
Scene Study for Actors: What You Should Actually Be Working On
Most actors use scene study to present work instead of changing how they work. Here’s what scene study should actually be doing for you if your training is working.
In-depth acting articles and insights on technique, auditions, and the business of acting. Written by a working actor and respected acting teacher, drawing from decades of studio training and professional experience.

Most actors use scene study to present work instead of changing how they work. Here’s what scene study should actually be doing for you if your training is working.

If your acting feels pushed or unnatural, it’s not a talent problem, it’s a process problem. Here’s what’s causing it and how to shift into work that actually feels real.

Cold reading isn’t about reading perfectly, it’s about staying connected when you don’t know what’s coming next. Here’s how to stop freezing up and start working truthfully in the moment.

If you feel like you’re working hard but not getting better, you’re not alone. The problem usually isn’t effort, it’s what you’re practicing and how you’re being guided.

Most actors pick a studio based on reputation, not results. Here’s how to actually choose a class that makes you better in the room.




No fluff, just solid advice about acting and your career.
Most actors choose an acting studio the same way they choose a restaurant. They go by reputation, reviews, or what they’ve heard.
If your goal is to become a stronger actor, someone who can walk into auditions and actually work, then you need to choose a studio based on what it teaches you to do, not what it promises.
Every acting studio says they “teach technique.” That doesn’t mean much.
What matters is what you are actually doing in class, week after week.
A strong acting class should train:
Actors grow by doing. In my acting classes online, you WORK, more than once a session.
Listen closely to how the teacher adjusts actors.
Weak direction sounds like this:
These are results. They don’t tell you what to do. Uta Hagen once said “playing mood is doom spelled backwards.”
Strong direction sounds different:
Now you’re working.
In my acting classes online, actors start to build something real, something they can rely on
under pressure.
Never choose a studio blindly.
When you audit my class, I will give you a short monologue for my assessment.
When you audit, ask yourself:
4. Look for a Process You Can Repeat Outside of Class
A great acting studio doesn’t just help you in class.
It gives you a way to work on your own.
You should leave with a clear approach to:
Script analysis
Breaking down beats
Preparing for auditions
Working with a partner
If you can’t take what you’re learning and apply it to a self tape or audition, the training isn’t complete.
This is where many actors get stuck. They feel good in class, but lost when they’re on their own.
That gap matters.
It comes down to this:
If the answer is yes, you’re in the right place.
If not, keep looking.
Your training shapes everything, your auditions, your confidence, your growth.
It’s worth choosing carefully.
If you’re looking for a place to build that kind of process, you can explore my acting classes online that focus on listening, behavior, and real-time work.
You can also sit in on a class first. A Free Audit Class gives you a chance to see the work up close before committing.
No guessing, just clarity.
How do I know if an acting class is good?
Look for real behavioral change in actors, not just polished performances. Good classes teach process, not results.
Should I choose an acting studio based on reputation?
Reputation can help, but it shouldn’t be the deciding factor. Focus on what and how the studio actually teaches.
Are online acting classes effective?
Yes, if they focus on real interaction, listening, and actionable technique. Passive or lecture-based classes are less effective.
What is the most important thing to learn in acting class?
Learning to listen and respond truthfully is the foundation. Everything else builds on that.
How many acting classes should I try before choosing one?
Audit at least one or two classes. Compare what you see, then choose based on the quality of work, not convenience.
