Actor & Acting Coach: Charles Tuthill

Charles Tuthill has taught at the Atlantic Theater Company, The Actors Center, Purchase College Conservatory, Caymichael Patten Studios, and New York University. As an actor he has played leading roles in New York at Manhattan Theater Club, Lincoln Center Directors LAB, Revelation Theater Company, Theater for a New Audience, Worth Street Theater, and the WPA. Regionally, he has appeared at Actors Theater of Louisville, Alliance Theater, Arena Stage, Berkeley Repertory Theater, Great Lakes Theater Festival, Repertory Theater of St Louis, Trinity Repertory, and the Williamstown Theater Festival. Film and Television credits include Law and Order, Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, all the New York based daytime dramas, and many short films including the Academy Award Nominated SPEED FOR THESPIANS based on Chekhov’s THE BEAR.

Interviewed by Joanna Parson




Let’s get to the nitty gritty of what our readers want to know about monologues and auditions. In your opinion, what makes a great contemporary monologue, and how can actors find them?
A great contemporary monologue reflects a point of view about our culture that the auditor can identify with or admire. The idea of what is contemporary changes drastically from year to year, sometimes from week to week! I am always curious to know what is on the minds of actors in their twenties because they represent the next generation of theater makers. I am a bit of a voyeur. I enjoy seeing what it is they want to express about themselves, what kinds of questions they are asking and it gives me a clue as to what life will be like twenty years from now when these young actors are leading the way.

It doesn’t interest me to see an actor in their twenties do a piece that was written when I was in my twenties.I was sitting in a class today taught by Olympia Dukakis and she asked the actors who were working: “What is the one deep thought that resides within this play?” This seems to me to a great way to distill what a play can be about into tangible terms. I heard somewhere that we have 3 to 5 really big character developing moments in our lives. Monologues are usually one of those moments in the characters life, so your attachment to the material should be deep.

Ask yourself what you are auditioning for and suit your monologue to that material. Auditioning for an agent or a casting director carries a different set of expectations than auditioning for a season at a theater or for a graduate school. Don’t confuse them, and don’t leave your sense of humor behind. A friend of mine likes to say an initial audition is just a first date, it’s not the wedding!

Your Web site includes a list of monologues that you consider to be overdone. Why is it important for actors to look for newer or less-heard material?
The list you are referring to was compiled by my friend Karen Kohlhaas who teaches a monologue preparation class in New York. She asked several industry professionals to list monologues they were tired of seeing. The interesting thing she learned was how old some of the material was! Often twenty years old! What was going on in the 1980’s really isn’t relevant or immediate anymore! If you are a young actor, find something newer. It’s likely that it will express a point of view that you can identify with and you will get attached to the ideas in the material in a significant way. Don’t underestimate what the material can do to help your acting. I sometimes think when I assign scenes in class that the character will teach the actor more about living life than I will.

However, I could see material from a great play repeatedly rather than average material. I wouldn’t get tired of the material because a great play is dependent on the actor bringing something of himself to the role. I love Shakespeare plays to see what a particular actor brings to it. The same is true for O’Neill, Williams, Chekhov, Shaw, Ibsen…When the strongest aspect of the monologue is the storytelling, you’re in trouble. I just don’t care about the plot. I care about the individual interpretation of the circumstances and how they relate to that particular performer. While I enjoy the writing of Teresa Rebeck or Nicky Silver, when I’ve heard it once, it doesn’t allow for much revelation of individuality. I end up listening to the writing rather than being aware of what the actor is bringing to the audition room.

You also talk a lot about “actions”—what is an action, and how can an actor use action to shape a performance or monologue?
Different schools teach the meaning of action in different ways. It’s a way of finding out what the underlying purpose of the material is. What carries you from one moment into the next, and how are those moments connected?

There are many ways of playing an action. A typical action as taught by a school like the Atlantic might be something like: “I am trying to put my partner in his place” or “I am going to get my partner to accept a beautiful gift”. This way of working is illustrated in the book The Practical Handbook for the Actor. Another school teaches an action as “to get the love I deserve”. Yet another school of thought is “what are you trying to make your partner FEEL?” These to me are all actions. My favorite way of looking at actions, by way of Ron Van Lieu is to ask “How am I trying to move my life forward in this particular moment in time?”

I have to say that when I studied acting I hated playing actions, but as a teacher, I see how invaluable it is to actors. It gives the work focus. What is even more fun is when that initial work is done, to trust it, throw it away, and really play.

How can you choose material that’s appropriate for your “type”? Actors can play anything, right? So how do you even know what your type is?
I don’t think actors can play anything. I think actors like to believe they can because they’re actors. Again, I think the material should reflect the actor’s frame of reference. I don’t see how a twenty year old actor can play King Lear. They could certainly play an aspect of Lear, but their life experience isn’t anywhere near the character’s. This isn’t to say that an actor is limited to playing only what he knows. The imagination is an important part of the work as well, and I think we’ve all had experiences acting where we released something we didn’t know was inside us. That’s the kind of acting we live for!

As for typing yourself, I think it’s a good idea to do a couple of things. Ask friends what parts you could play, what actors you remind them of, or what adjectives describe you. Then do it again with people who don’t know you, who only have a first impression of you. After all, we only get about seven seconds from the time we walk into a room before someone has made decisions about who we are. It’s important that you know what you are giving off when you enter a room and your audition material should be in line with who you are.

So, what makes a good Shakespearean monologue?
As far as I’m concerned any Shakespeare monologue is good! But if you want to stand out from the pack, I think it’s best to stay away from pieces that have a lot of antithesis or split focus. Find something that is straightforward, with high stakes, and BOLD. Don’t get involved with trying to find something they’ve never heard. It can’t be done. Find something you want say.

Chekov, Wilde, Tennessee Williams– is it important to have monologues for all of different classical and American play styles?
Absolutely. You can’t use an Oscar Wilde monologue to audition for a Chekhov play. The social behaviors, rules of conduct, and internal needs of the characters are drastically different. If you are auditioning for a Chekhov play, you don’t have to do Chekhov per se. You could use Turgenev, Ostrovsky or Gorky, and it would put you in the landscape that the director is interested in examining. For a Wilde play you could use Granville Barker, Somerset Maugham or perhaps Shaw depending on the material. It always helps a director if your audition selection is in the same ballpark as the material being produced. I can’t tell if you can play Williams if you are doing a monologue by Nicky Silver. I love them both, but to me they ask very different things of the actor playing them.

When, if ever, is it appropriate to choose a monologue where you speak with an accent that is not your own?
I think it only makes sense if the play you are auditioning for contains that accent, and you are letting the production team know that you are capable of that dialect. If you were doing a general audition, and you were allowed two pieces, I would say you could do one with an accent if you absolutely love the monologue, and it shows off your work to great advantage. Otherwise I mostly want to see YOU. When I’m auditioning actors, I’m not only looking for people who are talented, but people who are fun to be around. I want to get a sense of that person. Monologues are so difficult. We get to learn so much about you and your acting when you are doing a monologue which is why they are useful to directors. Don’t complicate it by adding a dialect

Let’s say I have an audition tomorrow, and I don’t feel that I have a monologue that, in my opinion, is perfect for what they might be looking for. Should I try to prepare a new monologue, or stick with something tried and true that may not be exactly appropriate for the part?
This is one of those questions that drives me a little crazy because I imagine one set of circumstances where I have a particular answer, and once that answer is formed in mind, I imagine another set of circumstances where my answer is negated. Karen Kohlhaas says that if you have 20 monologues ready to go at anytime all of your bases will be covered. I think there is truth in that.

At the end of the day, you have to feel good about what you are doing. There is no sense in walking into a room and doing work that you are not proud of. I like to think that if presented with a monologue that doesn’t quite line up with the circumstances in the play I am directing, that I have enough imagination to see you in that role.

What if you’re interested in film acting? Are there monologues that can help you show your “film acting” style? Say, is there such a thing as “film acting style”, anyway?
Of course there is no such thing as film acting style! What I think you mean is: Is this acting the kind of acting where I want to move in for a close-up? Acting for the stage and acting for the camera are two separate jobs. I think it is rare that an actor would be asked to do a monologue from a play when auditioning for a film. Plays are verbal, films are visual, and some of the best acting in film comes in moments that are non verbal. If you are asked to do a monologue for a film audition work on being intimate and simple, and allow your thoughts to tell the story. We don’t need a lot of voice from you in film, we are more interested in whether we can experience you.

Do you suggest actors do any kind of physical or vocal warm-up before a monologue audition, or is all of that a bunch of hooey?
Seriously??? Of course I think you should do a physical and vocal warm-up! Don’t you want range in your expression? If you aren’t needing to do a vocal and physical warm up before a monologue, you are not challenging yourself enough as an actor, and you should go to LA and be on TV and leave the actors who want to be in the theater alone to do their job.

What if an actor gets really nervous before auditioning? Do you have any suggestions for handling nerves?
Audition more often. Sooner or later, you will stop thinking about the people at the table and what they think of you. You will start thinking about what you are doing in your work. This is such a good day, that you never go back to worrying about the table again. Even when they are eating their lunch.

I knew a teacher that said: “character thoughts replace actor fears.” If you can be specific and personal, your inner critic will go away and you will become an advocate for your character’s needs. Give yourself something that you WANT to do up there! It has to be PLEASURABLE for you, or you will become self conscious.

Some acting auditions are cold readings, where actors are handed a script they’ve never seen, given ten minutes in a waiting area, and then expected to be brilliant. What do you suggest actors do first when they’re given a script for a cold reading?
I never really had to do this often when I was acting to tell the truth, but my advice is: Take a big bite in the opening moment and let the rest play out from there. No one wants to see timidity, even when you are playing Laura in the Glass Menagerie. We want to see what that character is capable of, and the only way to do that is to put it out there. You will let everyone in the room know that you are a risk taker, and a generous actor. Who doesn’t want to work with that?

What do you think directors and casting directors look for on a resume? Are there common resume mistakes that you see actors making?
Once you get the basic format there isn’t much more to it. Some people like to arrange their credits a particular way, or import headshots into the resume. That’s all fine, I suppose. I don’t think it makes much difference. I want to know who they’ve worked with. Can I call a director they’ve worked with and get a referral? Where have they trained? Do I enjoy the acting that comes from that training ground, or am I going to spend my rehearsal period trying to undo bad habits?

Frankly, I think this topic gets too much importance by young actors. As long as I can read it, it’s fine. Do there have to be do’s and don’ts about everything in this business? Where is the individuality?

How important is a good headshot? What can actors do to get the best headshot possible?
Obviously a good headshot is important at the beginning of your career. It’s all you have. You can get a meeting if you have a great shot.

As for what you can do to get the best shot, someone should poll the headshot photographers on this. Perhaps it will be your next interview! It took me several times before I got good shots, and I got better at it every time I had new shots taken.

My advice is: study headshots before your session. Look at the body language and find what you like and bring it to the photographer. When you are in your session, put your eyes on the floor, drop in an image of a loved one, and slowly raise your eyes in to the lens. Slowly and gently move your face so the photographer can capture the light playing on your face in different ways. When you get tired or you do go dry internally, lower your eyes. The photographer can’t photograph you if you aren’t making yourself available to the lens. It keeps you in the driver’s seat, rather than giving all of your power to the photographer.

You’ve taught acting and actors for years, at some of the best institutions in New York, and privately. What would you say to people who say that acting talent can’t be taught—you’ve either got it, or you don’t?
Some actors have instinct. Some are hungry and determined. I can’t teach these things. I can talk about a particular play, or a period in time that the play was written, or the structure of a scene. I can observe the actors working, and when I’m lucky, see what they are missing in the work and try to offer a way for them to get to it. The potential for better work usually lies in the body, or the breath. I don’t like teachers who direct the students. I am trying to bring out the best in the student and to bring what’s best about them from within themselves and out into the room so it can be shared with an audience. I love actors and their ability to do this. If I can encourage it in the classroom, then I like to believe it will have an impact in the future of the profession. It takes a tremendous amount of courage to act, and I think anybody can do it. There should be as many types of actors as there are stories to tell, don’t you think?

Jonathan Hammond, Actor/Coach on Training and The Truth

 

Jonathan Hammond Bio:

Jonathan has held faculty positions at Rutgers University (the MFA program) and Collaborative Arts Project 21 (NYU). His private clients have appeared and are currently appearing on and off Broadway, major regional theaters, soaps, television and film.

 

 

Interviewed by Joanna Parson

 

You’ve been a successful actor for many years.  When did you decide to begin teaching?

I have always taught. It’s very much in my blood. Even in college I was ‘acting coach’ on student productions. I feel as much ‘in flow’ when I am teaching or coaching as I do when I am acting. It is a true passion of mine. For me the idea of ‘those that can’t, teach’ is totally absurd. I am an actor and I am acting teacher and coach. I love it!

I love empowering actors. I love helping them remove the obstacles that stand in the way of their brilliance. An actor’s greatest asset is who he already is. It seems so obvious, but so much of the work I do is simply getting actors to trust their instincts, work from themselves, and celebrate who they are. So often, my clients and students are trying to be some pre-conceived notion of what they think the people behind the table want. In actuality, it is their own special uniqueness that is of the most value.  

Also, I see that so many wonderful actors don’t really have the first clue about analysis. It doesn’t seem to be taught well in the schools, because even the actors that come to me with lots of training are sometimes sketchy when it comes to this. This is part of what excites me the most about teaching and coaching, helping actors discover and utilize the clues from the script.

Do you teach or coach a specific method of acting, like the Method or Meisner work?

Absolutely not. People work very differently. It is the job of a teacher and coach to be well-versed in many different approaches and methodologies.  Some actors are heady and analytical, others are intuitive and earthy. A good teacher/coach can read this kind of thing immediately about a client and find the best way in for them. I am not going to work with a primarily Shakespearean actor with an MFA in the same way that I would work with a fabulously talented dancer from the cast of WICKED. There are a myriad of different types of experiences and histories.  

The material itself also requires different ways of working. While we are ultimately always looking for the truth, you can’t approach MEDEA in the same way that you tackle THE LION KING.  

While I work with a host of ‘techniques’, I love Practical Aesthetics. This encourages the actor to imagine himself in a given situation. How he would react, feel, and respond. This is the quickest way to the actor’s truth. From there it is easy to add ‘style’, a dialect, a specific physicality, or whatever other externals might be appropriate.  

Can acting be taught, anyway?  Shouldn’t people with talent be able to pick up a script and simply dazzle us with their instinctive choices?

Training is important. That being said, I know brilliant and successful actors with MFAs from YALE and others who have dropped out of community college. Everyone comes to their art in a different way and with different experiences.  Most of the actors I know who do classic plays have trained. Most of my Broadway/Musical Theater folks take class and study privately. There are some actors are just instinctual and if they do have a technique, they don’t really know what it is.  

To answer your question, many exceptionally talented (and trained) actors that I work with are not always able to ‘pick up a script and dazzle’. So often, the people that work with me, clients with MFA’s or lots of professional experience, haven’t really figured out exactly what it is they are trying to do in a scene. It is the same with my musical theater clients. Often, they have not decided what it is that they specifically want to accomplish dramatically in their song. There are basic steps that get over-looked. I see it over and over again. People often just need an outside eye that can see what they have missed.  

How do you suggest that actors go about picking acting classes or coaches that are right for them?

Follow your instinct. By this I mean… do you feel empowered when you work with this teacher of coach? Notice I said “empowered”. You want someone who is going to tell you the truth about yourself so that you can be awakened and excited about the next step. I don’t care how famous or ‘accomplished’ an instructor is, you should never be made to feel shamed, humiliated or censored.

I would also be wary of classes with industry professionals. Show business contacts are extremely important, and these kinds of seminars and workshops can open doors. While I believe agents and casting directors have invaluable insights about work presented to them as a finished product, it is not been my experience that they are the place to necessarily go to for technique and craft. There are exceptions of course.  

I believe that the alchemy of the actor’s art is best left to people who can look compassionately at the entire picture of the artist. There are many stages that an actor’s work and craftsmanship goes through before it should be presented to the people who will make final decisions about it.  

You went to undergraduate school at the University of Michigan.  How was that experience?  What kind of people do you recommend look at the University of Michigan theatre program for their undergrad education?

It’s a fantastic program. It’s not right for everyone.   

I am a bit Taoist about the whole school thing. If you want to go, apply, audition and see what happens. If you get in, that’s great. If you don’t, there are always other possibilities. It is important to add that I have coached seventeen year old kids who want to go to NYU, Michigan, or the like. They have had every financial opportunity available to them – summer programs, trips to New York, cast albums, and private voice lessons. The parents have hired me to coach their children, sometimes as many as ten sessions for college auditions.  

Musical theater training of the caliber of University of Michigan, Carnegie-Mellon, etc. is an extremely intense market place. There is amazing training to be had at these institutions. But there are many ways to approach a career in the arts.  

When did you apply to the American Repertory Theatre Institute at Harvard University?  Do you think that attending ART has made a significant difference in your career?

A.R.T. got me an agent and put me in a lot of debt. Graduate school can absolutely help your career. There is a showcase in New York, and the cache of ‘I went there’. If it’s a school that is respected, it can be a great introduction to the business. But if you want that kind of training, get it wherever you can get it. The cream does rise to the top. It may be a bit more difficult if you went to Iowa State than to Julliard, but if you get training, I believe that you will get to where you are supposed to be.  

On a personal level, I have to say that I believe A.R.T. to be a spectacularly mediocre program. I do not recommend it. I did get some good training, but I do not believe it is of the caliber of many other programs – even those that are considered less ‘prestigious’.  

I also think it is important to be very careful about accruing debt for acting training. A regional theater job is at best $800-900 a week, and that’s when you actually get a job. This is not a wage that accommodates monthly student loan payments.  

In your opinion, is there a significant difference between musical theatre acting, and acting for straight plays?

Nope. It’s just about telling the truth.

We all know we want to act naturally when we’re singing, but there’s all that… well… SINGING to do.  Do you have any tips to help get actors out of the trap of listening to the sound they’re producing instead of focusing on the words and actions of a character?

It all boils down to technique. The singing voice must be trained in such away that it can express itself with the same intention and subtlety that it does when it is speaking. In the contemporary musical theater this is a requirement. This is something that can be taught.

Once the vocal technique is in place, the actor is totally free to express whatever he is trying to express. What am I trying to do? What am I trying to get? What am I trying to figure out for myself? These are the exact same questions that need to be answered for a Eugene O’Neill play or Shakespeare. The difference is that the singing technique must be in place before the actor can communicate with a real and authentic level of truth in a musical framework.  

Do you coach people differently when they’re auditioning for on-screen television or film work?  Is there a difference between screen and stage acting?

Nope. It’s just way, way smaller. Everyone makes the acting-in-film-thing into some big mystery. You tell the truth without the extra energy that you would give an 800 person room. That’s it.  

It’s all about the thinking in film and TV. You simply approach it with the gentleness and nakedness of thought. Thought translates and communicates effortlessly. It’s quieter.  

What should actors look for in a monologue?  Do people really audition with monologues anymore, anyway?

I don’t work with monologues very often at all. In general, most auditions are going to be prepared material from whatever it is one is auditioning for. However, if you are introducing yourself to agents and casting directors, it is a good idea to have a few monologues.  

You have to have monologues that say who you are. If you are hilarious, make sure you have something that shows your comic chops off. If you are gorgeous, play the part of the beautiful person in love, or the sexy ingénue. If you are intense, let them see the driven side of you that comes so naturally. Show business divides and categorizes and type casting exists. If you are in the monologue stage of your career, you need to think in these terms. Your monologue needs to present to them what you are in the most obvious of ways. Eventually, of course, you will transcend every stereotype and change the world with your monumental talent.  

On a side note, if you are someone who does Shakespeare, you will often use soliloquies for auditions.  

When an actor is working on a scene or a monologue, what are the first things he or she should do?

Read the play. Answer the following questions — who am I? What kind of person am I? What do I want? What am I trying to do? What is in my way? The big one for me is – what am I trying to do?  

Also, just play with it. Read it out loud, read all the parts. Explore it without your internal censor judging it. You can edit, refine and specify later. But at first, just play.  

What are the biggest mistakes that you see actors making when they approach the work?   

They don’t answer the basic questions for themselves. Or, they have given their power away and become identified with what they think they lack, or to what they believe that they are supposed to be.  

Do you have any hints for actors who are working with material in a heightened classical style, like Shakespeare or Moliere?  How are we supposed to keep the emotions real when the language is so foreign to the way we really speak?  

You have to totally understand what it is you are saying. What am I actually saying in words that I can understand? What am I trying to do? This seems so obvious but I can’t tell you how many times people come to me with a classical piece with only a vague sense of the meaning of the language.

The best way to work with classical material is to actually work with it. Listen to it. Go to see it done well. There are wonderful recordings and videos of Shakespeare plays. The more you hear the language and experience it in your mouth, the more facility you will have with it.  

There is definitely more ‘homework’ to be done when you first start approaching the classic plays. You may need a summary, or an edition that provides lots of definitions, clarifications and foot-notes.  You can’t begin to bring real emotions to anything unless you have a deep understanding of it. This ‘academic’ approach, is an essential step.

Finally, take the trip off yourself that there is a ‘right’ way to do Shakespeare. Everything is always just about telling the truth.

What do you think beginning actors should do when they are first trying to get on stage and screen?  

Take very good care of yourself. Make sure that your basic needs are met. Replace overwhelm with excitement. Be honest. Listen. Train.  

Try to act somewhere, even if it means you have to pay to do it. Ask yourself these questions – Why do I want to act? Could I be happy doing anything else?

Tell us a story!  Is there one particular role or experience that you’ve had that changed the way you thought of the process of acting?

I think it is very important that actors approach acting not only in terms of their craft, but equally in terms of their emotional and mental well-being. Show business can be cruel, objectifying, and triggering place. Actors often feel that everyone else has the power, that they have no say in what happens to them in their lives, and that they are totally expendable. The key is for you to decide for yourself how you choose to relate to this difficult profession. If you have a starving artist mentality, you will be a starving artist. If you believe that you are powerless and subscribe to ‘victim’ mentality, that is what the world will mirror back to you.  

Rather than a story, there are two things that teachers of mine have said to me that have been extremely useful and that I would like to pass on:

A few years ago, I was in the throes of an angst-ridden decision to go or not go to an audition for a play that I didn’t believe in. I knew that I supposed to care. It was a kind of high-profile, commercial production, an ‘opportunity’. But I couldn’t shake the feeling that it just wasn’t right for me. The wonderful musical theater teacher Craig Carnelia said to me: ‘Jonathan, you don’t have to do anything that you don’t want to do. Ever. For the rest of your life. Until you die’. To this day, I follow this advice.  

The second comes from my amazing, sage-like voice teacher Margret Riddelberger who told me that ‘if the decisions and choices that you are making don’t scare you a little bit, you’re probably not growing’.   

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