#NerdsUnite: The Ramblings of a Raconteuse

<editorsnote> Nerds, meet my buddy Helenna. We met on twitter not too long ao, and she's totes mcgotes one rad chiquita banana with a flare for all things flair! That's right, Helenna here is what we call an artsy fartsy nerd. She's a poet, into all things dramatic arts, and she's going to come on board to write each week about her love of said drama. Well not like actual drama drama, like some cat fight shit - but you get the idea.

I only have one thing left to say ... HIT IT HELENNA!!! </editorsnote>

#TalkNerdyToMeLover's @Helslevy

I ended my last post “Project Helenna - Part One” by saying that I am now declaring my remainder of 2012 as the year of “Project Helenna.”  

If you’re wondering why, feel free to go back and read my previous post to get caught up.  For those of you looking for details on just how I’m going to get down to business, here is what I mean…

I am turning my focus back to the craft of acting and to a “holistically healthy Helenna: mentally, physically, and spiritually, to create the best actor I can be and my best self.”

How am I going to do this?

Since I have a producer type brain, I’ve laid everything out for myself as if it is a project I’m about to produce.  

Now, first off, in addition to producing content for the web I also have spent many years on the business of acting which is extremely important for any actor looking to break into the business.  I’ve educated myself in a very comprehensive way taking a ton of workshops and classes and seminars etc… I’ve studied with many of the leading minds in this field and have saturated myself with information.  

Secondly, as an actor, I’ve also filled myself with training in Vancouver as well as LA and again, I’m saturated. 

At this point, I’m bursting and prepared and I believe in my skill set.  I’m ready.  Do I still have a ton to learn?  Of course.  We never stop growing and changing.  But right now, at this stage of my development as an actor, I feel ready to really apply the training I’ve had not in a class but on set as much as possible. 

I’m taking everything I have learned and am creating a laser beam focus.  A lot of the time the best actions are the types that you would take if you were already “there” so that you are actually ready instead of preparing to be ready.  ”Project Helenna” for me means going about my craft and career as if I am already a series regular.  I thought it easiest if I laid out my guide of what I’ll be focused on to explain exactly what this means for me. 

1) Optimum Health and Fitness

I’ve often said that I want to be in the best physical condition possible because not only do I want to look fantastic, (after all this is Hollywood), but I want to be able to play roles where I’m kicking butt Lara Croft/Sucker Punch styles.  (If there is a comedic element thrown in there, all the better!) While I’m in relatively good shape, my goal is to get to the point where I could be called tomorrow to do training with wire work, or massive guns, or in some type of martial art, and rock it out because I’m in such a great state of fitness.  

I’ve started training with a friend of mine who has developed a great program for me in the gym in my building.  It’s taken what I was already doing for my workouts and refined it so that I feel like I’m properly focused.  This is a definite challenge to me, but one I am ready for. So far I’ve completed a week of the new program and I feel great!

 

2) Sharpen My Craft

I recently had to prepare 25 pages of sides (aka. “script”) for 3 different characters for a meeting I had.  This was an incredibly fun task, but also rather difficult.  One of the roles was a pretty big stretch for me and I had to do a lot of work getting myself to the place that that character lives inside of me and I only really had a day to do it.  

And heads up, tv auditions are nothing like theater where you have weeks of rehearsal.  You don’t have a ton of time to prepare and you have to be able to deliver a wholly realized character.  I ended up doing a stellar job, but it made me realize that having such a dense amount of material to prepare to the point where it’s “set ready” takes a focus on my craft that needs to be the norm.  

I realized that I need to make a list of all of the possible types of characters I can play and start researching them now as opposed to when I get the material.  That way, as soon as I see the type of character, I can access the information I’ve banked so that I have a solid starting off point and I’m not forced to begin with the base line of research. (ie)  a cop’s mindset vs a lawyer’s etc…)

Now this being said, in the past I haven’t really needed to do massive amounts of research for an audition because that character’s thoughts and words and feelings were like second nature to me.  But in this past case, I really needed to school myself.  The character was foreign to me and I was being held to a very high standard.  I was being truly tested to see if I was ready for the next tier jump.  I passed with flying colors. 

3) Balance the Mind

I’m very grateful for Jack Plotnick.  He is one of the acting coaches I work with and is all about affirmations. Thank God for that.  

Being an actor can be crazy-making.  We deal with ups and downs on a daily if not hourly basis in a way that the rest of the world doesn’t.  Rejection is inevitable and every day we are putting our emotions and the core of ourselves on the line.  For those of you reading this who aren’t actors, the best way to describe it is that basically, we are doing job interviews a number of times a day and the reason we don’t get a job could have nothing to do with our skill set.  The reason could be that we are too fat, too thin, have brown hair and they want blonde hair, our eyes are too close together, or perhaps the producer’s girlfriend is the one already favored for the role.  There are a zillion things out of our control and yet we have to deliver the goods every single time. 

There is so much anxiety and fear that can arise from this business that you need to be grounded completely in who you are.  Someone told me once that contrary to popular belief, actors are the most sane people in Hollywood because we are constantly being faced with our own shit and forced to work through it.  This totally makes sense to me. I know that I can’t access all of the things in me as an actor if there is an emotional block in my way.  I also know that the nervous energy of a high stakes audition or job (aka. excitement without the breath), can be crippling.  I’ve know people who have intense fight or flight, myself included.  Even Pavarotti is known to have said “ok, little me, big me is taking over” before a performance to calm nerves.  

So all this being said, I’m going to continue “working through my shit” so that I can consistently be the most open vessel possible.  Whether that means as an actor letting the character really inhabit me, or as the working professional kicking butt at an audition or on set.  I’m committing to freeing my mind of the bullshit that I can so easily create for myself so that I can continue the journey to centering myself spiritually and mentally.  A good start to this for me will be finally reading all of the books on my shelf that I’ve meant to crack open for YEARS.  The first one I’m going to finish? “You Can’t Afford the Luxury of a Negative Thought” by Peter McWilliams. 

4. For Now, Working Only As An Actor

I’m going to focus on working solely as an actor for the rest of the year, with passionate peers and people at the top of their game who I can learn from and grow from. I’m going to continue to stay strong with this intention and embrace saying “no” to the things that will not serve me.  I primarily mean producing new projects.  I’m constantly getting new ideas that pop into my head that I want to go forward with, but as I explained in my last post, I’m letting go of that safety net for the time being and challenging myself to not get distracted from my laser bean focus.  Saying “no” is quite possibly the hardest thing for me, but I need to always ask myself “will this get me closer to my goal?”  And if not, I have to be comfortable letting it go. 

Luckily, I have a great manager who is helping me navigate my career and a lot of fabulous seeds are being planted.  Bit by bit, my career is growing and I’m excited to keep this laser beamed focus and see what comes to fruition. 

5. Know What Works For Me

And finally, I’m going to continue with the theory of focusing on what works for me and letting go of what doesn’t.  One of those things is knowing when certain information is useful to me.  Recently there are some resources that I feel no longer serve me and have stopped using them, but right now I’m addicted to these particular blogs/podcasts and highly encourage other actors out there to check them out:

The Working Actress  by Anonymous

Inside Acting Podcast by Trevor Algatt  and AJ Meijer 

The Actors Voice by Bonnie Gillespie

Secrets of Screen Acting by Patrick Tucker/podcast by David H. Lawrence Xvii 

and for those of you who haven’t read Jenna Fischer’s blog post from a number of years ago, I absolutely suggest reading it ASAP. 

________________

So with no further ado, development is officially over and “Project Helenna” has been green lit ;)  Here I go…!

#xoxo hels


tweet me at: @helslevy

browse me at: helennasantoslevy.com

email me at: contacthelenna@gmail.com

Previous
Previous

#WTF: About this weekend ... can I get a rundown? (date via twitter & fence hopping)

Next
Next

#FileUnder: This is happening ...