Acting Insights with Richard Kline

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.

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Why You Feel Stuck in Your Acting and How to Start Improving

Actors stay busy.

They take classes, work on scenes, go to auditions.

They put in the time.

But nothing really changes.

I hear this all the time, “I feel stuck.”

If you feel that way, it is not because you are not working hard enough.

It is because the way you are working is not changing anything.

Effort is not the problem.

Process is.

 

1. You Are Repeating the Same Habits

This is the biggest reason actors feel stuck.

You are doing scenes, but you are approaching them the same way every time.

Same patterns, same instincts, same choices.

So even though the material changes, your work does not.

What to look for:

  • Do your performances start to feel similar?
  • Are you falling into the same rhythms?
  • Are you aware of your habits but not changing them?

If nothing about your approach shifts, nothing about your results will either.

 

2. You Are Focused on Performance Instead of Behavior

A lot of actors try to get it right.

They think about how the scene should look, how emotional it should be, how it will be received.

That puts you in your head.

You are now performing instead of responding.

What to shift:

  • Take your focus off how it looks
  • Focus on what you are doing to the other person
  • Let the moment affect you instead of controlling it

When your attention changes, your work changes.

 

3. You Understand the Work, But You Are Not Applying It

This is very common.

Actors learn concepts.

They understand objectives, beats, relationships.

But when they get into a scene, they go back to old habits.

Understanding is not enough.

You have to apply it.

In my acting classes online, we focus on working until something actually shifts, not just talking about it.

Ask yourself:

  • Are you actually using what you learn?
  • Are you practicing it consistently?
  • Are you staying with it long enough to change?

If it is not showing up in your work, it is not landing yet.

 

4. You Are Not Being Pushed Out of Your Comfort Zone

If your work always feels controlled, you are probably staying in what is safe.

Growth does not happen there.

It happens when you are unsure, when you do not quite have control.

What to look for:

  • Are you taking risks in your work?
  • Are you being challenged in class?
  • Are you trying things that feel unfamiliar?

If you are always comfortable, you are probably not changing.

 

5. You Are Not Staying With Adjustments Long Enough

Real change takes repetition.

But many actors move too quickly.

New scene, new notes, new direction, without ever going deep.

So nothing sticks.

In my acting classes online, I will keep actors working on the same adjustment until it actually starts to take hold.

What to look for:

  • Are you repeating adjustments week to week?
  • Are you going deeper into the same issue?
  • Do you feel something starting to shift over time?

If everything changes too quickly, nothing changes at all.

 

6. You Are Trying to Get Better Instead of Working Differently

This is subtle, but important.

Actors think improvement comes from doing more.

More scenes, more classes, more effort.

But if the process stays the same, more just means repetition.

What to shift:

  • Focus on how you are working, not how much
  • Be willing to change your approach
  • Let go of what feels familiar if it is not working

Better results come from a different process, not more effort.

 

What Real Progress Actually Feels Like

When your work starts to shift, it feels different.

Not perfect, but different.

It feels like:

  • You are more focused on the other person
  • You are less in your head
  • You are responding instead of performing
  • You are open to what happens instead of controlling it

That is when you know something is changing.

 

FAQ: Why Am I Not Improving at Acting

Why do I feel stuck in my acting?
Most of the time it is because your process is not changing, even if you are putting in effort.

How can I improve my acting skills?
Shift your focus to behavior, listening, and applying adjustments consistently.

Is taking more classes the answer?
Only if the training challenges your habits and changes how you work.

How long does it take to improve in acting?
It depends on how consistently you apply the work and whether your process is effective.

What is the biggest mistake actors make?
Trying to perform instead of focusing on real behavior and connection.

 

Ready to Start Moving Forward Again

If you feel stuck, it is not about working harder.

It is about working differently.

Focus on listening, behavior, and real connection.

That is what we train every week in my acting classes online.

You can start with a Free Audit Class and experience what it feels like when the work actually begins to shift.

When your process changes, your results follow.

Written by your acting coach, Richard Kline.