William Mapother

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Work Begets Work

Posted on: March 31st, 2012 by wmapother 4 Comments

(Another in a series of posts to actors.  For more check out the ‘Info to Actors’ category at left.)

When we’re growing up we’re subjected, for better or worse, to our parents’ musical taste.

(Oh, how I don’t miss the colossal 8-track.)  For me that meant 50s rock-n-roll from my dad, and great songwriters from my mom.  One of my mom’s favorites was the 50s jaunty folk trio The Kingston Trio.  (You can hear strains of their style in early Bob Dylan).

I remember many of their songs, but one in particular has stayed with me. ‘Desert Pete‘ tells about a pump in the desert and a note left there, with instructions for users to leave a jar of water for the next visitor, so he can use it to prime the pump.  It’s vaguely socialistic, if you’re sensitive to that sort of thing, but the message is good:  “You’ve got to prime the pump, you must have faith and believe, You’ve got to give of yourself ‘fore you’re worthy to receive.”

I’m going to co-opt that message and make it, as so many actors do, about myself.  (Or you, in this case.) Here it is:  Work begets work.  Jobs almost never come from nowhere.  You must build some momentum to them. You first have got to prime the pump, as it were. Take small, non-paying, non-glamorous jobs.  If you’re attentive and determined to learn, they’ll be a reward unto themselves. But they’re also the path to bigger and better jobs, even if you can’t see how while you’re suffering for free.

I’ve lost track of many times this strategy has paid off for me.  A few years ago I went to NYC for the summer to participate in the Public Theatre’s Shakespeare Lab.  It was a great opportunity, but it was also for no pay and no guarantee to ever appear in one of their prestigious productions. While in NYC, though, I arranged some general meetings with casting directors, and one of those turned into my role in Another Earth.

More recently, I read for a small indie that I wasn’t sure I was right for, but the casting director remembered me the following week and put me in a web series for the new content YouTube is commissioning for itself.

Several years ago I did a tiny indie for almost no money, and that led to voice work on a couple eps of Robot Chicken.  And a weekly writers/actors cooperative (i.e., non-paid) lab that I’m a member of led to a few webisodes of I <3 Vampires. Finally, doing a little computer tutoring for someone back in 2003 led my getting a role in The Grudge.

And I have even touched on how many times I’ve been rehired by the same people, or by people whom I met when I was working, or people who saw work I did for little or no money.  Working = keeping yourself busy, meeting new people, learning lessons about yourself and others, developing skills that might be called upon, perhaps practicing your craft or getting tape for your reel, and a hundred other benefits.

The bottom line:  Whether it’s acting in a short film, working on a webisode in some capacity, making short films on your iPhone just for the hell of it, writing a script to see what’s that like, or even something as apparently unrelated as helping a neighbor rebuild his shed, getting involved and producing work of any sort pays off.  Even if at the time you can’t possibly imagine how.  Just get yourself out there.  Give of yourself before you’re worthy to receive.

Peter O’Brien, a longtime friend and a very good writer, suggested that many of my ‘Info to Actors’ posts apply to younger writers as well.  I wouldn’t presume, but…well, thank you, Peter.

[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.]

Posted in Acting, Acting Tips & Info, Film, Music, Video (Online & Home)

Culture Made Easy

Posted on: December 2nd, 2011 by wmapother No Comments

Suggestion for actors #2,317:  Sign up for email newsletters of your local museums and cultural centers.
Among the many advantages:

•  They often have free events.
•  They’re a great opportunity to make contacts with writers and directors (It was at a reading by Adam Gopnick at LA’s Skirball that I met the NYC director who led me to NYC’s Public Theatre’s Shakespeare Lab which led me to the casting director who thought of me for Another Earth (more on that some other time.  You get the idea.)
•   The events are good to go with a date.  Or someone you want to be a date.
•  Pt. 2 of the line above:  They’re a good place to make contact with a date.
•  Did I mention that some of the events are free?
•  Filmmakers love it when actors see classic movies.  Such as those shown at museum.
•  You don’t have to trust yourself and/or take the time to view their websites.  Actors like it to be easy, right?

Some in L.A. to get you started:
Skirball
LACMA
Hammer
Getty

[This has been another in a continuing series of potentially helpful, hopefully commonsensical information to actors on practicing their craft or surviving while trying to do so.  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 suggestions to actors, click the ‘Info to Actors’ category at left.

Posted in Acting Tips & Info, Los Angeles, NYC, Recs

Back from the Non-Dead, only to…

Posted on: February 1st, 2010 by wmapother 1 Comment

My, my, my. Five months just doesn’t take as long to slip by as it used to, does it? Well, no use blaming Mother Earth and Father Time for this one. Mea culpa, big time. My apologies for the absence — but those aliens just wouldn’t bring me back, no matter what I said. Okay, enough tomfoolery. Lost, er, Lots to catch up on.

So, after finishing the Shakespeare Lab in NYC, I narrated The New Sudan, a documentary on Southern Sudan’s work at rebuilding after the twenty-year civil war. It will soon begin the circuit of film festivals. The trailer is here.
Then I shot an indie film, Another Earth, in the gorgeous Catskills of New York state. It’s a romantic drama/sci-fi. That will also soon be making the festival rounds.
November found me in Vancouver, another beautiful location. (It’s a tough job, I know..). This time I was shooting an episode (called ‘Sanctuary’) of Fox’s new show Human Target, which airs THIS Wed, Feb 3, at 8pm. (Gold stars to those who guessed that might have something to do with my finally returning to my blog..) If you miss the airing, you can see it on Hulu by clicking here.
Then, in December, I was back in NYC to shoot an episode of Law and Order: Criminal Intent. (which should air in March/April). NYC in December with the holidays lights and the smiling shoppers…Autumn been berry berry good to me.
That’s enough for the first post in five months. I didn’t stretch properly, and I don’t want an injury after so long away. More to come soon!
Posted in Acting Projects, Film, News & Events, NYC, Other Photos, Stage, TV, Voice

A SAD AND MERRY MADNESS

Posted on: August 2nd, 2009 by wmapother 13 Comments


My time with the Public’s Theatre’s Shakespeare Lab (see earlier post) is drawing to a close, unfortunately. We’ve finished classes and rehearsed our show, A Sad and Merry Madness. This week we present the show around the five boroughs of NYC, and we conclude our performances next weekend in the Hamptons with a fundraiser for the Public Theatre, hosted by Alec Baldwin. Details are here and here!

Posted in In Person (or, like, Live), NYC, Photos of Wm, Stage

O, What a Rogue and Putting-Off Slack Am I

Posted on: July 10th, 2009 by wmapother 4 Comments

Please forgive the tardiness of this post. In faith, I have a good reason: a head full o’ Bard. In mid-June I began the intensive Shakespeare Lab at NYC’s Public Theatre.

Basically, it’s eight weeks of the Man from Avon, from soup to nuts. Twelve of us (and I’m in very good company) are given a variety of Shakespeare-centered classes in everything from Acting to Voice. The facultyis remarkable.

It’s been everything I hoped for and more. One of the difficulties of being an actor is how little time is actually spent acting. (Most working actors I know feel that their real job is looking for a acting job.) We do it because we love it, and then we don’t get a chance to do it. And when we do get the chance, although we’re generally grateful for the work, it’s often not challenging.
The challenge is part of what appealed to me about the Lab, and boy, has it delivered, both in the amount and nature of the work. And, of course, the text itself. I’ve read Shakespeare in college as an English major and then for pleasure, but playing it is something else entirely.
The complexity of the thoughts, language, and situations, to say nothing of the requirements of the verse itself, demand everything from the performer. (Only four weeks in, and I’m already holding forth like a veteran. Dang.) I’ll just say this: Attending the Lab is one of the best decisions I’ve made in some time (not, some would assert, that that sets the bar very high..).
We finish the Lab with some performances around NYC August 1-9. The show will be a mixture of scenes, sonnets, and maybe some Elizabethan dancing and singing (no, not even this faculty can teach me to sing). For those in the area and interested, the dates and locations are on the blog’s calendar. (To be sure the place, date, time hasn’t changed, before attending please be sure to call the Public Theatre: 212-539-8500.)
Fare thee well!
Posted in Acting Tips & Info, In Person (or, like, Live), NYC, Stage