Joel Steingold is known for his work on HOW TO GET AWAY WITH MURDER, HAWAII FIVE-0, and SHAMELESS.
You can see him in numerous other Films and TV shows both on camera and as a VoiceOver actor.
Catch him currently in THE CHI.
Be an asset to the environment that you’re working in.
What are you doing daily, weekly, monthly, to enhance your career?
"Work begets work."
Specialize in the slow game
Don’t worry about the money initially.
Burnout means you are at a point where an extended period of time has gone by without you taking care of yourself.
Whatever you put before taking care of yourself, you’re going to lose.
When you’re burnt out take a step back and observe.
Take time out to think about where you are in your life and where you wanna go.
What my ego thinks I can get done and what I can actually get done are very two different things.
Overwhelm happens when I am trying to catch up with what my ego thinks I can get done.
Slow down and look at a week, a month, a quarter, a year.
Start to plan, and take some of the pressure off.
Emotions that come up:
Cure:
You don’t to quit, what you want is a break.
When I’m overwhelmed the number one thing I don’t want to do is stop but the number one thing I need to do is stop.
Expectations are premed...
About Eric:
Eric Nelsen is a multiple Emmy Award winning and Tony Award nominated American actor and producer. He is best known for his work as an actor in Hulu's revival of All My Children playing AJ Chandler, and most recently, his recurring role in season 4 of Showtime's hit drama The Affair.
On stage, Nelsen portrayed Brett Sampson in the original Broadway production of 13, and starred in The Good Mother, produced by The New Group. He has appeared in over 30 television series, including The Blacklist, Girls, The Following, NCIS, Blue Bloods, and iCarly. Nelsen has also appeared in the Universal Pictures film A Walk Among the Tombstones opposite Academy Award nominee Liam Neeson and Coming Through the Rye opposite Academy Award winner Chris Cooper.
In 2018, Nelsen most recently won a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Digital Daytime Drama Series for his work on the Amazon web series The Bay. As a producer, Nelsen has won three Daytime Emmys for his work...
So many feelings come up around the opening
There is a special anxiety around it.
There was anxiety around the pandemic because it had never happened before…but that same anxiety is around opening up because it’s never happened before either.
What are the things we can do to take care of ourselves emotionally while this is going on?
Fear and anxiety are never going away, but how we handle those can change.
When we stay in anxiety, we are in victim energy, catabolic energy— energy that eats itself, it's self-destructive.
We want to be in anabolic energy.
How can you break it down? Baby step it.
About Mark:
Mark Ivanir has been working as a professional film and television actor in Los Angeles since 2001. His first major film role was in Steven Spielberg’s 1993 Oscar-winning epic SCHINDLER’S LIST. He rejoined with Spielberg twice, first for a cameo appearance in Terminal, then again for his much anticipated Tintin. A pivotal role in Robert Deniro’s 2006 film, The Good Shepherd, landed Mark a role in Barry Levinson’s What Just Happened, this time acting alongside Deniro. Currently, Ivanir awaits the release of four studio features: Johny English Reborn (starring Rowan Atkinson), Everybody Loves Whales (staring Drew Barrymore, Kristen Bell, John Krassinsky), A Late Quartet (co starring Philip Seymor Hoffman, Catherine Keener and Christopher Walken) and 360 (co starring Anthony Hopkins, Jude Law, Rachel Weitz and Ben Foster). He has booked over 35 Guest Star and Guest Lead roles on television shows such as: 24, Monk, CSI NY, Law and Order, Fringe, CSI Miami, Nikita and many ot...
Think of something that happened to you that you’ve held with you throughout your career and created some sort of thought attached to it.
Think about how that instance is holding you back.
“Forgiving is not forgetting, it’s letting go of the hurt.”
Resentment- the only person it’s hurting is you.
Think of resentment as a replay on a football field.
When you have a resentment, and replay what happened in your head, you are reseeing it.
Ex: Two guys collide, and you hear the break of the bone, and the commentators go ooh that was a bad break, and they watch it again. The next time you swear the sound got clarified, louder, and you swear the grimace of the guy who got hurt got bigger, the color got brighter.
And each time they play it again, the sound gets louder, the color gets brighter.
Resentment does just that.
“Don’t allow someone to live rent free in your head.”
How many resentments do I have that are taking up energy and space?
This is the question: Can I love myself e...
About Ed:
Ed Lewis is a Voice Director for Video Games, Animation, Audiobooks, Commercials, Documentaries, Promos and for pretty much anything else you want him for. Ed’s extensive experience casting Film, Television and Theatre for ten years, paired with his actor training from the University of Michigan give him a unique perspective on how to approach Voice Over projects. He treats his work as a VO Director exactly the same as his time directing auditions for The Wire, Chappelle’s Show, 24 and others.
Ed’s experience working in casting with amazing directors like David Simon, David Koepp, David Esbjorson and all other sorts of Davids has taught him how to direct projects from children’s animation to first-person shooters. Communicating with actors can be a challenge, but Ed has the vocabulary, insight, experience and knowledge to communicate the client's vision and to make the recording sessions productive with even the most difficult and complex individuals.
What did casting ...
When are we doing too much?
When are we doing too little?
What is our responsibility and what isn’t?
My Part vs. Not My Part
The Serenity Prayer
Grant Me the Serenity to Accept the Things I cannot change
I cannot change other people, places, or things, or outcomes.
I did my part but I can not control how that director took my performance in my callback.
Courage to Change the Things I can,
I can only change myself, my attitudes, and my actions.
And Wisdom to know the difference.
Wisdom to know the difference between the things I cannot change, and what I can change.
Thank you for helping to change the things I can control, and to let go of the things I can’t.
Recovering your True Self—The awareness of who you will are
When in doubt, leave it out.
Don’t just do something, sit there.
When in doubt, slow down, pause, journal, and make a plan for how you are going to take care of yourself.
Journal, talk it out, find a bookend.
Show me what I need to learn today.
Help ...
About Maria:
Maria Dizzia currently teaches an ongoing scene study class at The Freeman Studio in NYC. She has taught both Public Speaking and Acting at the University of California at San Diego as well as master classes at Wheaton College, Penghao Theater in Beijing and the Sichuan People's Art Theater in Chengdu, China. She was a Beinecke Fellow at Yale School of Drama and a 2011 recipient of the Fox Foundation Resident Actor Fellowship.
Broadway credits include: In The Next Room by Sarah Ruhl (Tony nomination Featured Actress; Lincoln Center). Recent theater credits include If I Forget by Steven Levenson (Roundabount Theater Company), Belleville by Amy Herzog (Drama Desk Nomination; New York Theater Workshop, Yale Rep), Annie Baker's Uncle Vanya (Soho Rep), Drunken City by Adam Bock (Playwrights Horizons), and Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl (Second Stage, Yale Rep, Berkeley Rep). Outside of the United States, Maria has performed at The Gate Theater in London with The Civilians and at ...
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“If we treated our friends like we treated ourselves, we’d all go to jail.”
There are no mistakes.
I use my mind to govern my brain.
The mistakes stem from my brain, or my heart, or both.
Why is it so bad to give yourself a break?
Ask yourself what was the lesson, what can be learned from this experience?
The next time I’m in this situations, this is what I intend to do.
There are no mistakes there are only choices.
If you let go of it being a mistake, and allow it to be just something that happened, then you prevent it from becoming an assumption.
The Thought, Action, Emotion Triangle.
Why do I feel that I always screw up __________?
What do I need to work on?
Reframing thoughts empowers us to be more positive about what’s happening.
When we are more positive about what’s happening, we get more positive results.
Change can’t to choose not to, change should to could, change have to choose to, change...