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re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor
Posted by: Snowgrace 03:37 am EDT 09/03/18
In reply to: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor - WaymanWong 01:34 am EDT 09/03/18

Indeed, good for him!! Lots of actors work at TJ, & like waitering in an event space or restaurant, the constant activity & ever changing clientele, plus familial energy of the staff, likely stimulate him more than sitting at home waiting for the next acting job! Am a bit appalled by a casting director who helped me land a major credit for which I did good work, as she has never again called me in since seeing me working with a positive energy as a cater waiter.
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re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor
Posted by: twocents 10:52 am EDT 09/04/18
In reply to: re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor - Snowgrace 03:37 am EDT 09/03/18

appalled by a CD who helped me land a major credit for which I did good work, as she has never again called me in since seeing me working as a cater waiter.
CW was as bad as background work in her estimation! smh
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re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor
Posted by: AC126748 09:46 am EDT 09/03/18
In reply to: re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor - Snowgrace 03:37 am EDT 09/03/18

If you live in a city that isn't New York or LA, it's possible that virtually every actor you know and see regularly on stages in your city has a day job. I know that's true where I live. I can count on one hand the number of actors I know in my large city, with a strong theater scene, who derive 100% of their living from acting work alone. Many are waiters, bartenders, teachers, receptionists, temp office workers, standardized patients, etc. I even know several who also work at Trader Joe's. There's no shame in a hard day's work, no matter what it is, and I hope that's the lesson that comes from this.
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re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor
Posted by: JereNYC (JereNYC@aol.com) 12:38 pm EDT 09/06/18
In reply to: re: How apt for Labor Day: Making ends meet as a working actor - AC126748 09:46 am EDT 09/03/18

I have often wondered how even big name theatre stars (the names WE here at ATC revere, but which probably wouldn't mean much outside the tristate area) pay their bills when they're not headlining Broadway shows.

Just a few weeks ago, this conversation came up with a friend after a performance of ON A CLEAR DAY at Irish Rep, which starred Melissa Errico, one of my absolute favorites. Errico has had a wonderful career in the theatre over the last 25 years, but I find it hard to believe that she can support herself and her family with her earnings from it, especially what she must be earning in off-Broadway jobs like ON A CLEAR DAY. (I know she has a husband and kids, but I have absolutely no knowledge about her personal life or what her husband does for living now that he's retired from tennis). I've always just assumed that people like Errico must have some sort of "day job" or other form of income.
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