For film and TV, try to have a more conversational tone. For stage, you'll need better diction and bigger vocal production.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
On stage you need to emphasize every emotion. But on screen you need to tone everything down and make it believable.
Stage actors are usually much more conscious of speaking up and making sure that everyone can hear in the back of the theatre; a film actor probably thinks of that a little less.
The beauty of me being on stage is I have a voice.
The complaint with me being on stage was always that I was slightly too naturalistic and not projecting enough. I've got quite a soft voice, so that didn't help.
I like films better than the theater because you have to spend so much energy projecting your voice from the stage in the sheer effort to be heard.
I think the more you do this and the more comfortable you become on stage, you start speaking more and becoming more of a character in yourself.
On stage, you've got dialogue you've learned. You've got a paying audience. It couldn't be better, you know?
I talk too quiet, and I have to yell on stage.
Singing and acting on a show is like theater; it doesn't get any better.
I have absolutely no preference on TV or stage. Every job I take or that I audition for all comes down to the quality of the script.