(I wrote this 11 years ago, but I think it holds just as true today.)
“Excuse me. Where do I go to be a star?” Heather Graham says this as she gets off of
the bus in the movie “Bowfinger”. I saw
this movie way before I ever moved to Los
Angeles , and thought it was hilarious then. But wow, after moving here, I had no idea how
accurate that movie was.
Some reviews weren’t favorable for
the movie, but I have always loved Steve Martin and Eddie Murphy. And after living here, I realize how
realistic those characters really are.
We’ve all met the actor who keeps holding on, waiting for their break,
and why, we don’t know. It never comes. We’ve met the lucky guy who just happened to
be in the right place at the right time.
The director (or agent) who’ll tell you exactly what you want to
hear. The actress that, if it weren’t
for her looks, wouldn’t be anywhere. The
leading man, who is so arrogant and so self-centered, you’re surprised anyone
would want to work with him. And the
name-droppers. Hollywood
wouldn’t be Hollywood
if it weren’t for all the *&%$! name-droppers!
“Welcome to Hollywood .
Everybody’s got a dream. What’s
your dream?” What’s your plan should be
the question. When I first got here, the
main question EVERYBODY asked me is “What’s your plan?” Now, really I came to L.A. to get more stage time and take
Groundlings classes. Back in Nashville , where I’m from,
there is one comedy club, and it only allows you to do its open mic once a
month. Other than that, there was one
other open mic in a bar that was once a week.
You can’t get better at anything if you don’t do it any more often than
that. So that was my plan. Others felt it wasn’t a good plan, but it was
all I needed.
But I went through the motions of
finding an agent. I landed one within a
year or so. Is it a good agent? Does it matter? A bad agent is better than no agent at
all. She had me get new headshots, which
I probably needed. She wanted me to take
commercial acting classes, but I am extremely cheap. She sent me on three auditions, but the third
one I landed (I think because of the overalls I was wearing. Make fun of how I dress, will you?). It was an industrial, and because of it, I am
now SAG eligible. Yay!
But what does that mean? I still haven’t gotten any more
auditions. People say, send your headshot
out. Isn’t that what an agent is
for? Look on Craigslist. I got a date off Craigslist once; I won’t
EVER do that again! And why? To find gigs to work for free? I guess that’s helpful…if I wanted to be an
actor.
I don’t like the downtime. I don’t like memorization. I don’t like constantly being surrounded by
pompous, arrogant, vain people who drive BMWs and drink Starbucks. I hate the huge, bug-eyed sunglasses that people
wear…indoors. I hate the nasty air and
pollution. I am not happy living in an
“apartment” that used to be a hotel room. It does, however, remind me ofeing in
college. I call it my dorm room. But it’s hard to think that for the same rent
I’m paying here, I could get a two-bedroom apartment with the works! It’s hard to make real friends or to have
real dates here, because people out here are only interested in what they can
get out of you or what you can do for them.
Hollywood
is fake on so many different levels. But
don’t get me wrong. There are a lot of
good people here. I’ve met some amazing
folks.
Now that I’ve been here for a
while, I cringe when I here someone say they are an actor. First, really? What have you been in? Oh, nothing?
Then you’re not an actor. Actors
act, they don’t sit around bullshitting and name-dropping. Second, are you studying acting? Have you wanted to be an actor since you were
five? Are you passionate about it? Or do you just want to be famous? Because I’ve got to tell you, I have wanted
to do comedy since I was a child. I am
constantly writing, constantly observing, constantly eating, sleeping and
breathing comedy. It is the one true
love of my life. Can you say that Mr.
Actor or Miss Actress?
To be an actor, a comedian, an
entertainer of any kind takes discipline, practice, studying, and
perfecting. You don’t just go out and
buy paints and decide that you’re an artist.
You don’t just buy a guitar and decide that you’re a musician. It takes work and time…LOTS of it. It doesn’t happen overnight, and it
shouldn’t. They say it takes ten years
to become an overnight success. I
believe that. It would probably take you
that long to become good. It would take
even longer to become great! I hear new
comics all the time say: “Oh, I’ve been
doing standup for about a year.” Really? Well, keep at it.
I hear so many other people talking
about how they’re going to be doing this, or they’re working on that, or how
they’re going on the road…blah, blah, blah.
Talk is all that is. A year
later, and none of them are doing any of that.
There are those who talk the talk, and then there are those who walk the
walk. If people are running their mouths
about something, then they probably aren’t doing much else. The people who are really doing stuff, don’t
say shit about it. They just get the job
done. They just do it.
So what’s my plan now? To just do it. I realize that what makes me happy is not
what’s going to make you happy, or her happy, or him happy. And you can’t measure success by someone
else. Success to one person may be
making huge paychecks and driving a BMW.
(On a side note, I would be happy if I NEVER saw another BMW and its
pretentious-ass driver again.) Success
to me is making enough money to live comfortably doing what I love and what I’m
passionate about, to be with real friends, and to wake up everyday excited and
happy about what I’m doing. That is
success. And I don’t know that I’ll find
that here in L.A. , but because of Hollywood , I know better
about what I really want. Thank you, Hollywood .
Comments
Post a Comment