LOOKING FOR AUDITIONS?
  • Get cast in films, theater productions, TV shows, commercials, and web series
  • Jobs for actors, models, dancers, comedians & more
  • Take your career to the next level; the most trusted audition resources in the world
CASTING A PRODUCTION?
  • Find amazing talent
  • Call for cast & crew
  • Reach thousands of actors, models & performers
  • Find location space and professional equipment
WANT TO GROW YOUR AUDIENCE?
  • List yourself, find industry professionals, skills and equipment
  • One stop Preview, Pre-screen and Review audience for your production
  • License your movie, music and products
  • Reach a global audience and maximize profit
PRESENTING
  • Error type: "Forbidden". Error message: "The request cannot be completed because you have exceeded your quota." Domain: "youtube.quota". Reason: "quotaExceeded".

    Did you added your own Google API key? Look at the help.

    Check in YouTube if the id UC4y6NK7UjIeDMBbCXlPNhsw belongs to a channelid. Check the FAQ of the plugin or send error messages to support.
  • Error type: "Forbidden". Error message: "The request cannot be completed because you have exceeded your quota." Domain: "youtube.quota". Reason: "quotaExceeded".

    Did you added your own Google API key? Look at the help.

    Check in YouTube if the id UC1c32cPA23NvaP0qkhBFDpA belongs to a channelid. Check the FAQ of the plugin or send error messages to support.
  • 6 Things You Didn’t Know About Being a Broadway Understudy

    Throughout my career, I’ve been an understudy for the Broadway productions of “Beauty and the Beast” as Lumiere, Prince Eric in “The Little Mermaid,” and “Amazing Grace,” a musical about the 17th century English slave trader who wrote the world-famous hymn.
    Each show has taught me something completely different about the experience of being an understudy and you may be surprised by what those lessons are.
    1. Rehearsal does not exist. Aside from being a replacement in “Beauty and the Beast,” I had no rehearsal before I went on for Prince Eric. It is your responsibility to know the role whether or not you get to do it on its feet.
    I ran lines in Denver for “The Little Mermaid” with the other understudies between tech scene changes, but when the show moved to New York, all the lines changed and we had to start over! In Chicago, I was thrown on stage during the first weekend of previews of “Amazing Grace” when an accident happened to our lead actor. As frightening as this sounds—and it is the actor’s nightmare—it is a great lesson in taking each moment as it comes. You have no other option in this situation but to

    Go to Source

    Leave a Reply

    « | »