All the World’s a Stage: Including Your Living Room!
First written for
Stage 32 in 2022
Although I wear many hats (literally) as a Creative, my
deepest roots are as an actor. I performed my first role when I was 8, trading the
lead for a smaller part because I was daunted by the number of lines to
memorize (the first and only time that happened).
I consider myself a performer and storyteller in the oldest
of traditions, interacting with crowds and using a loose script and structure
that allows ample room for improvisation and a broad emotional spectrum. I have
been trained in improvisation, clowning, and Commedia dell'arte and I am also a
Chautauqua Scholar.
https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/02/my-work-as-chautauqua-scholar-and.html
In my article on audition prep [https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/03/preparing-for-auditions-seven-steps.html],
I told the story of auditioning for a producer in full pirate regalia in a
kitchen in Ohio.
Little did we know that performing in kitchens, living
rooms, and through a video platform called Zoom would soon become a way of life
for many working actors.
During the Lockdown, instead of touring the country,
performing or presenting at festivals and conferences and in libraries, schools,
and on college campuses, I used been using Zoom, StreamYard, Be Live, and
Facebook Live—often several times a week—to keep working in those stressful,
challenging times.
I performed for audiences I never would have reached in
other circumstances, and the video presentation model lasted well beyond the
Lockdown, bringing in considerable income and credits for my CV.
At present, I have three sets in three rooms of my home, for
three unique projects. Not everyone’s so lucky. But with green-screening, Zoom
backgrounds, a basic understanding of lights and cameras, and creative use of
some furniture and props you can create interesting sets in a single space.
For any actor, even under the best of circumstances, finding
ways to keep working occupies a lot of our time. Additionally, we have to stay sharp.
Focus and concentration, script analysis, and keeping the body and voice attuned
are daily activities for the serious working actor.
All of these become harder in isolation or sitting or
standing in front of a computer screen or camera in a room in your home, trying
to find the energy and adjustment cues that are normally provided by a live
audience or your acting partners.
So how do we take advantage of these challenges? Having
spent well over a hundred hours adjusting my approach to performances and
presentations for various video platforms, I’ve learned a lot—not only about our
craft but how to make the most of increasing opportunities to perform from your
home.
Let’s be honest—performing this way is not the same as being
on tour, but I made it work. I often had no idea how many people were watching or
how they were reacting, which made it more like TV and film work. In these
situations, you don’t have anyone to play against, which makes the work less
organic and more strategized as far as playing different notes and varying the
performance.
But, all things considered, this way of working has benefits
for the actor, both in terms of performance and the business.
It’s a chance to
continue to work and hone your craft
If there’s one piece of advice at the core of my teaching, books,
and blogs, it’s this: Creatives must keep
working. Working like they breathe. Honing their craft, strengthening their
Vision and Voice, and building their networks and brand.
(Vision and Voice) https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/02/how-3-act-model-heros-journey-enhance.html
(Networking) https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/03/practicing-art-of-networking-is.html
Working from home or a small studio is nothing new for
actors. Self-tape was so prevalent preceding the pandemic that it’s a major
focus of my teaching and coaching [https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/04/self-tape-success-audition-strategies.html].
The new opportunities for working through multimedia platforms are one more way
to hone your skills in front of the camera.
There are plenty of Zoom readings and script workshops
available. Not only will you be working—you might meet the next big writer or
director, and you will make plenty of contacts among your fellow actors.
I find that these projects are perfect for working on
concentration and focus. If you have been in a Zoom meeting or event, you’ve
probably seen how attention wanders, how people forget they are on-screen and
engage in telling behaviors through gesture and eye movement.
The classic exercises in concentration, focus, and being
authentic and not self-conscious onstage created by Uta Hagen, Constantin Stanislavski,
and Sanford Meisner can all be practiced to up your game in cyberspace.
For a performance I did for a public library in 2021, they asked
me 20 minutes before the start if they could let people into the Zoom space 10
minutes early. I readily agreed. It was an opportunity to practice authenticity,
using the props on my set to give the early arrivals a glimpse into the private
world of the character.
It was a strong warm-up, and I met the client’s needs
without hesitation.
They love that.
And will pay for it. During that same time period, I booked an online
presentation (again from a canceled live show), and when I named my price, they
insisted on more because I am so
“enthusiastic and easy to work with.”
It’s an opportunity
to cultivate new skill sets
I’ve always been about the need for any writer, actor, or director
to have a working knowledge of what the other two members of this triad do. It’s
fundamental to being a professional storyteller and finding your Vision and Voice.
Although I always had an interest in the technical
side—showing up at set builds to pitch in and learn, designing and running
lights and sound for live performances—finding these skills invaluable as a
director, I had always had more than a little fear of it.
The technical skill that scared me most was video and film
editing. I always hired editors for my multimedia projects. But, because of new
opportunities arising out of the pandemic, I’ve learned to use editing
software, and it’s been fun (and lucrative). Having broken the ice with some
simple promotional pieces to help sell online performances, I’m now doing a
variety of videos for new and existing clients, including a six-minute piece
for an international tabletop gaming conference that I wrote and acted in.
The success of that project and amount of time I’m spending
setting up cameras, sound, and lighting in my home studios gave me confidence
to pitch myself as the found footage actor for my Mothman ’66 Escape Room as
writer and puzzle designer. I worked in isolation to produce edit the footage
with confidence and it has been a great success as the prologue of the
experience (and it is great exposure for me as an actor).
(Escape Room design and consulting) https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/02/escape-room-design-and-consulting.html
I don’t always work in isolation. Few actors, directors, and
multimedia writers do. I’m working with teams
all the time, as I produce my online programs and design Escape Rooms and
immersive experiences. Everything I’m learning on the technical side is making
me better, no matter which particular hat is on my head.
Expanded audience
I spend a good part of my year on tour doing historical
education performances. The audiences that come to these kinds of events range
from dozens to hundreds, depending on the venue. Most of the events are
theme-based, and draw a certain demographic. Many are paid for by grants and
nonprofit fundraising.
The public library I mentioned is seven hours from me. After
canceling two live performances in the spring and summer, they got a grant from
their state Humanities Council to have me perform through Zoom. I was paid the
same, without travel expenses and lost time on the road, and the audience
count, still building weeks later, is over ten times what it would have been. I
also saw a much broader range of people interacting in the Q and A. This
program featured my popular one-man pirate show, so many of the people who missed
seeing me perform across the country in the spring and summer were able to attend.
During the summer of the Lockdown, my wife and I were asked to
do a Saturday morning story time for families. We readily agreed. We did the
voices of the characters and sometimes dressed in costume. We recently reached
a milestone: 100 books read live on Saturday mornings!
https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/02/saturday-morning-story-time-live-100.html
We have many three-generation families making it a part of
their Saturday morning ritual, or they watch as soon as they can when everyone
is together. Children’s book authors send us their books, as do viewers who
want to hear us read their family’s favorite children’s books. It’s been
terrific exposure and has gotten me back to my roots as a professional actor,
teacher, and playwright in the world of Theatre for Young Audiences.
Improving your communication
skills with potential clients and hiring organizations
This is all about meeting needs. Putting people at ease. Being
authentic and using your passion and knowledge to create excitement and desire
for what you’re able to offer, especially when it comes to Work for Hire [https://joeymadiastoryteller.blogspot.com/2025/04/i-dont-need-credit-work-for-hire-for.html].
Because of my enthusiasm for the work and willingness to
make things easy for the hiring organization (many of them are using multimedia
platforms for the first time), it’s rare that I book something as a one-off.
In order to make the most of online events, you can’t sell yourself
as just an actor. I explain my set
design, talk about lighting and how I adjust my program for viewing through a
screen instead of live, and share what I’ve learned during prior online
performances.
Because online programming is so new for so many, they are
not always great at it, despite coaching and best effort. During a Q and A on a
Zoom event the moderator had trouble posting questions on the screen after the
performance. I managed it with a smile and covered the lags with additional
material.
I truly believe that those of us engaging with this shift
early on are responsible for proving that it works. That’s a lot to undertake
on top of doing great work, but rewards for early adopters will be immense.
It contributes to
building your brand
The idea of “jack of all trades, master of none” no longer
applies in the technologically accessible world where modern Creators live. DIY
is all the rage and there’s much to be said about what it means in terms of creative
control and just plain getting things done. Honing your primary craft by
experiencing writing, directing, and production makes you a better actor.
And acting as your own producer will definitely feel
empowering.
Not everyone can do it. I hear from a lot of my colleagues
how they hate the online performance process. As they relate the details of
their meetings with potential hirers, it’s clear their resistance is talking
them out of jobs. They are wrapped up in the lack—of live audience, of equipment, of the proper skills to pull
it off—instead of seeing the potential.
It’s a different kind
of reel you can share with potential hirers
The amount of my work online has dramatically increased in
the past 4 years. I was in a Zoom interview with a state university two days
before the library performance and the interviewer attended the Zoom event and
shared the link with his fellow board members. He would not have traveled the
12 hours to see me live. I was also able to send him—and other clients and
hiring organizations—links to my YouTube channel, Stage 32 profile, and other
places where they can see a wide array of my work. It has already led to
further opportunities.
Making the most of
Times of Crisis
Despite the recent challenges for actors—and all Creatives—if
you continue to innovate and expand your repertoire while expanding and upping
your skill sets, I promise you’ll come out of this better positioned, with a
stronger brand and increased bookings.
When I wrote the original version of this article in 2021, two
long-time actors from New York City were staying here at the Creative Cottage. One
stayed for seven months, living in a camper in my driveway, and the other, my
son, staying for two years. They were in conversation every day with colleagues
in the United States and Canada.
The takeaway from those conversations was clear: Those who
embraced these new opportunities were thriving, while those who weren’t
experimenting, learning new media, or forging new connections were lamenting
the lack of auditions and jobs.
Which kind of actor do you want to be?

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