Perth Film School

You Are Viewing

A Blog Post

TIPS ON GETTING YOUR KIDS INTO ACTING

Do you wonder if you have a budding star in your family? Has your child been begging to audition for community theater? Have you considered enrolling him or her in drama camp? If you’re thinking about getting your child involved in acting, then this post is for you!

 

Start them early.

Dance lessons are a great place to begin, and many children start as early as 3. Taylor remembers her mother starting her in a local theater program when she was about 6. Instead of taking voice lessons, Walker recommends that kids under age 14 participate in choir, learn an instrument and find opportunities to sing in public. Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati offers classes in acting and other subjects for kids as young as age 6, but don’t despair if your child shows an interest at an older age. Walker believes in raw talent and has been wow’d by first-time performers as old as 14.

Take them to shows.

Expose your kids to a variety of theater, dance and musical performances.

Take it seriously.

Auditions are serious business; directors will expect your children to behave professionally and show not just that they have talent, but that they can handle the responsibility of being in a show or on screen. Come prepared, their not just going to put your child onstage because their cute.

Get ready for some major time management.

Rehearsals and film-shoots are a big time commitment especially in addition to school and homework. Kids in film get out of school on shoot days, but they’re still expected to make up all their lessons.

Learn to deal with rejection.

Going to auditions means putting yourself out there and perhaps not getting rewarded with a role. That’s part of this profession, and that’s what you should tell kids.

For every 100 auditions they do, they might get one part, so you’ve got to have the backbone to deal with that. There’s a lot of really good kids out there. Just because they didn’t make it, it doesn’t mean they’re not a good performer.

Explore all of the options.

Professional theater organizations like Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati aren’t the only way to get your child into the spotlight. Encourage him or her to participate in school plays, community theater and church productions. And let them know that they can still have a career in theater, even if they don’t become a performer. “There are other things out there,” says Walker, who trained to be an opera singer and now runs Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati. “So you might not get to become a Broadway star but the field can still be your profession.”

Nurture their dreams – just make sure the dream is really theirs.

Don’t be a stage parent, forcing your child into something they don’t genuinely want to do. “We get kids at Main Stage auditions that are bawling and they just don’t want to come in that room and their parents are going, ‘You get in there…’ and my heart just goes, ‘Don’t do that!’” says Walker. “And rarely do those children make it because they’re not ready.”

Throughout our conversation, Walker kept coming back to one point: that parents with children who have a natural love of performing will just know it. “I believe you’ll see it in your child,” she says. “If they’re highly dramatic or they sing a lot or are always moving around and can dance, you’ll see it. And then it’s taking a raw talent, training it, giving them the techniques and discipline. Get them in a class that is a creative outlet. Find where those programs are, get them trained, and then go out and do that audition.”