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    Back to Martini Shot

    Martini Shot

    Billy Moves In

    Once, I had a show on the air that wasn't doing too well in the ratings. This happens...

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    By Rob Long • Apr 6, 2005 • 4m Listen

    Billy Movies In

    This is Rob Long with Martini Shot on KCRW.

    Once, I had a show on the air that wasn't doing too well in the ratings. This happens.

    But one day, the universal symbol of series success came over the transom in the form of a &quotspec,&quot or sample, script.

    The title of the spec episode was &quotBilly Moves In,&quot which I found odd. There was, to my knowledge, no &quotBilly&quot character on the series. I try to keep up on these things.

    I flipped through the pages. Huge speeches for &quotBilly.&quot Pages and pages of &quotBilly&quot dialogue. &quotBilly&quot this and &quotBilly&quot that.

    Billy, it turns out, is technically a character on our series. He had one line, in episode two. He was a customer in a bookstore. The spec entitled, with alarming stupidity, &quotBilly Moves In,&quot was penned by the actor who played the part. He has taken the bull by the horns. He has written himself a role as a series regular. He thinks, like most actors, that most writers are mildly mentally retarded and will not notice that the &quotBilly&quot actor and the &quotBilly Moves In&quot author are one and the same. Worse, he thinks I will finish his script. I don't.

    The actor who essayed the role of &quotBilly,&quot (one tiny line: &quotDid you like this book, man?&quot) was okay, but he couldn't quite master the requirements of the role of &quotBilly,&quot which were, simply, to say his line in as neutral a tone as possible, and then to move quickly away. The first day of rehearsal he did it perfectly and we laughed, because, after all, we wrote it. The second day of rehearsal, emboldened by his triumph, &quotBilly&quot put a little more spin on the ball and blew it. The third day, he really loaded up the attitude (&quotHey, did you enjoy this book, man?!&quot) and it was time to have a little talk with him. &quotHey, man,&quot I said to him after the run-through, in my best actor-dude dialect, &quotthrow it away, okay?&quot

    He looked at me blankly.

    &quotThrow it away,&quot I said. &quotJust say it. Just say the line straight.&quot

    &quotReally?&quot he asked.

    &quotReally,&quot I answered.

    &quotBut Iim trying to activate my choice.&quot

    I looked at him blankly.

    He clarified: &quotI'm trying to give Billy a little texture.&quot

    &quotWell, don't,&quot I said. &quotJust throw it away.&quot

    When we shot the episode two days later, he was a lot better. But still never as good as he was that first day, before he started acting. Later, I am on the phone with my agent, and I mention the spec script and the day player. ME

    (winding up)

    And that just proves what I've always said.

    Actors are crazy. Completely out of touch

    with reality. Easy to flatter, easy to manipulate,

    impossible to treat as equals.

    • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

      Rob Long

      Host, 'Martini Shot'

      CultureArts
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