One of the most desired jobs in this world is that of an actor or actress, because the world of the entertainment looks so glamorous and exclusive. Beside worldwide exposure, money and fame, you can have thousands and thousands of people looking up to you and wishing that someday they are going to be just like you.
This is one of the most craved jobs that there will ever exist in this world, for as long as entertainment exists. However, what many do not realize or just refuse to see is that with power comes a lot of responsibility. The movie industry is not an easy place to live in, and sometimes you have to fight for your life.
First of all, it is quite difficult to actually play in a movie, to act. You have to pretend and do it looking good and stylish. You have to give up who you are and become one with the character that you are playing. Many years of training are behind every actor and a lot of hard work is put into each mimic and tone of voice. You can actually say that acting is like extreme sports. You test your limits, not only physically, but psychologically as well.
So let's say that you have the looks, the talent and the courage to enter the movie business and take a shot at one of the hottest jobs there. And let us also assume that you are successful. You make it into this business and start to have what you wanted from the beginning: money and fame. You think your struggle is over? I might be inclined to say the opposite: your true struggle is just beginning. What you have experienced until your entrance in this movie business was a piece of cake considering that you were your own person and the mistakes that you made would only affect you and probably a few other people close to you. Now things are different. You make one little mistake and a whole world is there to judge and label you. The entertainment world can be all you ever wanted, but it also requires a lot of sacrifice and compromise.
You believe that this is unfair? Well, as I have said before: with great power comes great responsibility and if you are not ready for it, nobody is going to care. Once you have decided that out of all the jobs in the world, being an actor is what you want to do and started to pursue your dream, your life is going to be harder than expected. The entertainment business is no place for the weak.
Being a star, a well-known person has many advantages that you can use. However, there is also a dark side to fame and sometimes things can get very ugly. Honestly, there are people in this movie business that literally had to fight for their life, and unfortunately some did not succeed, because they lost the fight against some powerful temptations.
I guess all that I am trying to say is that you have to understand the entertainment world and see all its sides before choosing to be a part of it. Or better yet, expect the unexpected and be strong. There are always two sides to each story.
Jobs In The Movie Industry
Most people seem to think there are concerned in the making of motion pictures just four classes of people actors, scenario writers, directors and cameramen. It all seems very simple. The scenario writer sits down in the morning and works out a scene; he wakes up the director, who packs some actors and a cameraman in an automobile, together with a picnic lunch, and goes out to make the picture on some lovely hillside. Then, having finished the photoplay, they take it around to your local theater and exhibit it at twenty-five cents a seat.
As a matter of fact, the movies, now the fifth national industry in the United States, has as many phases, and as many complexities as any other industry in the world.
Broadly speaking, the movies are made up of alliances between producing companies and distributing companies. For example, the Constance Talmadge Corporation produces the photoplays in which Miss Talmadge is starred, and this Company is allied with the First National Exhibitors Circuit which takes the completed film and sells it to theater managers in every part of the world. The Constance Talmadge Corporation's duty is to make a photoplay and deliver it to the First National Exhibitors Circuit; the latter company
duplicates the film in hundreds of "prints," advertises it, rents it to exhibitors, and sees to the delivery of the film. In the same way, Nazimova makes comedies and releases them through the Metro Corporation, her distributor.
The great distributing companies employ the salesmen, advertising experts, business men, and, so forth. All the technical work concerned with the making of the picture, however, is in the hands of the producing company, and, since we are engaged in such work ourselves, it is about these posts that we must talk.
If we are to take the studio jobs in their natural order, the first to begin work on a picture is, of course, the author. Each studio employs a scenario editor who is on the lookout for good magazine stories or plays or original scripts. He himself is not so much a writer as an analyst, who knows what kind of stories his public wants; generally he is an old newspaperman or an ex-magazine editor. Having bought the story, he turns it over to a scenarioist the "continuity writer." This type of specialist is much in demand, since no story can survive a badly constructed scenario.
The scenario writer puts the story into picture form exactly as a dramatist may put a novel into play form for the stage. It is the scenarioist or continuity writer who really gives to the story its screen value hence the very large prices paid for this work when it is well done. Next in line is the director, who takes the scenario and sets out to make the picture.
There is a shortage of directors at present, and for that reason, salaries are particularly high in this line, but of course, direction is a profession which takes many years of study.
In beginning work on his picture, the director first consults the studio manager, who is really the head of the employment office. The studio manager consults with him as to the expenses of the scenery and the length of time to be spent in making the picture and then summons the technical staff.
The technical staff of a studio is a rather large assembly. There is the art director, who plans the scenery, the technical man who directs the building, the casting director, who selects the actors, the electrician, who assists in working out the lighting effects, the laboratory superintendent, who must supervise the developing of the film, the cutters, who assemble the completed film, and last, but not least, the cameraman. Of course there are hundreds of minor posts assistant director, assistant cameraman, property man, research experts, location seekers, and so forth.
The casting director immediately sends out a call for the "types" demanded in the scenario. If possible, he notifies the actors and actresses personally, but more often he is forced to get in touch with them through the numerous agencies which act as brokers in "types/ The Actors' Equity Association is now doing excellent work in supplying actors for pictures at the lowest possible cost to the actor in the way of commissions.
Presently a large number of actors and actresses appear at the studio and the casting director selects from them the individuals best suited to the coming production. Beginners are warned against grafting agents who on any pretense whatever charge more than the legal 5% commission. They are also warned against signing "exclusion" contracts with any agent, as this frequently compels the actor to pay double commissions.
Meanwhile the art director has built his scenery, and the picture goes "into production." At the end of some six weeks or two months, the directors turn the completed film over to the assembling and cutting department. As a rule both the director and the scenario writer work with the assembler and cutter, and if they are wise, they insist on doing the cutting themselves, for the success of the picture depends largely upon this important operation of assembly.
At the same time, another specialist designs and works out the illustrations on the borders of the written inserts. Finally the assembled picture is shown to the studio staff, and if they are satisfied, the negative is forwarded to the distributing company. The studio's work on that picture is ended.
From this brief survey, you can see that the avenues for breaking into the movies are almost unlimited. You can be an actor, director, cameraman, scene builder, cutter, titler, scenario writer, or anything else if you will begin at the bottom and learn the game. All of these positions are highly paid and all require a high knowledge of motion picture technique.
The important thing is to start to get into the studio, in any capacity. Then choose the type of work in which you desire to rise, and learn it. Everybody will help you and encourage you if you start this way, instead of trying the more common but less successful method of starting at the top and working down.
Both Groshan Fabiola & Malcolm Blake are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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