How do you spell relief? F-A-I-L-U-R-E

Last Wednesday I auditioned at a reputable theater that shall remain nameless, and I am SO relieved I didn’t get cast that I could just squeal. The disquieting daymare unfolded thusly: Upon arrival at the audition space, I get paired to read with a seemingly over-trained younger fellow – so methodical that he teeters on a permanent state of awkward. We receive our side (portion of the script to audition with) and agree to read it over separately before rehearsing it together.

I sit and try to read while two of the nine other actors in the lobby have some sort of presentational (read: “aren’t we so cute and likeable and don’t you wish you were our friend?”) domestic dispute. Apparently the guy did something in the theater that “wasn’t right,” and when they reemerge he finds himself on the receiving end of a slap attack – the girl actually flails at him. “What’d I do?!” he screeches. Her answer is a power-play demonstrated by a cool turn in the other direction and an overly-composed walk to the other side of the lobby, followed by a fake-pouting, “you know what you did.”

I return my focus to the script: page two, the characters are physically flirtatious. Page three, they kiss. Wait, kiss? What kind of a director keeps a kissing scene in an audition side? And the attendant said we are to read the whole thing – that means the kiss happens. Damn.

So Mr. PSA and I go into a back room to rehearse, before which, may I note, he digs into his backpack and pops a mint. I can’t figure out if this is considerate or slimy. I later decide it’s both.

    Mr. PSA: How comfortable are you with physical boundaries? Me: Fine. How should we handle this kissing business? Mr. PSA: I think we should go for it. Me: [awkward pause] um, Okay.

Okay? Okay?! Why did I say that?! I’d really rather not kiss this kid. It’s not that he’s ugly or anything, it’s just so unnecessary to kiss at an audition. Then again, it’s ridiculous to mime it – neither of the options are ideal.

We get into the theater, and the director addresses me quizzically:

    Director: [reading my name off of my headshot] Lee-ga? Me: [polite, friendly] oh, it’s “Lee-ah” Director: [long pause, more staring at my headshot] You know, when the ‘e’ comes before the ‘i’ like that, it’s pronounced ‘ay’ (like hay)]. Me: [attempting to be cute and clever] Yes, but if you take away the ‘a’ on the end, the name is pronounced “Lee,” not “Lay” – so it’s “Lee-ah” Director: [disbelief] uhhhh…. Me: [acquiescing] Yeah, my mom got a little creative… Director: Well, [pointedly] I guess you’ll pronounce your name however you like. [beat] So, Mr. PSA, it’s nice to see you again - what have you been working on lately?

In the movies, this is usually the kind of exchange between some old salt and a subordinate that’s followed by, “I like you, you’ve got spunk!,” and a promotion. But there was no light-hearted response; it looks like this was a test that I failed. There are few things worse in theater than a director who forces you to contradict him but then doesn’t acknowledge or care for you respectfully standing your ground.

We go on to perform the scene, and right as we are centimeters from kissing the director says, “thank you” (directorspeak for “you can stop now”) and I turn my head just in time to get kissed on the cheek. Yesss! But Mr. PSA doesn’t hear the director and continues. The director says louder, “oh, you’ve rehearsed this part – keep going.” Mr. PSA hears that, there's some floundering and then he backs up to the line before the kiss. Arrrrgh! The awkward kiss happens, I phone in the rest of the script, the director thanks us again, we walk out of the theater, I leave without saying goodbye to Mr. PSA.

On the drive home I felt like I needed to take a shower, not because of Mr. PSA, but because I felt compromised – I took things that are meaningful to me – my name, my kiss – and devalued them to impress someone who didn’t care. All for a stupid audition. Yes, sometimes failure is a good thing.

Denied. Again.

Almost two weeks ago I auditioned for a show at Theatre in the Round. This is a non-paying community theater, yet highly respected (so much so that some audiences don’t think you’ve “made it” as an actor in the Twin Cities until you’ve performed there – I will refrain from elaborating on how narrow-minded I think this is considering our vibrant arts community – but that mentality exists and I wanted to note it). When I checked in for my audition, they handed me the paperwork I needed to complete along with a contact information card that they keep on file, presumably forever. On the back of this card was a very rude awakening: a list of the shows that I’ve auditioned for since the card was first filled out. In 1998. Even though I hate math, I did some anyway and realized that in the SEVEN YEARS I’ve been auditioning for Theatre in the Round, I have never been cast. Ouch.

Granted, I don’t think I’ve ever auditioned there in front of the same director. And I’ve been on the other side of the casting table plenty of times and know what the process is like, but still – seven years?! I get paid stage gigs now with some regularity. I get paid film gigs and voice gigs and any number of other uncategorized gigs – hell, I even get pre-cast! But I can’t land a role at Theatre in the Round? What am I doing wrong?

So, as I’m sure you’ve guessed by now – I didn’t get cast for this latest show. The director did, however, send me a very kind e-mail commending me for a strong cold-read and for making him laugh. He also shared that I was his second choice for a specific role. I didn’t really know how to respond to that... um, “hope your first choice drops out?” But then I remembered that if it sounds like a bad idea, it probably is one. I thanked him politely and gave myself a little, mental, pat on the back for pretending to be an adult.

So, I have a few options for my next goal (in terms of Theatre in the Round):

1) Continue this adult trend and keep auditioning like a good sport (boring but respectable/humiliating – it depends on when you ask me); 2) Keep auditioning until I get cast once, consider it a coup, and then never audition there again; 3) Do everything I can to make it BIG, and then continue to audition there and make not-getting-cast into a sport.

Option #1 it probably is – ‘cause I’m an adult. Sigh.

Auditioning according to Darwin

I had my film audition on Saturday, and it went pretty well. The biggest challenge of the audition was just getting there – it was clear out in Mahtomedi – so far out there that even Google Maps couldn’t get it quite right. There were two very specific streets (Wildwood Road and this thing that goes by four names: Division St./Century Ave. N./Geneva Avenue N./East County Line Road N.) that I came to discover, after a good 30 minutes of driving around in Mahtomedi, are labeled as County Road numbers instead of their proper given names at major intersections. But only at major intersections. So for all intents and purposes, Wildwood Road is actually County Road 244, and is NOT to be confused with Wildwood Avenue or Old Wildwood Road. Same deal for that freaky road with four names. By the time I put a few thousand extra miles on my car, clearly convinced that if I could even FIND the place, they’d have to cast me out of sheer awe for my incredible perseverance, I found it. I had a good laugh to myself after the audition when the producer mentioned that their afternoon auditioners were far more regular in showing up than their morning ones. Apparently their 9 am didn’t show, and the others were late. No kidding - If I had a 9 am audition (God help me if I ever do – ick), and I got lost in Mahtomedi, I would truly just say fuck it and go home.

Thanks to the locals of Mahtomedi for their patience and kindness in offering directions. Even if they never mentioned the bizarre Christian Name/County Road # phenomenon.

uhhhhh...

On Tuesday night I watched my newly acquired DVD of Before Sunset (open letter to the IRS: thanks for the tax write-off!). The first time I saw this movie in the theater, I came out speechless. Few works of art ever cause me to be completely mind-blown - examples include Company C Na Na’s Tyrannous Rex at the 2003 MN Fringe, Before Sunset’s predecessor Before Sunrise, Almodovar’s Habla con Ella, Eric Matthews’ It’s Heavy in Here, any album by Self, etc.) Anyway, Before Sunset not only stuns me to the point of overwhelmed silence because I feel like someone has secretly taped my life and then put it on screen, but also because the acting is so precise. It’s so good it makes me want to weep. The characterizations are so spot-on, so natural, so fresh. The two leads, combined with the script, make this thing flipping indestructible. This of course leads to the next logical question: when do I get to do this? I tell you, while I really appreciate doing industrials for the big yellow tag which shall remain nameless, or the other association that pesters millions of people via telephone daily, or any number of other well-meaning groups, helping people figure out how to sell cell-phones or pressure people into paying their delinquent bills is not especially gratifying work. It pays beautifully and helps keep food on the table, but doesn’t allow for much, shall we say, interpretation. And seeing as my feature film work is seriously lacking in, well, existence, my chops aren’t what they need to be to even consider auditioning for something as potentially awesome. Even if I could get an audition.

This leads me to share that I have an audition on Saturday for a feature-length film. It’s a low-budget indi deal that’s a throw-back to 50’s horror films along the lines of Swamp Thing. Yes, yes, I realize that this will be highly stylized, and nothing like the naturalistic style of Before Sunset but I also realize that this is as good a starting point as any. This is all, of course, contingent on me getting cast in the first place. I’m in contest for what appears to be a lead female, although I don’t think I’m “beautiful” enough to get the part. I hate it when films advertise for "beautiful" actors. I mean really, what kind of narcissistic jerk responds to something like that? Thank god I didn’t read that description until they placed a revised call – there’s no way in hell I would have responded. Anyway, I’ve had a promising e-mail or two with the director after sending him my headshot and resume, but I’m pretty confident he’s going to change his mind once he sees me.

On top of all that self-consciousness, I have no idea what to do for a monologue (can’t just use one of my stage audition monologues, because the acting style between theater and film is so different). So basically, I’ve got to get my act together before Saturday at 1 pm. Anyone know how to lose 20 pounds and memorize a killer two-minute film monologue in two days?

Yeah, screwed.