Re: CASTING DIRECTOR WORKSHOP Easter Holidays
Posted: Tue Mar 19, 2013 3:33 pm
Totally agree
I wrote a couple of posts this week mentioning that there are opportunities offered by well known theatre/institutions for local people that often are overlooked and with no many children attending. My dc did the audition for NYMT and 'luckily" didn't make it through, no way I could afford that money times 2. Why I did it in first place if I didn't have the money? To see what all the fuss was about. I do appreciate the high quality but I think that the NYMT auditions are a making money machine. It costs £45 (in my case time 2) for getting a place (not in a prestigious school) but in a very expensive big workshop that look good on your cv at best (unless you are cast in a lead part, maybe). How many kids did audition this year, they had to add a couple of dates to meet the demand? If they were 1,500 that makes £67,500
Plus, I suppose that then you have to pay to see your children performing and then you tell it to family and friends to go as well (free marketing). How much money do they do from your not payed but paying performing children?
At least they could use it to keep it down the price tag of the "workshop"
You know what? I start to be very annoyed with all this "clever" people. I think they have an easy run. It doesn't matter if I am not taking my children anymore in these expensive "opportunities", there are hundreds of children/parents that are fighting over it with cash in hands and plenty for them too choose even with lots of talent.






I wrote a couple of posts this week mentioning that there are opportunities offered by well known theatre/institutions for local people that often are overlooked and with no many children attending. My dc did the audition for NYMT and 'luckily" didn't make it through, no way I could afford that money times 2. Why I did it in first place if I didn't have the money? To see what all the fuss was about. I do appreciate the high quality but I think that the NYMT auditions are a making money machine. It costs £45 (in my case time 2) for getting a place (not in a prestigious school) but in a very expensive big workshop that look good on your cv at best (unless you are cast in a lead part, maybe). How many kids did audition this year, they had to add a couple of dates to meet the demand? If they were 1,500 that makes £67,500



Plus, I suppose that then you have to pay to see your children performing and then you tell it to family and friends to go as well (free marketing). How much money do they do from your not payed but paying performing children?
At least they could use it to keep it down the price tag of the "workshop"

You know what? I start to be very annoyed with all this "clever" people. I think they have an easy run. It doesn't matter if I am not taking my children anymore in these expensive "opportunities", there are hundreds of children/parents that are fighting over it with cash in hands and plenty for them too choose even with lots of talent.