Ensemble: Yes or No?
When you fill out an audition form for any DMTC show,
whether it be a
Main Stage or a Young Performers production, you will come across the
question, "Will you accept ensemble? Yes or No." There are only
two acceptable answers to that question:
- Yes, you will accept a spot in the ensemble if the
director offers it to you. Or...
- No, you will not accept a spot in the ensemble if the
director offers it to you.
Please answer that question
honestly. Do not say "yes" unless you mean it. Do not say, "Yes,
I'll
take ensemble," and then, upon having it offered to you, turn around
and say, "Oops, I'm too busy." Now the director has to look for
someone to fill the slot she or he offered to you based on what
you wrote on your audition form. That takes up time the director
really does not have.
Reasons to say "no" to ensemble
The best reason: You have years and
years of acting
experience behind you, even formal training, and years of experience
playing principal roles. If that is the case, these next paragraphs are
not directed at you. If you have that kind of talent and experience, it
will show, and, chances are, the director will
only consider you for a principal role, anyway.
Other reasons: If you are not that
experienced an actor, but, for whatever reason, you do not want to do
the show unless you get a
particular role, say "No" to ensemble. Please be honest with yourself.
If you will feel too miserable to do the show if someone else
gets the part you want, please, just say "No" to the ensemble question before
you audition.
We don't want you to be miserable. It is okay to say "no" to ensemble
if you really do not want
to be in
it.
While you will be given equal consideration for the
roles you are
interested in playing, regardless of whether you state particular
preferences or say you will accept any part including ensemble, please
remember: The fewer roles you indicate you will accept, the fewer the
director's options for casting you.
If you really are too busy for a part
that a director might offer you, please do not audition at all. Do not
waste
the director's time and the time of everyone else who auditions. If you
are too busy to do the show, you are too busy to audition. Do not
audition just because your best friend is auditioning if you, yourself,
do not have time to take part in rehearsals and all the performances.
Reasons to say "yes" to ensemble
- You want to do the show because you love it (it is
your favorite
show or the score features your favorite song or the show is based on
your favorite story).
- You love performing in general.
- You want to get more stage experience.
- You want to work with the show's director, music
director, choreographer, etc.
Remember that you have a far better chance of getting
cast if you are willing to accept any role or ensemble part offered to
you as opposed to only wanting particular roles. Only one person can
play "the lead,"
but two or three dozen can be in the show in other roles and ensemble
parts.
Remember that the producers of this theater company
always accept ensemble, even though, as the leaders of this company,
they don't have to. By their own example, the producers show the value
they place on a cast with a strong ensemble, and their belief in the
integral part every actor plays in the success of a production.
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