William Mapother

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Drat!…But well done, I have to say.

Posted on: March 5th, 2012 by wmapother No Comments

A potential builder of a film finance marketplace recently stumbled on Slated. He wasn’t thrilled we’d gotten there first, but in his post Sam Links was very gracious and intelligent and complimentary about the whole thing.

I’ve written some FAQ about Slated, for those who are wondering what’s the hubbub, bub.

Snow + Slated = CNBC

Posted on: March 1st, 2012 by wmapother 1 Comment

CNBC Business has a great piece on how Slated is transforming film finance.
I’ve written some FAQs about Slated  and how it works.

Bonus:  There’s a photo of my feloow co-founders with big chessy grins up at Sundance this year.

‘Scuzzball verisimilitude’

Posted on: February 22nd, 2012 by wmapother No Comments

That’s the high praise from TV Guide’s piece on my Justified ep.  They tossed out that bone
right after noting that I’m a Kentucky native.  Hmmm.

Television Without Pity tossed me their bone of the ‘Lost Alumnus of the Week’ for the same ep.

I am awash in glory.

OK! from AICN

Posted on: February 21st, 2012 by wmapother No Comments

Ain’t It Cool News loooooves my upcoming episode of Justified. (Set in Harlan, KY, ‘natch.)
Sounds as if, y’all, that they had almost as much fun watching it as I did shooting it.  Almost.

How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall?

Posted on: February 18th, 2012 by wmapother 2 Comments

Practice, goes the old joke.  Whatever humor you find in that dies pretty quickly as you’re struggling to think of your next line.  Or worse, when you’re leaving the office/set berating yourself because you didn’t put in more prep time.  So, I have a suggested solution.  It can’t prevent the self-recrimination (for that, maybe skip Catholic school in your next life?), but it probably will be of help with the practice.

It’s called Rehearsal.  No, I’m not being a smart ass.  Yes, rehearsing will of course help, but finding friends to help you rehearse for an audition/job you have, which is, simultaneously, an audition/job that they wish they had, isn’t always easy.

Enter Rehearsal 2, the app, available in iTunes for iPhone and iPad.  It makes memorizing your lines so much easier.  Among its features:  you can audio record and play back the whole scene, so that you’re receiving your cues audibly, not just reading them off the page.  You can make audio and video notes, highlight your lines, and even submit voice-over auditions.  Basically, it’s a stress-reducer, and who among us doesn’t need that?

It was developed by actor David H. Lawrence XVII, who built it for someone just like himself.  And he’s great about adding new features and keeping it updated.  I’ve recommended it to several friends, all of whom now swear by it.  To me, it’s been worth every penny.

[This is another in a continuing series of potentially helpful, hopefully practical posts to actors on practicing their craft or surviving the trying.  I bear no responsibility for how this or any of my posts might ruin your life, lead you to law school, or make your parents sick with worry.  For more of the same, click the ‘Info to Actors’ category at left.]