Author Archive | David H. Lawrence XVII

Where I Workshop – Part 1

Hey, there!

Actors I meet will often ask me to recommend workshop locations that I’ve personally found useful.

I’m going to share some of my favorites, and the first one is Connect Studios LA.

And there’s a reason they’re first: they are all about your success. Oh, and they also kindly allow me to teach the VO2GoGo curriculum there.

Here’s what makes them great. Continue Reading →

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Supporting Your VO and Acting Habit

Hey, there!

Getting started and continuing to grow your VO and/or practice is a challenge.

And yet, there’s a drive in all of us to achieve the goal of a thriving career. But how do you support that career in the days, weeks and months before you can make a living doing VO and acting, without it taking over your life, and your eye off the survival ball?

I’ve got some help for you. Continue Reading →

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Fairy Tales And False Hopes

Hey, there!

As actors and VO artists, we want answers to our career questions. Sometimes, like primitive cavemen, if we can’t find those answers, we’ll accept what others tell us if we hear it enough, no matter what amount of truth those answers contain.

One of those false answers has to do with IMDB and the action of “liking” an IMDB profile. Continue Reading →

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Pixar’s 22 Rules of Storytelling – Rule 21

Hey there!

I get really enthusiastic when some asks me about storytelling, and how important it is to your VO career to develop and hone your storytelling skills.

It’s essential.

So, every so often, I like to roll out items from this list from Emma Coats, who used to work at Pixar as a story artist, and who serially tweeted Pixar’s 22 Rules of Storytelling.

I’m sharing with you one of these rules every so often, along with how you can apply each rule to your VO artistry.

Today, Rule 21… Continue Reading →

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VIDEO: Are Auditions Causing You A Complete Meltdown?

Hey there!

On-camera, VO, commercials, theatre…we find ourselves as performers being asked to open our little suitcases and show the buyers our wares.

Auditioning can be the most stressful actions we’re asked to take. I watch people sweat bullets in the waiting room, and always have the same piece of powerful advice.

Just listen to what Michael Kostroff has to say about it.

And what’s his most powerful piece of advice? Continue Reading →

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