04/09/2026
When brand new actors walk into my class, they often think they need to do something complicated or impressive right away. They do not. The first thing I look for is whether you can answer the basic questions. Who am I? What is going on? What just happened? What do I want? If you cannot answer those, you are not ready to play the scene yet.
Most beginners skip this. They jump into performing without understanding the given circumstances, and it shows. The work feels general, disconnected, and pushed. This is where actors start trying to force emotion instead of letting it come from something real.
This is character and script analysis 101. Nothing advanced. You should know your circumstances the same way you know where you are in real life. Clear, simple, and grounded.
Some of the biggest actors go further and build full biographies or journal as the character. That work has value. But this is the baseline. This is the minimum requirement for anyone stepping into class for the first time.
Once this is in place, everything changes. Your choices get specific. Your listening improves. You start to work like an actor instead of pretending to be one.
Tom Draper, Acting Coach