Today marked our first performance of As Night Falls at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown. Tomorrow marks our first performance of Chasing, and two days ago we performed at Smithfield for the Platteland Preview. The day before that too.
This is the fourth year I`m performing in Grahamstown, and even though some things are old hat, each brings something new, but this year marks many firsts. This year is the first time that I am performing in two shows at Festival (Or Fest, as the locals and regulars call it), it is also the first time that our director is not here, the first time that we performed on our way down to Grahamstown, the first time we didn`t sleep over in Colesburg. The first time we had preview performances in Pretoria as well, and the first time we had to raise funds to buy costumes and props and have money for our S and T.
But, it is also the first time our first performance had an audience of over 80, and when you are relatively unknown and performing on the Fringe and audience bigger than our cast of 8 is something to be proud of. Especially considering how or technical rehearsals went. Our technical rehearsal for As Night Falls was scheduled for 23:30 to 01:00 last night to this morning. Upon arrival at the theatre the LED lights (which provide much needed colour and atmosphere for a dance show) were not working. Someone was sent to replace the cable. The lights also decided to replot themselves half through the process, and our cast and technical people struggled on until our lighting states were planned, lit and recorded into the lighting board. Which meant that we left the theatre this morning at 02:00 and were all up again at 07:00 to get ready for our 10:00 performance today.
And yet, considering Smithfield, we can`t complain too much.
Performing at Smithfield was interesting, as the small town was not particularly equipped for a dance show. Performing on a slippery, raked stage, we skated more than danced the first night, and despite our efforts again the second night. Instead of running, and `chasing` each other across our makeshift stage, we...walked with great energy and intention.
And tomorrow morning I will arise again at 06:30 to perform at 10:00 (Chasing requires me to wash my hair before the show), and again at 14:00. Tomorrow evening I will be bruised, I will disinfect the multiple burns on my feet, I will laugh with my cast members about the mistakes we made, wondering if the audience noticed. We will joke about an audience member walking out of the show or arriving late. We will complain about the mistakes the technical team made, and I will be happy. Happy and excited to perform again the next day. Cause this is what we aim to do. To perform.
All the trials, tribulations, hillarious scenarios, crazy people and encounters in the climb to hopeful stardom.
Sunday, 30 June 2013
Monday, 24 June 2013
Shows will go on!
The whole point of rehearsals, studying and training, costume fittings, technical rehearsals and struggling with lighting boards and CD players is to
perform, eventually. So, this past week was the type of week someone like me
lives for. Last Saturday my show at the State Theatre, Today’s Youth Tomorrow, for
the Youth Expressions Festival opened. We moved into the theatre at 8 that morning, started
a technical rehearsal at about 10, and performed our show in front of an
audience for the first time at 12 that day. We had a fantastic performance on
Saturday, with a standing ovation, but the day had not started off that well. I
left my flat that morning at 7:30 to fetch 2 benches which were incremental to
our show, and upon which we had been rehearsing. I picked up two cast members
and headed to the space in which we had been rehearsing. The benches, try as we
may, did not fit into my car. Bailey, the most experienced of our cast of four,
and the glue that held me together during this process, decided that we would
surely find a substitute once we reached the theatre. When we did reach the Momentum
theatre in which we were performing, we found the set piece which the set
department from the State Theatre had prepared for us.
I had asked for a chair, resembling that of a tennis umpire. I had also mentioned, repeatedly, that the cast would be climbing onto this chair. The rickety chair standing in the middle of our stage, kept upright by about six stage weights would not support an orange, never mind an actual dancer. It was removed from our stage pronto. Then Bailey and I took a brisk walk through the loading bay to find something appropriate which we could use to substitute our flat benches we had been rehearsing on. We found two benches, which were stable enough for us to dance on and which were of the correct size, but unfortunately they had backs. We moved the benches on stage, and changed the choreography to work on our brand new set pieces.
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The cast of Today's Youth Tomorrow: Myself, Bailey Snyman, Mdu Nhlapo and Chanel van Wayk in our dressing room at the South African State Theatre |
And after the high of Saturday’s performance, I rehearsed
until the early evening on the two other shows I am dancing in which opened
respectively on Friday evening and Saturday evening. Sunday we had off in order
for our bodies to rest, bruises to heal slightly, to disinfect the floor burns
we got during the week and usually to catch up on work we didn’t have time to
do during the week.
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Apples and Oranges: Setting the stage for Today's Youth Tomorrow. |
And early on Monday morning I got ill…violently ill. My
presence at rehearsals for all three shows was cancelled and when I got to the
doctor on the public holiday I was informed that I was the third patient he had
seen that morning with a 48 hour stomach bug. I required it to be a 24 hour
stomach bug, as I had to perform Today’s Youth Tomorrow at 2 the next
afternoon. And propped up on medication,
vitamin water and jelly babies I did. I left the stage feeling nauseous and
dizzy, but proud that I had survived the entire show. Along with the stomach
bug, I had to deal with a new technical team, as the theatre did not apparently
deem it necessary for our lighting and sound operators to actually know the
show, and with no stage manager from the theatre back stage to act as a bouncer
we had a surprise guest artist appear on our stage, in school uniform halfway
through our show. But the representative from the festival who came to watch
our show was on his feet during the curtain call.
Tuesday evening I was back in rehearsal as we plotted lights
for the opening of our shows on Friday and Saturday. Thursday evening we
replotted the lights for our shows, and then had our first full dress rehearsal,
under the lights and the watchful eye of a video camera. And the next evening
we performed As Night Falls. Saturday afternoon I performed Today’s Youth Tomorrow
and at 7 that evening I performed Chasing.
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Bruised and Burnt: My feet on Saturday evening after performing three dance shows in two days. |
Three different shows in two days. It’s been a wonderful week.
Sunday, 9 June 2013
They tell me its one week...
This past week has been high on stress, low on time and
crazy on the body. As life would have it, after stretches this year of not
having much work, and stretches of unemployment which will still come, I am currently working on
three dance shows simultaneously.
My very first non-university show, TODAY’S YOUTH TOMORROW
opens at The State Theatre in six days. Which means that including today I have
five rehearsals left with my cast, and in the limited time I have had to create the
show, with the limited availability of my actors rehearsing has not been
easy. I also leave for Grahamstown, performing in Smithfield along the way in
16 days to perform CHASING and AS NIGHT FALLS at the National Arts Frestival.
And, just because that’s how things work out, I had a two day intensive Laban
course and an unexpected audition in Johannesburg this week. And the cast of As
Night Falls had to perform at UP Drama’s Head of department’s inaugural speech
on Thursday evening, which required rehearsals from Monday as well. I feel like
this week of my life was exactly what they meant with the whole raining and
pouring scenario.
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Myself and fellow dancer Mdu Nhlapo, waiting backstage to perform at an inaugural speech. |
And the powers that be decided that my show needed to be
viewed by The State Theatre in this week too. Considering the amount of hours my cast of
very understanding friends and fellow dancers have had to rehearse together I
feel we had come quite a long way, and yet not in my opinion, far enough to be
viewed this past Saturday. And when our Friday evening rehearsal needed to end earlier than
expected I tried to cancel our viewing the next day, but to no avail. And then on Saturday morning one my
cast members informed me a few hours before our said viewing that he would not
be able to attend. After an out-of-breath phone call, in my five minute water
break while rehearsing for the shows I will be performing in Grahamstown, my
said viewer informed me that, no matter who was or was not present, I would be
viewed that day. I bluntly informed him that if this was the case, he really
would not be seeing all that much. He steered on, apparently non-plussed that a
quarter of my cast would not be present.
So, innumerable stomach knots, curses and a rehearsal later
a dancer from The State Theatre arrived to view our little incomplete cast. We walked
through choreography and I discussed the flow of our show with him (which had
changed again about an hour after our viewing). To my absolute surprise
considering what we had shown him he was very impressed with the work that he
had seen. With the concept of the show and the style in which we were working. I
think the relief rolled off my physically as he left the rehearsal space about
ten minutes after the last quarter of the cast arrived to rehearse. And we could,
eventually, carry on with our much needed rehearsal, and the precious time that
we four have to dance together.
As our show is physical theatre I am more
of someone pulling draw strings together in the collaborative process of generating
and making movement/dance material for our show, and I feel that the title of
choreographer doesn’t necessarily suit my position. But at
the end of the day I am responsible for the content going on stage, and I feel
like I am in a cocktail shaker of emotions at present. I am elated that I will
not only be performing at The State Theatre for the first time, but that ‘my’
first show will be on stage soon. I am also stressed out about the fact that the
show is not entirely finished as of yet, that I still have costumes and props and makeup
to buy and songs to learn and music to edit. And somewhere in between all the ‘I
have to’s all the ‘I must still’s and my
Stage Manager that can’t be present at my technical rehearsal, I have faith in
the people I am working with, my training and myself. Saturday will bring
an amazing Today’s Youth Tomorrow to The State Theatre, come hell or high
water.
But that, it seems, is how theatre life goes.
Monday, 3 June 2013
Making a show!
I’ve always maintained, that the only way to make it in our ‘industry’
is to create your own work. To hunt down every opportunity with the expertise
and patience of a ninja. And apparently, when you’re really blessed, sometimes opportunity
falls on your lap unexpectedly, with an SMS at eight in the morning on an unexceptional Friday.
I’m not a morning person and luckily for me I tend to
rehearse late at night, or work into the early hours of the morning on my
dissertation so I tend to sleep in sometimes. So when an SMS woke me up before
eight on a Friday morning after I had been up working on my dissertation all
hours of the evening it took me a moment to focus on what I was reading. The
moment my blurry brain comprehended the message however, I was wide awake.
A contact, and friend, I made a year ago during an audition
and call back is involved in a festival aimed specifically at youth. The
festival required a dance show, to be choreographed by a female, and he had
recommended myself and another girl for the slot. I needed to submit a name and proposal for an hour long dance
show, to be performed 4 weeks from that morning, via SMS, immediately. The
thinking cap went on, and a call to my mother and a very creative friend later I
had a proposal, I had a title, and I had an SMS. A few hours and a phone call
later I had the job. To conceptualize and choreograph and hour long dance show.
That Monday I went in for my very first production meeting
as choreographer/director and as I learned from my 30 page long contract I read
later that day that my title for this production also encompassed the role of co-producer.
Within the frenzy of the past two weeks I have signed contracts, drawn up
budgets, planned, re-planned and again reworked the concept and structure of
the show. I have laid on my stomach on a tar road taking photos of apples for
the poster of the show with my iPad as my camera decided that the appropriate
day for it to stop working would be the day that I had to send in my poster. I’ve
spent hours downloading music, sourcing costumes and had stretches of doubting
whether I was up for what has been put upon my path. Basically, I’ve learned
that everything I’ve always known about putting your own show together takes
about three times longer than you would think.
The most amazing part of the experience so far has been the
people I’ve worked with. Amazing friends who are willing to be in my show for
almost no pay. A friend who has far more experience, and a name that carries actual weight in the industry who is willing to not only perform in my show, but has
been mentoring me through the process, and has been great help at dispelling my
indulgent moments of doubt. Parents who support me, and friends who are happy for me.
After all the paper work, all the shopping, all the emails and all the
planning rehearsals truly begin. And its two weeks to curtain up!
Sunday, 26 May 2013
Challenging a Repeat Performance
Each show has its own set of challenges. Whether its simply
stamina, challenging emotions or a costume that's really difficult to get in and
out of. This year for the National Arts
Festival I will be performing in two shows (presented by Tuks Drama and The
Matchbox Theatre Collective) that we have performed in Grahamstown previously. Both shows choreographed and directed by Nicola Haskins. So
this year, instead of learning a new show, or creating something new we are
relearning work we did in the past. And I’m learning that this presents its own
challenges too.
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A still from As Night Falls in 2011, choreographed by Nicola Haskins. |
In 2011 our cast of 8 performed the physical/dance theatre
piece AS NIGHT FALLS in Grahamstown, and again at the Krekvars Student Festival
and Aardklop. A lot has happened since 2011 and most of us can't really
remember much. That, and two of the original cast members needed to be
replaced. Watching the video of the show I started to remember pieces of the
choreography which had once been second nature. Like an amnesiac recollecting
out of place moments in their past that don’t quite complete the puzzle I would
remember flashes, not only of what I did on stage, but back stage too. Then we
started to remember all the mistakes, all the fun we had backstage, out of
breath and dying for a bottle of water that we had left in the wing opposite.
That time that my lamp broke apart on stage and the batteries rolled across the
stage, or the performance where I didn’t catch that bottle that came hurtling
at me at a not to optimal angle and I had to run clean across the stage to
catch it. That time in Grahamstown when my fascinator
fell off my head, or when audience members, ‘shocked
by our work’ walked out halfway through the show while the other half of
the audience loved it. Or during a different festival when the lighting
operator made a mistake and we did the opening scene, which is supposed to
happen in darkness with the cast creating patterns of light with head lamps,
under full lights. And I think our cast’s favourite moment, when, during the third
movement of the show the music cut out, and we carried on seamlessly...in silence.
In these rehearsals I have been surprised by how my body has
been able to remember more than my conscious mind. How, when we left the music
on there were large sections of choreography our bodies would just do
instinctively two years later.
So far the greatest challenge I have found in relearning is
how to keep my performance fresh. How not to be trapped between memories of the
past, and what we used to do and to stay present in the moment this time around. And that is one
of the beautiful and challenging things
about theatre to me. As a theatre performer you know a show backwards, forwards
and sideways before you go on stage. Most of the time you know more than just
your own part or choreography. But every night when you go on stage you need to
deliver your performance to a paying audience who is seeing the show for the
very first time, no matter if your audience is smaller than your cast. And
every performance needs to be fantastic.
Sunday, 28 April 2013
Making a short!
I’ve heard from enough people in our ‘industry’ that it does seem to be a fact: It’s who you know rather then what you know that makes the difference sometimes. I’ve never really been good at that…making ‘connections’ getting ‘contacts’. I prefer not to think of life as some great form of high school where knowing the cool crowd is what gets you in. And yet…
I bumped into a friend of a friend at an event whom I had met once briefly last year sometime. I knew that she was an actress like me, and I recognized her, but I can’t say I knew her name specifically. We met truly this year in March, when we exchanged knowledge of names for the first time, and a facebook friendship request later I received and message from Denel Honeyball on a Monday morning.
She was part of the One Day Movie Collective, at that stage still in its infancy, and they required an Afrikaans actress to be in a short film. I said I would do it, without regard for content now that I think about it, attached my email and waited for the script to be sent to me.
And before I had printed the scripts I was part of the inner
circle with a few more facebook invites to pages and groups. An actress, part of
the One Day Movie Collective, and one of a diversely skilled group of people. All
in love with making movies.
So last Sunday, after leaving a choir camp, early, and after a
morning rehearsal for upcoming dance shows, I headed off to Johannesburg to
film a short film, entitled Droom.
In the film I play a lesbian, and I was informed the wardrobe required would be an 'indie-rock vibe'. So I decided to go in a dress,
simply because its easiest to change clothes underneath, and forgetting the
layers of tape on my knees that I require lately in order to dance I arrived at
our director’s home in Johannesburg. When I met her she looked at my knees:
“Is that your interpretation of a lesbian?”
After removing the muscle tape from my knees, rather
quickly, I met our director (in the style that really counts with an exchange
of names!), cinematographer and our director’s girlfriend, a professional
photographer by trade who was taking stills during the shoot and helping out in
general. Like holding reflector boards, or making sure passing hobos didn’t
steal our equipment while we were shooting. Denel and I ran our lines together
in the car on our way to location, did some quick makeup touch ups in a bathroom
mirror, while the rest of the team scouted the ideal location, and headed off
to shoot the first film for the One Day Movie Collective.
If you live in the Gauteng area you will know that last Saturday
was inexplicably cold, wet and generally miserable, so we were thankful for the brief moments of sunshine we did have on Sunday for our outdoor shoot. We rehearsed and set up
the shot, then waited for the glimpses of sun between the clouds and did takes
as best we could with passing moments of sun shine before it was lost again
for a while! Standing outside in the cold in my dress our director decided to go with I was freezing while our cinematographer tried to estimate when the sun would shine bright enough again so that we could film the shot. There wasn't exactly opportunity to do many retakes. So as actresses Denel and I had couldn't fumble. That added to the fun.
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A still from Droom with Denel Honeyball and myself. |
It was such fun, working with people from such different
professional backgrounds, working together to make a film simply because it was
something we wanted to do. A film that we wanted to make. It was an honour to
work and get to know these people, with all our little fumbles. Including me
forgetting that my microphone pack was clipped to the bench and not my
clothes. I fact I was reminded of sharply as I tried to stand up in the take!
If any writers, actors, cinematographers, camera operators,
directors are editors want to get involved with the One Day Movie Collective
click the link and like the facebook page to receive updates. And if you don’t
mind holding up a reflector board to see what making movies is all about, then
you can click too!
Tuesday, 26 March 2013
The stars do shine brighter in Africa: At the Naledi Awards
I’m not someone who believes in coincidence. So when the
head of the college where I teach at ‘happened’ to let her students know that
she had managed to get tickets for the students to attend the Naledi Theatre Awards
on Monday the 17th I knew the timing was not a coincidence. So, as the drama and theatre lecturer I called
and asked if there would be a ticket for me as well. A weekend spent on
tenterhooks and Monday morning provided a message: She had managed to get a
ticket for myself, and for my boyfriend/partner/long-suffering-plus-one.
So straight after a Monday morning audition I hopped through
my second shower of the day to get ready for the awards, and then head off on
the trek from Hatfield to the Lyric Theatre at Gold Reef City.

“It’s probably in bad taste to ask at the awards, but are you nominated?”
He laughingly replied that he hadn’t been, and had ended up at
the awards in a similar fashion to the way I had.

At the end of the evening I was talking to a fellow actress when I
was asked to stand for a photo just before we left to go home. I didn’t think
much of it, until a photo I posted of the Nalide awards on Instagram got a
comment
.
Mika Stefano, a South African entertainment and gossip blogger
commented on my photo that he had a photo with myself with fellow actress Denel
Honeyball and choreographer Nicola Elliott and that he would be posting it on
his facebook page. And so it was…
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Nicola Elliot, Denel Honeyball and Myself, photo courtesy of Mika Stefano's facebook page. |
Monday, 11 March 2013
International Pool-Side-Ho: De-Robing
I’ve always told my students that they need to decided what
they are willing to do on screen or stage, and what they aren’t because once
you are pressured with an offer you might end up doing something you regret. I
am certain that nudity is not something that I am comfortable with, but I had
never considered being clothed in a shot with other actresses who are nude. And
by the time I found out that this is exactly what I would be doing there was no
turning back. And to be completely honest I’m still not sure how I feel about
it. I do know that I, as a clothed actress, was treated very differently on set
by the male crew members than those who weren’t.
Two aspects of the shoot were entirely new to me, the first
was the nudity. In light of how exceptionally conservative coke and been when
it came to what we ladies were and were not showing it was quite a shock for me
that no one was trying to cover my cheeks in between shots, or make sure that my cleavage was not showing. The second aspect was the pyrotechnics, as
we were shooting an action series. One of the sequences we shot involved a
large gun fight and explosion during the evening. Personally I like to think it
was because of my acting skill, but it might have more to do with the fact that
I’m blonde and was wearing a neon pink dress over my bikini and I would
therefore be visible in the weaker light, I was chosen to be involved in this
shot. Along with two of the ladies who were doing nudity. While robed we
rehearsed ducking under tables and chairs while actors screamed, without much enthusiasm
considering they were actors ‘bang bang’. Then on the cue of the explosion we
were to run inside the house of the location we were shooting on. One the first
rehearsal we three ladies, all still robed, ran into the house, as we were told
to do, and not to stop until we were in the kitchen. Once we were in the kitchen we were
greeted by the family who owned the property we were shooting on, along with
their two young sons of roughly 10 and 12.
As we walked back to our first positions one of my co-stars
looked at the other:
“We have to run in their just now without our robes. And the
kids are sitting there”
They both panicked. One of the crew members involved with
pyrotechnics, who we had been talking to earlier walked by. He was very Afrikaans
and rather animated. We had signalled to him to come closer. He shrugged and
mouthed “Why?”
One of the ladies called: “The boys are inside” and pointed
to her robe.
We could visibly see the gears change in his mind as
realization of what was about to happen dawned on him and speedily changed
direction to run inside the house and ask the family to temporarily vacate the
kitchen.
When we did shoot the scene the directors decided not to
have us ladies running around. I have to admit the first time we shot with the
noisy blanks I was not prepared for it. I was required to very little acting
considering how real ammunition rounds sounded surrounding me (we were
trapped in the cross-fire of the shooting) and how loud the rounds we were. As
we ducked under tables and deck chairs all three of us convulsed as the shots
were ‘fired’ around us. Even by third take our bodies reacted to the sound of
each ‘bullet’ being fired. And then there was the explosion!
Our Afrikaans pyrotechnics friend had set of the small
explosion two or three times the day before to test what was supposed to
happen. I will never forget watching him converse with the third assistant
director, who was very British. His ‘English’ was so peppered with Afrikaans
words in all the functional places in the sentences that I could read the
confusion on the British Third AD’s face as the Pyro Guy was explaining what he was
about to do. He didn’t have the heart to tell Pyro Guy that he didn’t know what
he was saying and just nodded as if in confirmation and walked away. Pyro Guy
was none the wiser, and carried on with his job.
Now as the explosion was to be set off with some sort of
radio device the entire cast was to switch off their cell phones, as a cell
phone could potentially accidentally activate the explosion. And nobody needed
to be told how dangerous it was. I do not have any understanding of
pyrotechnics in film, but I assume they are meant to be more flash and less
bang. Although we were very far for the explosion I could feel the heat on my
skin every time it flashed up into the night sky.
On one of our takes I had to dive underneath a table during the explosion,
exactly where one of the crew members had dropped a glass earlier during a previous sequence. I had a
piece of glass in my forearm, and didn’t fancy it getting infected considering
that I had been crawling around on the floor with a bleeding arm for about 20
minutes. I went to the third AD who worked mostly with us. All I really wanted
was a plaster, but the medic was called and I was inspected, disinfected and
plastered, all the while under the eyes of about 50 male crew members.
“Hey Alvin, you never spend that much time helping any of us”
This was followed by general laughter. I smiled graciously
to my make-shift audience, and went back to my ‘first position’ to redo the
take.
As with any job, a number of things happened that were new
and funny. An apricot fell out of the tree I was standing under just just
missing me as the director called ‘action’.
Jewellery was forgotten and snuck back on, and prayers were said that no
one in continuity would pick up on it. Three Champaign glasses were broken. I
had to do a scene walking across a blistering hot pavement. And in between each
take I was hopping from foot to foot to the amusement of the crew. But one of my top moments was that of the
‘poisoned food’.
Two of us clothed ladies were to stand around a table filled
with food and feed it to one of the cartel members. One of the crew members
came to us and asked if we were comfortable with our assignment and as he was
leaving said nonchalantly: “And by the way, the food is poisoned”. We rehearsed
the scene, and the cartel member we were acting with took a bite of some of the
food placed all around us. One of the female crew members walked up to us:
“Guys, don’t eat the food it’s been sprayed with insecticide. We have to do it so flies don’t sit on the
food during takes. We usually have sings up”
They guy from earlier chipped in: “I told you it was
poisoned”
Monday, 4 March 2013
International Pool-Side-Ho
I have, so far, had an interesting progression in the types
of roles I have done for camera. I started out as a baker, with almost no
makeup on and piece of linen on my head. I then played a stripper, progressed
to a Vegas Showgirl, and most recently in January I portrayed a ‘Classy Hooker’.
I would have called it a pool-side-ho, but we’ll get there shortly.
Two days before going on set, I received a phone call from
my agent. From my photograph I had been chosen to do some work for a British
action series which is being shot in South Africa. Now I know my dad watches
the series, but that is about as much as I knew going in. I was of course
interested in working with a British director. As a South African actress the word 'International' make your eyes sparkle and your mouth drool. When I received the confirmation
email I saw that my character would be a ‘Classy Hooker’. I called my mom. “Well,
if you’ve ever thought you’re not sexy enough, you now have your answer” was
her response. Earlier last year when I was cast as stripper I made it abundantly
clear to my agent that I was not prepared to do nudity, so at least I was sure
of what was required of me in that sense.
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Our spectacular location |
So GPS in hand off I went for my two day shoot, on one of
the worst roads I had ever driven on. Upon arriving on set I immediately headed
off to the makeup ladies. They always know in which direction to send one. I
did realise that there were almost no other women on set either. Slightly
early, I was the first of the girls for the day to arrive, and as I signed in
by the appropriate people I was handed a cerise pink card saying ‘Classy Hooker’ as a form of identification.
As I queued three other girls arrived, with bleached hear tight t-shirts and
tiny shorts. In retrospect this should have been my first clue. The three
ladies were handed yellow cards that said ‘Hooker’. I assumed that we would be
working together, and they were really friendly so I introduced myself and had
lunch with them. A little while later I noticed another dark haired lady who had come
while we were eating lunch. She had the most spectacular tattoos and a cerise pink card. Another dark
haired lady arrived and the six of us, three cerise pink cards and three yellow
cards were herded into makeup. We were divided between the makeup artists, and
the false lashes were divided between us. One the ladies in
charge came over with a ‘Look Book’ for us, as we were to we were to be Columbian hookers. Curlers were put into my already curly hair, and I was based,
powdered, painted, lined and glued into place. I was moved into the main
trailer for the finishing touches on my hair. The head of makeup grabbed me and
looked at the girl seated on the swivelling high chair next to me. You could
read the unimpressed look on her face as her hear was teased. The head of makeup
laughed:
“Honey we are not doing what you would choose to do. In fact, if you
chose to do this I would be forced to stop you”
This broke the ice, and I could
help but laugh as my own hair was teased into a high pony tail, and my fringe
was teased over to one side.
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Only I can manage to play a hooker and not wear my heels in any of the shots! |
I was one of the last girls to be finished and as I made my
way to our trailer (YES THE SIX OF US HAD OUR OWN TRAILER) the wardrobe lady in
charge of us followed me in. Most of the other girls already had their gowns on
over their costumes. That is another thing I had learned on set. Always take a
robe. Firstly, it tends to get cold on set sometimes, and generally you don’t have
anything with you, so it’s good to have when it gets cold. Secondly, if you’re
wearing a tiny costume, and you have to walk past mostly male crews it’s nice
to have the option to cover yourself.
I was put into a pair of tiny silver denim shorts, which I
was just thankful I fit into, and one of the shiniest metallic tops with an
open back I had ever seen. I was given a pair of colourful stiletto heels,
given large gawdy jewellery and a rather cute pair of aviator sunglasses. We
sat around in our trailer until we had to set to start the real work.
Now, at this point, as an actress all you have with you is
what is going to be in frame, a cell phone you can usually hide in your costume
somewhere and some of the other girls had their cigarettes with them. As we arrived
someone from wardrobe, on set, would check if were completely camera ready. The
wardrobe lady who had loved my top in the dimly lit and air-conditioned trailer
realised the blinding and reflective potential of the shirt I was wearing in
the sunlight and it was immediately decided that I had to change…post-haste as
the director wanted to start shooting as quickly as possible. Abigail, who was
the wardrobe lady in charge of us grabbed me by the arm and we went briskly
into an out of the way empty room.
“What underwear are you wearing?” As she had
strapped me into my shirt I knew very well she didn’t mean my bra.
“Black boy cuts.”
“With a little bum cheek? Fantastic”
So as it turned out all she had with her was a black bikini
top and a bright pink crocheted dress.
My underwear would be serving as my bikini bottoms. I had once proclaimed that I wouldn't do nude work, but underwear was completely fine. It seems that when you say these things you truly get tested. I was changed in a matter
of minutes and in place to start rehearsing for the first shoot of the day.
The six of us were positioned around a pool with a river in the background. The cameras were ready. We had rehearsed our
small action and knew what to do.
“OK ladies, robes off”
The three yellow carded girls were wearing only bikini bottoms…
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