
Why You Feel Stuck in Your Acting and How to Start Improving
If you feel stuck in your acting, it is not because you are not working hard enough. Learn what is actually holding you back and how to shift your process so your work starts to change.
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.

If you feel stuck in your acting, it is not because you are not working hard enough. Learn what is actually holding you back and how to shift your process so your work starts to change.

Most actors turn script analysis into something heavy and confusing that does not actually help their performance. Learn how to break down a script in a simple, usable way that keeps you connected and responsive.

If your self tape feels flat, it is not a camera problem, it is a connection problem. Learn how to bring your work to life by focusing on behavior instead of performance.

Most actors over prepare in their head and lose what actually makes a performance feel real. Learn how to prepare for auditions in a way that keeps you present, responsive, and alive in the moment.

Not all acting classes actually change your work, even if they feel productive. Here’s how to tell if your training is moving you forward or just keeping you busy.




No fluff, just solid advice about acting and your career.
Actors stay in classes for years.
They show up, do scenes, get feedback, feel like they’re working.
But their acting doesn’t really change.
I hear this all the time, “I’m taking classes, but I still feel stuck.”
That’s not about effort. It’s about what the class is actually doing.
So how do you know if your acting class is helping you, or just keeping you busy?
This is the first sign.
You do a scene, you get notes, you understand the notes.
Then the next week, you’re doing the same thing again.
That means the feedback isn’t actually shifting your behavior.
In my class, I’m not just giving notes. I’m working with you until something actually changes.
What to look for:
If nothing is changing, the training isn’t landing.
Some classes feel great.
You leave feeling inspired, motivated, like you did good work.
But then you get to an audition, and everything feels the same.
That’s a disconnect.
What to look for:
If your training doesn’t translate, it’s staying on the surface.
If you’re always comfortable in class, that’s a problem.
Growth doesn’t feel comfortable.
It feels uncertain. It feels like you don’t quite have control.
In my class, I’ll push actors past what feels safe. That’s where the work actually shifts.
What to look for:
If you’re always in control, you’re probably not changing.
Actors often think more scenes equals more growth.
It doesn’t.
If your process stays the same, the results stay the same.
This is something I come back to constantly in class. The scene isn’t the point. How you work is the point.
What to look for:
Without process, you’re just repeating yourself.
This is a big one.
If you feel like you have to be good in class, you’re not going to take risks.
And if you don’t take risks, nothing changes.
In my class, it’s not about showing your best work. It’s about actually working.
What to look for:
The faster actors improve, the more willing they are to not look good while they’re learning.
Real change takes repetition.
But a lot of classes move too quickly.
New scene, new notes, new direction, without ever going deep.
In my acting classes online, I’ll keep actors on adjustments until they actually start to take hold.
What to look for:
If everything is new every week, nothing sticks.
When the training is working, it doesn’t just feel good.
It feels like something is changing.
It feels like:
That’s when you know the work is landing.
How do I know if an acting class is good?
A good class challenges your habits and changes how you work, not just how you perform.
Should I switch acting classes if I feel stuck?
If nothing is changing and you’re not being challenged, it may be time to find a different approach.
How long should I stay in an acting class?
Long enough to apply adjustments and see real change, not just attend.
Do online acting classes work?
Yes, if they focus on real-time adjustments, listening, and behavior, not just feedback.
What should I look for in an acting teacher?
Someone who identifies your habits clearly and pushes you to change them.
If your class isn’t changing anything, it’s not about doing more. It’s about working differently.
Focus on training that builds real listening, real behavior, and real connection.
That’s what we focus on in my acting classes online.
You can also start with a Free Audit Class and experience how the work actually feels.
When the training is right, you don’t just feel better after class. You actually start to change.
