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.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
For film and TV, try to have a more conversational tone. For stage, you'll need better diction and bigger vocal production.
The stage gives you more control over your own work; in television, there's a distressing amount of communal writing. Unless it's your show, you have no control over that. You're at the mercy of whoever's running the show.
I find with television, you have to play personality, whereas onstage, everyone talks about 'the character,' and what you do. It's a very different thing, because stage is much bigger, but on television, for things to come across to the public, I think you have to play a bit of your personality.
Anything I write that I consider stage-quality work, I won't give my TV show. I put it in my live show.
Being on stage is a seductive lifestyle. My advice to aspiring actors is think twice. People sometimes go into acting for the wrong reasons - as a shortcut to fame and fortune. If these goals are not attained, they feel a bitter disappointment.
I've seen such great material, and now I'm more picky with the type of jobs that I take because it's gotta be there. There's an old theater saying: 'If it's not on the page, it's not on the stage'... You gotta have some type of standards as far as the jobs that you take and the roles that you take on.
I love being on stage if I'm not on a set. If I'm at home, I'm usually in my office editing or reconstructing my website or whatever it may be. I just love putting creativity into a performance, so if the right script comes along, and I certainly am reading comedies and dramas now, then I'm ready willing and able to give it a shot.
Acting takes a lot of practice, but so does auditioning.
I like to spend as much time on the stage as possible. I don't do a regular TV series because I don't want to be overexposed.
I prefer stage work, as an actor.