Freya Tingley
Working screen actor and head coach at Tingley's Acting Studio. Credits include Netflix productions and on-set work alongside Jean-Claude Van Damme, Bill Skarsgard, and Clint Eastwood.
Training, unions, and working credits
Public professional record. Source: Showcast, IMDB, and credited productions.
- Working professionally
- Since 2013
- Training
- Acting training, 2010–2013.
- Union
- SAG-AFTRA
- Performed accents
- American Standard, English, Australian, Irish, Scottish, Cockney, Welsh, Russian
- Notable credits
-
- Netflix productions
- On-set work alongside Jean-Claude Van Damme
- On-set work alongside Bill Skarsgard
- On-set work alongside Clint Eastwood
Articles by Freya
Every piece on this page is written from current practice.
-
The full craft stack: every discipline a working actor eventually meets
Screen acting is not one skill. It is a stack of overlapping disciplines, and a working actor meets most of them over a career. This pillar piece walk...
2026-04-15 · 11 min read -
What scene study actually is: from table read to first run
Scene study is the working actor’s laboratory: a small group or one-to-one setting where actors take a short scene apart, interrogate it, and put it b...
2026-04-14 · 6 min read -
Five questions every scene study session should answer
If a scene study session ends and you cannot answer five specific questions about the scene, the session did not do its job. This article lays out the...
2026-04-13 · 6 min read -
Scene study for screen vs stage: the differences that matter
Stage scene study and screen scene study overlap in the big ideas and diverge in almost everything else. The structure of the scene is the same. The t...
2026-04-12 · 5 min read -
Self-directed scene study: running the work without a class
Not every city has a scene study class worth the money, and even where one exists, you cannot rely on it for every hour of work you need. This article...
2026-04-11 · 5 min read -
The first-pass cold read: three instincts to trust in the opening beat
When you get cold sides and you have four minutes, your first instincts are usually right. The problem is that most actors override them with a more c...
2026-04-10 · 5 min read -
Cold reading in the room: what to do with a sheet of sides and four minutes
An in-room cold read is its own skill. You get sides at the door, four minutes in the corner, and then a stranger asks you to read. The preparation wi...
2026-04-09 · 5 min read -
Why cold reading fails (and why it is almost never a text problem)
Most actors who think they are bad at cold reading are actually bad at something else: listening, committing, or staying present under the stress of a...
2026-04-08 · 5 min read -
Cold reading drills you can run with a phone and a friend
You do not need a class to get better at cold reading. You need a phone, a friend who will read opposite you, and a small stack of unfamiliar scenes. ...
2026-04-07 · 6 min read -
On-camera technique: why stage instincts work against you
If you trained on stage first and moved to screen later, your instincts are working against you in ways you do not always feel. Stage trains you to pr...
2026-04-06 · 8 min read -
Eyelines, frame, and the geography of a screen scene
Eyeline is one of the small technical things an actor cannot bluff their way through on camera. A wrong eyeline reads as the actor not being in the sc...
2026-04-05 · 6 min read -
Stillness on camera: the economy that separates stage actors from screen actors
Stillness on camera is not the absence of acting. It is a specific economy of movement that trusts the lens to magnify whatever is happening behind th...
2026-04-04 · 6 min read -
The close-up: what changes when the camera gets in
The close-up is where screen acting stops forgiving anything. The frame is the face, the cut will live or die on three seconds of eye behaviour, and e...
2026-04-03 · 6 min read -
Meisner's repetition exercise, explained by a working actor
Meisner's repetition exercise is the most misunderstood drill in modern acting training. On paper it looks like two people repeating a single observat...
2026-04-02 · 5 min read -
Your first Meisner class: what to expect and what not to
Walking into a Meisner class for the first time is disorienting on purpose. You will not read a scene. You will not monologue. You will sit opposite a...
2026-04-01 · 6 min read -
Why Meisner-trained actors sound different in auditions
Casting directors often describe Meisner-trained actors with the same shorthand: present, simple, not working. Why do these actors sound different on ...
2026-03-31 · 5 min read -
Meisner for screen: translating the training to the camera
Meisner was built in a studio for stage work, and some of its tools need translation before they land well on camera. The core principles travel clean...
2026-03-30 · 5 min read -
Michael Chekhov's psychological gesture: the tool most actors miss
The psychological gesture is Michael Chekhov's signature tool: a single, stylised, physical movement that stores the psychological core of a character...
2026-03-29 · 6 min read -
Chekhov's atmosphere exercise: building the room before you walk in
Atmosphere is Chekhov’s name for the emotional charge of a room, a place, or a moment. His atmosphere exercise trains actors to drop into a specific a...
2026-03-28 · 6 min read -
Chekhov's imaginary body: how to build a character you can actually see
The imaginary body is another of Chekhov's core tools: you construct an internal image of what your character's body is like (heavier, lighter, older,...
2026-03-27 · 5 min read -
Chekhov for screen: which tools travel and which do not
Chekhov's technique was built for stage and film at a time when screen acting was still closer to theatre. Some of his tools travel cleanly to modern ...
2026-03-26 · 5 min read -
Choosing a monologue that will book the audition
Most monologue problems are actually material problems. The wrong monologue will not land no matter how well you perform it, and the right one will ma...
2026-03-25 · 5 min read -
The two-minute monologue: structure, pacing, and the final beat
A two-minute monologue is a very specific unit of performance. It has to arrive fast, hold its shape through a middle, and end on a beat that tells th...
2026-03-24 · 5 min read -
Classical vs contemporary monologues: when each is the right call
Whether to bring a classical monologue or a contemporary one depends entirely on the room. Drama school auditions and certain theatre meetings still e...
2026-03-23 · 4 min read -
How to rehearse a monologue so it does not turn to wood
Over-rehearsal is the main reason monologues turn stale. The piece becomes a track you perform rather than a thought you are having right now. This ar...
2026-03-22 · 4 min read -
Script analysis: the three reads every actor should give a script
Most actors read a script twice: once for fun, once for their part. That is not enough. A full script analysis takes three passes with three different...
2026-03-21 · 5 min read -
Objective, obstacle, tactic: the three tools that do the work
Objective, obstacle, and tactic are the three foundational tools most actors first learn in a Stanislavski class and then spend the next ten years usi...
2026-03-20 · 5 min read -
Reading script structure: where your character sits in the scene’s arc
A scene is a small story. It has a beginning, a turn, and an end, and every line sits somewhere on that shape. If you know which line is the turn, you...
2026-03-19 · 5 min read -
The subtext pass: what is being said when nothing is
Subtext is what the character is saying underneath the words they are using. It is usually the opposite of the surface line, or at least askew to it. ...
2026-03-18 · 5 min read -
Character development for screen: building a life around three scenes
Screen characters are often built from three or four scenes. You will not get a hundred pages to live with them. You will get fragments. The craft is ...
2026-03-17 · 5 min read -
Backstory: how much is useful, how much is a distraction
Backstory is the cheapest drug in acting: a lot of it feels like work, most of it does not land on camera, and some of it actively distracts you from ...
2026-03-16 · 5 min read -
Physical life: the three character choices the camera actually sees
The camera is a documentary recorder of physical life. It sees weight, tension, and the speed at which a body moves. It does not reliably see the rest...
2026-03-15 · 5 min read -
Character research: interviews, documentaries, and the books that actually help
When a role asks for specific research (a profession, a condition, a subculture), most actors default to a general internet skim and call it done. Rea...
2026-03-14 · 5 min read -
Meisner, Chekhov, and Stanislavski: how the three relate
Meisner, Chekhov, and Stanislavski are three of the most influential acting techniques in Western training. They are not competitors and they do not t...
2026-03-14 · 2 min read -
Voice work for actors: what a daily warm-up should cover
A daily vocal warm-up for an actor is not a marathon. Fifteen minutes, done consistently, will do more for your voice than an hour twice a week. The w...
2026-03-13 · 5 min read -
Resonance, placement, and what the camera actually hears
Microphones hear differently from a theatre’s back row. They pick up breath, they register tension in the throat, and they amplify every resonance imb...
2026-03-12 · 5 min read -
How to get your child started in acting
Getting a child started in acting in a healthy way is a staged process, not a single decision. The first stage is play (local drama classes, school pr...
2026-03-12 · 2 min read -
Vocal health on a heavy shoot week: steam, silence, and sleep
A heavy shoot week can wreck an untrained voice. Long days, cold trailers, crying scenes, and after-wrap conversations all add up fast. This article g...
2026-03-11 · 5 min read -
How to approach an acting agent
Approaching an acting agent is a targeted, professional exercise. The submission package is standard: a current headshot, a showreel (even a short one...
2026-03-11 · 2 min read -
Voice coaching vs singing lessons: where they overlap and where they part ways
Actors regularly ask whether singing lessons can double as voice training. The answer is partly yes and partly no. They overlap on breath and resonanc...
2026-03-10 · 5 min read -
How to prepare a self-tape in 24 hours
Preparing a self-tape in 24 hours is a standard working-actor skill. The process is broken into three blocks: text work (first four hours), rehearsal ...
2026-03-10 · 3 min read -
How to build a showreel when you do not have footage yet
The hardest showreel is the first one. You need footage to get cast. You need to get cast to get footage. The way out of that loop is to generate your...
2026-03-09 · 5 min read -
Editing a showreel: order, length, and the merciless first cut
Most showreels are too long, open slow, and end where the editor ran out of ideas. Good reels are two to three minutes, front-load your strongest mome...
2026-03-08 · 4 min read -
Self-generated showreel scenes: writing, casting, and shooting your own
If you are going to write your own showreel scenes, write them honestly. Casting can tell the difference between a self-generated scene and a clip fro...
2026-03-07 · 5 min read -
What to do on your first day on a professional set
A first day on a professional set is mostly about not getting in the way. The crew knows their jobs. The other actors know the etiquette. As the new a...
2026-03-07 · 2 min read -
When to update your showreel (and when a new one is a waste of money)
There are two reasons to update a showreel: you have footage that is stronger than what is currently on there, or your castable range has shifted enou...
2026-03-06 · 5 min read -
Audition nerves: the physiology, and what actually calms them
Audition nerves are not a character flaw. They are a physiological response to a situation your nervous system has correctly identified as high stakes...
2026-03-05 · 5 min read -
Stage school vs. coaching with a working actor
Stage schools and one-to-one coaching with a working actor are complementary, not alternatives. Stage schools are good for ensemble experience, stage ...
2026-03-05 · 2 min read -
The pre-audition routine: the twenty minutes before you walk in
The twenty minutes before you walk into an audition room decide more than most actors realise. The routine inside those twenty minutes is the differen...
2026-03-04 · 5 min read -
What casting directors actually watch in the first 15 seconds
Casting directors typically make a first-impression judgement within the first 15 seconds of a self-tape or in-person audition. They are not deciding ...
2026-03-04 · 2 min read -
Why 'just be yourself' is bad advice for nervous actors
“Just be yourself” is the most common audition advice and one of the least useful for a nervous actor. Under stress, “yourself” is a moving target. Th...
2026-03-03 · 4 min read -
Self-submission when you do not have an agent
Self-submission is the process of applying to acting roles directly through casting platforms, without agent representation. It is standard practice f...
2026-03-03 · 2 min read -
Audition mindset: reframing the room from test to work
The single most useful mindset shift an auditioning actor can make is to stop treating the room as a test and start treating it as a small piece of wo...
2026-03-02 · 5 min read -
Learning an accent that holds under pressure
Learning an accent for performance is different from learning one for casual use. A performance accent has to hold under pressure, through emotional s...
2026-02-28 · 2 min read -
Keeping your child safe on set and in auditions
Child safety on set and at auditions is a combination of legal protections (which vary by country), industry standards (which are patchy), and parent ...
2026-02-26 · 3 min read -
Cold reading: how to train the skill
Cold reading is the skill of performing a scene you have never seen with only a few minutes of preparation. It is trainable through drills that separa...
2026-02-25 · 2 min read -
What to do when your agent goes quiet
Every represented actor goes through quiet periods. Some are the agent's fault. Most are not. Before assuming the relationship is broken, an actor sho...
2026-02-24 · 2 min read -
Headshots, reels, and what casting actually wants to see
Headshots and showreels are the two visual assets every working actor needs, and both are misunderstood. A headshot is not a portrait. It is a photogr...
2026-02-21 · 2 min read -
Balancing school and an acting career
Balancing school and an acting career is mostly a problem of time and negotiation. On paper it is tractable: acting work is episodic, school is contin...
2026-02-19 · 2 min read -
The callback is the first audition, repeated
The most common callback mistake is treating it as a new audition. Casting has already seen a version of your read they liked enough to bring you back...
2026-02-18 · 2 min read
Book a 15-minute call with Freya
Free, to discuss your goals and whether coaching is a fit.