Zitat
"The book won't tell you how to act, but will tell you how to be an actor, how to stay sane and succeed in any creative position, if you have a dream and want to make it a reality it'll offer you properly useful advice. It's one of those books that helps you know yourself, ask the right questions, and reminds you to be happy. It is truthful, eye-opening and insightful, reading it feels like getting tips and advice from a friend down the pub; it is a goldmine of information. I'm no actor, but it's one of those books that I'll carry with me, return to time and time again because remembering this advice will help me become a better and happier person." - "Huffington Post" "A little book but great fun... Presented in large print with jokey soundbites, occasional speech bubbles and stylised on-page annotation, "The Golden Rules of Acting" covers drama school, auditions, agents, directors, dealing with reviews and various other aspects of living an actor's life with wit. "Remember the best part about drama school is that you get to spend all day acting. Cherish that, you may have to wait a long time until it happens again," opines Nyman wisely. I liked his well-made point that success in this business is a marathon not a sprint. Samuel L Jackson was 46 when he made "Pulp Fiction" and Morgan Freeman 52 when he starred in "Driving Miss Daisy." Nyman's advice about having a decent website and keeping a record of everyone you meet with a note of when and where is sensible too. I think it's worth the cover price for the quotations alone. Threaded through the book are gems such as Michael Caine's "I'm a skilled professional actor. Whether I have any talent or not is beside the point" and Mark Twain's "The harder I work, the luckier I get...".If you get only one useful nugget it will have paid for itself. -- "The Stage" "The cover of this book has a splash star on it reading 'Over one million copies sold.' Then an asterisk, and the asterisk note says Completely