Each year long-running musicals are recast and new musicals are written. You want to audition for a role in these shows but you don’t have an agent, and there are thousands of singer dancer actors looking for work. How do you start?

Every year, production companies run open calls. They are particularly useful if the show is new or in an unusual genre (grunge/folk/rock or Tuvan throat singing), if there is a serious lack of actors with the relevant casting requirements (ethnic casting or tightrope juggling), or if the casting directors simply want to know what’s out there at the moment. Open calls are usually advertised in the theatre press (The Stage newspaper in the UK is an example). The open call can be quite a demoralising process (not for nothing are they called “cattle calls”), so this article will help you prepare for them.

The first thing you’ll see when you arrive is a long queue. Depending on how popular the show is, the queue could be three times round the block, or just a small crowd. Be prepared to stand in the queue for several hours. Even 15 years ago, professional singer friends of mine were kept waiting for 7 hours on the auditions for nuns in The Sound of Music.

What should you carry with you? Your resume or CV and a photograph are essential. If the photograph is not attached, make sure that both the resume and photograph have your name and contact details on. Photographs and CV details often get separated, and it would be horrible if the panel remembered your face but then couldn’t find your contact details on the photo. A bottle of water is vital, and either a book or an mp3 player is useful to while away the hours.

You will give your name to the auditions usher or stage door manager, and the audition begins. You might have only two minutes to walk onto the stage, give your name and sing your song. If you’re unlucky, you’ll have 16 bars. If you’re really unlucky, they will ask you for your best single phrase. How do you deal with this?

Remember that the purpose of this audition is NOT to get the job! If you’re up against 1,000 people or more, nothing you can do will make you stand out enough to be offered the job on the spot. Your task is to be asked back for the invited calls, the ones that follow the public cattle call. Therefore your task is to appear professional, calm and focused. That’s it.

If you look professional (dress appropriately, perform to a good standard, interact well with the panel) you will be noticed. If you seem calm you will score points too – cattle calls are difficult situations with a lot of “unknowns” – like not know what time you’re actually going to perform, and a vast number of people breathing down your neck! If you are focused, you’ll be able to sing your piece to the best of your ability, and lock into the character immediately. Being focused really “reads” well on a theater stage, so the panel will notice very quickly how well you do.

When I’m coaching for the 16bar audition, the key is practise EVERYTHING. The walk in, the hello, the piece announcement, giving the pianist the music (or the backing track), the getting into focus, the 16 bars (decided beforehand, please!), and the exit. Everything is important, even the way you interact with the auditions secretary. I work to help you choose song extracts that show your best (and it’s not necessarily your loudest or highest), and to sing those extracts to the best of your ability.

Notice I haven’t said what you should sing! Ultimately, in a cattle call your choice of song is less important than how you sing it. I have been on cattle calls where actors singing the weirdest songs have been called back for the next audition, simply because they sang it really well. In a situation like this you want to stack the dice in your favour as much as possible. Take a piece you know really well – that way if nerves strike, and you will still feel secure in your song.

Panels find cattle calls just as horrible as you do, and believe me, they breathe a sigh of relief when someone professional, calm and focused turns up. Normally there are 3 heaps on the casting panel’s desk. Yes, No, Maybe. The only pile you want to be in is the Yes pile.

And if you give a clear, focused, professional performance and follow the rules in this article, you’re much more likely to get to sing in the next round and stay in the Yes pile.

Jeremy Fisher is the author of Successful Singing Auditions, and trains singers and performers to find and maintain their best. For articles, free downloads and information on effective vocal training, check out Vocal Process, the voice training company that’s “revolutionising the way singing is taught” (LINK magazine)
http://www.vocalprocess.co.uk



It is very rare for a singer, dancer or actor to be cast in a role on the strength of their first audition. Because there are literally thousands of performers looking for work, most musicals have a Recalls system that can be fairly lengthy. One UK client had to endure 9 recalls at her own expense before she got the part. This article takes you through the different stages of the audition process, and describes how a coach can support performers through the recall system.

I assume that you have gone through or sidestepped the preliminary stage of the audition process (the cattle call) and have successfully completed the first private audition.

You know from having got the recall that the casting director thinks you fit the part and are at the appropriate level for the production. They want to find out more about you and how you deal with the material in the show. They will usually give you music and script for the roles they want you to audition for.

If the production company haven’t given any music or instructions, but has asked you to sing your own choice for them again, my advice is NOT to take new songs “to show something different” but to polish the same songs that were sung in the first audition. I also recommend wearing the same outfit. It’s the song, the performance and the clothing that got you the recall, so why risk changing their minds?

During a coaching session for auditions, we focus on the song, the character and the story – what’s the package that we’re selling? This technique, used for first auditions with your own choice of song, can be applied to the recall. We’ll explore the songs the casting panel has provided, identify the style elements of the show and incorporate them into the song (and your voice). We will also categorize the character’s personality traits, and test different versions of the scenes and songs to bring a consistency to both the singing and speaking.

That’s the first major hurdle. But the second recall is different again. By this time you will probably have been given not just the music but also some clues or advice on how the company wants the character to be played. In coaching for the second recall, we might experiment with different readings of the song based on different subtexts. It’s essential during the second recall that the performer gives a clear reading, but can still stay flexible enough to change if required.

The third recall is usually a more flexible event. You now know that you are at the right level and appropriate for the role. Often in the third recall the director and musical director will work with you in detail. This is the time to listen and experiment! Occasionally other auditioning actors will be brought in to “match up” a potential cast. My coaching sessions for the third recall are much more focussed, using information and hints given by the panel.

For example, working on auditions for the musical Spring Awakening recently, one of my clients was looking at three different roles and had been given very specific instructions from the directors for all three songs. So we worked on more aggression and bite in the consonants for one character, a more fluid, lyrical feel with some musical style tweaks for the second, and a hypnotic, sexually dominant feel for the third.

Another client was working on recalls for Mamma Mia and was up for two of the three leading ladies. So we worked on the dialogue for each character, identifying and shaping the differences between the two roles, finding the essence of their speech patterns, speed of delivery, pitch range and characterisation. Then we carried those differences into the songs to give a complete, identifiable package for each of the leads.

By the time you get to the fourth, fifth or sixth recall, you will have a relationship with the casting panel, and they have more time to discuss what they want to experience from you. You should be able to find out if there are any weaknesses in your presentation, and what you can do about it. Experimentation is vital here so know your material!

Occasionally at this point, it’s less about you and more about the casting panel being in disagreement about what the role requires. Perhaps a show originates on Broadway and comes over to the West End (or vice versa). In these cases there is often an American casting contingent who might have very different ideas. Just stay calm and do what you do. Be prepared to change everything that you have done so far. Stay focussed and open, and listen very carefully to what you are being told. In the rare event that you receive conflicting information, follow the advice of the person with the highest authority!

And if you don’t get any further in this particular journey, remember that the casting panel in your country has already approved your performing and will remember you for other shows.

Auditioning for jobs is a fact of life for the actor singer dancer. Once you become more successful at singing auditions, casting directors start to see you in other roles and you can bypass the first stages of auditioning (although even for the stars auditioning never goes away – “Would you like to pop in for a chat and a little sing?”).

Landing a role in a Broadway show or getting a West End lead can be incredibly rewarding. Working the Recall System in this way can help you understand the process and get you there quicker.

Jeremy Fisher trains singers and performers to find and maintain their best. He’s the author of Successful Singing Auditions, and creator of the Voicebox Videos (featured on the BBC and broadcast to an estimated 44,000,000 people). Sign up for Jeremy’s free newsletter containing original interviews, pre-release offers and receive your BONUS free copy of “86 things you never hear a singer say” at http://www.vocalprocess.co.uk