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Preparing Your Young Actor or Actress for Industry Success
http://www.acting-camp.com/Acting_Camp_Articles/Preparing_Your_Young_Actor_or_Actress_for_Industry_Success.html
Brooks Patton
Helping your young acting hopeful prepare for a successful acting
career can be an incredibly rewarding experience for the parent.
All parents like seeing their children being creative, expressing
themselves, and, most importantly, having fun.
It should be stated, however, that forcing a child to participate
in any pursuit they don’t like is not just counterproductive
but harmful to the child. Your role, as the acting hopeful’s
parent, is to caringly nurture your children’s’ expressed
interests and not force them into a pursuit in order to live vicariously
through them. One would have to be born under a rock to have missed
some of the more public examples of what can happen when children
are forced into an acting career they never wanted.
That being said, there are some very simple pointers you can follow
that will have a powerful impact in the immediate sense and create
long-term opportunities for the professional acting success of your
son or daughter.
Start Early
Human beings, it would seem, are all natural born actors. Early
in their lives, they often spend entire afternoons play-acting imaginary
scenarios. Sadly, as many of us get older, we forget how much fun
acting can be. By exposing your youngsters, at an early age, to
the concept of acting, you are, in effect, introducing them to something
at which they are already. Regardless of whether it’s soccer,
football, chess, or acting, childhood pursuits should always be
fun. By giving your children an early glimpse of acting while they
are young and predisposed to the concept, you dramatically increase
the odds of their long-term success. Acting Camps provide the perfect
vehicle for your children to immerse themselves in the creative
fun acting can provide. What they gain from the camp experience
has as much to do with you, the parent, as it does the camp itself.
With the internet woven into the fabric of our lives, there is simply
no excuse for parents not doing due-diligence research on any acting
camp they are considering. A little research time, up front, can
save you a lot of money, effort, and disappointment later.
After your children have started their first camp, make sure that
they are having fun. If not, first try finding a better-suited program
and see if that resolves the issue. If not, you may need to consider
the fact that acting may not be of interest to them at that point
in their lives. If that is the case, and the situation is handled
carefully, it may well become one as they get older. Forcing the
issue now will virtually guarantee that your child will never enjoy
the art. If there isn’t a fit, back off and give them some
time. Find out what it was about the camp experience they didn’t
like. More importantly, find out what things (even if only a few)
they actually did like about the camp. Pay attention to these answers.
There is a good chance that, armed with this information, you can
research other camps that may be better suited to your child’s
tastes and artistic needs. Find a different camp, try again next
year, and until then don’t push or make a big deal out of
it.
Be Involved
Acting is a passion and, like flame, it needs fuel in order to
burn. A parent’s support and involvement has no equal as that
fuel. Acting Camp is about far more than just what happens during
the time your child attends. What happens before and after camp
is as important as the camp itself. Furthermore, if you have an
uninterested attitude towards your children’s pursuits then
their attitude will soon follow your own. Help them prepare for
the camp experience beforehand. If you have done your research,
then you are well-versed in what your children will be learning
and doing. Help them feel prepared for it and they will have the
kind of fun that only self-confidence brings. After Camp is over,
spend a lot of time revisiting what they experienced and learned.
Often, there are exercises and drama games that can be fun for the
whole family to recreate. Children look to their parents for validation.
Be that validation for your young actor or actress and you have
armed them well for success.
Be Selective
Acting Camps are as varied as the children who attend them. Take
the time to research, research, research. If your children is new
to the art, look for fun-filled camps that focus more on the enjoyment
of the experience than the knowledge gained. As your children progress,
they will want, as well as need, more challenges for their minds.
Complacency destroys drive, and an unchallenged mind can hardly
avoid becoming complacent. Acting Camp should always be fun, but
as your children grow they will develop a sense of pride in their
craft and will be eager to take the challenge to the next level.
Do your homework and be prepared to provide that challenge in their
next camp.
Preparing For the Next Step
Eventually your children (and I use that term loosely here) will
be ready to move on to acting school. As you have watched and participated
with your children in their acting youth, you’ll no doubt
have picked up on where their artistic talents and drive really
lie. Research schools that have well-respected programs and degrees
in those areas. This next step is an expensive one, so doing your
research here actually does pay. Just as acting camps have helped
form your children’s creative foundations, so acting schools
will take it to that next, and this time, professional, level.
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