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@lisheman
Lady Gaga as āThe Countessā on set of American Horror Story: Hotel
Guildhall School of Music and Drama audition- 9th December 2015
my guildhall audition has been my favourite of all my auditions so far.
i was about an hour early, and i walked into the Sundial Court and the guy on reception told me to go to a gate outside just up the road and he would open them from his computer, which he did and i was then in like a courtyard type thing. on the left was a door with an āacting auditionsā sign. i went down to the basement and hovered outside the door for a bit because i could see a doorway with people in it, who i thought must have been still there from the morning audition, but there was one boy outside that room on a sofa, so i went in and said hi to him- he was a friend of someone who was in the room that had just auditioned and was waiting to hear her result.
the first thing i thought about this place was that it looked like a club or music venue of some kind. this was the accommodation block for guildhall students, not the actual building itself, but it was honestly so cool- there was a stage at one end with guitars and amps and wires draped everywhere, a bar at the other end, a load of big sofas and chairs dotted around with a few potted plants, all in quite a grungy, dim room. a girl called evie then arrived a few minutes after me, and this was her first audition i think. we got chatting and she was absolutely lovely. the morning group then came out, and out of 12 of them, 4 had got recalls, including the girl whose friend was waiting for her. i saw lots of hugs and congratulations flying around which was so nice considering in the morning, these people would not have known each other, so i figured everyone in my group would also get to know everyone well.
more people came until there were 11 of us ( and there was one latecomer). it was so so friendly, there was no tension and everyone was fairly young- the average age here was a lot lower than that of my RADA.
a recent graduate called us through to a room with a big table which we all sat around and wrote down our monologues. there were 3 graduates, 2 boys and a girl, who talked about guildhall for a bit. they gave us numbers to pin on ourselves, with their apologies: they explained that this was just for the movement workshop, so they could differentiate us before they got to know us in our auditions/interviews. i was number 10.
we left our bags in that room as a graduate took us into a little studio for our movement workshop. there were two people auditioning us, a man and woman, both fairly young they made us walk around the space with varying tension levels and intentions etc., then got us lined up against a wall and made us imagine in front of us was a pet shop window, and we were to walk up to it and look at the animals within, so like everyone was āawāing at the window, but the auditioners were like stop, we want no āshow actingā, just do it as natural as possible. they then got us, one by one to walk up to them and say āhello, my name is ___, today I have travelled from ___. All my life I have been afraid of ___ but have enjoyed ____ā followed by the first line of our classical monologue. for example: āhello, my name is annie and today iāve travelled from hull. all my life i have been afraid of the underside of mushrooms, but have enjoyed fine art. lo, she is one of this confederacy.ā then sit down. they explained that they want truth, not show acting, so like to strip down gestures and accents, and do the pieces truthfully. they also said that they wanted eye contact- whereas normally you look above the heads of the panel if you are addressing an audience, look at them, but if you are addressing another character, one of the graduates will act as your other character. they also said to pick out of the 3 monologues our favourite, so we had to chance to perform that one, then they would chose the next, and give you some direction and alterations on that one, and they may or may not ask for a third or a song.
we went back through the loungy area, to be called one by one. the people who went first were free to leave and get dinner once they had done which most of them did, but being 11 I hung around all day. 4 of us girls did a little vocal warm up together, sharing exercises and stuff which was so cute and fun, and then we just sat on the sofa and chatted. Ā As I was waiting for 3 hours ish, I got to know these people so much better than at typical in and out auditions. we all agreed that we recognized the woman on our panel from some tv show,although none of us knew what and none of us dared ask
my graduate for my audition (iĀ think his name was ronan or something) had a BEAUTIFUL accent, I think it was welsh or something, but I sat outside the studio with him and we chatted about into the woods and random stuff like that, then we got called in and the panel just chatted with me for a bit and asked which piece i would like to do, so i went for my kara again. karaās monologue is to the audience, so i was making eye contact with the panel- and i LOVED it. It was so different but there was something about observing them viewing it which gave it another dimension and i really felt the character a lot more than i have ever before. they were super friendly and lovely, and asked me who my helena monologue was to, so i said hermia and they laughed and pointed at ronan(???? Iām gonna call him ronan), who i performed it to as if he were my Ā hermia. the panel stopped me a little way in and reworked it so i was more āpissed off than sadā in their words, which i enjoyed. ronan was so bloody cute, acting all upset and stuff as i shouted at him. i then got a chair and we chatted about me- they had my personal statement on the desk and were asking me about it which was nice to think they had read it and were interested. i was then free to leave.
after talking to the other auditionees, i found that they had similar experiences- a re working on their second monologue, and no need for a song or a third speech. one girl said that her contemporary was a sad piece, but she was asked to perform it like it was the funniest thing in the world. it was all a bit mad, but so so fun.
all the earlier auditionees came back and we went back into the separate room to get our results- 2 of the 12 got recalled, one boy and one girl.
on the way out, we were all trapped inside the gates which just wouldnāt open which was a bit of a laugh, then 3 of us got the tube back to Kingās Cross together.
all in all i had a very long but fun day. i loved the whole experience, school and vibe, and will definitely be auditioning there again.
RADA audition- 8th December 2015
hey, Iām annie and this is my first year auditioning for drama schools- all the auditions I will come to talk about are for 3 year B.A Acting courses. i am 17 and in college in Hull at the minute and as i havenāt auditioned for a school before, i have found reading blog posts about audition experiences so helpful before attending any of my auditions, so I thought I would add my own to try and help others know what to expect and whatever
my first audition was RADA- i was soo nervous as it was my very first drama school audition ever- but i neednāt have been at all.
i got to Kings Cross and walked down towards RADA, it wasnāt far, although the rain did make it feel a lot longer than it was- i went past it just to check i knew exactly where it was and that i could find my way back before going to The British Museum to wait. i would recommend this as itās not far away and itās free entry- i could find a seat and run over my pieces in my head and chill for a bit.
my audition was at half 1, and i got there at 12.45. i just said hey to the woman on reception who gave me a sticker saying āRADA auditionsā, and i took a seat next to a girl who was nice but i canāt remember her name for the life of me. She was actually there for the 2.15 audition but the woman said it was cool and she could join in with the 1.30 group so she wasnāt waiting around. Ā More people arrived until there were 10 of us, and we got taken up to a big room which is basically like the board room from the apprentice. at one end, the woman gave us a big speech about RADA and the course and everything. Ā she was lovely and made us all feel at ease. she gave us all our application forms back to check the details were still correct, and to write down all our monologues before splitting us into 2 groups of five. 2 recent graduates took a group each and took us into two different waiting rooms where we could leave our bags and warm up and chat etc. we were numbered 1-5 (i was 4) and took it in turns to go in with our graduate to do our monologues.
the room our group used was basically a small studio rehearsal room, with a table at one end with two absolutely lovely people on the panel: there was a young man and woman who were soo welcoming and shook my hand and told me to pull up a chair to have a chat. it was really really chill, they asked me about like where iāve travelled from, who my favourite actor is, what iāve seen and really liked/disliked at the theatre and we ended up bitching about john godber and having a bit of a laugh, it was just such a nice vibe. i canāt actually remember what they were like teachers or graduates or whatever, but they were lovely nonetheless.
they said to go into the space, put my chair at a side if i didnāt need it and decide which monologue i wanted to perform first. i chose my contemporary (karaās monologue from a letter to lacey by catherine johnstone), and it was a little shaky, definitely not my best but okay. they then said to take a second before going into my classical (queen margaret, henry VI part 3), which i really wasnāt feeling, i wasnāt getting good vibes from that piece (from myself like, not the panel- they were so lovely about everything, but after doing that piece and feeling that way about it, i havenāt done it since). they congratulated me on getting through my first ever audition and then asked me to pull up the chair again and have another chat. we discussed my credits and stuff and they asked me which role has been the most challenging for me, stuff like that, then my graduate led me out and i was free to go- the actual audition was about 15 minutes or so Iād say, but with all the waiting and stuff iād say it took about 2 hours in total.
i heard back in a few days to say i was unsuccessful, but i will definitely be auditioning there again- i loved the vibe, it was so positive and there were so many applicants who had auditioned year after year who were still trying, so Iām not disheartened in any way.
any advice i would have for anyone auditioning would be to not be put off by the whole prestige of āRADAā and the fame it has- itās honestly just a school like any other, the people auditioning you are human too and try to enjoy it!