The UK Degree Advantage
Studying in the UK offers access to top-notch drama schools and training facilities that specialize in stunt performance, giving you a competitive edge in this thrilling industry. You'll also benefit from networking opportunities with industry professionals and exposure to high-quality productions.
The Role & Expectations
A stunt performer carries out the dangerous and physical action you see in films, TV shows and live productions. When a character falls from a height, crashes a car or throws a punch, it is often a trained stunt performer doing it, not the actor. This work matters because it lets stories show exciting, risky moments while keeping everyone safe.
Day to day, you train hard to stay fit and learn new skills, then rehearse stunts again and again until they are safe and look right on camera. You might fall, fight, drive, ride or work on wires, always following a careful plan worked out with the stunt coordinator. A lot of the job is preparation and repetition, not just the big moment itself.
You need to be physically fit, brave and disciplined, with skills in things like martial arts, gymnastics, swimming or driving. Being able to follow instructions exactly and stay calm under pressure is vital, because safety comes first. The reward is a career full of variety and excitement, where you help create scenes that thrill audiences.
- Physical fitness: You must keep your body strong and flexible to handle demanding action safely.
- Specialist skills: Many performers train in areas like fight choreography, high falls or driving.
- Safety awareness: Knowing how to manage risk protects you and everyone on set.
- Discipline: Stunts are rehearsed carefully and repeated until they are right.
- Teamwork: You work closely with directors, choreographers and other performers.
- Resilience: Bumps, long hours and unpredictable work are all part of the job.
Daily Responsibilities
- Train and exercise to keep your fitness, strength and flexibility at a high level.
- Rehearse stunt sequences repeatedly until they are safe and look right on camera.
- Check equipment such as wires, padding and harnesses before performing.
- Discuss the action with the stunt coordinator, director and choreographer.
- Perform stunts like falls, fights, vehicle work or wire work on set.
- Practise specialist skills such as martial arts, driving or swimming.
- Follow safety procedures and first aid guidance throughout the day.