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Guidelines
For Your
Acting Resume
(By
Rachel Vaater, Editor of Guide
to Talent & Modeling Agents) |
- Limit your
resume to one page
- Trim your
resume to fit the size of your headshots
- Staple your
resume to the back of your photo.
- Your name
should appear at the top.
- If you have
union affiliations, put those at the top.
- Also at the
top, put what you are trained to do (singer, dancer,
actor).
- Include
contact information.
- Height,
weight, measurements (for models), clothing size, hair
color, eye color, vocal range (if you are a singer),
union affiliations (not always included, especially if
you are not yet a union member) should be near the top,
easy to find and read. Do not include your age unless
asked to do so, except for infants and young children.
- Generally,
credits are listed by show name first then the role you
played, the director (if notable), and theater or
production company.
- Do not lie
about your credits! The professional acting community is
relatively small and your lies will come back to haunt
you.
- Try to
organize your experience section (acting, singing,
dancing, whatever) in some sort of logical order that
will highlight your strong points. If you are trying out
for a part that needs a strong singing voice, and you
have a strong singing voice, then place your singing
experience at the beginning of your experience section.
What if you don’t have any heavy
drama roles? Only musical comedy roles? Do your best on
the resume and then build up some heavy drama experience.
If the part you want requires a strong singing voice, but
you have a weak singing voice—try out for a different
part.
- Try to make
your experience reflect the kind of part for which you
are auditioning. For instance, if you are auditioning
for a heavy drama, don’t put your light comedy roles
first.
- Don’t include
“extra” work on your resume. A lot of actors use extra
work to pay the bills, but it doesn’t belong on your
resume.
- A section for
relevant education can also be helpful, especially if
you received training from some noteworthy school or
instructor.
- Toward the
bottom, indicate other skills you have that might be
appealing: horseback riding, skiing, billiards, mountain
climbing, handball, tennis, skating, playing an
instrument, etc. These skills might throw a part your
way.
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