Day 12 Topic 4
You don’t need a novel—you need the right bio for the room. A great bio sells your lane in one glance, gives bookers confidence, and leaves a trace of humanity. Different contexts want different lengths and tones (opera vs. MT vs. community theatre). We’ll build your set—40/75/120/250 words—so you can paste-and-go.
Why your bio matters (and changes by venue)
- Opera & professional MT programs: tight space; third person; recognizables up front (houses/roles/awards); 40–100 words typical. Broadway/Playbill bios often top out near 50 words.
- Community theatre programs: still third person, but tone is looser; many companies cap at 50–100 words.
- Web/EPK: you’ll need multiple versions (short for press kit, fuller for website). Industry guides recommend keeping 50/100/150–200-word cuts ready.
The Bio Builder (use this for any length)
- Lead with recognizables: venue/role/award or a strong press quote (if you’ve got one). Opera writers recommend a hook early—make it truthful.
- One-sentence positioning: what you do now (voice/rep lane; MT type; directing focus).
- 2–3 highlights: recent roles, collaborators, competitions, or projects (spellings matter!).
- Human detail: one specific personal line (language work, outreach, hobby) to be memorable.
- House style: third person; clean punctuation; respect word count. (Many companies specify it—and will edit you if you don’t.)
Sector-specific best practices
Professional Opera (company/YAP programs)
- Word count is tight; 40–100 words is common; name major houses/roles first; list rep sensibly; keep it third person. Keep a short and program cut, plus a fuller web bio.
Professional Musical Theatre (regional/Broadway programs)
- Similar brevity; Playbill-style bios often ~50 words; list a few recognizable shows/roles/venues; a wink of personality is welcome but stay pro.
Community Theatre & Schools
- Often 50–100 words; include a couple favorites, training, and (if the company allows) a short thank-you. Follow each theatre’s posted rules.
Your “set list” (keep all 4 on file)
- 40-word program bio (tightest; opera/Playbill)
- 75-word program bio (community/regional)
- 120-word short bio (press kit / website section)
- 250-word full bio (website / EPK press page)
Industry sources explicitly recommend maintaining multiple lengths so you can answer any request fast.
Examples you can steal (swap in your details)
Opera — 40 words (program)
Mezzo Jordan Lee debuted at Portland Opera (2025) and returns to Opera Theatre of Saint Louis this season. Recent roles include Dorabella and Charlotte; awards include Laffont District Encouragement. A champion of new song, Lee appears with pianist [Name] nationwide.
MT — 50 words (Playbill-style)
Ava Kim (she/her) credits: Natasha, Pierre… (Arden), Rent (Maureen, Casa Mañana), Spelling Bee (Olive, Geva). BFA [School]. Social @avasingsthings. Thanks to [agent/coach/family]. (50 words; crisp, third person; recognizable houses.)
Community Theatre — 75 words
Chris Alvarez is thrilled to return to Rivertown Players after Into the Woods (Baker) and Newsies (Davey). Favorite credits: Once (Andrej), Bright Star (Jimmy). Training: [Studio/Teacher]. By day, Chris is a bilingual music educator and volunteers with [Org]. Love to Maya for endless patience with late rehearsals. (Follows common 70–100 word caps.)
Opera/MT — 120 words (short web/EPK)
Praised by [Outlet] for “luminous phrasing,” soprano Ana Ruiz debuted at Palm Beach Opera in 2025 and appears this season with New World Symphony and Opera Saratoga. Recent highlights include Lauretta, Susanna, and premieres by [Composer], with broadcasts on All Classical. A district winner in the Met Opera Laffont Competition, she also curates The Neighborhood Salon, a 40-minute program of Spanish-language song with pianist [Name]. Ruiz studied at [School] with [Teacher] and speaks ES/IT/DE. Offstage, she’s building a free online resource for Spanish-language art song.
Director — 120 words (short)
Director Marcus Bell makes intimate, actor-forward work spanning new plays and chamber opera. Recent: Vera Stark (PlayMakers), The Wolves (Shattered Globe), and a site-specific Dido with [Opera Company]. Former SDCF Observership; assistant/assoc credits at LORT houses with [Directors]. Training: [MFA/Program]. Marcus designs efficient rooms (on-time tech, safety-first physical work) and teaches text into action at [Institution].
Full Bio — 250 words (website)
Baritone Noah Patel brings story-first musicianship to repertoire from Mozart to today. In 2025 he debuts with Virginia Opera (Guglielmo) and Des Moines Metro Opera (cover: Figaro), following appearances with Opera Colorado and Opera Neo. On the concert stage, he’s sung Brahms’ Requiem with [Symphony] and Carmina Burana with [Chorus+Orchestra]. An advocate for new work, Patel premiered [Composer]’s [Cycle] at [Festival] and appears on [Label]. Recognition includes a Laffont District award and the [Competition] First Prize. He trained at [School] (MM) and [YAP], studying with [Teacher/Coach]. Upcoming: a 35-minute salon program—Songs of Migration—touring libraries and galleries, with education workshops for teens. When he’s not singing, Patel cooks South Indian recipes from his grandmother’s notebook and logs Chicago running miles by the lake.
Common mistakes (and quick fixes)
- Ignoring the word limit. If the theatre says 50–100 words, deliver 90—not 190. (Yes, some will cut you without mercy.)
- Laundry list. Pick recognizables and keep it recent; program bios aren’t résumés.
- Only one version. Keep multiple lengths on hand; it’s standard practice in arts admin.
- First person in programs. Unless told otherwise, use third person.
Assignments (ship today)
- Draft four versions: 40, 75, 120, and 250 words. (Opera/MT pros: you’ll use all four at some point.)
- Paste the 120-word on your site/EPK and the 40/75-word into a “Program Bios” doc.
- Send to 5 readers (coach, MD/conductor, director, rep, peer). If 3+ give the same note, adjust.
- Update every season or when roles/hair/lanes change.
References & Further Reading
- Backstage — How to Write a Playbill Bio (Without Sounding Like a Robot). On length (often 50–100 words, ~50 on Broadway) and tone. https://www.backstage.com/magazine/article/how-to-write-a-playbill-bio-78346/
- Backstage — What Should You Write in Your Program Bio? Practical tips; don’t list every credit; include ways to find you. https://www.backstage.com/magazine/article/what-should-you-write-in-your-program-bio-77607/
- Bandzoogle — How to create an EPK for your music (with examples). Keep short bios for press kits. https://bandzoogle.com/blog/how-to-create-an-epk-for-your-music-with-examples
- Mid-America Arts Alliance — How to Write an Artist Bio (Tips & Examples). Maintain 50/100/150–200-word versions. https://www.maaa.org/news/how-to-write-an-artist-bio-with-tips-and-examples/
- MasterClass — How to Write an Artist Bio. Reminder that formats change by context; keep multiple cuts. https://www.masterclass.com/articles/how-to-write-an-artist-bio
- Cindy Sadler (opera) — “How to write one of the fastest rising bios…” Hook early, keep it true. https://cindysadler.com/update/2017/12/20/how-to-write-one-of-the-fastest-rising-bios-in-the-opera-world-today
- University of Utah Theatre — Program Bio Guidelines. Specify 80–100 words, third person, house style. https://theatre.utah.edu/images/pdfs-doc/Program_Bio_Guidelines.pdf
- Kerry Hishon — How to Write a Program Bio. Community/school programs often 75–100 words; keep it brief. https://kerryhishon.com/2016/01/26/how-to-write-a-program-bio/
- AACT — Write for Spotlight (bio length). Common request: 50 words or less for contributor bios (useful community-theatre benchmark). https://aact.org/writing-spotlight
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