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Meet Olivia Peck

Today we’d like to introduce you to Olivia Peck.

Olivia, we appreciate you taking the time to share your story with us today. Where does your story begin?
Although I live in Atlanta now, I am a creative originally from Traverse City, Michigan. Growing up I did band, church musicals, and plays at summer camp. I was your typical choir kid. I was never really the star of the show until my last year of high school when I finally got the lead in the school musical, “Oklahoma!”

When I went to college, I struggled to find my place. It was an incredible experience and I feel I was well trained, but for a variety of reasons, I just didn’t feel like I belonged there a lot of the time. My jazz studies, my lovely roommates, and the chipping away at my music education degree was what kept me going. Two years after I graduated college in 2017 is when I started to seriously pursue acting in film and embraced creating again. Something about having no restrictions or pressures from a school felt good.

After living in Las Vegas and Baton Rouge, I wound up in New Orleans and for a few years, I lived a dreamy, crazy, and fun life. I learned a lot about acting, but I also learned a lot about myself. There I studied acting for camera and landed my agent, who I am still represented by today. I am grateful that I found my tribe in Louisiana. Thanks to many acting mentors and my agency, Action Talent, I have done over a dozen commercials, several short films, and starred in two feature films. No matter what I’m doing on set or getting to experience with my singing students, I am just happy to be doing what I’m doing. I used to think that being creative was just soul-crushing. It felt like a disease and I wanted to be “normal.” (Whatever that means.) But after everything the world has been through lately, I can’t imagine being bitter about something like that. It is a gift to have art inside of us and in our lives. That outweighs the struggle of being an artist every time the going gets tough.

Would you say it’s been a smooth road, and if not what are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced along the way?
Like many creative people, I have dealt with having ADHD throughout my life. This has affected my learning, of course, but it has caused me a lot of emotional pain as well. Before being diagnosed in college, I felt like I had a totally different brain compared to my peers. I don’t know how else to say it. Until I had the comfort of realizing that I just learn differently, I really just thought I was dumb or there was something seriously wrong with me. I was teased for being spacey and deep down I really didn’t feel as smart as everyone else. Having ADHD is really a superpower in a lot of ways, but being in a traditional classroom made me feel like I wasn’t capable of learning. A lot of what I know now has been because of amazing teachers that worked with me one on one or are things I taught myself.

Thanks – so what else should our readers know about your work and what you’re currently focused on?
I am a voice teacher and actress primarily. I have a restaurant job as well to help pay the bills when there’s a dry spell in film. I do love being on my feet, and having co-workers, though. Part of being an independent contractor in the film industry can be lonely so I like to do a variety of things to keep busy. Currently, I’m writing my first feature-length script. If you know me you know I love the funny stuff. I have a web series called “Todds!” and my film will be based off of the world I have created in that web series.

How do you think about happiness?
My students make me happy. It’s so rewarding to hear them improve over time. Just hearing a song on the radio that one of my students is working on will make me smile. I teach beginners and hobbyists mostly and many of them have been working with me for years. It’s a special thing.

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Image Credits:

Picture with Guitar by Vanessa Creighton

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