loader from loading.io

Episode 279: Nepotism and Grandiosity

Acting Business Boot Camp

Release Date: 04/10/2024

Episode 284: Prayer & Meditation for the Actor show art Episode 284: Prayer & Meditation for the Actor

Acting Business Boot Camp

So today I actually, I've been just so intensely busy with so many different things and I was in New York City today and one of the things I used to do when I was in New York more than I am now is I would go into churches and I just happened to pass by an old church that I usually would go into and I just walked in. And it was quiet, quiet.  And I have been noticing this past, I don't know, week, that my mind has been racing a lot.  Just tons and tons of talk and nothing negative. Just very busy.  And it's disrupted my sleep and it's been so unpleasant.  And then I went...

info_outline
Episode 283: The Benefit of Wisdom for the Actor show art Episode 283: The Benefit of Wisdom for the Actor

Acting Business Boot Camp

Today, I'm going to talk about the subject of Wisdom.  Wisdom is my favorite word in the American language.  God, do I love Wisdom. The reason why I love Wisdom is because Wisdom gives me power. And sometimes it isn't even the power of knowledge, but the power of knowing what to do.  And I don't have any script for this podcast or guidance for this podcast. I'm just talking to you about this subject because it is truly just the thing that I crave more of.  This past week I turned another year older. I help people to adjust their thoughts and their lives to work for...

info_outline
Episode 282: Perfectionism and You! show art Episode 282: Perfectionism and You!

Acting Business Boot Camp

Now I wouldn't say that I would sometimes call myself Peter Pamela Perfectionism Rose, but sometimes I've called myself Peter Pamela Perfectionism Rose. The biggest thing about perfectionism that I want to talk about today is that perfectionism leads to procrastination, leads to paralysis.  The other thing that I think is so important about the lesson of perfectionism is to make your ears grow bigger, cunning, baffling, and powerful. I look at all the ways, in fact even this too, recording today's podcast, I was looking for the right time to do it.  But do you know what the right...

info_outline
Episode 281: Taking Risks show art Episode 281: Taking Risks

Acting Business Boot Camp

Today I'm going to be talking about something that I have been doing recently, which I've been really taking risks. It's been real. It's been an adventure. And I've said to myself, I remember earlier this year, I was in a foreign country. I was driving in a foreign country, on the opposite side of the road. And I went in my car. It was late at night and I'd been traveling for a while and I just said to myself, You are so brave. You are so brave.  And I think one of the things that I've learned in taking risks is really to encourage, be your own cheerleader while you're doing it. ...

info_outline
Episode 280: Vulnerability & the Actor show art Episode 280: Vulnerability & the Actor

Acting Business Boot Camp

Today, I'm going to talk about something that I've been feeling recently—vulnerability. Yeah. Vulnerability. Just feeling a little tender.  Now, the thing I always think about with vulnerability is vulnerability and emotional availability is two of the greatest assets that actors can have.  All I have to say about that is that can also be like your cross to bear, as it were when dealing with the industry.  Because as an actor, as an artist, we wear our hearts on our sleeves.  But how I like to approach the business is the business. When I go in there, I do my work, my...

info_outline
Episode 279: Nepotism and Grandiosity show art Episode 279: Nepotism and Grandiosity

Acting Business Boot Camp

I'm going to be talking about something that a listener sent me, and I thought it was a really interesting idea for a podcast, which is about nepotism. I do think it is yet another one of those areas of the industry where we can get our heads in the clouds and not on our bodies, and really allows us to make excuses for not showing up and taking responsibility. As a NEPO baby, I am not one. I do not come from anyone in the industry. You have an advantage in that you have those connections. However, you also have to have the talent, consistency, and persistence to back that up. The other thing...

info_outline
Episode 278: Interview with Casting Director Angela Mickey show art Episode 278: Interview with Casting Director Angela Mickey

Acting Business Boot Camp

About Angela Mickey: Angela Mickey is the Managing Director of Casting at Liz Lewis Casting Partners, and has been working as a Casting Director for 24 years.  Angela works across the board on commercial, voice-over, film, TV, and theater projects, with a concentration on comedy, real people, and theatrical casting.  She enjoys working with both veteran and up-and-coming creatives, developing the best, unique plan for each project, and working as a partner to the producing process.  Recent on-camera commercial projects: Spectrum, UberEats, DCU, Blue...

info_outline
Episode 277: Are You Stuck? show art Episode 277: Are You Stuck?

Acting Business Boot Camp

  So, this week, I've received numerous emails from actors who have told me that they feel stuck.  That's why I was like, if they're feeling it, maybe I should do a podcast about feeling stuck.  So we're going to get to that.  Being stuck. I think being stuck has a lot to do, at least for me, about timing.  Generally, it always comes down to timing—not my timing; it's the Universe's timing. And then that sometimes just doesn't work. If I'm not in the greatest place, that frustrates me even more because I'm like, “Why not now?” “Why not now? What the fuck is...

info_outline
Episode 276: Musical Theatre with David Cady show art Episode 276: Musical Theatre with David Cady

Acting Business Boot Camp

About David Cady: DAVID CADY is currently a professor of commercial and musical theatre performance at AMDA, NYU, and Pace University. Prior, he was a casting director for Donna DeSeta Casting for close to 30 years. In addition to countless commercials, his casting credits include the original Dirty Dancing, Disney's Enchanted, Michael John LaChiusa's The Petrified Prince for the Public Theater, and the world premiere of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Jim Steinman's Whistle Down the      Wind, directed...

info_outline
Episode 275: New Beginnings of Spring show art Episode 275: New Beginnings of Spring

Acting Business Boot Camp

I don't know about you, 2024 is not exactly what I expected it would be in this industry. And, I'm after the strikes and, after everything we went through last year, seriously? This is it?  Now, of course, there are reasons for this.  There's the potential IATSE strike and the industry contraction. But the problem is that I don't know about you, but I'm left with feelings. And I thought that, since we just moved our clocks, I thought I would make this episode about spring and new beginnings.  In fact, I had friends over for dinner the other night, and my dear friend brought me...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

NEW FREE MASTERCLASS

I'm going to be talking about something that a listener sent me, and I thought it was a really interesting idea for a podcast, which is about nepotism.

I do think it is yet another one of those areas of the industry where we can get our heads in the clouds and not on our bodies, and really allows us to make excuses for not showing up and taking responsibility.

As a NEPO baby, I am not one.

I do not come from anyone in the industry. You have an advantage in that you have those connections. However, you also have to have the talent, consistency, and persistence to back that up. The other thing is that, oh, you're so and so's daughter or you're so and so's child. Oh. Then you must be fantastic, and then you have to live up to that, or you can never be your own person.

Now, I have a friend of mine who is the child of an incredibly famous actor, but that child chooses to use a different name because they don't want to be known as so and so's child. Now, that is very admirable. 

I may go about it differently.

I would say use every advantage you have. 

But this is the thing, and this is the real key point because most of you listening to this podcast are not; do not have nepotism in your family. What do you do? 

And this is the best advice I can give you. You need to keep your focus. 

So often, I have actors who look at point A and point B, and instead of just drawing a line between point A to point B, they go up, they go down, they go around, they twirl around.

They walk outside, they come back inside, and then maybe eventually get to point B. 

The question, the thing is that things like nepotism and a lot of things that I feel in the industry, try to get your focus from the three points where you need to be putting your focus, which is your acting training, your business skills and the core work, the work on you are the things that distract you from taking real responsibility for the job that you have been given to do on this Earth, because I believe the universe has given you given all of us a gift.

The question is, are we going to nurture that gift and are we going to stay focused on pursuing that gift?

Or are we going to allow our focus to go off into things that we cannot control again? 

My favorite prayer or affirmation is the serenity prayer that reminds us of this. Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change. I cannot change other people, places, times, things, or situations, and whether my competition has nepotism or not, courage to change the things I can.

I can only change myself, my attitudes, my thoughts, and my actions, and keep the focus on myself, my strengths, my career, and wisdom… 

Wisdom, my favorite word in the American language, to know the difference, which is the difference between what I cannot control or change, which is other people, places, things, or situations, or change.

Nepotism and other actors I may be competing against and what I can change, which is myself, my attitudes, my thoughts, and my actions. 

So, that's my response to the first part of that listener's question. I'm going to read the second part to you because I think this is very interesting.

Getting past the “what chance do I have?” misconception, ever having the opportunity to compete with a nepotism child. 

Again, what I would say about that is your job when you go into an audition is to focus on the work. 

It is not to focus on who your competition is. I joke about how I used to go into an audition room, and I'd sit in the audition room and basically pick the actor who I thought was going to get the job.

That is so working against ourselves instead of for ourselves. 

What I think is so crucial here is that when you go into audition, that your focus is again on that courage to change the things you can, which is really, truly freeing. 

Focusing in on your work as the actor and living the life of that character in that space and time, whether that be in a self tape or be in the room.

The listener goes on to say, my own personal Cher story. I consider myself a Nepo baby to an extent. I was raised in a theatrical household with family members who made their living in the arts and entertainment. When I was a child, they would say things to me that made it almost impossible to understand.

And trust me, we were nowhere near the Barrymore status. If anything, that caused far more damage. And then validation. It is something I have struggled with on and off.

I could elaborate so much more, but I think you get the idea. 

So grandiosity, let's just talk about that word. 

I have also experienced grandiosity in my life, whether observing it in other people or, sadly, myself carrying it out. Oh, what dress are you wearing? Oh, it's a Valentino. When, actually, maybe it was bought at Target.

Oh, we're a grand theater family. It's just a small theater town in Connecticut or somewhere, but we are the family known as the theatrical family. Where has grandiosity played a part in your life?

Do you have family members who exaggerate? Do you have friends who tend to exaggerate? A partner who tends to exaggerate? 

The question is, what is wrong with the truth? What is wrong with the truth? 

We don't always have to sell ourselves. We can just be. 

And especially as actors, I find that grandiosity is about us trying to prove to an agent, a manager, a casting director, a writer, a producer, or a director that we are “so much better than we actually are.”

But here's the thing. How you actually are is enough. 

I am enough. I always have been, and I always will be. And that is what I also want you to notice. Use your mind to govern your brain to notice. Am I trying to be more when just being me may be enough? 

I will also give you one final lesson on this, which is about from the casting director's point of view. 

You don't have to prove to me that you are good. 

You just need to do your job and know that you are good at doing that job. 

And that will make me want to bring you in for auditions, and that will make me want to hire you.