Description

Book Synopsis

Casting is an essential component of any film or video project, but the core skill-set needed to cast effectively is little understood. Casting Revealed: A Guide for Film Directors is a straightforward manual on the art and craft of casting. Here, director Hester Schell offers her insider perspective on casting workflows, industry standards, finding actors, running auditions, what to look for in a performance, contracts, and making offers. This new edition has been updated with fresh interviews with casting directors, full color head shots, new information about online video submissions, and a companion website featuring forms, contracts, and sample scenes for auditions.

  • Gain a fuller understanding of the misunderstood art and craft of casting actors for film and video production.

  • Learn to find the right actors for any production, run auditions, interview actors, effectively judge performances and video submissions, evaluate suitability for a role

    Trade Review

    "I wish I had Hester’s book when I first started in Hollywood. It would have saved me a lot of heartache because it spells-out in clear and concise language the necessary tools for successful casting every filmmaker needs to know. Reading this book reminded me of how much the Academy needs to award an Oscar® for casting directors. Because casting is an art form, and Hester’s book is the best I’ve read on demystifying the process."

    —Jon James Miller, producer, Pooka Productions/Gravity-Squared Entertainment

    "While nothing can replace the benefits of hiring an experienced casting director, this book has some great insights for beginning filmmakers."

    —Lana Veenker CSA & Eryn Goodman CSA, Cast Iron Studios: Wild, NBC/Grimm, Twilight

    "Hester, I have to compliment you on taking on this mystery of a job and making it so enjoyably clear as to what we do as a process and how we take young people who are interested in filmmaking - who don’t understand the first thing about how the casting process is done - making it enjoyable to read and very informative of how this works and how they can use their time and their effort and money to the best of their ability… to get good talent."

    —Carolyn Pickman, CP Casting, Boston: Mystic Pizza, Black Mass, Straight Outta Compton, Gone Baby Gone

    "Expect an informative lesson on the rules of the game, with strict outlines from every phase of production. Whip out your pens and highlighters and start jotting down notes, because this will surely be on the desks of up-and-coming writers, actors and directors for years to come."

    —Kyle Rupprecht, MovieMaker Magazine, on the first edition of Casting Revealed



    Table of Contents

    CHAPTER ONE: SAVE MONEY — DO IT YOURSELF: DIY

    INDEPENDENT FILM AND MARKET SHARE
    HOW THIS BOOK WILL SAVE YOU MONEY

    Do It Yourself
    Collaborate Or Die
    Anyone Can Make A Movie
    Yes, But Is It Worth Watching?
    Why So Many Films Don’t Make The Film Festivals
    Raise Your Standards
    All About Editing
    Inexperience Costs More Money
    The Best Actors Are The Right Actors

    TECHNOLOGY HAS CHANGES EVERYTHING

    Prescreening Footage
    The Headshot Submission Process Has Gone Green

    SAVING MONEY RECAP

    CHAPTER TWO: YOUR DIRECTING CAREER

    BETTER CASTING IMPACTS YOUR LONG-RANGE CAREERGOALS

    Shorts Are Your Stepping Stone

    WHERE TO CONNECT WITH ACTORS

    BREAKINGBARRIERS: HOW TO TALK TO ACTORS

    Blame the Media

    CHAPTER THREE: AN OVERVIEW OF THE CASTING PROCESS

    WHY DIY: Do It Yourself

    CASTING DEFINED

    Principal

    Background

    WHAT ARE YOU CASTING

    Professional Language

    Preliminary Considerations
    Families And Lovers

    CASTING IS

    Principal, Background Casting

    TYPES OF AUDITIONS

    Open Calls

    Appointments: Script Readings, Cold Readings And Improvisation
    Callbacks

    CASTING STANDARDS

    Keeping It Professional And Confidential

    Never Settle

    Actor Are Looking For You As Well

    Agents Are Looking For Projects For Their Clients

    Los Angeles And New York: United States Casting Centers

    CASTING IS NOT

    A Party

    About Your Ego: Get Over Yourself

    TO UNION OR NOT

    Thoroughly Evaluate Your Decision

    One Member Makes A Union Shoot

    Experience Gets More Done

    The Less Experience The Longer Your Day

    Questions For Discussion

    WHEN TO START

    What Do Actors Look For When They Read Your Audition Announcement

    Plan Ahead To Stay Ahead

    WHAT YOU NEED TO START

    You Need A Script

    You Need "Sides"

    Know The Window Of Time You Plan To Shoot

    You’re Going To Need A Place To Hold Your Auditions

    You Need Your SAG Paperwork Done

    Reality Check

    CHAPTER FOUR: INDUSTRY STANDARDS

    ACTOR MARKETING MATERIALS

    Cover Letter

    Headshots

    What Makes A Good Headshot?
    Headshot Samples

    Resumes

    Reels

    Video Submissions

    Warning Signs Of The Less Experienced

    WHY LOOK FOR THESE STANDARDS?

    CHAPTER FIVE: ACTING — WHAT IS IT?

    Acting Defined

    The Actor’s Toolbox

    Approaches To Craft

    SCRIPT ANALYSIS: If It Ain’t On The Page, It Ain’t On The Stage

    Given Circumstances

    The Moment Before

    What’s My Motivation?

    GO FURTHER: Who do you like?
    GO FURTHER: Character types

    GO FURTHER: Character type attributes

    ACTING 101 FOR DIRECTORS

    How You Feel Is A Result Of What You Do

    The Magic Verb

    Understanding The Craft: Where To Go For Help

    CHAPTER SIX: TIMELINES —

    WHEN TO START AND WHAT TO DO BEFORE JUMPING IN

    ANNOUNCEMENTS, AUDITIONS, CALLBACKS AND CONTRACTS

    WHERE TO HOLD AUDITIONS

    Keeping it Professional: 1st Impressions Count

    THE CASTING TIMELINE EXPLAINED –

    SCHEDULES: WORKING BACKWARDS

    Two Weeks From First Shoot Date: Rehearsals

    One Month From First Shoot Date: Contracts

    Six Weeks From First Shoot Date: Callbacks

    Two Months From First Shoot Date: Auditions

    Ten Weeks From First Shoot Date: Distributing Audition Information.

    Three Months From First Shoot Date: Preproduction Breakdown

    The Producer Is There To Help You

    Union Preparation Recap

    CHAPTER SEVEN: THE CASTING BREAKDOWN — SPREADING THE WORD

    BREAKDOWN ELEMENTS

    SAMPLE BREAKDOWNS

    BREAKDOWN DISTRIBUTION

    National

    Local Or Regional

    Social Networking

    Flyers: Other Places To Put Your Breakdown

    Press Releases

    Physical Geography

    International And Regional Web Site Distribution

    CONTACTING AGENTS

    Who Represents Whom

    CHAPTER EIGHT: STAYING ORGANIZED

    WORKFLOW

    Who Follows Instructions

    Turn On Your "Flake Radar"

    MANAGING FILES

    Confirming Auditions

    Sample Initial Contact 1: SET APPOINTMENT

    Sample Initial Contact 2: SELF (VIDEO) SUBMISSION

    HANDLING REJECTIONS

    OTHER FILES

    Creating Script Sides From Your Screenplay

    Sign-In Sheets

    MASTER SPREADSHEET

    CHAPTER NINE:
    THE FIRST ROUND — WHAT YOU NEED AND WHERE YOU NEED IT

    PREPARATIONSANDPROCEDURES

    Provide Scripts In Advance

    Make A Schedule

    Setting Up

    Allow Enough Time For Each Actor

    Information Form

    Keep Secrets

    HOW MANYACTORS DO I SEE FOR EACH ROLE?

    WHO DO I CAST FIRST?

    Cast Your Leading Actors First

    Supporting Actors

    Background Extras

    INSIDE THE SESSION

    Controlling The Room

    Casting Sessions Are Job Interviews

    Casting Sessions Are Private

    Memorized Sides

    Using A Reader

    Recording The Casting Session

    Adjustments And Direction When You Have Something To Say

    MORE BASIC DO’S AND DON’TS

    Do Expect Actors To Be Prepared And On Time

    Do Expect Actors To Arrive With A Headshot And Resume

    Nudity, Scars And Tattoos

    Don’t Ask Actors To Sign A Release Form For Audition Footage

    Keep Track

    Keep An Open Mind To All Potential And Opportunity

    Ending The Session

    Sorting The Session: Do You Need More Options?

    CHAPTER TEN: THE SECOND ROUND — CALLBACKS

    CONFIRMING YOUR CHOICES

    CALL BACK FOR SURE

    CALL BACK MAYBE

    NOT GETTING A CALLBACK

    CALL BACK PROCEDURES

    Set Call Back Appointments

    Test Your Communication And Directing Approach

    Put On Your "Poker Face."

    Sleep On Your Decisions

    CHAPTER ELEVEN: OFFERS AND CONTRACTS

    THE OFFER AND THE ART OF NEGOTIATION

    UNPAID PROJECTS

    PAID PROJECTS (Union or Not)

    CONTRACT: Get it in Writing

    UNION CONTRACTS

    LOCAL HIRES ONLY

    STATE PRODUCTION INCENTIVES

    A Word from the SAG-AFTRA Office

    CHAPTER TWELVE: DON’T TAKE MY WORD FOR IT —
    FRIENDS CHIME IN

    FAST, CHEAP, GOOD—PICK TWO.

    A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS

    Actors Do A Shout Out

    Directors Do A Shout Out

    CHAPTER THIRTEEN: CASTING DIRECTORS —
    DO YOU NEED ONE?

    The Job Defined: Potential Meets Opportunity

    Types Of Casting Directors

    The Interview And Checking Credentials.

    Job Tasks And Responsibilities: What Will They Do For You?

    When In Doubt: Hire A Professional

    What’s It Going To Cost?

    Other Resources

    CHAPTER FOURTEEN: SO YOU WANT TO BE A CASTING DIRECTOR

    LOVING ACTORS
    OUTREACH AND MARKETING

    Industry Connections
    Getting Started

    INTERVIEWS

    Michael Druck, Austin, Texas

    Ken Lazer, New York City, New York

    Sarah Kliban, San Francisco, California

    GLOSSARY OF COMMON FILM TERMS

    THE PARTS OF SPEECH: Just For Fun

    VERBS
    NOUNS
    COMPOUNDWORDS
    FINANCIAL TERMS
    COMMON PHRASES

    WEB RESOURCES

    NOTES, BIBLIOGRAPHY AND RESOURCES

    RECOMMENDED READING

    SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE / SYLLABUS

    INDEX

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    FAN MAIL

Casting Revealed

    Product form

    £37.99

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 8 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Hester Schell

    15 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Casting Revealed by Hester Schell

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 07/09/2016
      ISBN13: 9781138945340, 978-1138945340
      ISBN10: 113894534X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Casting is an essential component of any film or video project, but the core skill-set needed to cast effectively is little understood. Casting Revealed: A Guide for Film Directors is a straightforward manual on the art and craft of casting. Here, director Hester Schell offers her insider perspective on casting workflows, industry standards, finding actors, running auditions, what to look for in a performance, contracts, and making offers. This new edition has been updated with fresh interviews with casting directors, full color head shots, new information about online video submissions, and a companion website featuring forms, contracts, and sample scenes for auditions.

      • Gain a fuller understanding of the misunderstood art and craft of casting actors for film and video production.

      • Learn to find the right actors for any production, run auditions, interview actors, effectively judge performances and video submissions, evaluate suitability for a role

        Trade Review

        "I wish I had Hester’s book when I first started in Hollywood. It would have saved me a lot of heartache because it spells-out in clear and concise language the necessary tools for successful casting every filmmaker needs to know. Reading this book reminded me of how much the Academy needs to award an Oscar® for casting directors. Because casting is an art form, and Hester’s book is the best I’ve read on demystifying the process."

        —Jon James Miller, producer, Pooka Productions/Gravity-Squared Entertainment

        "While nothing can replace the benefits of hiring an experienced casting director, this book has some great insights for beginning filmmakers."

        —Lana Veenker CSA & Eryn Goodman CSA, Cast Iron Studios: Wild, NBC/Grimm, Twilight

        "Hester, I have to compliment you on taking on this mystery of a job and making it so enjoyably clear as to what we do as a process and how we take young people who are interested in filmmaking - who don’t understand the first thing about how the casting process is done - making it enjoyable to read and very informative of how this works and how they can use their time and their effort and money to the best of their ability… to get good talent."

        —Carolyn Pickman, CP Casting, Boston: Mystic Pizza, Black Mass, Straight Outta Compton, Gone Baby Gone

        "Expect an informative lesson on the rules of the game, with strict outlines from every phase of production. Whip out your pens and highlighters and start jotting down notes, because this will surely be on the desks of up-and-coming writers, actors and directors for years to come."

        —Kyle Rupprecht, MovieMaker Magazine, on the first edition of Casting Revealed



        Table of Contents

        CHAPTER ONE: SAVE MONEY — DO IT YOURSELF: DIY

        INDEPENDENT FILM AND MARKET SHARE
        HOW THIS BOOK WILL SAVE YOU MONEY

        Do It Yourself
        Collaborate Or Die
        Anyone Can Make A Movie
        Yes, But Is It Worth Watching?
        Why So Many Films Don’t Make The Film Festivals
        Raise Your Standards
        All About Editing
        Inexperience Costs More Money
        The Best Actors Are The Right Actors

        TECHNOLOGY HAS CHANGES EVERYTHING

        Prescreening Footage
        The Headshot Submission Process Has Gone Green

        SAVING MONEY RECAP

        CHAPTER TWO: YOUR DIRECTING CAREER

        BETTER CASTING IMPACTS YOUR LONG-RANGE CAREERGOALS

        Shorts Are Your Stepping Stone

        WHERE TO CONNECT WITH ACTORS

        BREAKINGBARRIERS: HOW TO TALK TO ACTORS

        Blame the Media

        CHAPTER THREE: AN OVERVIEW OF THE CASTING PROCESS

        WHY DIY: Do It Yourself

        CASTING DEFINED

        Principal

        Background

        WHAT ARE YOU CASTING

        Professional Language

        Preliminary Considerations
        Families And Lovers

        CASTING IS

        Principal, Background Casting

        TYPES OF AUDITIONS

        Open Calls

        Appointments: Script Readings, Cold Readings And Improvisation
        Callbacks

        CASTING STANDARDS

        Keeping It Professional And Confidential

        Never Settle

        Actor Are Looking For You As Well

        Agents Are Looking For Projects For Their Clients

        Los Angeles And New York: United States Casting Centers

        CASTING IS NOT

        A Party

        About Your Ego: Get Over Yourself

        TO UNION OR NOT

        Thoroughly Evaluate Your Decision

        One Member Makes A Union Shoot

        Experience Gets More Done

        The Less Experience The Longer Your Day

        Questions For Discussion

        WHEN TO START

        What Do Actors Look For When They Read Your Audition Announcement

        Plan Ahead To Stay Ahead

        WHAT YOU NEED TO START

        You Need A Script

        You Need "Sides"

        Know The Window Of Time You Plan To Shoot

        You’re Going To Need A Place To Hold Your Auditions

        You Need Your SAG Paperwork Done

        Reality Check

        CHAPTER FOUR: INDUSTRY STANDARDS

        ACTOR MARKETING MATERIALS

        Cover Letter

        Headshots

        What Makes A Good Headshot?
        Headshot Samples

        Resumes

        Reels

        Video Submissions

        Warning Signs Of The Less Experienced

        WHY LOOK FOR THESE STANDARDS?

        CHAPTER FIVE: ACTING — WHAT IS IT?

        Acting Defined

        The Actor’s Toolbox

        Approaches To Craft

        SCRIPT ANALYSIS: If It Ain’t On The Page, It Ain’t On The Stage

        Given Circumstances

        The Moment Before

        What’s My Motivation?

        GO FURTHER: Who do you like?
        GO FURTHER: Character types

        GO FURTHER: Character type attributes

        ACTING 101 FOR DIRECTORS

        How You Feel Is A Result Of What You Do

        The Magic Verb

        Understanding The Craft: Where To Go For Help

        CHAPTER SIX: TIMELINES —

        WHEN TO START AND WHAT TO DO BEFORE JUMPING IN

        ANNOUNCEMENTS, AUDITIONS, CALLBACKS AND CONTRACTS

        WHERE TO HOLD AUDITIONS

        Keeping it Professional: 1st Impressions Count

        THE CASTING TIMELINE EXPLAINED –

        SCHEDULES: WORKING BACKWARDS

        Two Weeks From First Shoot Date: Rehearsals

        One Month From First Shoot Date: Contracts

        Six Weeks From First Shoot Date: Callbacks

        Two Months From First Shoot Date: Auditions

        Ten Weeks From First Shoot Date: Distributing Audition Information.

        Three Months From First Shoot Date: Preproduction Breakdown

        The Producer Is There To Help You

        Union Preparation Recap

        CHAPTER SEVEN: THE CASTING BREAKDOWN — SPREADING THE WORD

        BREAKDOWN ELEMENTS

        SAMPLE BREAKDOWNS

        BREAKDOWN DISTRIBUTION

        National

        Local Or Regional

        Social Networking

        Flyers: Other Places To Put Your Breakdown

        Press Releases

        Physical Geography

        International And Regional Web Site Distribution

        CONTACTING AGENTS

        Who Represents Whom

        CHAPTER EIGHT: STAYING ORGANIZED

        WORKFLOW

        Who Follows Instructions

        Turn On Your "Flake Radar"

        MANAGING FILES

        Confirming Auditions

        Sample Initial Contact 1: SET APPOINTMENT

        Sample Initial Contact 2: SELF (VIDEO) SUBMISSION

        HANDLING REJECTIONS

        OTHER FILES

        Creating Script Sides From Your Screenplay

        Sign-In Sheets

        MASTER SPREADSHEET

        CHAPTER NINE:
        THE FIRST ROUND — WHAT YOU NEED AND WHERE YOU NEED IT

        PREPARATIONSANDPROCEDURES

        Provide Scripts In Advance

        Make A Schedule

        Setting Up

        Allow Enough Time For Each Actor

        Information Form

        Keep Secrets

        HOW MANYACTORS DO I SEE FOR EACH ROLE?

        WHO DO I CAST FIRST?

        Cast Your Leading Actors First

        Supporting Actors

        Background Extras

        INSIDE THE SESSION

        Controlling The Room

        Casting Sessions Are Job Interviews

        Casting Sessions Are Private

        Memorized Sides

        Using A Reader

        Recording The Casting Session

        Adjustments And Direction When You Have Something To Say

        MORE BASIC DO’S AND DON’TS

        Do Expect Actors To Be Prepared And On Time

        Do Expect Actors To Arrive With A Headshot And Resume

        Nudity, Scars And Tattoos

        Don’t Ask Actors To Sign A Release Form For Audition Footage

        Keep Track

        Keep An Open Mind To All Potential And Opportunity

        Ending The Session

        Sorting The Session: Do You Need More Options?

        CHAPTER TEN: THE SECOND ROUND — CALLBACKS

        CONFIRMING YOUR CHOICES

        CALL BACK FOR SURE

        CALL BACK MAYBE

        NOT GETTING A CALLBACK

        CALL BACK PROCEDURES

        Set Call Back Appointments

        Test Your Communication And Directing Approach

        Put On Your "Poker Face."

        Sleep On Your Decisions

        CHAPTER ELEVEN: OFFERS AND CONTRACTS

        THE OFFER AND THE ART OF NEGOTIATION

        UNPAID PROJECTS

        PAID PROJECTS (Union or Not)

        CONTRACT: Get it in Writing

        UNION CONTRACTS

        LOCAL HIRES ONLY

        STATE PRODUCTION INCENTIVES

        A Word from the SAG-AFTRA Office

        CHAPTER TWELVE: DON’T TAKE MY WORD FOR IT —
        FRIENDS CHIME IN

        FAST, CHEAP, GOOD—PICK TWO.

        A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS

        Actors Do A Shout Out

        Directors Do A Shout Out

        CHAPTER THIRTEEN: CASTING DIRECTORS —
        DO YOU NEED ONE?

        The Job Defined: Potential Meets Opportunity

        Types Of Casting Directors

        The Interview And Checking Credentials.

        Job Tasks And Responsibilities: What Will They Do For You?

        When In Doubt: Hire A Professional

        What’s It Going To Cost?

        Other Resources

        CHAPTER FOURTEEN: SO YOU WANT TO BE A CASTING DIRECTOR

        LOVING ACTORS
        OUTREACH AND MARKETING

        Industry Connections
        Getting Started

        INTERVIEWS

        Michael Druck, Austin, Texas

        Ken Lazer, New York City, New York

        Sarah Kliban, San Francisco, California

        GLOSSARY OF COMMON FILM TERMS

        THE PARTS OF SPEECH: Just For Fun

        VERBS
        NOUNS
        COMPOUNDWORDS
        FINANCIAL TERMS
        COMMON PHRASES

        WEB RESOURCES

        NOTES, BIBLIOGRAPHY AND RESOURCES

        RECOMMENDED READING

        SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE / SYLLABUS

        INDEX

        ABOUT THE AUTHOR

        FAN MAIL

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