Category Archives: career

Bloody Mary – Fun Size Horror Revisited

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They are finally able to be released publicly! The shorts we made for Fun Size Horror are now available for public view.

“Bloody Mary” was a fun bit of filmmaking made under surprise conditions. Originally we had a different crew, location and equipment – but then there was some bad luck behind the scenes. Thanks to some help from Fun Size founder Zeke Pinheiro we were able to shoot and get this in on time.

Give it a look and then watch it a bunch more and tell a friend. More next week!

See you next time!

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January 7, 2015 · 9:00 am

Due to schedule conflicts, please see this link…

I am in pre-production on a job that had a sudden and drastic deadline change so the blogs I had intended to write this week may be a bit delayed. However, there is still new content of mine on the internet!

My monthly article on Create with Jenna went up today and you can see it by going to any of the links that I have put in this sentence…

…or THIS ONE.

It’s about career management during slow times of the year – like the holidays!

Enjoy!

See you next time.

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Filed under actor stuff, career, Create with Jenna, holidays, Hollywood, producing, productivity, projects

New Course Schedule at Studio 105!

 
 
Starting in 2014 there will be new options to help build your career or introduce you to your inner actor. Our new All-Ages Beginner Class will now be availabe on Mondays from 6-8pm taught by Curtis Andersen. This class will focus on all the acting basics utilizing our tried and tested three-prong system focusing on improvisation, scene study and audition techniques; great for someone just starting out. You’ll learn in a comfortable environment with others at your level so there’s no risk of feeling out of place or embarrassed.
Also we will be introducing our new seminar program. At the end of each quarter we will present a seminar designed to help further your career, whether it be in the entertainment industry or not! In March and October we’ll present Entertainment 101, 30 years of experience packed into 2 hours helping to get you started in the wild world of entertainment, and in June and December we’ll present Think Fast, using improvisation to enhance your performance. Think Fast is good for actors and non-actors alike and a great way to help build your confidence. Seats are available for just $50!
So to break it down:
  • Monday – All-ages Beginner’s class with Curtis Andersen 6-8pm
  • Tuesday – Beginning Level Acting with Steven Nelson 7-9pm
  • Wednesday – Advanced Technique with Curtis Andersen 7-9pm
  • Thursday – Advanced Technique with Steven Nelson 7-9pm
  • End of March – Entertainment 101 with Curtis Andersen Time TBA
  • End of June – Think Fast: Using Improv to Improve Your Performance Time TBA
  • End of October – Entertainment 101 with Curtis Andersen Time TBA
  • End of December – Think Fast: Using Improv to Improve Your Performance Time TBA
 
It’s going to be an exciting year!
 
We look forward to seeing you!

 
For more info go to STUDIO 105.biz

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Filed under acting, actor stuff, audition technique, blatant plug, career, class, improv, scene study, seminar, shameless self promotion, studio 105

Gratitude 2013

Hollywood, and the entertainment business in general, is tough. There’s always a hustle happening and it doesn’t ever stop, even when you’re successful – in fact it can get even hustle-ier. It’s easy for this business to get you down, weigh on you and lead you down a path to cynicism.

But it’s very important to remember that  part of the reason why it is hard is because everybody wants to do it and if you aren’t giving it your all you can be replaced before you even realized what has happened!

All that being said, I truly believe there is no other industry like entertainment and if you are working in it you have every reason to be grateful. Every entertainment project is a team effort, whether it’s a film, T.V. show, record, play, musical, book, YouTube video… no one can truly do it completely on their own. We stand on the shoulders of our supporters and teammates and lift up into the world a bit of something that couldn’t have existed without everyone’s help. From the director to the make-up artist to the casting director to the music producer to the background actors to editor to the writer to the camera man to the sound technician to the production assistant to the personal assistant… they are all a part of the process. Parts of the puzzle that makes up the final work. And we can’t forget about the accountants and P.R. reps, A&R people, managers, agents, lawyers, all the folks that help keep the business moving (even if sometimes it doesn’t feel like it).

So I’m thankful that I am able to create as my job. I’m grateful for the struggle. I’m grateful for the work. I’m grateful when a project is completed and I’m grateful when a new one starts. I’m grateful for the friends that I have made in this business and I’m grateful that I get to share this with my wife. I’m grateful that I have a supportive family that was willing to help me follow my dream at such an early age and I’m grateful to my students who are letting me help them on their way through this crazy industry.

So this November as you’re dreading holiday dinners, calorie counts, Black Friday and Cyber Monday, or any of the other cliched things that there are to dread I hope you will take some time out for yourself, take stock of what you do, and give thanks. Give thanks to the people who have helped you do what you do and even the people who have created obstacles to over come, after all sometimes we need a challenge to get the best possible result (just ask Steven Spielberg about Jaws).

You make things! That’s the coolest thing there is! Keep it up!

Happy Thanksgiving!

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Filed under career, holidays, inspiration, Thanksgiving

Actor 101: Picking Up The Pieces – What Happens When A Project Fails

In 2012 I had a bad July.

A very bad July. 
We were just coming off of a successful production for the plastic surgeon documentary and were heading full steam ahead into post. The next two projects were lined up and crewing up. We were knee deep in casting and then disaster struck – all but our initial financing fell through…
…on both projects…
…at the same time. 
The next six months worth of work were gone. Worse than that, being the lead producer, I suddenly had employees who were also out of work. The projects were shot and my credibility was shot. 
It was a very bad July.

Losing funding is nothing new in the entertainment industry. It, literally, happens every day. In the initial days of the financial crisis it was sometimes happening several times a day (that’s a different, less terrible, story). But the devastation caused by the loss is dependent on several key factors:

  • Type of project.
  • People associated with the project.
  • The likelihood of replacing the funding.
For big studio pictures having a project flounder isn’t such a big deal. They can repackage and attempt to get it made for years or even decades. 
If you have major stars in your project it’s a bit easier to keep interest up and entice new money.
In the end, if you have a strong track record, are a major studio and/or have the star power to put butts in seats then your likelihood of replacing funding is strong and you just need to survive the delay.
We didn’t have any of those benefits. 
What we did have was a great idea, a FANTASTIC crew and some interest from prominent distributors who were looking forward to seeing a final cut. But it wasn’t enough to get the funding back in place in time to keep our production schedule.
Working in Hollywood often means that your credibility is also your line of credit. Things can happen on a handshake, but then they better happen. Just like your credit score, it is very easy to damage your credibility and not as easy to build it back. I like to pride myself on keeping my word, especially in business, but that July the rug was tugged out and, direct fault or not, I was holding the bag and all the excuses and apologies in the world doesn’t change that.
It’s easy to find stories about success in Hollywood, it’s all anyone wants to talk about. Scoring deals, making movies, living the dream – the whole town runs on the hope and wish fulfillment popularized by the trade and gossip magazines and entertainment shows. But you can’t throw a stone in the Los Angeles Metro Area without hitting someone who’s had it all fall apart on them…
…and everyone else is scared that they’re next.
You can feel it in the casting waiting rooms, executive board rooms, and every Studio City apartment. No one is immune, but you do have a choice about how you cope and what you do. 
I decided to fall back. 
With the projects completely stranded, we used what money we had to pay out who we could (everyone who wasn’t a producer) and I went back to my desk to start shaking the money trees. For months I was pretty much locked away at home licking my wounds and looking for rent money on top of project funding. I was making daily phone calls of apology to partners, crew and fellow producers. I was working out what the tax issues would be… I was mourning the loss.
Normally this is where I’d tell you that at least something good came out of it, there’s a moral about keeping hope alive and the music swells as we get to a happy ending… but, no, that’s not really how this story ends. While my life certainly hasn’t fallen apart, I am still recovering, career wise, from the loss of these projects. We have gotten some things back on track, but not made. I have regained at least a little bit of my credibility with the people I was most worried about, but frankly I’m not sure about everyone. Even fifteen months on I carry a great deal of guilt about the whole thing. 
I don’t know that I have any good advice about how to deal with this since I’m still in the thick of it, but I did think that it was something that was worth writing about because, whether you’re a vet or noob, nobody tells you about the failure part. It happens, more than anyone wants to admit, and you aren’t alone if it happens to you. In fact, if/when it does happen, you’re in really good company. Every major entertainment player has a horrible story they never want to tell and really they are the best example to follow. Anyone who finds success in this business does so due to a combination of hard work, determination and skill. Perseverance, talent and an eye for opportunity can turn the whole thing around and, as quickly as everything was taken away, the ship can be righted and back on course. 
What I hope you take away from this is that failure is only as bad as you let it be and that it’s OK, healthy even, to be upset and mourn the loss of a project, a part or a gig. The end of a project is merely the end of a project, not the end of the world. The nice thing is that there is always something else out there. It might not be right around the corner, and you may not be ready to hear it, but it is out there. It’s up to you to get yourself collected and get back on the horse. 
I’ll see you out there.

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Filed under actor 101, career, Create with Jenna, learning experience

Syndicated Curtis Update!

The Create Your Life with Jenna site has launched and if you follow any of the links they will take you to the career page where you can read my syndicated blogs!
Also you can follow this link to hear me call into Jenna’s radio show. I’m about 35 minutes in, but her other guests are also excellent and worth a listen.
As long as we’re talking about syndication, go have a look at my fan page to see old episodes of Sabrina: The Teenage Witch with me as Gordie! Links to the streaming episodes are being posted weekly.
Oh, and if you want to watch them on Amazon, why not try a 30 Day Free Trial of Amazon Prime down below?
See you next time!

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Filed under career, shameless self promotion

Actor 101 – Catching the “Bug”

I had a conversation with a marketing client. He asked me, because I’ve been in the entertainment business for a long time, why his niece, who is struggling to make it as an actor, won’t join him part time in his office. The way he sees it, if the whole “acting” thing doesn’t work out, she’ll have a job that can grow into a decent career.

I didn’t know what to tell him.

He commented that actors seem to really hang on to the idea of being actors even if things don’t seem to be working out.

I didn’t know what to say.

Then he waited for me to respond.

I know that I’m not unique in hearing this. Usually when you hear it it’s coming from a relative or authority figure you are close to. Not usually from someone else’s relative where you have no context on the situation and, as I’ve mentioned before, context is important!

I fumbled and flailed for an answer. Since it was completely off topic I tried to just brush it off, but he was persistent. I implied that it’s very hard to give up on a dream; he countered that she isn’t making a living. I asked what she had been working on, he had no clue. It was a circular conversation headed nowhere. I finally finished by telling him that when you catch the acting bug it can be very difficult to shake and that the more he pushes it, the more she’ll likely push back. That must have been what he needed to hear because he was ready to move on after that.

But I thought about that conversation the rest of the day. I didn’t know why it was so hard to give him an answer. I tried to think about why I stuck with it, but I always feel like I’m a bad test case. I “caught the bug” back in kindergarten and was fortunate enough to have a variety of things all fall in my favor:

  • Supportive parents who didn’t mind making the commitment with me.
  • Moving to Southern California at an early age.
  • Beginning a professional acting career as a child and having success right off the bat.
I credit these three things, things that I had no direct control over whatsoever, to me having any kind of career more than any talent I have or persistence I may show. Not everybody is as fortunate. So I thought about it in a more abstract way. There is a trope, almost an archetype, of the hopeless actor who is always ready for the next audition as they get ready for their waitress job. It is a reality, but I’m talking about the way it’s portrayed in movies and TV shows where there’s an unfettered optimism about how they will make it soon, but it will probably be after they deliver that last coffee to table 22.  There are lots of reasons why people want to become an actor, but I believe that when it shows up in its most honest form the only people who are willing to go for it are optimists or natural gamblers. Or both.
There are, of course, lots of lures to becoming an actor: fame, respect, money, attention from the desired sex; all of these reasons, though, usually lead to burn out pretty quickly when/if there isn’t a relatively quick reward. The people who truly stick with it, who have a hard time doing anything else, they require that optimism/gambler mentality. 
It’s not an easy life to be a performer in the United States. As much as the life is praised and desired in the public eye, in private it gets very little respect. It isn’t seen as a “real’ career and too many times the very people you count on for support are the ones who will tell you that you can’t do it. They’re right to be skeptical, if it were easy then EVERYBODY would do it (and sometimes it feels like they are) but if they don’t support your choice it can be very hard to stick to it the way you need to to make it. That last reason alone is why so many working actors in the U.S. are also self-starters and entrepreneurs. It takes a lot of drive to actually make it and “making it’ at even the smallest level can take years. 
But there’s a flip side to that coin: not everyone who really wants it, no matter how much, are going to make it. Some people, most people, will not work enough to support themselves. That is a fact backed up by actual numbers and here are three articles that I found just doing a very basic Google search:
Like I said, the people close to you have a reason to be skeptical, but here’s the thing – it’s worth the shot.
Dreams are dreams for a reason, they are the things we want most that we know are hard to get. A dream career is something that at least has a shot of coming true provided you are willing to do the work. Yes, the numbers are against you, but if you’re an optimist/gambler then that doesn’t matter. Liker Han Solo said, “Never tell me the odds!” If you are an entrepreneur then now is the best time to try your hand at an entertainment career because all the old models are dying and everyone – big studios, small studios and anything that shows video content – is looking for the new way to monetize the work. It’s going to happen, but it’s still very much in the air as to who is going to show the rest of us the way.
So I guess, if he were to ask me again, I still wouldn’t have a great answer to his question but I do understand where she’s coming from and I’m right there with her.
See you next time.

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Filed under acting, actor 101, actor stuff, career, jobs

Chicago & Creativity

Over the weekend Rene and I had the pleasure of visiting Chicago. I delivered the Think Fast seminar at the National Auctioneer’s Association Conference. We had a fantastic time in Chicago, we loved so many things about it, enough for it to be a completely different post later. Today I want to talk about the conference.

The point of the conference is continued education for the benefit auctioneers who attend. They get a chance to brush up on skills and learn new techniques. I was invited to help share improvisation techniques to aid in crowd control and auction flow. We did a series of games designed to keep them from second guessing themselves and to engage the creative centers of their brains. 
These are very personable people with gregarious personalities. They have a performer’s mentality and a salesmen’s drive. They write their own scripts, interact with people constantly and do the job of being both a host and performer.  These are creative people, but many of them had forgotten that. 
When I was first approached about speaking at the conference one of the specifics that was mentioned was to help come up with snappy patter and one-liners. That’s a tough thing to do for other people in a general way. When writing comedy it’s best to write to your subject. General jokes create general results. Specific jokes create specific results, better results. The fact of the matter is that they really didn’t need my help coming up with clever or snappy patter. Every one of the people at that conference has all the ability they need, they just needed the confidence to trust themselves. 
And that’s really the point of it all. So many people forget in the course of what they’re doing that part of why they are doing whatever it is they are doing, they are doing it because they had an idea about it. Something triggered their creativity and got them to where they are at. 
Now I know what some of the more cynical of you are thinking, “What about people in menial jobs? What kind of creativity got them there?” And, ok, I’ll give you that the job itself may not be the end goal, but they got that job for a reason. They needed to pay for something and that job is going to help do that. Everybody has their reasons. And sometimes the motivation can lead down some convoluted paths that distract you from the ultimate goal. All the more reason to get refocused! 
During the exercises you could see the spark light up as they remembered that they already knew how to do this stuff. They brought their own talents out and they got excited! It was really neat to see. Tools are great but seeing people use them, effectively, is always better. 
I think that we can all forget sometimes how to use our talents, at least to their full extent. It’s easy to get caught up using them in certain ways, simple ways. Sometimes you don’t get challenged, worse we don’t always challenge ourselves. Talents are different than skills. Skills are learned, require practice and can fade from lack of use. Talents are innate. The stick around whether we want them or not. Skills can enhance a talent, but skills can never replace a talent. 
I have heard it said, and it makes a nice poetic notion, that when you teach you learn as much as you pass on. I definitely learned some things during the conference. While talking to them I was reminded that I haven’t really been utilizing my talents as much either. It was motivating. I saw what it was like for them to be making a living doing what they love. That was inspiring. And I was pointed to a Facebook group all about grilling and barbecuing. It looks delicious!
So I put it to you, use your talents. They don’t need to make you famous, but they can make a difference, even if that difference is just making you a little bit happier. 
But that’s just me, what do you think? Let’s talk in he comments. 
See you next time!

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Filed under career, Chicago, commentary, consulting, creativity, doing new things, education, getting started, happiness, inspiration

Good Day. Shooting Day. Creative Day.

Today was a good day.

It wasn’t particularly extraordinary, but it was a good day.  

Today was the first day of shooting for “Enter the Wolf”, the show that we sold to Syfy, and Zeke was our man on the set.  I stopped by to check in and everybody, the crew, cast – everybody – were great!  I’m very excited to see how the rest of the week goes.

I was also doing a bunch of scheduling and paperwork for the documentary today.  That’s more of an experience than something that is interesting to write about, but it did take up a good portion of my day.

The thing that made the day truly “good” though was that I felt creative today – still do actually.  I had inspiration to write and images and new ideas popped into my head and I suddenly had a need to be in a book store.  Or a cafe with coffee and cheesecake.  Or a piano lounge in New York.  Or Tokyo.  Some place with atmosphere where I could pop open my Moleskine and jot ideas or a story or build the site map for the re-design of CurtisAndersen.com (which is what I ended up doing).

I have so many ideas flowing through my head that it’s actually hard to concentrate.  I’m listening to the Creative Screenwriting podcast right now so that my brain can focus as I write this.  Still I really want to get the ideas out.

I had a new idea for a novel today.  I’m trying to decide if I want to hand write it or type it.  I should also probably try and find out when I could make the time to write it.

These bouts of inspiration usually come when a win hits, and even though the Syfy show could still implode it’s still a pretty good win!

Today’s picture is of Hollywood & Highland when I was traveling between my two destinations today.  I’m hoping to make it to set again tomorrow so that I can post some behind the scenes pics on the Wiggy Blog tomorrow.

See you tomorrow!

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Filed under business, career, Enter the Wolf, making movies, musings

Getting Things Done!

Today was a really good day. I like to advocate the principals laid out in the book “The War of Art” by Stephen Pressfield. After my divorce I was pretty confused about which way my career was going to go and wasn’t sure what to focus on. My friend Jeff Garvin helped me out quite a bit by recommending the book. All of the ideas in it are pretty straight forward and seem like common sense, but it’s amazing how hard it can be to put them into practice. Today I beat resistance and really got a lot of stuff done! And along with those things came some of the fruits of my labor – which quite literally means labor in the form of jobs and even some possible movie funding on a film that I thought wouldn’t really start getting traction until the summer! I’m not sure that I had much of a point when I started writing. I really just wanted to share my excitement about what is going on and how today went.

Actually there is a point to all of this. I pay a lot of lip service to the idea that you can do what you love and make a living at it. Sometimes that can be a hard idea to defend when I spend a lot of time struggling to make ends meet myself, but today was the sort of day that reminds me that it can and does work out. It just takes that one day to get everything back on track. Sure I might not have a paycheck from it just yet, but I can use the word “yet” and be very confident that it will not change to “won’t.”

OK, I’m going to sleep now (hence the picture) so I can wake up fresh and try to have another day like today tomorrow.

See you then!

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Filed under career, general