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Create Your Musical Theatre Resume |
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Written by triplethreat
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Creating A Musical Theatre Resume
Your resume is probably the most important document you will ever have as a performer. It provides information about your training, your experience, your talents. It provides information that can be vital to the choice of whether or not you are cast in a show. It's important that it show you off as effectively as possible, so to help you here are some guidelines.
- Make it short and sweet. Keep to one page if possible but definately no more than two or three.
- Resist the urge to make it "pretty". Simple but clean presentation is best. No funky fonts or crazy colours.
- Theatre people are sensitive about losing actors to film. List your theatre credits first.
- List smaller roles in big places (ie New York) before big roles in small places.
- List classic roles, such as Shakespeare, before others since they indicate the depth of your background.
- If you were directed by or performed with an important personality, list his/her name underneath the company you performed with.
- In general, try to list performances in choronological order (by date performed).
Format of a Theatre Resume
Most resumes have a standard format in which basic information is placed at the top, and all experience and training is put into a table, like this:
| Musical Theatre |
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| Name of the Show |
Name of the Character |
Production Co & Director |
Year |
| Theatre |
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| Film |
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| Training |
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Then, after the table, you add in point form all your other miscellaneous activity.
More Theatre Resume Tips
Download a sample acting resume
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