How To

How to Interview an Actor

By ValerieDavid, eHow Member Rating
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Interviewing an actor can be a fun, interesting, and rewarding experience. It can also be stressful, maintaining professionalism and getting good answers out of someone who is usually a complete stranger. Follow the steps below to help you plan, choose good questions and engage the interview subject for the best results possible.

Difficulty: Moderately Challenging
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  • Legal size notepads
  • Tape recorder or phone recorder
  • Extra batteries
  • Access to video store, Internet, library

    Preparing for the Interview

  1. Step 1

    Research your subject. Read the press kit and any articles you find on-line or at the library. Know the actor's biography, and discover his interview style. This will prepare you for what to expect, and know what questions have already been asked a million times.

  2. Step 2

    View the actor's work. If she's promoting a new film or show, you'll possibly get a sneak preview tape or passes. Also view the artist's past performances. The more you know about your subject, the more detailed questions you can ask.

  3. Step 3

    Craft questions from your research. Come up with ten to twenty questions, depending on how much time you're allowed with your subject.

  4. Step 4

    Choose questions about both new and old material.

  5. Step 5

    Ask at least one question about the actor's favorite work or pet project. They'll open up more about subjects that are important to them.

  6. Step 6

    Limit personal questions. Tell the publicist if you plan to do an interview with a highly personal slant. If it's a piece geared towards promoting their latest project, don't add any extraneous personal questions.

  7. Step 7

    Focus your questions to the slant of your publication. A magazine for industry professionals will be more interested in the actor's thoughts on craft and the technical aspects of making a movie, rather than on the actor's sex appeal or charity work.

  8. Step 8

    Do your best to ask a question the actor might not have heard before. You're more likely to get an engaged response if it's something the person hasn't previously thought about.

  9. Step 9

    Choose the top five questions you most want to ask. Write these first on your legal pad, leaving a line or two of space in between for possible notes. Add your remaining questions after. Don't discard any good questions; you never know what will come up in the interview.

  10. Step 10

    Arrange questions so that there will be a natural progression from one topic to the next. You want the interview to progress like a normal conversation rather than a history exam.

  11. Interviewing the Actor

  12. Step 1

    Announce the start of the interview, so the subject knows his comments are now on the record. Start the tape player and ask the first question.

  13. Step 2

    Listen to the answers. It's a difficult balance, listening while still preparing what question to say next but it's important. Listening and responding appropriately to your subject creates rapport.

  14. Step 3

    Ask any unscripted question that arises naturally from a response. Questions that flow out of the conversation will get better answers than queries that seem canned or come out of nowhere.

  15. Step 4

    Use your scripted question order only as a guideline. Skip around if one of your questions seems more appropriate when asked earlier or later in the interview.

  16. Step 5

    Announce drastic changes in the subject. Sometimes it's unavoidable that further questions require a 180-turn from what you've already been discussing. Letting the actor know that you're shifting focus makes it less awkward when you present your new query.

  17. Step 6

    Mention a personal fact or experience if it's pertinent. An interview can feel like an interrogation if the interviewer never offers any personal information, such as discussing a film you both liked.

  18. Step 7

    Listen for cues and watch the actor's body language. If the subject's answers turn shorter, or if he's continually looking at his watch, it's time to change the topic or end the interview.

  19. Step 8

    Announce the final question. Knowing it's the end of the interview will usually relax the subject, and the actor might add some thoughts to sum up the topic.

  20. Step 9

    Thank the actor for his time, and let him know that you'll pass on a copy of the interview or a link to the online site to the publicist.

Tips & Warnings
  • Take notes only if necessary. If the actor mentions a specific charity they work for, spells out a difficult movie title, or gives a date, jot the information down. Listening is the most important aspect of an interview and it's hard to listen if you're writing everything down. Let the tape do its job.
  • Use personal stories sparingly, if at all. The interview time is about the actor, not you. Mentioning a small detail or point in common can help establish a rapport, however. A shared birthday, similar tastes in music or movies can help break the ice and make the interview more friendly.

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