Grammy-Award Finalist Topher Keene is widely regarded as one of America’s top Acting, Singing, and Public Speaking Coaches.
From teaching kids to sing their first solo, to helping Film and Television Stars perfect their roles, to helping pro Vocalists record hit albums, to helping YouTubers and Podcasters refine their vocal skills, to helping CEOs and Executives improve communication and presentation skills, Topher Keene can help anyone develop a powerful and confident voice and improve their performance skills.
Let It Crack: How to Build a Stronger Chest Voice (Without Playing It Safe)
So here's a pattern I see constantly in my studio. A singer comes in, technically very capable. They've done choir, they've done some classical training, maybe they were in show choir or had voice lessons through high school and college. Their head voice is beautiful — clear, in tune, controlled. Their head mix sits comfortably. They can navigate up to a high B or C and make it sound effortless. And they cannot, for the life of them, belt a low G.
Belt Without Breaking: How to Hit Disney High Notes With a Lighter Chest Mix
So I want to talk to you today about one of the most common breakdowns I see in my studio, and it happens almost exclusively on the big musical theater belt songs. I'm talking about the soaring high notes in songs like "Defying Gravity" from Wicked, "Let It Go" from Frozen, "How Far I'll Go" from Moana, "Part of Your World" from The Little Mermaid, "She Used to Be Mine" from Waitress, "Almost There" from The Princess and the Frog — all of those moments where the music swells, your character is supposed to land this enormous emotional note, and absolutely soar.
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Start Strong: How to Audition for Character Roles in Musical Theater
So you're auditioning for a show. Maybe it's a campy horror musical, or a glam rock cult classic, or one of those big Disney villain showcases, or a vintage burlesque-tinged piece like Cabaret or Chicago — anything where the role is bigger than life and the casting team needs to know within sixteen bars whether you can sell it. And you walk in, you sing your cut, the team smiles politely, you walk out feeling like that went well... and you don't book it.
5 Tips for Actors Transitioning from Stage Theater to Film Acting
The transition from stage theater to film work can be daunting for actors. But with a little preparation and the right mindset, it can be a smooth and exciting experience. Here are some top tips for actors making the transition from stage to film.
Audition Strategies for Stage Plays & Musicals
Stage play auditions reward a different skill set than film or television. You will stand in a room, hold a monologue, project your voice without amplification, take direction at full performance scale, and demonstrate that you can sustain a character through a two-hour run. The intimate camera-friendly underplaying that books film roles will get you cut from stage auditions. Different medium, different game.
Performing for Kids: Why "Authentic" Is the Wrong Goal When You're Singing at a Birthday Party
If you're a trained singer or musical theater performer who's eyeing the kids' party circuit — princess parties, superhero appearances, mascot work, library reading events, anything where you're showing up in costume to entertain a roomful of seven-year-olds — I need to save you from a mistake I see talented performers make over and over again.
Audition Anxiety: How to Walk Into the Room Ready, Not Wrecked
Audition anxiety is a specific animal. It is not the same as general stage fright. It is not the same as performance nerves. The audition room creates a particular cluster of pressures that the regular performing environment does not, and the performers who book consistently are the ones who have learned to work inside that pressure rather than against it.