The role
What an actor actually does, day to day.
Actors bring characters to life on stage, screen, radio and beyond. They tell stories that make audiences laugh, cry, think and feel. It is a job that sits at the heart of theatre, film, television and the wider entertainment industry, and good acting can move millions of people.
Day to day, an actor spends a lot of time preparing. They learn lines, study scripts and rehearse scenes until they feel natural. They attend auditions, take direction from a director, and perform the same role again and again until it is right. Between jobs, they keep training and look for their next role.
This career takes confidence, dedication and a thick skin, because rejection is common and the work can be unpredictable. You need creativity, a strong memory and the ability to take feedback. The reward is the chance to do something you love, to keep learning, and to connect with audiences in a way few other jobs allow.
- Memory: You need to learn lines and stage directions accurately and recall them under pressure.
- Emotional range: You must believably play characters who feel very different from yourself.
- Resilience: Auditions often end in rejection, so you have to keep going and stay positive.
- Teamwork: You work closely with directors, crew and fellow actors to make a production succeed.
- Discipline: Long rehearsals and repeated performances require focus and reliability.
- Adaptability: You may switch between stage, screen, voice work and adverts to keep working.
Day to day
Other interesting careers
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Singers are the heartbeat of the music industry, captivating audiences with their vocal artistry and emotional expression.
A DJ plays and mixes music to get a crowd going at clubs, bars, parties, weddings and events.
Magicians captivate audiences with their illusions and tricks, turning the ordinary into the extraordinary.