How To Make An Acting CV With No Experience
A Beginner-Friendly Guide That Helps You Look Professional (Even If You've Never Booked a Role)
I remember the first time I tried to make an acting CV with “nothing” to put on it. I stared at a blank document, then started typing and deleting the same sentence over and over. It felt like everyone else had credits, training, and fancy theatre names, and all I had was naked enthusiasm.
If you're hoping your CV will lead to real opportunities, understanding how professional casting works and where to find acting auditions is just as important as the document itself.
Here's the truth: casting teams don't need you to have a long list of credits. They need you to be clear, easy to understand, and ready to work. Your CV isn't a trophy cabinet — it's a casting tool. Your job is to make it easy for someone to say, “Yes, this person fits. Let's bring them in.”
What Casting Teams Actually Want From Your CV
If you have no experience, your CV still has value because it answers practical questions:
- Who are you? Name, representation if any, and contact details
- What do you look like? Height, playing age, and basic stats
- What can you do? Skills, sports, accents, instruments, and languages
- How reliable are you? Training, relevant experience, and professionalism
Most beginners lose opportunities not because they lack credits, but because the CV looks messy, confusing, or padded with things that don't help.
The Beginner Acting CV Structure
Keep it to one page. Two pages is overkill when you're starting out.
- Header — name and key info
- Credits — yes, even if you're new
- Training — short courses count
- Skills — only what you can do confidently
- Stats — height, playing age, location
- Links — Spotlight if you have it, showreel, self-tape, socials if relevant
Your Header: Simple, Clean, Professional
Your header should be instantly readable. No logos. No decorative fonts. No paragraphs.
- Full name
- Location — city and country
- Email — professional address
- Phone — optional, but helpful
- Representation — only if you have it
- Spotlight / IMDb / showreel link — only if real
If you don't have representation, that's fine. Do not write “seeking representation” at the top — keep it neutral.
Credits When You Have “No Experience”
Here's the trick: you're not trying to pretend you've done huge productions. You're showing relevant proof that you can handle a set, a brief, or a performance environment.
You have three honest options:
Option A: “Selected Experience”
This is best for true beginners. It includes anything performance-adjacent that shows reliability and ability:
- Student films, even one day
- Workshops with scenes performed
- Am-dram productions
- Voice work for a small project
- On-camera training projects with recorded scenes
- Background or film extra work, listed carefully and without overselling
Option B: “Training Scenes”
If you've done acting classes where you performed scenes, you can list them as training performance work:
- Scene Study Showcase — Character / Scene — Class / Tutor — Year
- On-Camera Scenes — Role types — Course provider — Year
Option C: “Credits”
If you truly have none, you can include a short, honest line instead of leaving it blank:
Credits: Currently building credits through training and short projects. Self-tape available.
That's it. Clean and confident. Then focus on training and skills.
Training: This Is Your “Experience” When You're New
Casting teams like training because it signals commitment and basic technique. You don't need drama school. A solid short course can be enough to look credible.
List training like this:
- Course Name — Provider / Tutor — Duration — Year
- On-Camera Acting — Studio name — 6 weeks — 2026
- Improvisation — Workshop provider — Weekend intensive — 2026
If your training is minimal, that's okay — just don't pad it with unrelated certificates. Focus on what helps you audition.
Skills That Get You Auditions
Skills are one of the fastest ways for a beginner to stand out — but only if you can actually do them under pressure.
Strong beginner-friendly skill categories:
- Accents — only the ones you can maintain
- Sports — team sports, martial arts, climbing, skating
- Dance — styles and level
- Instruments — with level
- Languages — with fluency level
- Licences — driving licence, motorcycle licence
If you've got one genuinely useful skill — for example, advanced swimming, horseback riding, boxing, or fluent bilingual ability — that alone can land you work faster than a long list of vague claims.
Stats: Keep It Practical
Keep stats short. Put them near the bottom.
- Playing age: e.g. 18 to 25
- Height: e.g. 5'9"
- Location: e.g. London, UK, and willingness to travel if true
- Hair / eyes: optional
Avoid listing exact weight. Casting doesn't need it and it can age badly.
The Headshot Rule
Your acting CV and headshot are a package. If your CV is clean but the photo looks like a cropped selfie with a busy background, you'll lose clicks.
Beginner headshot basics:
- Natural light or simple studio lighting
- Plain background
- Sharp focus on the eyes
- Neutral styling — look like “you”
If you're building your first credits, a solid headshot plus a tidy CV can outperform someone with more credits but poor presentation.
A Quick Beginner Acting CV Example Layout
Use this as a structure, not as text to copy word-for-word:
Name Surname
London, UK, email@example.com +44…
Showreel: yourlink, Self-tape: yourlink
Selected Experience
Student Film — Supporting — University Production — 2026
Scene Showcase — Lead (scene study) — Tutor Name — 2026
Background — Featured Extra — Production (if allowed) — 2026
Training
On-Camera Acting — Studio / Tutor — 6 weeks — 2026
Improvisation — Workshop Provider — Weekend — 2026
Skills
Accents: General American (confident), Northern (native)
Sports: Swimming (strong), Football (club level)
Languages: English (native), Spanish (conversational)
Stats
Playing Age: 18 to 25 Height: 5 foot 9 Base: London Willing to travel: Yes
The Beginner Strategy That Builds Credits Fast
If you're new, your goal isn't to create the “perfect” CV. Your goal is to create a CV that gets you onto real sets and into real auditions, so the CV improves naturally.
A smart sequence looks like this:
- Clean one-page CV and decent headshot
- Apply for beginner-friendly castings: extra work, student films, small roles
- Do one short course that includes filmed scenes
- Build a tiny Selected Experience section
- Upgrade headshots later, not first
If you want to start applying right away, use the casting search and filter by country, age, and gender.
Common Mistakes That Make Casting Directors Skip Your CV
- Listing skills you can't actually do
- Writing long paragraphs instead of scan-friendly sections
- Using multiple fonts, colours, or graphics
- Over-claiming, like “lead actor” in a class scene
- Stuffing unrelated jobs that don't help casting decisions
FAQ: Acting CV With No Experience
Do I need an acting CV to be an extra?
Often no, but having one can help you look organised and serious, especially for featured background.
Can I put school plays on an acting CV?
If you're very new, yes, but label it clearly, for example “School Production”. Replace it as soon as you gain newer credits.
Should I call it an acting CV or acting resume?
UK audiences usually say “acting CV”. US audiences often say “acting resume”. Your page can naturally mention both terms in the body text, but keep the document title consistent.
Next Step: Build Your CV By Applying
The fastest way to improve an acting CV is to use it. Start small, apply consistently, and understand the different kinds of roles productions cast for, from film extra work to commercials and streaming projects. You can see a full overview of the types of casting calls shared on Fame Street.
If you're new and want a clear overview of what gets posted — film extras, TV, commercials, online projects, and more — visit What Types of Casting Calls We Post.
Ready to see current opportunities? Join Fame Street to access casting calls and apply as they are released.