‘Part One: Have script, will travel’
Remember ‘Rosemary’s Baby?’ Of course you do. Remember that scene where Roman and Minnie Castevet, Rosemary’s creepy-nice Dakota neighbors who are really (spoiler alert!) witches, invite Rosemary and Guy over for cocktails?
Well, Roman (nice naming job there, Roman Polanski) gets to talking about his travels: ‘Name a place! Go ahead, any place.’
So Guy gamely goes, ‘Dubrovnik (or someplace like that)’ To which Roman says ‘Ah, Dubrovnik! Wonderful place. I’ve been there.’
Well, hah! Name a place, and chances are not only have I been there, I didn’t spend a dime of my own money to go. In fact, I was paid to go there!
Welcome to yet another wonderful thing about the wonderful world of advertising. At least, when I was in it. We used to travel all over the darned world shooting commercials. Everywhere!
And it didn’t have to be a glamorous product to shoot in a glamorous place. It was (big surprise) all about money. If it was cheaper to shoot in Paris, well, we shot J & J skincare in goldarned Paris. You didn’t even have to write the Eiffel Tower into the script. In fact, my very first foreign ‘location’ was a studio in London where we shot a bowl of frosting being made with Hershey’s Cocoa. That bowl could have been in Detroit. But it wasn’t; Detroit was too expensive.
So, in addition to the aforementioned London, I got to go to places like Milan (for Dentu-Creme, honest), Australia (Kimberly-Clark), and South Africa (where the pic at the top of this post was taken; Huggies Diapers). I’ve also been to scads of exotic domestic hotspots like Flagstaff, Pasadena, the Mojave Desert, Upstate New York and suburban New Jersey.
One time The Dude and I were on the way to a cousin’s ranch somewhere high up in the High Sierra. We were smack-dab in the middle of nowhere when I go ‘Oh wow, I know that gas station. I shot a commercial there.’
You can bet I’ve got some stories about those shoots, no matter where they were. Here’s one that happened when we were shooting in Paris (that J & J skincare brand I mentioned). It was a ten-day production with a huge budget, dozens of gorgeous models from around the world, and a nice-but-newbie client. The very first shoot day, we pulled up to the Bois de Boulogne, where dozens of vans and trucks were parked, huge arc lights were blazing, and scores of people were milling about with bullhorns and wardrobe racks and the like. And the client goes ‘Oh look! Somebody’s shooting a movie!’ We go ‘You are, David.’ Poor David. I thought he’d choke on his baguette.
Of course I’ve got more. (Just wait till you hear about the Mojave Desert—that one’s getting its very own post.) But here’s what happened at that gas station. It was a kind of ‘rest stop’ with a diner and a sort of ‘no-tell motel’. (We swore that Room 4 was a crack den.)
We were just ‘wrapping’ (finishing) when this PA (‘Production Assistant’: someone, usually young, who gets paid practically zilch to do thankless errands in return for being able to say he/she was a PA) directed our attention to a curtain right behind the banquettes where we’d been shooting. He parts the curtain to reveal a room literally crawling with snakes. It was glassed-in, but still.
That meant that, mere inches from where our actors had been fake-eating in a kitschy red leatherette booth were hundreds of snakes. It’s a wonder the hissing didn’t mess up our sync-sound.
I’m going to end this with a pretty good New Jersey Shoot Story. (More shoot stories, including The One About the Jellyfish in Australia and The One About the Transgender Teamster in LA, will coming soon, or whenever I feel like it, in Part Two.)
Anyway, New Jersey. When you see a commercial that’s set in a nice normal house, chances are that house is in New Jersey. (Unless you are seeing a green lawn around that house and it’s wintertime. Then the house is in California.) In fact, the same houses tend to get used over and over. Pay attention, and you’ll notice this. Anyway. We were at The New Jersey House for, probably, a cereal commercial.
Now here’s the thing about shooting at a house. Unless you’re part of the actual crew, you don’t get to go into the house. Not for meals. (There’s a truck that comes, promptly, for breakfast and lunch. Sometimes even dinner.) Not for snacks. (There’s a table for ‘craft services’: basically all the junk food on the Planet Earth, plus some fruit.) Not even to go to the bathroom. No, you get to go into the production trailer that’s set up in the driveway of the house.
So. One morning, we’re all sitting around in our directors’ chairs outside The New Jersey House. It’s the Team (producer, writer, art director), plus the account guy and the client. We’re sipping coffee and whatnot when the client grabs the New York Times and heads into the trailer.
A couple of minutes go by, and we notice a trail of something trickling down the driveway. A horrified (and probably soon to be ‘ex’) PA rushes over and makes the mess disappear. Turns out he’d forgotten to hook up the trailer’s toilet.
Pretty soon the client came out of the trailer, whistling a happy tune, still clutching his newspaper. Thank goodness he never found out. Unless, of course, he reads my stories.
To be continued. But if you just can’t wait, you can indeed check out that story about the messed-up sound on the Country Time Shoot (peacocks and rain were involved) in ‘The Most Fun You Can Have With Your Clothes On’. And here’s another good one about a shoot in Upstate New York, called ‘Old MacDonald Had a Silo.’ Oh, and about those snakes. Read ‘Year of the Snake’ to see how, in an alternate universe, The Child would not have existed.
Amagansett, New York. June 2015
Somehow those snakes don’t surprise me too much – there are so many weird and amazing things out there. I guess you have to make your own entertainment and others when visitors are few. The trailer story – I would have been laughing so hard I would have had to go before the toilet was hooked up. Thanks, Alice.
Hey, thanks Judy! Yup. Many times truth is stranger than fiction (like the trailer tale). I just write this stuff down (after I’m done laughing, that is) xoxoxo
Well, my trips to Phoenix and Richmond for insurance conventions just seem dull now. Hmmm, scratch that…they were dull then, too. 😉 What amazing opportunities you had, and how great that you realize the opportunities for what they were. The snakes, though…just the thought sends terror chills up my spine!
Hey there! Just remember: any trips paid for by one’s employer are good trips! Even if they are dull, they are, um, free. Just kidding. Thank you for reading, and commenting, and for being another person who, um, fails to see the fabulousness of snakes!
stephanie?
You mean, was Stephanie the account person?
no stephanie, the transgender 6′ 5″ sound guy, that was becoming a woman so he could be with his wife because she realized that she was a lesbian.
Oh, wow! Thanks, Sande! I remember that guy/gal/person SO well. But had completely blanked on the name. I may have to write that bit up as a post by itself (!)
Hit it out of the park again! [metaphorically speaking!!!]
Thanks for your completely unbiased comment, Mom! xoxo
Visiting in Brazil, our local friend invited us over for drinks and “snakes”! Very tasty 🙂
Love your blog!
My my my. I’m not even going to ask what the heck those “snakes” were. But I bet someone told you they taste “just like chicken”. I swear, the only thing I eat that tastes “just like chicken” is … chicken. Thanks for reading, Susan. So glad you enjoy it!
Alice, I sometimes ponder…were the (free) trips to Paris better than the (free) trips to Anywhere In Italy? So much wine, so much good food… too hard to decide. Life’s such a bitch.
Ah, Adrian. Yes. Waaaay too hard to decide! I’m calling it a draw. Though I even had fun in the Mojave Desert (!)
And I thought -every- commercial was shot in Petaluma – a town that can be made to look like anywhere/everywhere if you fill the frame the right way.
Take it from me…
Yes, George. Especially when you want to fill the frame with Graffiti (!)
Great stories. Poop stories are always hilarious 😀
Thanks, StomperDad! Glad you enjoyed the stories. I almost left out the poop tale. But some part of me realized that the scatalogical and advertising are made for each other!
Advertising can be a pretty sh—y job, if I learned anything from Mad Men…
I couldn’t have said it better, AdamJasonP! Though I must say that I had a great time. A much better time than those MadMen Guys (and Gals) seemed to be having (!)
Truth is often better than fiction…when it comes to actually living it.
So true, AdamJasonP! So true.
Very familiar with the “NJ house” concept-= the house across the street from me has had several shoots. Fortunately I have a very big front yard and have been known to “host” the “commissary” – a nicely lucrative venture! Thank goodness that trailer has never been part of the deal. Yet.
Thanks, Janet! So you’re the one who lives across the street from The New Jersey House. I love that you have ‘hosted’ the ‘commissary’. You are smart to have passed on the trailer(!)