Rummaging through my biographical dossier reader cjdahl60 discovered that along with my
voluminous “writing credits” there were also seven “acting credits”, leading to
queries about those experiences.
(Further IMDB
investigation reveals that I also have one “music credit” (I wrote the theme song
for Best of the West. Call me “Mr. Versatility.” Substantially unbalanced in the direction of
the writing, but still. How many songs
is Aaron Sorkin credited with?) (I did
not look. It could be a lot.)
The first thing to notice is that of my seven “acting
credits”, none of them were solicited by me.
Friends and colleagues said, “Do you want to do this?” and I said,
“Yes.” I never auditioned for any of
them.
How much better would I have fared as an actor had made legitimate
efforts in that direction? An
unanswerable question. Like asking how
well Bo Jackson might have done if he had exclusively played baseball rather
than the combined baseball and football.
The only difference is that in Bo Jackson’s case, people actually discuss that.
Anyway… acting. What
comes immediately to my mind?
Makeup. A
costume. The “butterflies of excitement”
rarely experienced by a writer. (As
distinguished from the “butterflies of anxiety”, which I am experiencing right now. )
You show up and you’re “in it.”
Not behind the cameras. In front
of them.
Believe me, it’s different.
Not that I ever starred
in anything, but that has little to do with it.
I felt the same jangly exultation playing the “Guard” in the Toronto Hebrew Day School Purim
pageant. Though I’d have admittedly been
more excited had I played “Mordecai.” (A substantially larger role, in the
production and in the history of
Purim.)
Let’s break down those seven “acting credits”, shall we?
Two of them involved miniscule speaking parts in films
written, directed, starred in and produced by a longtime friend of mine who
makes movies on his iPad. He includes me in his productions, partly because he knows I can competently do
the job but mainly because he always has, perceiving my active involvement as
a personal “Good Luck Charm.” Making me less
a working actor in this scenario than a thespianical “Rabbit’s Foot.”
I was paid nothing, and neither film enjoyed a theatrical
release. Which, jumping ahead, can be
said about every film I ever appeared in.
Another “acting credit” involves a Hart and Lorne (Michaels) Terrific
Hour Canadian television special, where, in a sketch I co-wrote, I portrayed
one of the renowned “Corsican Brothers”, wherein, in traditional “Corsican
Brothers” fashion – in which when one brother is injured the other brother feels the pain – I was
engaged in a furious battle, involving each imprisoned Corsican Brother
attacking himself mercilessly to get the other
Corsican Brother to talk.
(I have seen a tape of my performance as a Corsican Brother. To my eternal embarrassment, you can see me
laughing during the scene. As Robert
O’Neill my Actors Workshop teacher
would have observed, I was at that moment “loving myself in the art” more than loving
“the art in myself.”)
So that’s three. No Oscars.
No (Canadian) Juno Awards.
Four. (And I have to
move this along. I have a lunch date
with my financial adviser. Which I look
forward to. For his congenial
company. And for the tangible reassurance that he has not left town with all
of my money.)
I was a “Regular Performer” in The Bobbie Gentry Show, a “summer replacement” series that ran four
episodes and went pffffft. Every week, I performed material that I had
written, including a “telephone sketch” playing a character called “Charniecki”
whose hard-to-spell moniker he was continually clarifying:
“That’s ‘Charn’, as in ‘charn bracelet”… and then you add a
“niecki.’”
Hey, I didn’t force
them. Somebody said, “Do it.”
Then there were two movies…
Ivan (Ghostbusters) Reitman’s
Cannibal Girls, where I played “Third
Victim” in a film that was entirely improvised.
Needing someone who could invent usable dialogue, they came to me for my
writing abilities rather than my acting chops, which proved so deficient that when
they finally bumped me off they dubbed in another
actor’s agonized screaming. That was
definitely not me dying.
On the heels of my breakthrough debut in Cannibal Girls, I was hired to act in The Merry Wives of Tobias Rouke, the
producers of which ultimately ran out of money, stranding the tins of unedited
footage of the movie in the trunk of the director’s car.
From which, to my knowledge, it has never emerged.
There was nudity in that movie – I recall one scene where
the actress’s wardrobe was… nothing. Despite
their pleading imprecations, however, in a scene they claimed called for it but
that nobody had “heads-upped” me on that requirement, I adamantly refused to
remove my “long-johns.”
My enduring recollection of that experience was me, standing
underwear-clad in a swampy pool of water for what seemed like hours, while a
school of minnows nibbled hungrily at my submerged lower parts.
Ah, memories…
Finally, a writer-friend and co-creator of the short-lived
but noteworthy Buffalo Bill invited
me to essay the role of “Crazy Eddy” Felsik, the “Human Salmon”, a man made
“Buffalo-famous” by repeatedly traversing Niagara Falls in a barrel.
I had one line. An
important one, being the scene’s climactic “button.”
The shooting of that scene involved numerous re-takes, which
were undeniably because of me. (I knew that because after every take, the director
came up and asked, “Can you do it any better?”)
As I stood in that barrel, sweating profusely in my wet suit
under the punishingly dehydrating lights the foremost thought in my mind was,
“If I could only rewrite this line.”
There’s this statute called the “Taft-Hartley” Rule, stating
that you can be “waivered” for just one acting job before being required to
join the union, of which I was never a member.
After that single performance, I did not acted in television again. I like to think that was due to the “Taft
Hartley” restrictions rather than my underappreciated performance as “Crazy
Eddy” Felsik. (I am telling you, it was
the material.)
Anyway, there you have it.
Seven “acting credits”, two owing to my employer’s superstition, three
doing material I had written myself and four which never made it to the
theaters, for which my cumulated stipend was zero.
Hardly a Streepian oeuvre.
But you know what?
1 comment:
Bobbie Gentry was so upset at her show cancellation she's still in hiding.
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