So, I’m still trying to watch the Tonys. It was now time to move
into the bedroom to watch the show from there. All that Social Media
twittering for the lost dog was exhausting!
It was 8:52 when the first email came thru on my iPad. Bong!
Subject line: “IMPASSE CASTING EMERGENCY!” It seems that my
buddy, Jeanne Veillette Bowerman was having a huge problem. The lead actress for her short film IMPASSE was having a
family emergency and had to bow out. Eeek. We hate those kinds of phone calls.
You feel SO bad for the person on the other end of the line – your heart goes
out to them – and at the same time your heart starts pumping wildly in your
chest because you know you’ve built your whole film concept around casting
them.
I met Jeanne at the #140 Conference in NYC last Summer. It’s
a fabulous conference curated by the amazing Jeff Pulver. I say “curated”
because that’s his word. He’s the producer of the conference which is a
gathering of people from all over the world, all walks of life, who come and
give a speech about how they use social media in their work and in their lives.
Pulver hand-picks everyone who
speaks. Last year there was Ann Curry, Mayor Cory Booker, Deepak Chopra….and
me! It was my first
speech ever and I was so excited and so friggin’ nervous! Here it is if you
want to see it. My main goal was to try to stay in my body, not hide behind the
podium, and walk to the center of the stage and just tell my story. My friends
tell me I accomplished all three of these things! (big thanks to my coach,
Jeffrey Marcus!)
Anyway, back to Jeanne. We met at the conference and became
Twitter buddies. It’s an odd relationship in that we don’t really know each
other, but if you’re a avid Twitterer you can follow a person’s life and
see how they think by what they’re talking about. Jeanne is a writer and was working out of her “Panera
office” (that’s what she calls it) on a cold and rainy day when she noticed a
young couple start to have a fight. They took it outside in the parking lot and
she couldn’t hear them and all she could see was their body language. So what
does a good little Twitterer do? She tweeted the whole fight. She gave a play-by-play
of the whole thing as she imagined what they were saying to each other. By the
end of the whole exchange she had a spark of an idea. She immediately started
writing what became a short film called IMPASSE – inspired by the scene she had
witnessed in the parking lot. Then she set about finding a director and called
her friend Michael Bekemeyer. Using Kickstarter, they raised $15,680 (their goal was $12,500!!) and got all their ducks in a row to shoot it in Orlando, Florida.
They even cast the film using their social media connections and Twitter
buddies. John T. Woods and Wonder Russell are starring.
Cut back to me in bed trying to watch the Tonys with my
iPad blowing up with emails. Jeanne pleaded, “Is it possible at all to get your help
casting the role of Alice? I'm happy to pay you for your services. I’m in a bit of a pickle. We'll lose
thousands of dollars if we have to delay the shoot.”
Of course I’ll help! I immediately read her wonderful script and
thought of my friend, actress Jennifer Fontaine. We met a couple of years ago
on Facebook. As you can imagine,
as a casting director, I get hit on by actors every day. Since I like to keep
my private life private, I divert them to my “like” page (which was called a
“fan” page when I first set it up! I’m sure they’ll be calling it something
else next month!). The conversation went like this after the friend request
came in:
Me: ?? Sorry, do I know you?
Jennifer: err...no. I was hoping to introduce you to me . I'm
an actor and filmmaker and was just trying to add strong female role models to
my network. The work you do inspires me to continue and I hope to do the same
for someone else down the road. Have a great night! sincerely, Jennifer
Fontaine
Me: You had me at "strong female role models!!”
So I checked out her site and indeed she was a talented
filmmaker and actress so I clicked “accept”. We’ve almost worked together a couple of times – but not quite - until now! Jen was the first
person I thought of for this role.
As this is a short film with a very low budget (read= almost
non-existent but not quite Monopoly money) I knew I couldn’t go through the
normal channels and go through my star list to come up with a viable choice. Not
to say that Jen hasn’t done her fair share of great work, believe me she
has, but I knew it would take a very special actress to leave her husband and
toddler at home to go off and do a short film across the country.
I sent off the link to her reel to Jeanne and crossed my
fingers. I’ve been in this position hundreds of times when I think I’ve got the
perfect person for a role, and the producer and director have me start the
great Easter Egg Hunt From Hell and see hundreds of people – and then we come
back to the actor I was touting two months earlier….only to find they’ve are
unavailable by the time we circle back around! This time I got almost an
immediate response that Jeanne loves Jen and will send the link on to her
director Bekemeyer. I suggested that if they are both interested they can Skype with her
on Monday morning and they can all get a feel as to whether they’re on the same
page. In the meantime, I sent an email to Jen to see if she’s even
available! No sense getting everyone all hot and bothered if she’s off on a
vacation! That was around 10pm. I figured she’d check her email and get back to
me. I kept checking throughout the night until I finally went to bed. During the
night I start thinking of back-ups for our back-up!
Next morning I hear from Jen that she’s available and
interested. They have a Skype meeting and everybody’s happy and they’re off to
the races.
Mind you - all this happened while I was in bed with my iPad trying to watch the Tonys. Thanks to my boyfriend, TiVo, it's all recorded and I can go back today and actually watch it for real!
Here's Jeanne's blog about the status of IMPASSE along with Wonder Russell's brave journey.
We wish them all kinds of love and strength.
I welcome your comments.
Glad you're here - Marci

Marci, you are a casting rock star!!!!! Truly, I cannot thank you enough! How odd the Twitterverse is, as once Jen and I started Skyping, we realized not only did we already follow each other on Twitter, but she had retweeted our Kickstarter campaign to help us meet our goal. Small world.
ReplyDeleteThen the world got smaller, when I email introduced her to John T. Woods. It turns out when John originally moved to L.A. in 2002, he worked at a Starbucks where Jen's husband (and photographer), Kerem Hanci, was the assistant manager... and took John's very first headshots. God, I love serendipity.
So, I thank you again, Marci, and welcome the amazing Jennifer Fontaine to our IMPASSE family. We are blessed.
Small world indeed Jeanne! What an amazing connection all these people have. So glad you called me - and so glad to help! Now go out and make a great movie!
DeleteHoly merde, Marci Jo! Not only are your stories fast and funny, they're also WONDERFULLY, WONDERFULLY written. You communicate better than most people do with speech, hand gestures, facial expressions, flashcards and semaphore flags COMBINED!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant blogging debut! Can't wait to read more! :-)
ReplyDelete