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nancy

PRAGUE PLAYHOUSE AUDITION

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Prague Playhouse will be having auditions for True West, the dark comedy by Sam Sheppard, this coming Tuesday, November 10th, from 6-9pm at the Prague Film School, Pstrossova 15, Prague 1 (kind of across the street from the Globe Bookstore). We are asking for a 2 minute monologue for the audition.

The show will start rehearsals now and be performed at the end of January. Jeff Beck will direct the show. Actors will be paid 300 Kc per performance. We are planning 6-10 performances.

We are looking for the following roles (ages are approximate):

Austin – late twenties/early thirties – screenwriter

Lee – His older brother – late thirties/early forties

Saul Kimmer – Hollywood producer

Mom – mother of the boys.

Please write to brian@pragueplayhouse.com to schedule an audition.

WOMEN IN FILM AND TV EVENT

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Thanks to the pros who helped me out at the CASTING COUCH Panel Discussion last month in London. Pictured here are: Pippa Cross (Producer), Sharman McDonald (Writer), Aisling Walsh (Director), Me, Ros Hubbard (CD) and Natalie Haynes (Journalist and Comedian.)

I hope to post the transcript from the event soon, where we discussed the lack of female roles in TV and Film (According to the Equity survey, there are two male roles for every female role.)
WFTV working with Skillset recently did a survey which was announced at the London Film Festival. The survey was of what successful women in film had in common. The items are:
1. STRONG FEMALES INFLUENCES IN THEIR LIVES
2. EARLY CREATIVE LEANING
3. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS: a passion for the chosen occupation, effective management of rejection,
4. ROLE MODELS AND MENTORS. Significant role models of women working in the field.
5. INDUSTRY EDUCATION AND TRAINING. Key to success is to seek out every possible training opportunity.
6. INDUSTRY CULTURE AND ATTITUDES. Older participants reported overt sexism in the industry, but not the younger ones.
7. NETWORKING
8 SUPPORT AND ENCOURAGEMENT; many participants grew up in predominantly female families or received single sex education.

CSA GUIDELINES FOR CASTING DIRECTORS TEACHING WORKSHOPS

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At various times it has been brought up by various anonymous writers on my blog, that there may be some dodgy ethics involved with a casting director teaching workshops. The suspicion seems to be that actors might be paying to get cast. I have always assured actors that I am wearing a slightly different hat while teaching and that the workshops are purely educational.


Since there are many casting directors who teach workshops, CSA (Casting Society of America) of which I am a member, has an official policy for casting workshops. Please click here.


So from now on I will ask all participants of my classes to read and agree to these guidelines before taking my classes so that everything is %100 clear.

-NB

THEATRE AUDITIONS IN PRAGUE

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Audition Notice for Professional Production: Na Zabradli

Auditions: Black Snow Theater Company

For their adaptation of A Couple of Poor Polish-Speaking Romanians by Dorota Maslowska

Auditions: Sunday November 15th : 11 am – 5 pm.

Callbacks: Sunday November 22nd.

Rehearsals begin March 15, 2010

The show will run in rep on Divaldo NaZabradli’s mainstage in english with czech subtitles.

Premiere: May 15th, 2010

This is a paid production commissioned by Divadlo NaZabradli.

Contact Nicole at blacksnow.elt@gmail.com to schedule a time.

Venue for Auditions: Divadlo Na Zabradli,

Looking for all ages, male and female.

Nicole Grisco and David Peimer

Artistic Directors

O1 VISAS– possible problems and CSA response

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On Wed, 14 October, I am organizing a casting symposium on the subject of:

BRITISH ACTORS AND THE AMERICAN MARKET
sponsored by Spotlight and The London Film Festival
Catherine Shoard from the Guardian is moderating, and the panelists are:
Duane Clarke, Jeremy Conway, Priscilla John, Pippa Harrison and Jeremy Zimerman.
The event is sold out and already people have been writing in to ask if there will be a transcript available. The answer is YES, there will eventually. I also want to post some information about O1 Visas in advance.
The O1 Visa is what European actors need as a first step to working as an artist in the USA. There is information on it in my book, Secrets from the Casting Couch, or you an consult:
http://www.usimmigrationsupport.org/visa_o1.html Please note that this website is not a government organization; they are private. I have not researched them, so I can’t recommend them, but I will look into some recommendations. If anyone recommends a particular company, please let me know.
It has, however recently been called to my attention that there are limitations involved with the O1. Amy Mathieson, a British actor, who is now living and working in LA, wrote me this letter (click here). In this letter she starts by telling some horror stories about British actors who were actually cast, but then not allowed to work on their Visas. She then proceeds with some more positive news on the same subject and makes suggestions to other British actors.
I consulted C.S.A. (Casting Society of America) members to find out what their take on it was

Dear Casting Directors,

I will sit on a panel in London soon that will discuss the issue of British actors wanting to work in the US. I understand from some British actors that the O1 Visa is no longer accepted as a work permit by the big studios and networks in the US, and that the Green Card is required. Is this truly the case? Are O1 visas being turned down? Please if you have a moment, share your comments on this.

– Nancy Bishop

and here is the response:

Most Studios still do in my experience however NBC/Universal will not accept 01 Visa’s that have not been specifically applied for by the studio. 99.9 percent of the time this is not the case. I was recently unable to hire an actor on “Law & Order: SVU” who was a series regular on “24” and “Califorication” for this very reason.

-Jonathan Strauss

Yes, unfortunately it is true. Sony will no longer allow us to hire actors with O1 Visas – they must have a Green Card.

– Camille St. Cry

I imagine every studio has a different view on this. We do mostly television and hire foreign actors all the time. At CBS-Paramount, they have to approve an O1 Visa, by reviewing all the paperwork that was submitted along with the application. We’ve had very few problems, usually fixable by resubmitting the paperwork with broader language.

So long as the manager-sponsored O1 Visa isn’t project specific and allows the artist to work on a broad range of projects, it’s usually fine.

Since it may take a couple days to get approval, we’ve actually gotten to the point where we will preemptively have the studio review the paperwork as we’re setting up someone for producers.

Feel free to email or call with any questions. Hope this helps.

Best,

Jason Kennedy

I also spoke with MEG LIBERMAN (who works for CBS) on the phone and she gave a more complicated response:

Basically if an actor is hired by one production company to work on a particular production, that Visa might not extend to another production company. The best thing to do is get a “Blanket O1” that is not specific to any one project. The language on the underlying paperwork has to be as broad as possible.

In some cases Meg has had trouble hiring foreign actors on episodic work. Pilots can be easier since they have 21 days to petition for a visa. NBC does not accept the O1 because it’s owned by General Electric.

Meg hired one actor on “Medium” for NBC (but production company was CBS studios) then hired the same actor on “Las Vegas” which used a different production company, which didn’t accept the Visa. So after shooting a few scenes realized that she had to fire him and it cost the production $250,000 to re-shoot.

Ultimately the Green Card is the best thing to get.

I want to emphasize that I am no expert on these matters and that a a good immigration lawyer is required for anyone seeking to work in the US.

-NB

PRAGUE FILM SCHOOL AUDITIONS

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ACTORS WHO WANT MATERIAL FOR SHOW REELS OR MORE PRACTICE IN FRONT OF THE CAMERA…
AUDITIONS FOR PRAGUE FILM SCHOL

Sunday, October 11, 12:00 – 15:30, Kino Evald, Narodni 60 (right by Tesco)
The school will be holding a casting session inviting actors from the school and community- PLEASE COME, and bring a headshot. Audition material will be provided. For more information, please write to helena.novakova@filmstudies.cz

auditions at ACTOR EXPO tomorrow

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MESSAGE FROM REMI AT THE ACTOR EXPO:

“This weekend at the ActorExpo tradeshow 3rd October, Goldsmiths, London, for the very first time – we are holding open auditions – for Pantomime this season coming.

This is a real opportunity for up and coming actors to get paid work, but they must attend the tradeshow to get the opportunity to audition.

Auditions will be taking place between 10pm-12pm in the Goldsmiths Theatre.

All the actors would need to do is come prepared with:

-1 minute Monologue (short acting piece)

-1 minute Song

It’s FREE to come and audition.
To register and read the roles available please click here: http://auditions.actorexpo.rd-r.com/

For more information about the trade show please visit the website: www.actorexpo.co.uk.

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