ACTING IN COLUMBUS is a professional training studio in Columbus, Ohio which offers small and practical acting classes in a supportive yet challenging environment.
STUDENT UPDATE: James Dreussi's PENN STATE COMMERCIAL
James Dreussi is currently appearing in a PENN STATE UNIVERSITY Commercial
Acting in Columbus is a professional training studio in Columbus, Ohio which offers small and practical acting classes in a supportive yet challenging environment. We offer classes for adults in Scene Study, On-Camera, Improv, Acting for Film and Master classes. We're also offering an On-Camera Workshop for young performers and their parents. With our small class sizes; you receive personal attention from our faculty - all working, professional actors and directors.
WHY ACTING IN COLUMBUS?
Photo: Acting in Columbus student Hanani Taylor. After much preparation and a round of recent auditions in LA (including Disney and Nickelodeon) Hanani is moving to LA this summer. Click on her photo to read the FULL STORY
Prospective students frequently ask us what differentiates us from other acting classes. We answer that question by sharing what kind of work our students are booking. Your acting class will consist of no more than 12 students who will discover together that acting is probably the most challenging and thrilling thing they've ever done.
Weekend Acting Boot Camp is designed for the beginner who want intensive training over a short period of time or the rusty actor who needs to get back on top of their game. Boot Camp will give you a strong foundation in acting techniques as well as a firm grasp of the nuts and bolts of scene work and audition skills.Your Boot Camp will consist of no more than eight students who will discover together that acting is probably the most challenging and thrilling thing they have ever done. You will learn that if indeed this is for you and you stick with it, you will not only acquire a skill, but you will do something quite extraordinary with your life.
FRIDAY 7-9:30pm: Orientation Students will learn how to actively pursue objectives, creating character, and making choices based on the Super-Objective of the character.
SATURDAY 10am-6pm: Acting for Film/Scene Study Begin work on subtext and objectives, gaining an understanding of the basic mechanics of playing a scene truthfully.
Audition/Cold Reading Techniques - Learn audition techniques that will help you get the part. Understand the audition process and learn what a casting director is looking for in an audition.
Getting a scene "cold", making powerful acting choices, listening and answering in the moment as you fully commit to your acting partner and your objective in the scene. Your auditions will be filmed and you'll receive feedback from the instructor.
SUNDAY 12-8pm: Acting for TV CommercialsLearn how to audition for and break into the local commercial and industrial industry. Experience with the actual audition process: You'll work on-camera all day doing both prepared and cold readings, and receive plenty of feedback from your instructor.
ACTING IN COLUMBUS - featured in the Columbus Dispatch
PHOTO: SHARI LEWIS, DISPATCH
Richard Mason, at back, watches Brian Willis, left, and Mohamud Muhidin perform in his class "Acting for TV Commercials" at the Ohio Theatre. The class included Renee Beall, front center, Andy Kramer, center, and Alphonso Sanders.
Acting for TV Commercials preps aspirants for the small screen. Sunday, January 18, 2009 3:24 AM By Nick Chordas THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
It wasn't how Dwight Pigg expected to spend his 45th birthday -- staring at a fixed point on the wall and extolling the virtues of a glow-in-the-dark remote control. "No more fumbling around. And it glows in the dark. Glows in the dark! And here's the best part -- it's only $19.95!"The exercise was part of "Acting for TV Commercials," a seven-hour class yesterday inside the Ohio Theatre. Pigg, a mortgage loan officer from Westerville, was one of nine aspiring actors who attended.
"In this day and age, you have to convince someone to pay attention to you in less than 10 seconds," said teacher Richard Mason, a 27-year acting veteran and founder of Acting in Columbus. "That means you have to be a dynamic performer. It's tough. People don't have any idea how tough it is."Pigg's wife bought him the class as a birthday present because she was "tired of me watching TV and saying, 'I can do that better,' " he joked. "Besides, there have to be some parts out there for a middle-aged balding guy."Before the afternoon was over, the students learned the basics: how to find a reputable agent, going through the audition process ("It takes 15 auditions to book one job") and, eventually, how to perform for the camera.
They even learned the finer points of chewing food convincingly.All that didn't come cheap. Mason charges $200 for the afternoon. Lunch is not included, although snacks are provided. Welcome to the business, indeed.The monthly class, held inside the chilly confines of rehearsal studio No. 3, usually caps out at 12 students. Mason, who also works as a casting assistant, said he was surprised by the number of students who attended yesterday's session. "Because of the economy, I was panicking that I wasn't going to have anyone," he said. "Acting classes are a luxury, and the industry has been hit pretty hard. Advertising is one of the first things companies tend to cut. "It's a tough time for breaking into the industry, but there are still jobs out there."Landing those jobs is the tough part.
Renee Ritchey, a 40-year-old account executive from Worthington, said she caught the acting bug 15 years ago but never truly pursued a career before the camera. Not surprisingly, her acting resume is limited, including roles in community theater and a commercial for Big Bear in which she dressed like the Easter Bunny.Her first take was deemed "too stiff." The second take, after Ritchey was instructed to loosen up with 15 jumping jacks, worked just fine.
Mason said that 60 percent of the people who take his class book a job within two months -- more than one for SafeAuto Insurance. "SafeAuto is kind of a rite of passage for actors in Columbus," he said. He said that actors can be paid $3,000 for a regional spot that runs 13 weeks, while a national ad for the same run can deliver a paycheck as high as $10,000.That kind of payday sounded good to Brian Willis of Columbus. The 34-year-old food service and catering employee has been told for years that he "should be in commercials" thanks to a deep, commanding voice. "I don't know if I was too scared to do it before or what, but now seemed like a good time to give it a shot," he said.nchordas@dispatch.com