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Nothing inadvertent about it. I understood you to mean he’s specifically interested in screen acting in which the standards are looser as long as you’re not talking about becoming a virtuoso like Daniel Day Lewis, Ralph Fiennes, Meryl Streep, Cate Blanchett, etc. who all come from stage backgrounds. If you were asking about him becoming a theatre artist - especially in classic theatre or MT - I’d tell you something different. </p>
<p>I don’t know anything about the Temple acting program other than their MFA has produced some good teachers. It looks like [undergraduate</a> acting is a majors only program by audition.](<a href=“http://www.temple.edu/theater/undergrad/acting.html]undergraduate”>http://www.temple.edu/theater/undergrad/acting.html) I hadn’t looked and assumed it was a regular academic BA. If he can’t get in the classes without being an acting major or he finds himself being taught by grad students in the non-major classes, there is another good option in Philly. Playhouse West now has a satellite studio there that would be worth a look … [Playhouse</a> West | Playhouse West-Philadelphia](<a href=“CEPAT89: Link Situs Slot88 Dan Slot Gacor Hari ini Gampang Maxwin”>CEPAT89: Link Situs Slot88 Dan Slot Gacor Hari ini Gampang Maxwin)</p>
<p>If you can afford it along with college and he has enough AP or IB credit to lessen his gen ed courseload at school, night classes there might be a good option although doing that along with a heavy academic load might be difficult. A lot of working actors in LA trained that way. Just a regular, light(ish) academic courseload in college majoring in “whatever” and training in the studios by night. It would take some discipline to not let anything slide, but it’s a viable option if he’s the type of kid that can handle it …</p>