Head6

LeAndra Richardson images

____ HEAD6

Actor Websites by Web For Actors - LeAndra Richardson's professional actor website.

» Return to LeAndra's Website » Actor Websites
Share information about free actor profiles on facebook Share information about free actor profiles on twitter Share information about free actor profiles on pinterest

Actor Website Tips | You want a modern looking actor website, not an antique

Make sure the company building your website uses new technology The best way to see if a company you're trying to hire to build you your actor website is active and using the new technology is to ask them for a recent website they published. There's an even easier way to see if they...

Fun Facts | Websites for Actors

Build your actor website Build your #actor #website while boiling an egg.

Actor Casting Hints | Impress Casting Directors

How to get cast Always keep sides by your side. Even if you've got it down perfectly.

Actor Dictionary | Film Producer

What you should know

You could ask five different film producers what the definition of their job title is and they would likely give you five different answers. To put it simply, a producer' job is to get the film made. What an actual producer does will always change depending on the film that he or she is working on. Their involvement will usually depend on the budget, and the extent to which they can hire the appropriate people to work on their film. In general, the producer oversees the entire film-making process from start to finish. This includes finding source material (a book, comic, original idea, script, news article), optioning that source material, hiring a screenwriter, developing a script, securing financing, finding distribution, hiring a great director, overseeing the production process, overseeing the post-production process, and marketing the film. It is ultimately to producer' responsibility that the film gets made well, and under budget. In the feature film word, "producers" is the highest producer credit one can receive (unlike television where the highest producing credit goes to the "executive producer"). When a film wins an academy award for best picture, the trophy goes to the producer(s) and only the producer(s). If you want a good reference for film producing, I recommend the book "So you want to be a PRODUCER" by Lawrence Turman (the producer of THE GRADUATE, and the chairman of the infamous Peter Stark Producing Program at USC).