I have in no way be compensated or solicited for this review. This is solely my opinion.
I cannot believe that it’s been 8 weeks since I started my On Camera II class with Chris Agos at Acting Studio Chicago. The time has absolutely flown. Pretty frightening if I think too hard about it. I’ve got a lot I want to accomplish on my arbitrary timeline.
Now, for the review. I am going to preface this by saying that, if you can, you should absolutely take this class. You can stop reading now, or continue for a more detailed examination.
I am not a person who responds well to a bullying teaching method. This class is absolutely NOT that. I write this because some people do need someone to push and prod and make them feel bad about themselves to make progress. If that’s you, that’s fine, but this isn’t the class for you. This isn’t to say that Chris won’t get you were you need to be. In fact, you’ll sometimes do take upon take until the objective is achieved. But it’s never from a place of destructive criticism, it’s just the opposite.
Which leads me into: take upon take upon take. You are on camera every. single. class. Then, the whole class watches your first take and your last take and you and Chris discuss the changes that were made, whether they were good, etc. Before coming to Chicago I had one on camera role. Since March, I’ve completed three and one I’m currently in wraps up, weather permitting, next week. I’ve also been auditioning for on camera things pretty regularly. This was a bit overwhelming at first given my utter lack of experience (theatrekid4eva). However, I was at an audition yesterday and I felt at ease. I went in, felt the floor, and did my thing. I came out happy with how I did and, as you know, that’s the most that you can ask of yourself in this business. It was invaluable, confidence and technique wise, for me to literally be on camera every week working with, most often, unfamiliar copy. (We were given copy in advance only twice. The rest of the time was devoted to semi-cold reading.) Also, a word about that copy: we used real scripts from things that were, mostly, shot in the area. Being able to work off of the kind of copy that we are most likely to encounter here was (can you sense a theme?) indispensable. (JK. I used my thesaurus for invaluable).
Finally, the last part of class was always devoted to the business of the Chicago acting market. As I’ve written before, Chicago is different from the coasts. We talked about everything from agents to headshots/resumes to the confusing world of the unions specific to Chicago. This might have been worth the cost of the class alone.
Take it. That’s the verdict. Their contact information follows.
Website: Acting Studio Chicago
Phone: 312.527.4566