actors headshots
What your photographer needs in order to provide you with a successful headshot session: Part I
Los Angeles Headshot Photographer: Vanie Poyey
Speaking for myself, I find that my most amazing sessions have a lot to do with a client’s attitude coming into the session. I realize headshots are a large investment and that there is a lot riding on them. And often by the time actors come to me, they’ve had one or more bad experiences, their agents haven’t been happy with any of their pictures and they are at a complete loss. Regardless, assuming you have done your due diligence and have thoroughly researched photographers, once you make a decision, it’s important to trust your decision as well as the process of the photographer you chose to work with. In other words, let the professionals do their job.
What I’m about to say can easily be misunderstood so I want to be very clear. I’m not saying your input isn’t important and I’m not saying you shouldn’t voice your concerns or opinions. However, when someone is overly controlling about every aspect of the shoot from the largest detail to the smallest of details, it tends to stifle creativity. Not only is the organic process gone, but I’m worried about making the slightest wrong move and failing to please my client. I’m worried that what I do isn’t what they want so I’m extra careful to only do the things they ask me to do. I refrain from offering my usual advise and typically end up confining myself to tight parameters which doesn’t leave room for spontaneous moments that make for great pictures.
Believe it or not a person’s attitude can become a self fulfilling prophecy and can literally make or break a headshot session. The person who walks in with a negative attitude, constantly stopping the flow and the momentum because they are worried about what is going to go wrong because of what has gone wrong in the past, is very likely to walk away with pictures that don’t represent what I do in my body of work. This is never intentional on my part but if I’m prevented from doing what I normally do how can my pictures turn out the way they usually turn out? The person who comes in with a positive attitude, is free and open to new experiences, open to direction and entrusts me with the experience, will very likely walk away with exceptional results.
Part II of this post will outline some examples and show you the most amazing session of the year because of my client’s amazing positive attitude! Stay tuned and share your experiences here!
Below are headshots wrapping up the last of the batch from 2011!

Jason Thompson: Casual College Student / Urban Hipster

Thomas Webb: Egdy Bad Boy / Quirky Office

Charleene Closshey: Upscale Wife / Carolina Adler: Girl Next Door

Tessa O'Toole: Silverlake Hipster / Quirky Office

Reza Mir: Casual Office / Edgy Villain

Jennifer Neal: Young Mom / Mischievous Girl Next Door

Sean Fagan: Young Student / Robyn Heller: Quirky Mom

Alexandra Hoover: Business Professional / Sassy Office

Alexandra Hoover: Upscale Wife

Jefferson Rogers: Edgy Bad Boy / Guy Next Door

Steven J. Oliver: Business Professional / Mobster Boss
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Anthropologist Scott Frank talks “Headshots” and how Casting Directors interact with them.
Actor Headshots: by Vanie Poyey
Blog written by Scott Frank
A couple of years ago, I had the pleasure of sitting with Scott Frank, an anthropologist who specializes in studying Hollywood, to discuss Headshots. When I read the paper based on his research, I was fascinated to read about my business purely from the perspective of a study. I was particularly fascinated by the section on Casting Directors, part of which Scott agreed to share here. Are headshots really not as important as actors think? Judge for yourself!
Hi there. My name is Scott Frank, and I’m a professional anthropologist (i.e. I have a Ph.D in it), who’s specialty is studying how Hollywood works. The following is an excerpt from a paper I presented last year at a national Anthropologist’s conference. The subject of the paper was headshots, and how different people in Hollywood interact with them in different ways: actors, headshot photographers, and casting directors.
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Casting directors are, in a sense, unusual in that they are the end users of headshots, and ultimately the eyes for which the entire process of actors and photographers regarding headshots exists. It’s also the least precise group – technically, it’s probably better to use the term “casting professionals,” because many people can be involved in casting – there can be several levels of casting directors, casting associates, etc., or for a small production, the producer or director might even do it themselves.
In any case, the first thing to understand about these casting professionals is that they look at a LOT of photos. One told me that for a standard smaller film role, looking for, say, a 22 year old female, they might get 7,000 submissions. Another told me from his experience on network TV, for a minor guest star role, there would be between 1,500-3,000 actors vying for the slot.
The method through which most casting in Los Angeles works involves a complex series of events, but almost everybody at one point ends up using one of the online casting services, and eventually using the physical headshot artifacts themselves. Very briefly, for example, a TV show would send a script to Breakdown Services (which everyone uses); Breakdown will pull all speaking parts, make a description, and send it back to the casting agency for approval. Once approved, the descriptions get posted online, and they wait for the applicants to pour in.
The next stop is the headshot-intensive one. Casting professionals will scroll through all these hundreds – really even thousands of headshots for each role. Each shot is either passed over entirely, or rated a 1, a 2, or a 3, a ranking of how excited they are about each prospect. And here’s the part that I personally find fascinating – the way they select from all of those thousands of photos. For all the time and energy put in by the actors and the photographers to make each shot perfect, to make it really sing, the initial answer from casting people I spoke to was “I pick based on impulse and instinct.” When I started interviewing casting professionals, I admit I was hoping to hear some hard-and-fast rules, some strongly guiding principles for what they can tell is a good versus bad headshot, but truth be told, instinct is the only way really to do it – when you have to look at 7,000 photos over the course of two days, you can’t spend time really looking at each one; a quick glance and an instinctual response is the only way to pore through all of that data. Because that’s what your headshot is to a casting professional: data that is supposedly indicative of something they need: a good, working actor.
When someone casting a show says they go with their gut when selecting an actor based on a headshot, that can mean different things: one told me that he flashes “when you can tell who they are in the headshot” – he says that means you can tell they’re a good actor. Another said he’s flashing on how the actor fits the mental image he has of a character based on the breakdown description.
All of the casting folks say that headshots aren’t as important as actors think they are. Which is in a sense true – the selection is based on many factors – but in a sense also seems false: the casting professional is zooming through hundreds of shots – the only thing they are going on at first is your headshot. As one actor said, “all a headshot does is get you through the door”, and the casting professionals agree – after that, it’s your resume, and your actual ability, as demonstrated during a readthrough or pre-read.
The other thing that casting professionals seem to agree on is that somehow, in a way nobody is quite able to explain, in a truly great headshot, the actor’s personality – not just their appearance – comes though. One casting agent said that this happens in .3% of all headshots. At first I assumed he was joking, but then I ran the numbers and it makes sense: if you have a pool of 2000 applicants, .3% comes out to six people you’d strongly believe are up for the role, which sounds about right. In a sense, it’s shades of the old saw – that a photograph really can capture your soul; or at least an actor hopes it does.
Oh, and by the way, the other final rule I discovered in my research? Nobody – successful actors, agents, headshot photographers, casting professionals – thinks that an actor can pick their own headshot. When you’re selecting which one to use, ask for the advice of other people you know and trust. Speaking as an anthropologist, it’s not about which photo makes you look the best, but which one transmits your personality to the viewer.

Beth Triffon: Edgy Girl Next Door

Caity Jane Mullen: Young Disney / Greg Roman: Young Intern / Jan Morris: Upscale Wife
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The Backstage Spotlight Issue on Headshots
Headshots for Actors: by Vanie Poyey
Recently Backstage West asked a few photographers to give their input in an article titled Los Angeles Photographers on What Makes an Effective Headshot. This was my little bit followed by a couple of headshots.
“Your headshot should not simply be a pretty picture—a trap most novice actors fall into. Instead, your headshots need to market you specifically for the type you’re auditioning for. Your type, or what I call “marketing look,” is based on your age range. For example, if your age range is 18 to 23, your marketing looks may include “all-American guy next door,” or possibly “edgy hipster” or “edgy urban,” etc.
The two photos I chose—while full of personality, something I aim to draw from actors by directing them—also display very specific marketing looks. Sarah is clearly “the girl next door,” and Eduardo is clearly “the businessman.” When the casting community isn’t familiar with your work, a headshot that closely resembles the type in the breakdown gives them reason to believe you can act the part and to call you in.”
The following pictures are some examples of different looks!

Tom Krause: Young Grad Student / Kevin Shewey: Edgy Urban

Claire Crouch: Quirky Girl Next Door / Edgy CW

Mark Dippolito: Addict / Business

Drew Fonteiro: Bad Boy / Boy Next Door

Lenka Svobodova: Commercial Office / Leading Lady

Kyla E. Druckman: CW Love Interest
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