Actually this could work for any school but for me, I particullarly want CMU. I had a really great audition, but don't have the greatest grades. This is my dream school-it's actually perfect for me and I was wondering if anybody had any tips for pushing it that little bit extra to get in. Anyone? Thanks so much! -Jesse
Hmmm...maybe calling and asking to check the status of your application to make sure it's complete and if they let you get a word in edge wise, rub in how much you adore their school? Just a thought...
What a lovely idea Adoannie. Does your name have anything to do with the character in Oklahoma, if so did you know Kathy Voytko understudied that role. Kathy Voytko is the next Idina Menzel!!
was it a musical theatre audition? Did you do it here in Pittsburgh? If it was MT, i'm assuming you auditioned for Gary, Tony and Judy? Let me know, i'll see what i can come up with. Though it can never hurt, i highly doubt the letters will help your chances (not for this school), it ALL about the talent (considering there are so so few that actually get accepted). What pieces did you audition with? The School of Drama here has a lot of personal biases here that they tend to frown upon/dismiss certain pieces. Best of luck though! This is an amazing place to be!
also....no, the film or CD is a bad idea....you don't want to over do it. The faculty come back from these audition tours so burned out, and they really don't want to look at anything extra. They ask for exactly what they want to see, and don't need any more. Taking the advice about calling to check on your status couldn't hurt though. No, alumni interviews do not help your chances at all (unless you happened to interview with a former Dramat). The school of drama admition process is COMPLETLY seperate from the rest of the university (although both the Drama School AND the university have to accept you individually). Again, best of luck!
They have a meeting with the dance, voice and acting faculty after each of the audition sessions to discuss the auditioners. They are then put into piles of YES, MAYBE, and NO. That is done right after the audition session. So, really, it's already done -- just don't do silly things like harass them - sending in silly dance concert dvds, videos, cds, whatever - they never ever listen or watch them. They're just a nuisance. They do, however, appreciate a sincere thank you note. Good luck!
You need to just relax. You can suck up all you want, but if there are students who are better then you, they will get in. So just Chill and hope for the best.
If it were based purely on the audition, I think that I'm in(no tto sound stuck up) I just had a really great audition. It was my best one I think. My grades in school just aren't terrific cause I don't do my hmwrk-I much prefer to be directing and starring in my own shows(add that to already going to an arts school an you get a busy day). I want to know how to protray to them that I am also a hard worker.
It's great you had a good audition. But also remember there are about 1000 kids who audition every year, and a few of them probably had good auditions, too. They accept about 10-12 musical theatre majors each year. About half and half men to women.
Breakneck-that's the reason I want to know if there is anything I can do-tips, etc. That can set me ahead that extra bit. Now how much of a role would you say that grades in school have getting into CMU?
I recently auditioned at CMU for theatre directing and I must say, without sounding like a snob, that my grades should be the only thing that keeps me out. Silly me for being an idiot and only having a 3.5 GPA.
With a lot of schools (I almost went to CMU, and remember them being big on this) you can get a lot of brownie points for showing that you're realling interested. Call admissions with a question - not "when's my letter coming?" but a specific question about something you're interested in at the school. They log calls like that, and they want students who want them.
ETA - yes, CMU is really rough on grades. When I was there, the info session presentation had a big pie chart about how much grades/SATS/porfolios/auditions,etc count for, depending on which specific school you applied to. So, admissions are done pseudo-separately for each of the schools, Engineering, Performing Arts, Humanities and Sciences, whatever the particular names at CMU happen to be, I forget. Anyway, I vividly remember everyone going "oh, those musical theatre kids are so lucky, their grades don't count." Yes, your grades to count, but they tell you straight up at CMU that your audition is enormously overbearing. Yes, you have to get good grades, but if they love you and you have a B+ average, you may still get in. Normally, a B+ average won't get you into CMU alone.
ETA numero dos, since I just saw that Jesse asked about alumni interviews. Do it, just so you can show interest. They're big on alumni interviews there, because if I remember correctly, they don't do too many interviews with admissions staff.