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An Actor's Guide--Making It in New York City
 
 
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An Actor's Guide--Making It in New York City [Paperback]

Glenn Alterman (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 1, 2002
For any actor in or on the way to New York City, this is the definitive source for advice, winning strategies, marketing techniques, and invaluable insights to being a successful New York actor. Aspiring and established professionals will find this thorough and up-to-the-minute volume chock full of resources and advice about auditioning, making professional connections, promoting one's self, seeking opportunities in nontraditional venues, finding an apartment, securing "survival jobs," understanding actor unions, getting headshots, and furthering one's actor training in New York. This guide also details working as a film extra, careers in print modeling, scams and rip-offs to avoid, opportunities for actors with disabilities, and using the Internet to the fullest advantage. Included are in-depth interviews with legendary show business figures such as actor Henry Winkler, casting director Juliet Taylor, and theater director Joseph Chaikin as well top talents from the fields of film, television, stage, commercials, and talent agencies. Written by a professional New York actor with over thirty years of experience, this meticulously researched guide will give actors the tools they need to survive and thrive in New York show business.

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An Actor's Guide--Making It in New York City + An Actor Prepares...To Live in New York City: How to Live Like a Star Before You Become One + How to Be a Working Actor, 5th Edition: The Insider's Guide to Finding Jobs in Theater, Film & Television (How to Be a Working Actor: The Insider's Guide to Finding Jobs)
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A great resource tool that takes some mystery out of the process." -- Rob Decina, Casting Director, Guiding Light

"A must-read for the actor just arriving in New York as well as the seasoned pro . . . " -- William Esper, Acting Teacher and Director

"At last, a complete guide to survival as an actor in this industry." -- Jay Binder, C.S.A., Binder Casting

"Every actor who plans to move to New York should read this book." -- Debra Monk, Tony, Emmy, Obie, Drama Desk, and Helen Hayes Award–winning actress

From the Publisher

Acting programs at universities, colleges, film schools, and thousands of other organizations around the world teach actors the nuances of their craft. A successful acting career, however, requires a savvy that has little to do with motivation, characterization, or stage presence. Countless new actors arrive in New York City every year overwhelmed by the city, unaware of the resources available to them, and unprepared for the business of acting. Thirty-year New York acting veteran Glenn Alterman has seen it all and now shares hard-earned career success secrets in An Actor's Guide—Making It in New York City.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Allworth Press (February 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1581152132
  • ISBN-13: 978-1581152135
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,116,534 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Glenn Alterman is a multi-award winning playwright, the author of 22 theater related books (including eight books of original monologues), a screen writer, an actor, a top New York City commercial print model, and a highly respected monologue/audition acting coach. He was born in Brooklyn, New York to a bar-owning father and house-wife mother.
For many years he was a relatively succesful New York actor. One day, while frustrated about trying to find a monologue for an important upcoming audition, he decided to try write his own. He had no idea how to do this so he just took a huge leap of faith and did. That first monologue took several days to write, but ended up being a huge hit hit, winning him many auditions and opening the door to a new career, writing. Fate and good fortune lead to the publication of his first book of original monologues, Street Talk. Many books of original monologues (about 400 monologues) followed.
His books include: An Actors Guide- Making It In New York (and the recently released, completely revised "Second Edition"). The Perfect Audition Monologue, Glenn Alterman's Secrets To Successful Cold Readings, Sixty Seconds To Shine--101 One Minute monologues, Creating Your Own Monologue, Promoting Your Acting Career, Two Minutes and Under (Original Monologues for Actors, Volumes 1, 2, and 3), Street Talk (Original Character Monologues for Actors), Uptown (More Original Monologues For Actors), The Job Book: One Hundred Acting Jobs for Actors, The Job Book 2: One Hundred Day Jobs for Actors, What to Give Your Agent for Christmas, and Two Minute Monologues. Two Minutes and Under, Street Talk, and Uptown were the number one best-selling books of original monologues in 1992, 1993, and 1995 and, along with Creating Your Own Monologue, Promoting Your Acting Career, The Job Book, The Job Book 2, and Two Minutes and Under, were all "Featured Selections" in the Doubleday Book Club (Fireside Theater and Stage and Screen Division"). Most of his published works have gone on to multiple printings.
As a playwright, Mr. Alterman is the recipient of the first Julio T. Nunez Artist's Grant, The Arts and Letters Award in Drama, and scores of playwriting awards. His play The Pain in the Poetry was published in 2009 The Best Ten Minute Plays For 2 or More Actors. Mr. Alterman's plays, Like Family and The Pecking Order, were optioned by Red Eye Films (with Alterman writing the screenplay). His play, Solace, was produced off-Broadway by the Circle East Theater Company (formerly Circle Rep Theater Company). Nobody's Flood won the Bloomington National Playwriting Competition, as well as being a finalist in the Key West Playwriting Competition. Coulda-Woulda-Shoulda won the Three Genres Playwriting Competition twice, two years in a row! The prize included publication of the play in the Prentice Hall textbook, used in college theater departments all over the country.
Mr. Alterman wrote the book for Heartstrings: The National Tour (commissioned by DIFFA, the Design Industries Foundation for Aids), a thirty-five city tour that starred Michelle Pfeiffer, Ron Silver, Susan Sarandon, Marlo Thomas, and Sandy Duncan. Other plays include Kiss Me When It's Over (commissioned by E. Weissman Productions), starring and directed by André De Shields; Tourists of the Mindfield (finalist in the L. Arnold Weissberger Playwriting Competition at New Dramatists); and Street Talk/Uptown (based on his monologue books), produced at the West Coast Ensemble.
Goin' Round on Rock Solid Ground and Unfamiliar Faces were finalists at the Actors Theater of Louisville's playwriting competition. Spilt Milk received its premiere at the Beverly Hills Rep/Theater 40 in Los Angeles and was selected to participate in the Samuel French One-Act Festival. The Danger of Strangers won Honorable Mention in the Deep South Writers Conference Competition, was a finalist in the George R. Kernodle Contest, was selected to be in the Pittsburgh New Works Festival and has had over 35 productions, including at Circle Rep Lab, the West Bank Downstairs Theater Bar (starring James Gandolfini), the Emerging Artists Theater Company's one-act marathon, the Vital Theater Company in New York, and, most recently, with the Workshop Theater Company. There have been several major productions of his original monologues play, God In Bed, both in the United States and in Europe.
Mr. Alterman's work has been performed at Primary Stages, Ensemble Studio Theater (EST), Circle in the Square Downtown, HERE, LaMaMa, in the Turnip Festival, at the Duplex, Playwrights Horizons, at several theaters on Theater Row in New York, as well as at many theaters around the country.
Mr. Alterman has been a guest artist and given master classes and seminars on "Monologues" and "The Business of Acting" at such diverse places as the Governor's School for the Arts in Norfolk, Virginia, the Edward Albee Theater Conference (Valdez, Alaska), Southampton College, Western Connecticut State College, Broadway Artists Alliance, The American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), the Dramatists Guild, the Learning Annex, the Screen Actors Guild, the Seminar Center, in the Boston Public School System, and at many acting schools and colleges all over the country.
In 1993, Mr. Alterman created the Glenn Alterman Studios, where actors receive monologue/audition coaching, as well as career preparation. He was named "Best Monologue/Audition Coach in the Tri-State Area" by Theater Resources Magazine and first runner up as "The Best Private Acting Coach In New York", by the readers of Back Stage. He presently lives in New York City, where he's working on several plays, works on TV commercials, and coaches actors.
On the Web, he can be reached at www.glennalterman.com.

 

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Average Customer Review
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Oy, someone's done all the work for you..., July 21, 2002
This review is from: An Actor's Guide--Making It in New York City (Paperback)
While I didn't move to New York specifically to become an actor, I've sort of found myself happily "in the business" now. I randomly stumbled onto this book while looking for new wisdom to add onto must-reads by Uta Hagen, Michael Shurtleff, Stanislavski, etc. After having done a lot of research on how to be a successful actor in NY the "hard way", I think I agree with most of Alterman's suggestions - just wish I'd had this book in the beginning =)

An actor should always be reading, attending a lecture or workshop - you know, doing *something* to learn. New York has its particular nuances, and this book simplifies some of the hassles that a newcomer might find overwhelming. It gives some useful advice on dealing with the three most important things you'll have do when you get here:

*finding a place to live
*finding a job you like ('cos you have to eat)
*finding acting work, any and all kinds of work

Having a thicker-than-average skin here is an absolute must, for rejections run a-plenty, and they have your name on them. But this place is also (in my view) the most exciting, rewarding endeavour you'll make in your performance career.

This book has got lots of juicy info on auditioning, headshots, unions, different sorts of acting jobs (such as voiceover work), casting directors, agents, useful internet urls, etc. There are several interviews with casting agents & directors on dos-and-donts for actors - nothing beats knowledge from the professionals.

Good luck, and welcome to the greatest theatre city in the world...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good book for Actors anywhere, April 24, 2004
This review is from: An Actor's Guide--Making It in New York City (Paperback)
A good book with great advice for any actor- whether you're from a sprawling Metropolis or from Dahlgren, Illinois! It definitely caters more to the aspiring New York Actor (like myself), but there are some good lessons in here for anyone looking to make a career in this exciting yet intimidating field. i recommend, as this was one of the very first books that I read when i was thinking of making acting a full time career.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is extremely helpful., March 2, 2004
This review is from: An Actor's Guide--Making It in New York City (Paperback)
I stumbled on this book by accident and boy am i glad i did! This book tells you step by step how to make it out there as an actor. If you're a actor and is not quite sure on how or where to start this book is your key.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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When I began work on this book, I thought that my target audience would primarily be young actors coming to New York for the first time. Read the first page
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New York, Los Angeles, Fifth Avenue, Central Park, Screen Actors Guild, Manhattan Theatre Club, United States, Back Stage, Circle East, Circle Rep, East Village, Sixth Avenue, Upper East Side, Breakdown Services, Madison Avenue, Staten Island, West Village, Work Program, Battery Park, Lower East Side, Neighborhood Playhouse, Playwrights Horizons, Ross Reports, Sam Shepard, Seventh Avenue
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