William Mapother

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Priests, Priests

Posted on: September 13th, 2013 by wmapother 2 Comments

In the movie Jobs, I portray the calligrapher Robert Palladino,Robert Palladinowho helped cultivate Steve Jobs’ love of calligraphy and beauty in Apple’s products.  Palladino (in pic at right) was a monk while he was teaching at Reed College, then later became a parish priest after his wife died.  The Catholic Sentinel, the paper for the archdiocese of Portland, OR, has a nice article on Palladino and my thoughts on playing him.

As for my own skills in calligraphy, well, let’s just say that an expert would have trouble detecting differences between the handwriting of the present William and the one back in 4th grade…

Posted in Acting, Interviews and Q&A's, Photos of Wm

Film Schools, Oh My!

Posted on: September 13th, 2013 by wmapother No Comments

I’m often asked about which schools offer recognized and respected degrees in filmmaking?  Variety has helpfully provided a list of such schools.  It’s not comprehensive, of course, but it’s not a bad place to start..  Good luck!

Posted in Acting Tips & Info, Film

Advice from a Casting Director

Posted on: September 7th, 2013 by wmapother No Comments

Risa Bramon Garcia didn’t start casting projects yesterday.  Her first IMDb credit is 1985’s somewhat cult classic, Desperately Seeking Susan (starring Madonna, for the unindoctrinated among you). How’s that for starting a career?  On a personal note, I’m still grateful that she cast me in the 2007 pilot Skip Tracer, directed by Stephen Frears (I trust that he needs no introduction.).

She’s written a terrific piece with advice for actors on how to behave in the casting room.  It’s below, and you can alsofind it on her website or on Backstage.

 

21 Things You Can Do to Make A Casting Director Happy in the Audition Room

Casting directors are your advocates and your champions.  Your work reflects on us. Your wonderful work makes us look good and gets that role cast.  Your disconnected, tentative, muddled work does nothing for anyone.  We need you to be great. We’re here to host your experience and shepherd you in, not hold you back.  We want to share in your excellent work.

Casting directors await you on the other side of that door. The door to which you delegate so much power. The door that you can choose to see as a gateway or a barricade.  While you are tempted to turn the entrance into that room into a horror movie, know that it’s actually your stage, not a torture chamber. Whether it’s a pre-read for an associate or a full-blown director/producer callback session, this is your time, your experience. This is your opportunity to do exceptional work.  Enter the space and do the work for yourself, for the gratification of the work itself, and yes, to collaborate with the other creative people waiting to figure it out with you.  Truth: They can’t do it without you.

Here are some choices (and they are choices) to make any Casting Director truly happy in the room:

1. Accept the invitation with grace and enthusiasm; you were requested to be here as our guest.
2. Come in to work and not to please anyone or get our approval.
3. Enter with certainty. Don’t give up your power as soon as the door opens.
4. Play on a level playing field. We’re all figuring it out. Together.
5. Make no excuses whatsoever. Leave your baggage outside. Better yet, in the trunk.
6. Make the room your own. It will make us so much more comfortable.
7. Ask questions only when you truly need answers. “Do you have any questions?” is usually another way of saying: “Are you ready?” You aren’t required to have one.
8. Know your words and understand what you’re talking about. You don’t have to be totally off-book, but if you’ve spent quality time with the material, you’re going to know it. (More on quality time another day!)
9. Do your homework on the project; this includes knowing all the players, the show or film’s tone & style. Read all the material you can get your hands on.
10. Make choices; take responsibility for the choices you make.
11. Don’t apologize. Ever. For anything.
12. Know what you want to do and do it. Then leave yourself available to make discoveries. Know that your homework is done. Now let your preparation meet the moments.
13. Don’t mime or busy yourself with props, activity, or blocking. Keep it simple.
14. Don’t expect to be directed but if you are, take the direction, no matter what it is. Understand how to translate result-oriented direction into action.
15. Don’t blame the reader; “make the reader the star of your audition” (I quote my teaching partner, Steve.) Engage fully no matter who’s reading those lines. Likely your reader, a living, breathing human being, will engage (at least somewhat) if you show up.
16. Make specific, personal, bold choices. We want your unique voice to bring the script to life.
17. Stillness is powerful. Understand how to move and work in front of the camera; eliminate running in and out, getting up and down.
18. Require no stroking, coddling or love. We’re there to work. Don’t take it personally when we’re not touchy-feely. Know that we love actors and that’s truly why we’re here.
19. Understand that you’re there to collaborate. You’re being evaluated in terms of how you serve the role and the material. Any decision is not a verdict on your personhood.  Judgment is something you can control.
20. What you bring in reflects how you’re received so bring in joy, conviction, and ease, and our hearts will open.
21. Share your artistry above all else.
Remember that we’re all human in those rooms and you can affect us on an emotional level. It’s what we all really want. Being fully present, truthful, personal, and vulnerable is going to give us the ammunition we need to champion you with all our hearts.

Believe that we all desperately want you to do great work. We’re rooting for that every time you walk into the room. You show up and do your fullest, deepest work and we’ll slay dragons for you (other than Daenerys’ – Game of Thrones), and follow you anywhere. And man, we’ll be so happy doing it. You have the power to make that happen. For you, for us, for the work. Hallelujah! 

– Risa Bramon Garica

Posted in Acting Tips & Info, Film, TV

Jobs. And Not the Kind You Hate

Posted on: August 15th, 2013 by wmapother No Comments

I have a small, one-scene role in this Friday’s “Jobs,” with Ashton Kutcher. Given the quality of own handwriting, it’s a darn good thing I wasn’t expected to do any of my own writing in the scene. I worked with a calligraphy expert and learned enough to feel awed, humbled…and certain that it’s not in my future. Not in this lifetime, anyway.

Posted in Acting Projects, Film

Mad Men Mad

Posted on: April 27th, 2013 by wmapother 9 Comments

MadMen6-Facebook-Timeline-850x315

 

 

 

 

In anticipation of my guest spot on this week’s episode of Mad Men, below are some Q&A submitted by folks just like you.
Please feel free to submit further questions in the comments.  To left, you can sign up for my (occasional) newsletter.  And I’m on Twitter @williammapother, and on Facebook here.

[Here is AMC’s post-ep summary and wrap-up.]

Q:  Will you be giving out any spoilers in this Q&A?
A:  No, of course not.

Q:  Grrr.  What about at least discussing the –
A:  No, I’m sorry, I’m not even going there.

Q:  Okay, fine.  Whatever.
A:  Sorry, is that a question, or … ?

Q:  Damn, dude, just give me a second, would you?  Okay, Mad Men is very protective/secretive about information on upcoming episodes.  Lost was, too.  Which show’s Powers That Be would you rather face after having given out spoilers?
A:  Probably Lost’s.  As geeks themselves, Damon and Carlton would probably buy the explanation that I got over-excited and overshared.  Matt Weiner, however…  I just had this vision of confronting him in a sort of Mad Matt: Beyond Madison cage, and it involves ritualized disembowelment, humiliation before the secretarial pool, and a very bad wardrobe.  I’ll take the smoke monster and polar bear, thank you very much.

Q:  So what can you tell us about your character?
A:  He’s got two arms, two legs, and speaks English…intelligibly, on occasion.

Q:  That’s hysterical.  Really.  ADD LINKS  But based on your previous characters, does he maybe live in the jungle, or get inhabited by an alien, or munched by a ghost, or mummified and buried by underground creatures in the Old West, or even haul his 800-lb body around in a motorized lounge chair (and here’s a photo, in case you forgot)?
A:  I’m not clear…what’s your point, exactly?

Q:  Oh, I think I made it.  Back to the puffballs:  How did you get the role?
A:  I auditioned.  It was set up by my agent.  I’d gone in once before, but it was a couple years ago, and I don’t recall for which character.  I read for Matt, a casting director, and a few other people.  After the first time through, Matt gave me some good notes to tweak my performance, and I read it again.  I think there was another note or two, and then a third reading.  A day or so later, I heard that I got the role.

Q:  What was Matt like during the audition?
A:  Respectful, smart, focused, funny, specific, and serious about the work.  About what I expected.

Q:  Did you get to read the script for the entire episode?
A:  Once, yes.  A day or so before the ep started shooting, there was a group script reading.  A number of shows do this.  The entire cast, plus some others (execs, production team, etc.), gather in a big room and read the script aloud.  As you can imagine, it’s a good opportunity for everyone to get an overview of the episode and make tweaks as necessary.  For actors new to the show, it also helps bring them into the fold a bit, so they’re more a bit more acclimated when they start to shoot.

Q:  Who knew that you were going to be on the show?  Was it hard to keep it a secret?
A:  Only my agents and manager, and my family.  (I shot in December and had to change my travel plans for the holidays.)  It actually wasn’t difficult to keep it a secret.  MM was emphatic that they expected that, and I’m accustomed to generally keeping quiet about projects until I know I’ve survived post-production.
[Most actors have either experienced or heard horror stories about being cut out. (Back when actual physical film was used, it was called “being left on the editing room floor.”).  A friend was in a movie, and another actor in it flew his family out from the Midwest for the premiere.  He sits down with them, the movie starts, and he’s not in his first scene.  Or his second one.  Or any of them.  The movie ends, and his family was, like, “Where were you?”  The producer/s never told him (forgot?  afraid to?) that his part had been entirely removed…]

Q:  Was it fun to work on the show?
A:  Yes, it was a blast.  Everyone was friendly and welcoming.  And working with a cast and script like MM’s is always a privilege.

Q:  Do you have any ideas or hints about where this season of MM is headed?
A:  Zero.  And if my picks for this year’s NCAA basketball tournament were any indication, you really don’t even want me to guess.

Q:  Your character is planning a trip to a desert island where he’ll be alone.  Because he’s one of your characters, this is not considered unusual behavior.  What are at least five things he takes?
A:   A Native American headdress; the Beatles’ “Magical Mystery Tour”; “How to Lie with Statistics”; the collected works of Aldous Huxley; and his ongoing list of the best and worst things about G. Gordon Liddy.

Q:  WTF?  Thanks for nothing on that last one, man.  Moving on…. Do you have any preference about working in TV or film, big-budget or low-budget?
A:  Not really.  There are benefits to each.  I’ll go to wherever the work is good, or, more specifically, where they’ll hire me.

Q:  So, Mr. Picky, I’m on the other side of the deserted island from your character, and I have nothing to entertain me but all the projects you’ve been involved in (as this Q&A weirdly starts to bend in on itself).  First, though, because it seems more interesting, I count all the grains of sand, then clean my toes with palm fronds, and finally lie back and try to make heart stop through sheer willpower.  Then, with nothing else to do, I decide to watch some of your work.  Where do you suggest I start?
A:  [All links are to Netflix]  Movies:  drama In the Bedroom; sci-fi Another Earth (video & HBO); horror-western The Burrowers; horror The Grudge; sports film Without Limits.  TV:  Lost (11 eps) and Justified (2 eps).  IMDb page.

Q:  Do you ever play characters who aren’t, you know, weird or creepy?
A:  Sure, plenty of times.  Another Earth, FDR: American Badass!, Citizen Gangster, Moola, World Trade Center, The Lather Effect, The Grudge, Without Limits

Q:  Okay, I get it, thanks.  Maybe I’m lucky and packed some movies besides just ones you’re in.  What are some favorites you can recommend which I might not have seen?
A:  Most of these are older…Buster Keaton’s The General and Chaplin’s The Circus.  Cult comedy Withnail and I.  Hitchcock’s sexy thriller Notorious.  The fantastic Shampoo.  Action epic Bridge on the River Kwai.  Screwball comedies His Girl Friday (1940), Nothing Sacred, and The Lady Eve. Some Like It Hot, of course.  Six Degrees of Separation.  More recent:  Wonder Boys; Superbad, and the French drama Dreamlife of Angels.

Q:  What’s coming up for you?
A:  As usual, I’m attached to a few films due to shoot later this year, and I’m waiting to hear back about a couple more.  A few of my indie films are in post-production, and the indie Underdogs was just accepted to Newport Beach Film Festival.

Q:  Anything else about you I should know before I finish this and resume my life?
A:  I co-founded the premiere online film finance marketplace, Slated.com, which connects independent filmmakers with investors worldwide.  I also do voice-overs, write, and invest in/advise start-up companies.  I’m a spokesperson for Elder Abuse Awareness, on the Board of the Community Foundation of Louisville, a co-founder of the Flyover Film Festival, and a member of the Kentucky Film Commission.  I have a B.A. in English from Notre Dame and lose my voice during football season.

Finally, my previous Q&A’s are under the “Interviews..” category, to the left.  And I write occasional posts with information I hope will be helpful to young actors. Those are to the left, too, under “Acting<Acting Tips…”

 

 

 

Posted in Acting Projects, Acting Tips & Info, Favorites, Interviews and Q&A's, News & Events, Press, Recs, TV