Daniel Chamorro started directing his own films because nobody would cast him. Then his friend got a Netflix show. Now Daniel has 175 awards, has acted alongside Javier Bardem, and is the lead in a feature film in cinemas. Here's everything he told Ukrainian actors about how to actually break in.
"Stop acting. Think and feel — and the camera will get it. If you just think and feel, the camera will show everything. It is magical."
Daniel Chamorro studied film directing at Universidad Complutense in Madrid — a five-year degree. In his third year, he shot his first short film in his house with a single actress. It won 30 awards. He used that prize money to fund the next film. And the next.
While building his directing career, Daniel began acting in his own films — first to practice, then to create his own showreel material, since nobody else was hiring him. He studied with Bernard Hiller in LA, Mallorca, Italy, and Germany, and spent a year in Berlin connecting with the Berlinale Talents program.
For years, he sent that reel to directors he'd met at festivals. Nobody hired him as an actor. Not once. Then one day, a close friend was about to direct a major Spanish series and passed Daniel's material to the casting director. She said yes.
"The rehearsal in the shooting is an audition. It's not a rehearsal. You have to give 100% in the rehearsal."
— Daniel ChamorroOn his first day on set, Daniel gave 20% during the rehearsal, treating it like a warm-up. The director positioned the camera on his shoulder — the back-of-the-head shot, a signal of distrust. In the next take, Daniel went all in. The camera moved to face him. The director spent the rest of the day telling the crew Daniel was exceptional. He was then called for the next project: Netflix's first Spanish original series, Criminal.
Daniel was specific and practical about showreels, speaking from both sides — as an actor submitting reels and as a director watching them:
"Stop acting. People are paid for acting and they overact. Don't act. Think and feel — and the camera will get it."
— Daniel ChamorroDaniel studied with Bernard Hiller — known for naturalism, presence, and confidence. His advice distills years of working on both sides of the camera:
Al Pacino: "Repetition makes me greener." When you truly own the text, you stop thinking about it and start playing.
If the line is "I love you," try playing "I hate you." If the scene is a fight, end it with a kiss. Surprising choices are memorable choices.
Daniel played a character as a cat — careful with objects, feline attention. Finding the animal gives you physical instinct, not just intellectual understanding.
Write everything: their father, their secrets, what they hate. You'll forget most of it. But it lives in you during the scene — especially when you need to improvise.
In real life, we don't always know what to say. Characters who hesitate are more believable than actors racing through text.
Don't try to be the best actor in the scene. Try to make your partner look great. "If they shine, you shine more."
When a Ukrainian participant asked how to compete internationally as a foreigner — always the outsider, always being cast as "the Russian" — Daniel's response was direct:
"Don't think it's impossible. That thought — say goodbye to it. Dreams come true. But enjoy the process. If you're only happy when you reach the goal, in three months you'll be exhausted."
— Daniel ChamorroHe pointed to his friend — a very tall, unusually proportioned actor who struggled to find roles — who eventually became one of Spain's most sought-after monster performers. The alien in recent films. The creature in Mama. The thing that made him unemployable in conventional roles made him extraordinary in others.
Daniel's philosophy as both actor and director: make a choice nobody else will make. In one audition, he was playing a priest searching a living room for money. Instead of playing it like a villain, he started humming. Casual. Light. Unbothered. The contrast was far more unsettling than anything obvious.
In another scene — a drug addict fighting with his mother — he stopped mid-argument and kissed her on the forehead. Then walked away. A mafia moment. The opposite of what was written. The director loved it.
Daniel's on-set advice comes from directing as much as acting. As a director, he watches actors closely. As an actor, he learned what directors actually need from their cast.
If something goes wrong, use it. Marlon Brando picked up a dropped glove and turned it into the most tender moment in a scene. Accidents are gifts. Directors can fix almost anything in the edit except a scene that was never completed.
Don't ask "was that okay?" after every take. Silence means continue. The director knows where they need more takes and will ask. Trust the process.
If they change a word, change your response. Real listening creates real reactions. The scene becomes fresh when two people are actually responding to each other.
The only thing you control completely on a film set is your own timing. It costs nothing and signals professionalism more clearly than anything else in your first week.
Daniel was clear about the chicken-and-egg problem: agents want to see your work, but you can't get work without an agent. His solution:
Direct short films. Shoot scenes with friends. Your first job often has to come from you — not an agent. Once you have one credit, everything changes.
Pay for IMDB Pro (~$150/year). Build a spreadsheet of every relevant agent and casting director. Send personalized emails — use their actual name, reference a specific project they worked on. Mass emails are ignored.
Instagram and Facebook should be clean and professional. No party photos. When a casting director Googles you, your social profile is your first impression.
Daniel wrote to major film festivals asking for entry fee waivers. Sometimes they said yes. Sometimes 50% off. Ask. The worst answer is no, and you're already getting no.
"a lot of no's in auditions — you have to continue. 90% of our time is hearing no. Don't care about the no's. You have to not care."
— Daniel ChamorroFree live Q&A sessions with working actors, directors, and casting professionals from Spain, Germany, the UK, and the US. Open to Ukrainian film and theatre artists at any stage of their career.
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