Audition season is fast approaching, and with it comes the dreaded video submission. This short video highly determines whether or not a company will invite you to audition in person. With variables like camera quality, lighting, and editing to consider, the process can seem overwhelming. 

Pointe spoke to experts on both sides of the audition table to learn their tips for nailing your video submission.

Mindset Matters

Watching videos of yourself dancing can be difficult, especially if you, like many dancers, struggle with perfectionism. That’s why Cy Doherty, a corps member at American Ballet Theatre who moonlights as a video editor, recommends filming with a friend. If you have a tendency to pick apart your dancing, he says, “it’s nice to have someone there to say, ‘No, that was really good.’ ” The same friend can also help you start your music and frame your shot.

Cy Doherty and Olivia Tweedy dance together onstage during a performance. DOherty, wearing a burgundy long-sleeved top and pants, does an arabesque with his right leg lifted. OLivia Tweedy, wearing a light purple dress, pink tights, and pointe shoes, does a battement with her left leg behind him, facing profile, with her arms lifted high.
Cy Doherty with Olivia Tweedy in Twyla Tharp’s Push Comes to Shove. Photo by Nir Arieli, courtesy ABT.

Mackenzie Davis, a content creator and dancer at Azara Ballet, says that filming herself dancing for social media has improved her reels. According to Davis, regularly taking videos of yourself moving can help you feel more comfortable evaluating yourself on camera and correcting your form. 

Play to Your Strengths

One advantage of the video audition is that you can choreograph your own class and choose your variation. Kate Linsley, rehearsal director at Nashville Ballet, suggests dancers make choices that suit their strengths and ability level. “Let technique and artistry lead every choice you make,” she says. If there’s a more complicated step you don’t feel comfortable doing, leave it out or simplify the combination to make your classwork look as strong and flattering as possible. Linsley looks closely at classwork in each audition video, and she recommends that dancers stay away from “classography” to avoid overcomplicated exercises. Highlight the style you’re trained in and feel most confident dancing. “You can design a class that really shows who you are,” she says. 

Kate Linsley teaches class at School of Nashville Ballet.

Davis also recommends rehearsing a variation for a few weeks before filming it. “Variations can take a while to get into your body,” she says. She also recommends working with a mentor or dance teacher if possible. Davis’ first-ever audition video was made with the help of her ballet coach at the time. “He choreographed all the combinations and really tailored them to what looked good on me,” she recalls.

Be Yourself 

With the stress of filming, you might forget to focus on your performance quality. Doherty says it’s important to maintain energy in your face and let your personality shine through. “You need to show people that you love to do this,” he says. “Most companies are looking for people to put onstage, not in a studio. If you can show what you would look like in a performance, that’s best.”

Mackenzie Davis, wearing a white tutu with a lacy floral overlay and a small hat, balances on pointe on her right foot and does a degagé devant with her left leg in croisé. She lifts herb right arm high and her left arm out to the side, and looks out over her left shoulder and smiles.
Azara Ballet dancer Mackenzie Davis. Photo by Sam Zauscher, courtesy Azara Ballet.

Editing Tips

Linsley notes that less is more when it comes to editing your video. She recommends combining all footage into one video file for easy access and including your name in the corner of the frame. Doherty cuts any pauses or transitional moments out of his videos to keep viewers engaged. “You want to make sure there’s no room for people to be distracted,” he says. Both Doherty and Linsley recommend against overlaying audio onto your video—it risks misaligning your music and your movement.

Quickfire Do’s and Don’ts

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