Why do so many actors turn director?

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I wouldn’t think those skill sets are easily transferable seeing how much a director is in charge of. Like how did so many of the actors in The Office, also direct episodes? Bonus: does someone else stand in as director when you’re acting in a scene that you’re the director of that entire project?

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27 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Because actors have massive egos, and they want to add different accolades to their own name.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Because actors have massive egos, and they want to add different accolades to their own name.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Because actors have massive egos, and they want to add different accolades to their own name.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Not all actors turn into directors, but after acting on lots of movies, an actor might notice things that they think they could do better/differently and those accumulate into an urge to direct. Maybe they make some adjustments to their acting that a director likes gets them excited.

Not every pro athlete becomes a coach, but the players who approach their sport from a very cerebral perspective often become coaches. It’s a similar thing.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Not all actors turn into directors, but after acting on lots of movies, an actor might notice things that they think they could do better/differently and those accumulate into an urge to direct. Maybe they make some adjustments to their acting that a director likes gets them excited.

Not every pro athlete becomes a coach, but the players who approach their sport from a very cerebral perspective often become coaches. It’s a similar thing.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Not all actors turn into directors, but after acting on lots of movies, an actor might notice things that they think they could do better/differently and those accumulate into an urge to direct. Maybe they make some adjustments to their acting that a director likes gets them excited.

Not every pro athlete becomes a coach, but the players who approach their sport from a very cerebral perspective often become coaches. It’s a similar thing.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The skills are complementary… both require an artistic interpretation of material to tell a story. Actors tend to be overall artistic/creative types. And in some ways, it’s no different than an accountant becoming an accounting manager or a programmer becoming a team lead, etc. using skills to then manage those with similar skills.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The skills are complementary… both require an artistic interpretation of material to tell a story. Actors tend to be overall artistic/creative types. And in some ways, it’s no different than an accountant becoming an accounting manager or a programmer becoming a team lead, etc. using skills to then manage those with similar skills.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The skills are complementary… both require an artistic interpretation of material to tell a story. Actors tend to be overall artistic/creative types. And in some ways, it’s no different than an accountant becoming an accounting manager or a programmer becoming a team lead, etc. using skills to then manage those with similar skills.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s like cooking. When you don’t know exactly what you do you follow a recipe which is like following what a director says. When you start to understand you can start to teach other people how to cook. Directors tell actors where to stand and give notes on performance.