Taking Advantage of a “Career Lull”: Using My Words

What do I have in common with Steve Martin, Tina Fey, James Franco, and Andrew McCarthy? We’re actors who are also writers. You read that correctly, Andrew McCarthy is, in fact, a writer. He’s an award-winning travel writer. Check out some of his stuff on National Geographic Traveler. Now, I’m not talking about actors who all of the sudden want to “write” their memoirs, and get a ghost writer to do it for them. I’m talking about people with actual skills, who do their own writing. As a matter of fact, Tina Fey and Steve Martin actually STARTED OUT as WRITERS. I’m guessing they did it while they were pursuing acting as well, due to the fact that they are in both realms of the industry. Granted, there are those actors who have also written screenplays or stage plays, and blogs,  but that’s a different type of article all together.

I started acting when I was around the age of 8, maybe 9.  But I started making up stories as soon as I could talk. I even had an imaginary friend when I was 5 who I would tell my stories to. Her name was Jinglelyn, and again, I was 5. When I actually learned to read and write, writing took a back seat to performing onstage. I had found my passion for storytelling on stage. And I loved it. It’s my first love. Telling stories, no matter what shape or form, is what I love.

What I find funny now, is the fact that my parents kept giving me journals on my birthdays or Christmas, and I never really used them. I wasn’t really a “dear diary” type of girl anyways. It seemed sort of silly to recount my day on paper. I started writing short stories and plays, and when I got to high school, I helped start up the creative writing club at my all-girls, Catholic high school. I wrote stories, parts of novels I was working on, and seriously wanted to become a writer and an actor when I grew up. I was involved in anything creative. I sang in choirs, acted in the school plays and wrote stories. My English teacher even gave me a writing award my junior year of high school.  When I got to college, I majored in English because I love the element of story-telling, plot and characters. I thought it would help in the acting realm because I was able to learn about the different things that make up a good story. It was sort of like four years of script-analysis. I acted throughout college, even directed. My senior year of college, I got my first headshots and auditioned at my first major theater convention, which led to moving to NYC to study at Circle in the Square Theater School.

Within these past six years, I have been acting and putting writing on the back burner. I got my union cards and even pursued stand-up.  The closest I came to writing, before starting this blog, was stand-up comedy, which I still love because you can create your own material.  I started this blog because I wanted to get back into writing, and I wanted to write something from the perspective of an actor who was going through the ups and downs in their career. Not someone who is washed-up and giving advice. I’m still in the trenches and being in a  career “lull,” I have been writing about what I love. Movies I love, movies I loathe, anything and everything that has to do with the industry, with a unique perspective. It seems like I’m in good company of those who came before me. If you use all of your talents, it can lead to something. What that is, I don’t know. But I am pursuing my writing and my acting. So I guess I can add a back-slash to my job description. I’m a writer/actor. And I’m so glad you are reading my blog. Thanks.

Two By Two: “The Great Gatsby” Mia Farrow & Mira Sorvino

Mia Farrow as Daisy Buchanan in “The Great Gatsby” (1974)
Mira Sorvino as Daisy Buchanan in “The Great Gatsby” (2000)

This article was inspired by the fact that the movie posters for each of these films has the same font type. That, and the fact that my boyfriend was wearing a shirt bearing the cover art of the famed book, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald today. The iconic American novel has been adapted for the screen six times, including the soon-to-be Baz Luhrmann interpretation, set to be released this May. The first adaptation was a silent film in 1926, followed by the 1949 version starring Shelley Winters, and the most famous version, the 1974 film starring Robert Redford, Sam Waterston, Karen Black and Mia Farrow, with a screenplay by Francis Ford Coppola . The 1974 version won numerous awards, including: 2 Oscars, 3 BAFTAs, and a Golden Globe. Then, there is the 2000 television film version which aired on A&E, starring Mira Sorvino, Paul Rudd and Toby Stevens (Maggie Smith’s son) which, sadly, won no accolades. The reason was probably because, along with the script, the performances seemed like carbon copies of the ones that came before it.

Not only that, but the vocal characteristics for each are nearly identical. However, that may be due to the source material that F. Scott Fitzgerald provides. Source material, for us actors, is very important because it can tell us details about the characters that would otherwise be made up. Fitzgerald describes Daisy’s voice as, “breathless” and that her voice is “full of money.” This tells the actor how to perform the role to such an extent that some performances might seem similar, if not identical. Fitzgerald was extremely specific with how he wanted his characters to be perceived by readers. I am eager to see how Carey Mulligan interprets this famous role in Baz Luhrmann’s version.

I was unable to embed the video from the 2000 version, but you can click on the link and watch it here. For easier viewing, you might want to fast forward the video and start it at 3:27 or so, just get to the part with Daisy.

I was, however, able to include a  scene from the 1974 version:

In each clip, you can see that the vocal qualities of Daisy are nearly identical. Below is the trailer for the  updated film version starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Gatsby, Toby McGuire as Nick, and Carey Mulligan as Daisy. You’ll also notice in her exclamation of  the line, “Gatsby? What Gatsby?” is equally as similar as the previous two.

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s specificity with his character descriptions  led actors Mira Sorvino, Mia Farrow (and now, Carey Mulligan,) to interpret Daisy in similar ways. Not all acting is about creating. Sometimes, we just have to be the vessels for the director’s vision and the interpreters of an author’s description. In the end, they may turn out similar. That’s alright. It’s hard to interpret F. Scott Fitzgerald anyways, never mind adding a screenplay to the mix.

Two By Two: Time Travel Edition (Somewhere in Time & Peggy Sue Got Married)

I could have gone the typical route in comparing time travel movies and done this with Back to the Future and something else; however, I think the comparison between these two movies is an interesting one.  Somewhere in Time deals with a man who deliberately tries to go back in time and use time travel to his advantage, whereas Peggy Sue Got Married follows the outline of someone who ends up back in time within their own lifetime.

See each trailer:

Peggy Sue Got Married deals with something that everyone has probably had a dream about at one point in their lives or another. What if we mistakenly ended up back in time within our own lifetimes and could have a “do-over?” Quantum Leap took this concept and ran with it for five seasons of successful television.

In 1986, Francis Ford Coppola employed his daughter Sofia, his nephew Nicholas Cage, a young Helen Hunt, and relative newcomer Jim Carrey, in this film carried by Kathleen Turner in the title role as Peggy Sue. Like Somewhere in Time Peggy Sue Got Married has a main character has a protagonist who reveals information about future events  much to the confusion of those around them. Peggy’s life hasn’t exactly gone the way she’d thought, so this second chance, at first, seems perfect. Then, like all time travelers before her, she wants to go home again.

Just look at Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz. Much like Oz, Peggy Sue Got Married borrows some plot elements from the cinema classic. Although there is no wicked witch tracking her down, there is a ceremony performed by her grandfather that is reminiscent of the Wizard character himself. And probably due to the success of the 80s classic, Back to the Future, Doc Brown could be a prototype for Peggy Sue‘s resident genius, Richard Norvik. And in the end,Peggy Sue’s time travel was due to a heart attack, a slightly harsher injury than Dorothy’s fainting spell in Oz, yet each end up home again safe and sound.

The goal to end up back where you came from is not the main element in Somewhere in Time though. Even with Christopher Reeve’s handsome leading man being thrust back into the future, it has much more tragic end. SPOILER ALERT: He dies. Yet, Somewhere in Time has probably influenced countless movies that came after it (Titanic for starters,) and like Oz, has a protagonist thrust into circumstances of uncertainty with people who are unfamiliar. The resident wicked witch of it all, Christopher Plummer, doing his best domineering manager/love interest (?) of the early 1900s. Jane Seymour, in a pre-Dr. Quinn role, stars alongside Reeve as prominent stage actress Elise McKenna, who dies after seeing a play that writer Richard Collier (Reeves) produced. The older version of Elise McKenna melodramatically begs Reeve’s character to “Come back [to me.]”As fate would have it, Collier deliberately uses self-hypnosis to travel back in time to find the young Elise McKenna, fall in love with her and live happily ever after. That is until a brand new shiny penny screws up the whole “Happily Ever After” thing.

What I find most interesting about a movie like Somewhere in Time, is not necessarily the love element, but the amount of preparation and deliberate efforts on part of the main character to actually GO back in time with a specific purpose. Unlike something like Back to the Future where the characters wanted to see if time travel was possible, Somewhere in Time goes back in time with a very very specific purpose of staying there. The character of Richard takes the necessary steps needed to take care of his affairs in the present even before venturing into the past. He buys a suit that is of the time period he wants to be a part of. He even consults a former professor from college to make sure that something like time travel IS possible. Both Peggy Sue Got Married and Somewhere in Time make an effort with their scripts and pose the question of whether or not time travel is even possible in this day and age.

The main goal of Somewhere in Time is to find a specific person, make the lead characters fall in love despite enormous circumstances and throw a wrench in the whole big picture at the end. Mission accomplished. The “wrench” however, is a little disappointing though. I mean, Richard takes every precaution to assure that what he has on his person when he goes back is of the era…and leave it to a penny from the future to screw things up. However, just like Peggy Sue Got Married, this movie also has their resident Wizard in the form of an elderly man who grew up at the Inn where the story takes place. The only difference is that instead of helping the main character get back to where they came from, he’s helping the main character go back in time and stay there for good. Despite the fact that this movie is very very melodramatic, it is well done. The score (which I ended up studying in a college music class) is one of the romantic ones of all time.

The sad part about this movie comes about when time literally gets in the way of the love that the main characters have for each other and the only way they’ll be together again is in heaven. I swear, James Cameron borrowed from Somewhere in Time, especially at the end. Titanic and Somewhere in Time are so similar, that Christopher Plummer and Billy Zane each play characters who are nearly identical to one another. Both are controlling, manipulative,  threatened by the outsider, and have their lovely ladies whisked away by the charming leading man.

All in all, see these movies. Time travel movies can be fun and make us realize how lucky we are to be living in the present moment with the people in our lives. They add a bit of fantasy and tragedy to our viewing experience. Let’s be honest while we’re at it…we’d all love to fall in love with Christopher Reeve or play dress up like Kathleen Turner for the day. With these movies, you can. They’re enjoyable and available on Netflix. Rent them and go back in time for yourself.