
Laura Claycomb's Young Artist Corner
Your resume:
How should it look, what information should you put in it, What information is
admissible, and format
Pick a beautiful paper, a beautiful font, nothing too fussy or wacky. Keep It
Simple, Stupid (KISS) is always the best motto. Don't get a gimmicky paper, or
a strange colored paper (white or cream is great, maybe a very light gray or
blue is admissable) And don't get the bright idea to do anything fancy with
your name at the top. Please. They can remember your name is Joe Smith
without the flashing lights, thank you. Only thing they'll remember,
otherwise, will be showing it around the office saying, "Take a look at this!"
and laughing.
Your resume should always fit on one page. The one I have included as an
example actually has ALL my information on there, so it would not fit on one
page. If I were to send it out to an agent, it wouldn't have all the "agent"
information on the bottom, and I might prune some smaller roles from my lists.
If it were for an Opera Company, I would not have included the concert
repertoire. If it were for a Concert Venue, I would prune my Operatic Roles
down to four or five biggies I've done in great houses and put it AFTER my
Concert Repertoire on the page. Tailor your resume to your "audience." i.e.
If you are auditioning for a bel canto role, put all your bel canto stuff at
the top of the page. For this, a computer and printer at home or at least a
floppy with different versions of your resume are handy - you can run to
Kinko's and print one on great paper before your audition.
I have a friend on Broadway, and he says that they print their resumes on the
back of their 8x10 pictures. Sounds like a great idea, and I'm surprised that
more classical agents don't adopt this also. NO more lost pictures. (This is
done at the photo shop; don't try to print it onto your pictures at home with
your computer's printer, since it will only smear, and disappear with time.)
And be careful if you decide to glue your resumé onto the back of the picture,
as most glues will disintigrate the paper and compromise the photo paper.
Another problem with having resumés printed on the back of pictures is that a
resumé is always changing, and thus, you shouldn't have too many pictures
printed at a time, for fear of ending up with a zillion out-dated resumé's on
back.
Nothing worse than a "corrected" in ink resumé.
Always print a new resume. Don't just pencil in that one accented "i". It's
worth it. I promise.
The format should be some variation on the following:
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YOUR NAME
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your voice type
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Your address (either here or at bottom of page)
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Your vital statistics (if applicable)
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Your operatic repertoire
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Your concert repertoire
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Your education/preparation/competitions
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any other skills, interesting stuff
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Small date of issue
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your name - what you want to be known as for the rest of your life as your
stage name. Don't get any grandiose ideas to change your name, unless your
name is such a mouthful that no one will ever be able to pronounce it as is.
Maria Ekaterina Josefa Jesus Calligula Kalligalalopalopalopalos... Sometimes
just shortening it does the trick. (Maria Callas... OK, I made up the first
one, but her name was really long and Greek.) But what is a little difficult at
first may actually be unforgettable once someone wraps his/her tongue around
it! Delora Zdajick, Vesselina Kasarova, Fredericka von Stade. Very ethnic
names reveal a history about you that will add another fascinating layer to
your persona. Don't make up a new ethnicity for yourself. It's fake. Most of
all please, please don't think that having an Italian new name will give you
more clout in this business, and don't take on one unless you speak PERFECT
Italian already and have an Italian mama. Another valid reason to change your
name would be if there is already an established singer very close to your name
(Dennis O'Neil, Dennis MacNeill, Stuart O'Neill....) - check out Opera News and
go through the back part to see who's performing where - D.O'Neill, D.
MacNeill, S. O'Neill, etc.... to check out if your given name will easily be
continually confused with someone else already in the business. You don't want
someone to have to always say, "No, he's JOHN MacNeill, the baritone from New
Jersey, not Dennis O'Neill, the tenor..) Only other reason to use a different
name is if your name is SO UTTERLY HORRIBLY plain and nondescript that no one
will ever remember it as is. You'll know if this is true, because people will
have forgotten your name your whole life. (Of course, that could be connected
to your personality....) After all that, it'd be better to stick with your
name. You can always use the longer or shorter version of your name for good
use. Jennifer Larmore is "Jennie" to close friends, but "Jennifer" sounds more
serious and mezzo-ish. Jennie might have worked if she were a coloratura...
And you can always use a middle name if it rings better. i.e. Derek Lee Ragin.
You just don't want
to confuse people down the road by changing names if you're already known in
musical circles by one name!
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Voice type - I'd say, don't get too specific unless you're doing German house
auditions, and then you really need to stick to ONE fach and not stray,
repertoire-wise with what you offer. For non-German house auditions, unless
you really exactly fit into one niche and no other, I'd be very vague and let
them figure it out by your repertoire. Many people have such conflicting ideas
about what each fach is, and who should sing what. You might turn someone off
by calling yourself a dramatic mezzo, and then having some Rossini on your aria
list! People are weird. "Lyric coloratura soprano" could put it immediately
in their minds that I have a small, high voice or could make them imagine more
emphasis on the lyric part like Sutherland. Better to put "Laura Claycomb,
soprano" and let them figure out what type from my repertoire and my audition.
Soprano, mezzo-soprano, contralto (if you REALLY REALLY are a naturally dark,
dark voice with low notes for days and some higher notes so we don't think
you're just a soprano with no upper range who's darkening her voice),
counter-tenor, sopranist, tenor, baritone, bass-baritone, bass are all good
types. There is no such thing as a baritenor or a tenor-counter-tenor. (There
was such a guy who called himself this who came in and sang half mezzo arias
and half tenor arias in an audition.... and badly.) Choose one voice type and
make sure your repertoire reflects that. I would stay away from offering arias
that traditionally go to a different voice, but that nowadays are being cast in
a different way (Cherubino sung by a soprano, Zerlina and Despina by a mezzo,
et al.) Although they work in the operas, most people casting things these days
are NOT that well-informed, sorry to say, not that open-minded, and will just
be confused by you offering different fach stuff. If you've changed fach
lately, offer only ONE fach's repertoire for your auditions, even if that means
offering only two or three arias. No reason to sing something no longer
suitable just to have something on your list.
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address- sounds stupid, but some people forget to include how someone can
contact you! Your address should be the address where you will be easily
reached or that messages can get easily forwarded to you. Before you have an
agent, it is especially important to have an easily reachable phone number,
fax, etc... If this means sending all mail through your Dad's office or your
parents' house, then so be it.
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vital statistics - some people who are interested in Broadway, etc... like to
put their height and weight, color of hair/eyes (it's a black and white picture
you're including) on their resumes. I don't think it's that appropriate on
professional classical singers' resumes to include this information, but I
thought you should be aware of the option.
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Your operatic repertoire - you can have two parts to this: "roles performed"
and then a list of "roles prepared." I found this useful when I had hardly done
any main roles. That way, although I had only done "Giannetta" in "Elisir
d'amore," and "Papagena" in "Die Zauberflöte," they could find out that I was
prepared to do "Adina" and "Pamina." It shows a seriousness and good work
ethic to your auditioner, and can give them ideas in casting, plus make them
think of you as a front-runner, not just a comprimario, even if that's all
you've done so far.
You should put the following information in a easy to read table under roles:
the role, the opera, (the composer, if you like, or if you have some highly
non-standard repertoire) (if you learned a lot in English translation, go ahead
and put what language everything was in, so as not to mislead someone), what
opera company or school, which year - this is strongly recommended but not
absolutely necessary, and conductor or director if you esteem them a big enough
deal to mention. Once you get to a certain point when you want people to quit
thinking of you as a student, I'd relegate roles done at university to the
"roles prepared" pile. In the "roles prepared" pile, make a list of roles and
the opera they come from. Don't include partially learned roles or
now-inappropriate roles just to pad things. Even if you did something, why
include it unless it reflects well what you'd like to do?
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Your concert repertoire - you can include all repertoire; and include venues
where you've actually performed some, including conductor, in what festival,
etc..
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Your education/preparation/competitions: Schools and degrees achieved - include
degrees even if they're not music - this shows your multifaceted interests and
knowledge -(High School doesn't count), teacher if you like, coaches if you
think the auditioner might really know and esteem said person (don't, if you
just think they'll be impressed with an empty name - they know those charlatans
that used to be famous singers, run around "coaching" and can't teach
themselves out of a bag. Not impressive.) Include other ways you learned your
craft - i.e. studied acting at Actor's Studio in New York; fencing with famous
instructor XXX XXXX; Alexander technique with Alexander himself; private voice
lessons with Maria Callas; ballet with the Joffrey; modern dance with Merce
Cunningham; summer apprentice programs (Merola, Santa Fe, etc...) Don't
include that you did Master Classes with someone. That's not a long-term
learning pattern for you and nobody cares.
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any other skills, interesting stuff, languages !- If there's something that you
think might
provide interesting (not just a hobby of yours, please, or that you've been
"saved" by Jehova...) insight to your special talents, such as you're a
licensed doctor, dog trainer, rollerskating champion (these could be put under
"special skills") etc, then include them. You never know, they might be
looking for someone who can skate... Be tasteful.
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Date of issue - My agent adds a small "Updated October 04, 2001 - please
destroy any previous copies" to the bottom of the page of biographies and
resumes. Although it may sound a little James Bond-ish, it does strongly
convey that you would like to keep an UPDATED biography, resume, etc, in their
files. This also helps you to quickly and succinctly find out if a company has
your most recent biography or resume in their files. This gives you a great
excuse to send them a NEW one with all your most recent triumphs and remind
them that that you're alive and that they should book you! (Otherwise, you
get the stock reply of "we have your updated biography" when they actually
don't. No one can argue with a date.) No more old resume's going in the
performance program. I also include this magical phrase to my on-line resume
and biography, so people can know they are reading something up-to-date.
my resume
Part I Life Goals
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Part II Day In, Day Out
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Part III Getting started
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Part V Taxes, etc.
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Part VI Gifts |
Part VII Health
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Checklist
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Bel Canto Tips
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Young Artist Programs
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Summer Festivals
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Resume advice
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European Audition/Competition Ideas
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German Fest Experience
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Agents!
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Books, Resources
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MORE Books
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My list of competitions
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Fach list
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ClassicalSinger.com| VIEW/SIGN GUESTBOOK
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