Pip Edwards Creative
Nearby schools & colleges
13 Glass Street Kew 3102, 31 Tyne Street Box Hill North
If your training stops at self-tapes, auditions, or neat little mid-shots in class, you’re not set-ready. Real sets are messy. Blocking is awkward. Your scene partner might be off-camera, across the room, or nowhere near you. You’re working in heat, cold, rain, early calls, late nights — and the camera is never where you rehearsed it.
Scripts change fast. Marks matter. You wait for hours, then shoot immediately. You may get no notes. You’re expected to adjust on the fly and deliver anyway. Audition training teaches you how to book the role. Set training teaches you how to survive — and work well — once you’re there.
As you step into the new year, don’t just set goals — choose the person you want to become. This year, think less about “fixing yourself” and more about casting yourself in the role you want to grow into. Every decision you make is a quiet vote for that future you — and it doesn’t have to be big or dramatic. Small choices count. Showing up counts. Backing yourself counts. Keep choosing that version of you, gently and consistently. That’s where the real change happens
There might be others in your age range, your height, your casting bracket — but there is only one you.
One way of listening, reacting, thinking, holding silence, landing humour, carrying pain, or offering warmth. Presence, energy, point of view and lived experience can’t be duplicated, even when the brief looks generic.
The work is not to compete or compare, but to clarify.
The clearer you are in who you are, how you think, and how you show up, the easier it is for the right people to recognise you.
15/10/2025
TOP 10 TIPS (and a few extras) for BOOKING MORE TV COMMERCIALS
Out now in magazine
What’s your biggest tvc Selftape struggle?
Busy” sounds like progress, but often it’s just noise — a cover for feeling productive without actually moving forward. A full calendar doesn’t mean a full career. Instead of saying you’re busy, ask: What are my priorities? What’s actually getting me closer to the work, the craft, and the people who matter?
Make a to-do list if you like, but always rank it by impact, not volume. Your list might be long, but your priorities should be short — a handful of things that truly shift your career forward. Rehearse that scene. Update your reel. Follow up with someone who can hire you. Rest. “Busy” scatters your energy. Priorities direct it.
Your slate’s not just information. It tells casting you’re professional, you’re switched on, you’re comfortable of camera, and can follow simple instructions.
But it’s also your one chance to show who you are — that you’re someone they’d actually want on set for a 10–12 hour day. Good energy.
It’s the Selftape version of walking into the room and saying ‘Hi, nice to meet you’.
Stop hating on it. Use those few seconds to show a bit of charm, warmth, and confidence… and YOU
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.