imposter syndrome in the back of my head going, keep working, take meetings with everybody, because I’m hoping that this gives me some more opportunity to show what I do best. I have so much fun with these horror and genre films. They’re my most favorite films to watch, so the fact that I get to help find these characters and work with these amazing writers and directors every day is just a dream.
\n\n\n\nYou talked earlier about working with actors and how much you enjoy it. What piece of advice or wisdom would you give to an actor coming in to see you?
\n\n\n\nJust know that I’m on your side and that if you’ve done the work on the role and on the material, then just show it. You don’t have to bring anything else into the room. Put the nerves aside as best as you can, and just be yourself and show the work that you’ve done, and then it’ll all come together. If you’re right for the role, you’re right for the role, and it’ll show itself in the room. I want every single person to walk in that door to get the part. That means I\u2019ve done a good job. I used to have the worst nerves going into audition rooms. Anytime I\u2019d get a job, I’d be surprised, because I was a nervous wreck going in. But I knew that if I did the work and put the time into the material, it would release in the room, and I would make the choices that I’ve prepared. That\u2019s the biggest thing, too. Make interesting choices.
\n\n\n\nSo often, a wrong choice is better than no choice at all.
\n\n\n\nYes, because it shows me that you can make a choice. If a choice has been made, I’ll see that, and it shows me that they’ve actively been thinking about the part and that they’ve internalized it enough to get there. It means that there’s the likelihood that the director on the day is going to probably be able to get a different choice out of them. It’s exciting when that all happens and comes together.
\n\n\n\nThe post Casting Director Ian Bender on Championing Uniqueness and Breaking the Mold appeared first on Casting Networks.
\n", "content_text": "Ian Bender has not been a casting director for that long, but he\u2019s made the time count. The Canadian professional only started in the field eight years ago, but in that time, he\u2019s been part of dozens of productions, with much of his work in the indie world. His scope is widening, as he is, along with Ashley Hallihan and Nancy Nayor, one of the casting directors for the very buzzy recent horror flick Undertone. The film, about a podcast host whose latest project turns dark, stars Adam DiMarco and Nina Kiri and hit theaters earlier this month. He spoke to us from his office in Toronto.\n\n\n\nKey Insights\n\n\n\n\nIan Bender\u2019s acting background shapes his casting approach, keeping the actor experience central to every audition and decision. \n\n\n\nHe actively looks beyond traditional \u201ctype\u201d and values unexpected, creative choices that challenge assumptions. \n\n\n\nCasting blends creativity and logistics, requiring both artistic instinct and strong organizational discipline.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Get access to thousands of high-quality roles.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n JOIN FREE TODAY \n \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHow did you get into casting in the first place?\n\n\n\nI started as an actor, just taking workshops and classes as a kid, doing community theater stuff, and then I went to college for that, and did my best at trying to pursue it. Musical theater was my goal. Around the time I turned 30, I started to think, okay, what can I do with all this passion that I have for this industry and acting in general? I was lacking stability, and every time I would book a job, it would be, pack your bags. You’re going away for a few months at a time. A few friends of mine suggested casting. So I started working for Ashley Hallihan with Hallihan Casting here in Toronto, as her assistant. It was a really great opportunity for her to take me under her wing and show me the logistics behind casting, because it really is a very different job than acting.\u00a0\n\n\n\nYeah, no kidding. \n\n\n\n(Laughs) You get the creative muscle, of course, but it really is quite clerical. Heavy paperwork.\n\n\n\nBut that tends to appeal to a lot of people, too, being able to do both.\n\n\n\nYeah, exactly, and that’s how I feel, because I’m very type A, so it really fits me nicely. I love organization and have just as much fun with the business side of things as the creative side, where I get to brainstorm and think of people who would be great in a part, or auditioning actors and finding a new face that I haven’t seen before, seeing what interesting choices they bring to the table. It’s really nice to be able to flex both and to work on both sides.\n\n\n\nDo you find that because you’ve had an acting background, that’s given you an advantage in working with actors in the room, or even by giving them feedback with self tapes?\n\n\n\nYeah, I’d like to think so. I still think of everything as an actor. Everything that I do, the way I release my breakdowns, the way I conduct my auditions, all of that, I really am trying to keep the actor in mind, because I think of things that were pet peeves of mine as an actor growing up, or things that I wish casting directors would know. I really love getting to meet actors in person as well, and hear what their thoughts are and what their challenges are.\n\n\n\nIs there a checklist of things you go through in that regard?\n\n\n\nYeah, for sure. For example, there are a lot of factors that go into helping you get seen and recognized by casting directors. I had a lovely team of people helping me, but I wasn’t with the biggest agent in town, and I didn’t have those opportunities. So I keep my mind open when I’m going through my submissions from the very beginning, and considering everyone that gets submitted to me, and taking the time and due diligence to look at their resumes and consider them seriously for the part. Also, I love a wild card. So if there’s an actor that may not seem like they’re visually right for the part, I want to explore that to see if they give me something a little bit different. Those are the people that really make it far or get booked in some of these roles. It really forces the creative team as well to think outside of the box, and opens up new ideas for them. Sometimes I wish that had happened to me when I was an actor. I was a queer dude trying to find opportunities in the early to mid-2000s, and a lot of [them] just weren’t there. There’s only so many gay best friends that you can put in a series or film. (Laughs) I’m always thinking about that, trying to keep it as open as I can, because you never know.\n\n\n\nThat’s the thing that you can pass along to actors, that you make sure they understand that their uniqueness is a benefit, even when it sometimes doesn’t necessarily feel that way to them?\n\n\n\nAbsolutely. It’s your superpower, really.\n\n\n\nLet\u2019s talk about Undertone, which received the kind of pre-release buzz that a select few horror films get. That must be very exciting.\n\n\n\nI’ve been very lucky. Because I’m so interested in the industry, I continue to improve and learn. I was basically a student every day. So, to have an opportunity like Undertone, I worked with Black Fawn Films, Cody Callahan and Dan Slater before, and they’re really great guys. The writer-director, Ian Tuason, was new to me, but that script, when I first got it, was so wild, so interesting. It’s exciting when I get the tingles and start brainstorming right away. It’s a whirlwind. I don’t know what it’s going to look like for me. I still have that imposter syndrome in the back of my head going, keep working, take meetings with everybody, because I’m hoping that this gives me some more opportunity to show what I do best. I have so much fun with these horror and genre films. They’re my most favorite films to watch, so the fact that I get to help find these characters and work with these amazing writers and directors every day is just a dream.\n\n\n\nYou talked earlier about working with actors and how much you enjoy it. What piece of advice or wisdom would you give to an actor coming in to see you?\n\n\n\nJust know that I’m on your side and that if you’ve done the work on the role and on the material, then just show it. You don’t have to bring anything else into the room. Put the nerves aside as best as you can, and just be yourself and show the work that you’ve done, and then it’ll all come together. If you’re right for the role, you’re right for the role, and it’ll show itself in the room. I want every single person to walk in that door to get the part. That means I\u2019ve done a good job. I used to have the worst nerves going into audition rooms. Anytime I\u2019d get a job, I’d be surprised, because I was a nervous wreck going in. But I knew that if I did the work and put the time into the material, it would release in the room, and I would make the choices that I’ve prepared. That\u2019s the biggest thing, too. Make interesting choices.\n\n\n\nSo often, a wrong choice is better than no choice at all.\n\n\n\nYes, because it shows me that you can make a choice. If a choice has been made, I’ll see that, and it shows me that they’ve actively been thinking about the part and that they’ve internalized it enough to get there. It means that there’s the likelihood that the director on the day is going to probably be able to get a different choice out of them. It’s exciting when that all happens and comes together.\n\n\n\nKey Takeaways\n\n\n\n\nPreparation and authenticity matter more than perfection\u2014actors should focus on doing the work and trusting it in the room.\n\n\n\nMaking a bold or unconventional choice is often more impactful than playing it safe.\n\n\n\nAn actor\u2019s uniqueness is their greatest asset, even when it doesn\u2019t seem to fit the role at first glance.\n\n\n\n\n\nThe post Casting Director Ian Bender on Championing Uniqueness and Breaking the Mold appeared first on Casting Networks.", "date_published": "2026-03-31T10:13:46-07:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-22T12:04:15-07:00", "authors": [ { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" } ], "author": { "name": "Neil Turitz", "url": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/news/author/neil-turitz/", "avatar": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/wphb-cache/gravatar/824/824ad122ece0f64119671fbf606465d3x512.jpg" }, "image": "https://www.castingnetworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Ian-Bender-Headshot-e1774977109615.jpg", "tags": [ "Casting Directors", "Interviews" ] } ] }