Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Creating Your Own Voice-over Career

Among the things I love about a career in voice-over: the endless opportunities to create. But I think life offers opportunities to create no matter what you do. In my previous career as a biologist, I wrote a lot of papers based on rather dry data. When I wasn’t generating dry data and writing about them, I wrote papers that weren’t based on data at all. In a paper on homology and the ontological relationship of parts, I compared historical pathways in evolutionary biology to the transformation of the Tin Man in the Wizard of Oz from an all-flesh person to an all-tin person, or to the complete turnover of members in a baseball team that nevertheless does not change “the Yankees” into some other, separate historical entity. A paper on phylogenetic constraint was my favorite project ever, because it released me from the bonds of data and let me play with ideas to my heart’s content. Later, as a program director at the National Science Foundation, it was more challenging to find ways to have fun and create, but when I needed to give a presentation to discuss the history of funding in my program and the distribution of dollars across taxonomic groups, I made a huge “tree of life” that filled the conference room, with “apples” on the tree to represent grants awarded (it was quite effective, by the way, and paved the way for a major funding initiative at the foundation).

Tree of Life Project

Tree of Life project, National Science Foundation


And whenever a poster or flyer was needed, I volunteered. So the panelists we invited to help us make the final decisions about funding grant proposals found their way to the conference room with this:



Systematic Biology Panel poster




or this:

NSF Committee of Visitors poster



The point is, you can create your own opportunities for both work and fullfilment no matter what else is going on in your life. Whether your voice-over career is keeping you hopping, or whether you sometimes find yourself with down time, you can be creating something.

Casting director Bonnie Gillespie wrote yet another excellent article this week for The Actor's Voice called Back to Basics, covering the latest thinking on headshots, resumés, and the other tools of the actor’s trade. In it is a section entitled Put Yourself Out There – a call to action if you’re looking for ways to get yourself on the map. How do you get on the map? You put yourself there!! She writes about a talented actor-writer comedy team who produced their own short film, Girl's Night Out, to showcase their skills, which became a featured video on Youtube (thanks to additional legwork on the part of the creators – you don’t have to wait for that to happen either) and has led to some great opportunities for them. Bonnie is so right about the importance of creating your own work.

Ideas and opportunities come when you least expect them. A lot of the auditions and scripts I get are interesting, a lot are, well…. not. Last fall I got an audition script for Ariat boots that I really loved, and although I didn’t expect anything to come of this audition, I wanted to do something with it. I got my friend, voice-over talent & production wizard Ben Wilson to work on it with me and we came up with a piece we’re both very proud of. No, we didn’t get the gig (yes of course they were nuts not to hire us – thanks for mentioning it!) but we got a wonderful showpiece that we thoroughly enjoyed creating, and it has brought us other work. Sometimes I get nutty ideas for commercials. I know nobody is going to produce them, so I do it myself. Or I just stick stuff into projects I’ve been hired to do, just because. A long-standing client wrote me yesterday that he has left AuctionPal, the company he founded three years ago and for which he hired me to create the young and energetic, British-accented Piper as their spokesperson. AuctionPal is doing great, and he's still closely associated with them, but he needs new outlets for his own energy and creativity so he’s starting a new internet marketing company, Double Vision. He’s interested in hiring me to do the telephone answering system and wanted me to try out some voices, so this is what I sent him.

The next time you find work slowing down (not that you would ever admit to anybody that that happens – cuz that would be putting negative energy out there and it gets in your way and trips you), don’t wring your hands over it – do something about it! Send out more postcards, make more calls, write more emails, do more networking – but also, create something. Don’t know how to make Flash animations? Find a friend who does or take a class. Lack production skillz? Collaborate. Get busy. If people aren’t hiring, hire yourself to create a showpiece. It will keep you in tip-top creative shape, you’ll have a blast, and you never know where it might take you.

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8 Comments:

Blogger Peter O'Connell said...

There are numerous things I enjoyed about this blog post but the two parts that made me laugh out loud were wonderful throw away lines that a lesser writer would have omitted:

"(yes of course they were nuts not to hire us – thanks for mentioning it!)"

"(not that you would ever admit to anybody that that happens – cuz that would be putting negative energy out there and it gets in your way and trips you)"

just brilliant.

Best always,
- Peter

1:10 PM  
Blogger MCM Voices said...

Peter, you sure know how to make a gal's day!

Thanks for visiting!

M.

2:37 PM  
Blogger Kara Edwards said...

Mary-

Peter is right...brilliant! I loved this post. Anytime I have some spare moments (which of course, is never! heheh) I try to sit down and write something, or produce something, or find a new corner of the VO universe I have yet to explore. Time is on our side, it's how we spend it that counts!

Kara

11:04 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great, great post Mary. There truly are so many avenues to explore to "get yourself out there" that there's no way anyone can have nothing to do.
Excellent posts like yours are a prime example.

Loved the Atria spot!

James

9:33 AM  
Blogger Some Audio Guy said...

As always Mary, I couldn't agree more. It's not enough to just have an agent, or a website, or a whatever. It's your career so why wouldn't you take advantage of everything you can get your hands on?

I think trying to produce your own material is one of the best learning experiences a performer can go through. And who knows, you might just like it!

2:17 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Hi, Mary! Your posts are always thought-provoking and inspiring, but I particularly liked this one. I loved seeing the "show and tell" meeting maps from your previous life.

You wrote:

The point is, you can create your own opportunities for both work and fullfilment no matter what else is going on in your life.

Actually, I believe in the Law of Attraction school of thought that says you CREATE your REALITY.

No matter how you look at it, what you put out in the world comes back to you, one way or another! Why not make it something positive and great?!

Best wishes always for your happiness and continued v-o success!


Karen Commins
www.KarenVoices.com
www.KarenBlogs.com

8:25 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi, I enjoyed reading your article. I can tell that "the best is yet to come" for you by your positive outlook and attitude. I truly believe that 90% of the battle is how we face (i.e. walk thru) it. You keep on step-in - girl! Anyway, I was doing some research for my mother (she is not as computer comfortable as me :-)) ... She is unique in that although she needs further grammatical/articulate/basic vocal training she was born with a unique voice/range and an innate ability to make people laugh. She actually has this unique "laugh" that really needs to be packaged and sold on its own. Anyway it is her deep desire to get her voice "out there" and I am not exactly sure where to direct her to stop. I don't want to discourage her with all the technical details about her weaknesses that I mentioned before. Do you have any advice that I can give her on the best way to start? This is also 90% of the battle :-). Thanks for your time in advance and I look forward to getting your response when you get time.

Sincerely, Youlanda

6:30 AM  
Blogger MCM Voices said...

Youlanda, thank-you for stopping by and leaving a comment, and for your kind words!

Voice-over is not an easy career, and in this electronic age, the technical details are going to be a plague to anyone who is not tech-savvy. Having said that, I would also say that if your mom has a burning desire to be a voice artist, she'll find a way! I would suggest taking a look at one of my earlier posts, Setting Rates in voice-over http://mcmvoices.com/blog/2008/01/setting-rates-in-voice-over-business.html which is a sort of VO primer. It includes a link to an Amazon reading list put together by Karen Commins (and I always recommend checking the library before shelling out for books). Reading as much as she can get her hands on about any potential career is the best place to start. That, and reading aloud every day!

Take care and thanks again for visiting.

MCM

5:10 PM  

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