Argh!

<p>My artistic resume has spelling errors, as in like a role I had, I misspelled (not an obscure role, they will definitely notice). I have already submitted my resume with every application that requested it.</p>

<p>Please skip the lecture on the importance or editing and such, I know. I actually had several people look over it, and no one noticed the (about 2) errors (I believe most were just looking for formatting problems).</p>

<p>Is it worth emailing the schools?
Does it not even matter, because the resume I take with me to auditions is the one that counts? What about for non audition schools?
Just how hard should I be banging my head against the wall?</p>

<p>Make the correction and don’t call attention to the error by emailing the schools. It’s not going to affect your chances of being accepted.</p>

<p>^^^ Agreed. Do not sweat this. This won’t matter in the end.</p>

<p>Not an issue! Also, don’t sweat about formating your resume. There are so many different ways to format an artistic resume, that as long as they can clearly see “Performance Experience” and “Training” - the rest is just window dressing. I say this because my S keeps re-formating his resume every time he sees an example he likes better. (His theatre teacher at school likes one format, his voice teacher likes another, his coach likes a third.Oh, and his agent has a completely different format! I give up!)</p>

<p>I had to prepare a compendium of applicant resumes (almost 100) for a large regional audition and I can assure you that you won’t be the only one with typos on their resume. In fact, most of the resumes that I compiled had at least one typo.</p>