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auditions

MarieDen

New Member
Original Poster
Hello!
If I'm a canadian citizen, can I assist to the dance auditions or characters auditions? And then, if the audition goes well, ask for visas to be elligible to work in the united states? Is it possible?
Does anybody know about it?

Thank you =)
 

TubaGeek

God bless the "Ignore" button.
Site* :p

I have a strange feeling that this person is a bot :/ a very good one lol
Why a bot? Why not just a Canadian that wanted to know an answer so went to a site where people might be able to help her out?
Either way, I'm pretty sure Disney does NOT help with Visas. They don't give ANY front-line cast members relocation assistance, and I know that all International College Program interns have to leave within one year of their arrival. Those two things lead me to believe that they're not gonna be too helpful here.
Maybe I'm wrong, though. Anyone know better than I?
 

MarieDen

New Member
Original Poster
Seriously, just for one simple question, people react this way? Yeah, I'm canadian and my first langage is french. So please, try to help me instead of having fun of me. Still don't understand what is a bot. However, I don't think bot's nickname is gonna change anything in my life. Thank you by the way figmentfan. Actually, I'm a dancer in Canada and Walt Disney is an amazing place for shows and scene experience(can we say that in english?). I agree with you Tubageek, I don't think that WDW help people with visa. I didn't understand what you said about college student and their one year stuff? Can you explain please?
 

MarieDen

New Member
Original Poster
Why a bot? Why not just a Canadian that wanted to know an answer so went to a site where people might be able to help her out?
Either way, I'm pretty sure Disney does NOT help with Visas. They don't give ANY front-line cast members relocation assistance, and I know that all International College Program interns have to leave within one year of their arrival. Those two things lead me to believe that they're not gonna be too helpful here.
Maybe I'm wrong, though. Anyone know better than I?

Thank you Tubageek that's exactly my intentions =)
 

TubaGeek

God bless the "Ignore" button.
"If I'm a Canadian citizen." Your not sure? :rolleyes:
"Your not sure?" Apparently you're not sure which form of "you're" to use, so I wouldn't get too uppity.
I didn't understand what you said about college student and their one year stuff? Can you explain please?
There's a HUGE internship program known (aptly) as the Disney International Program. You apply and can spend up to one year working at Disney World or Disneyland. However, I've never heard of anyone in that program becoming a dancer, or "mover", as they generally call them. They'll generally only train you for a mover role if they think you'll be around for awhile.
 

Californian Elitist

Well-Known Member
grammar wasn't being criticized. The inability to know whether or not your a citizen was!

I was referring to your grammar, not the OP's inability to know whether or not he/she was a citizen. You were criticizing the OP's way of putting together their words, but you yourself can't or couldn't use the term "your" correctly. Before you correct someone regarding their speech or grammar, you should make sure yours is on point. "Your sure" makes no sense. "You're sure" is the correct way to say it, since "you're" is derived from you are. That's all.
 

AndyS2992

Well-Known Member
Sorry for my english. That was a bad traduction of mine.
Traduction? :S
I was referring to your grammar, not the OP's inability to know whether or not he/she was a citizen. You were criticizing the OP's way of putting together their words, but you yourself can't or couldn't use the term "your" correctly. Before you correct someone regarding their speech or grammar, you should make sure yours is on point. "Your sure" makes no sense. "You're sure" is the correct way to say it, since "you're" is derived from you are. That's all.

Ok calm down ladies, it's only the Internet =S
 

Californian Elitist

Well-Known Member
You sound totally calm. :p You just blew a gasket over grammar! Are you an English teacher? Calm own, put on some Disney tunes and go to your happy place. It's going to be all right.

I didn't blow a gasket. You're the one using exclamation points.

Once again, you're using exclamation points, which indicates you're yelling. I'm just correcting you, that's all...just like you tried to correct the OP, but sort of failed. Nope, not an English teacher, but an English major.

Time to drop the subject.
 

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