There's acting, and then there's auditioning; mastering auditioning is sort of the first thing an actor really needs to nail down when he or she wants to get a part.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Acting takes a lot of practice, but so does auditioning.
You have to keep persevering. An actor goes to a lot of auditions and doesn't get the part.
You have to have talent. You have to get the audition and then you have to nail the audition.
Auditioning is such an unnatural thing. You're in a tiny little room with, like, seven people cramped together, acting to a casting director; just, none of it makes any sense.
Auditioning is an entirely different part of what we do as actors.
With acting, you do want to get every job, and you're trying to get every audition, but then you reach a certain stage where you start to kind of gravitate toward the stories and the people that have a similar heartbeat.
I'm not so bothered by the audition process anymore; in fact, I use it. It's a time for the actor to actually get to the know the director and the producers a little bit, too.
The auditioning process is one in which the actor gets very little information about almost every element of it.
Auditioning is always so different for different things.
I actually love auditioning because I usually don't get the part. I've tested with Daniel Day-Lewis, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Tom Cruise. So I've gotten to that point, and I understand when I don't get it. There are a lot of very talented people out there.
No opposing quotes found.