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), a one-page resume, and a short cover letter explaining why you are approaching that specific agency. The approach itself is by email, never by phone or walk-in, and timing matters. This article covers how to research agencies that match your stage, what to put in a cover letter, and what to do when they do not reply (most will not).
Research: which agencies to approach at your stage
Research the agencies that represent actors at your stage. An agency whose client list is full of series regulars is unlikely to sign a pre-representation actor. An agency whose client list is full of working co-stars is a better match.
Read the full client list, not just the top names. The shape of the list tells you whether the agency has a place for an actor like you. A list with no one at your stage is unlikely to make an exception.
Focus on twenty agencies in a first round. A scattershot of two hundred rarely works.
The submission package: headshot, reel, resume, cover
Four things: a current headshot, a short showreel, a one-page resume, and a cover letter. Do not send a second headshot. Do not send a twelve-minute reel. Do not send a two-page resume.
Headshot taken in the last eighteen months. Reel under two minutes. Resume with current credits, training, and union memberships where relevant. Cover letter on the email body, not as an attachment.
The cover letter: why you, why them
The cover letter is three paragraphs maximum. Who you are, why you are writing to this agency specifically, what you are asking for.
Do not flatter the agency. Do not list your credits again, they are on the resume. Do not use the word "passion". Do not refer to yourself in the third person. Do not end with "looking forward to hearing from you" followed by three exclamation marks.
Do name a client on the list whose career trajectory resembles the one you are building. Do explain briefly what you are doing now and where you want to be in two years. Keep the letter professional, specific, and short.
After the submission: the silence, the follow-up, the iteration
Most agents will not reply. Assume silence is the response unless you receive anything else. A single, brief follow-up after four to six weeks is acceptable. Beyond that, move on.
Treat the silence as data. If twenty agencies did not reply, the package is not working. Before the next round, update one variable (the cover letter is usually the fastest fix) and try again with a fresh batch.