Philip Seymour Hoffman's advice to aspiring actors
Every time you're onstage is a chance to practice your craft.
Booked on a crappy show? Doing a lame open mic? It’s still a chance to practice your craft. Maybe you’ll impress one person in the room who remembers. Sabotaging your set means nothing good will happen. Bringing it means you’ve at least got a chance. Also, producers appreciate it when a comic actually tries to turn a show around rather than spending time dumping on the people who did show up.
Philip Seymour Hoffman, when asked what advice he’d give to aspiring actors, said this:
“This is something a teacher told me years ago, and he’s right: even if you’re auditioning for something that you know you’re never going to get or for something you read and didn’t like—if you get a chance to act in a room that somebody else has paid rent for, then you’re given a free chance to practice your craft. And in that moment, you should act as well as you can.”
“Because when you act as well as you can,” Hoffman says, “there’s no way the people who have watched you will forget it.”
So it leads to opportunities, but more importantly, “at the end of the day, all that matters is the work. Everybody knows that. If I show up one day and the work I’m doing isn’t any good, then I’m just a guy who’s not acting well…
So I would say it to anybody starting out: if you’re given a chance to act, take those words and bring them alive. If you do that, something good will transpire ultimately.”