June 29, 2009

Moonshot Screening


Very excited to announce the 1st screening of Moonshot: The Flight of Apollo 11 at the BFI Southbank this Friday 3rd July. After the screening there will be a Q&A with the director and some of the cast. You can book your tickets at the BFI website. Here's the BFI's intro to the evening:

A fine new TV docu-fiction, Moonshot interweaves cinematic drama with hi-definition NASA footage in presenting glimpses of life behind the scenes in Houston alongside edge-of-your-seat moments in space. Written by Tony Basgallop (Hotel Babylon) and directed by Richard Dale (Diana: The Last Days of a Princess; 9/11: The Twin Towers), Moonshot is the compelling story of the moment that united 600 million people around the world.

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June 21, 2009

Moonshot - the book

First comes book, then comes movie, then comes DVD in the DVD case. Let's start with the book, published in May 2009 - Moonshot: The Inside Story of Mankind's Greatest Adventure by Dan Parry.

From the 4 star Time Out review by Peter Watts:
"'It was the arduous ordeal of defecation that really tested the men's resolve.' It's sentences like that which make this look at the first moon landing such a page-turner. Constructed as artfully as the Saturn V rocket that shot Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins out of the Earth's atmosphere 40 years ago, Moonshot dovetails passages covering the history of the space race up to 1969 with terrific reportage of the Apollo 11 mission itself, from launchpad to splashdown."

The story, as author Dan Parry tells it, is so compelling that a major TV drama was screaming to be made. How perfect that Parry is also Head of Research at Dangerous Films, a leading independent production company. Formed in 2003, it has produced the television events 9/11-The Twin Towers, Diana - The Last Days of a Princess, D-Day 6.6.44 and Emmy-nominated Human Body - Pushing the Limits.

So in May/June 2008 Dan Parry, the Dangerous Films team and cast which included Daniel Lapaine as Armstrong, James Marsters as Aldrin, Andrew Lincoln as Collins (and me as Collins' wife, Pat), traveled to Lithuania to shoot Moonshot, a major TV factual-drama inspired by the book.

Now, just over a year later, ITV is about to unveil the fruits of our labor. Next month (exact date TBA) Moonshot will be broadcast internationally. I, for one, am thrilled to finally see it! Stay tuned for details.

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June 15, 2009

Useful advice in The Stage

We all could use a little help. Whether you're an actor just starting out or have recently arrived in the UK from the states or Canada - learning the ropes can be daunting. Luckily there are smart, experienced people out there who want to help...

After contributing to a Dear John article in The Stage a couple weeks ago, I had a look at the Advice page online and it's brilliant. There are How To Guides, Frequently Asked Questions, Legal advice for performers and more. You can visit it here: www.thestage.co.uk/connect

The Dear John section is full of helpful tips on a huge range of topics, from how to find an agent to fundraising, from sexism in presenting to self-promotion and networking. Get some useful insights here: www.thestage.co.uk/connect/dearjohn/

As the Edinburgh Festival is just around the corner, here's a Dear John answer for you:
How to make the most of a festival appearance: click here

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June 05, 2009

Working as an actor abroad

Extract from Dear John section of The Stage newspaper published Thursday 4 June 2009, in which I'm featured:

Q: I'm thinking of moving to another country to work as an actor - is the audition/casting process basically the same everywhere or are there differences I need to know about?

what the experts say...

Kosha Engler is an American actress and Anglophile, originally from Baltimore, Maryland. While in the US she acted regularly in Washington DC's finest theatres and appeared in TV and film, including The Wireand John Waters' A Dirty Shame. In 2005 she married a Brit, moved to London and has since worked in television, theatre, radio, voice-overs and commercials. This July she'll appear on ITV in Moon Shot, a TV movie about the Apollo 11 moon landing. www.koshaengler.com

"The Baltimore/Washington DC area was a smaller and less competitive place than London and, because of that, I found a healthy amount of theatre work, radio dramas and some film and television jobs. But despite the thriving acting community, the DC market wasn't big enough to justify agents, except in the case of on-camera work, where casting teams such as Pat Moran Associates (who cast me in The Wire) functioned as both casting director and agent, taking a cut of our fee. Without an agent, we actors had to be fiercely proactive and forge our own relationships with those who could employ us.
"In the four years I've lived in London - now with an agent - I've had more big auditions than in DC, but landing the job is much, much harder. The proportion of TV and film castings to theatre has reversed since my time in DC and I mostly go up for American roles. In the US, I was cast as English characters as often as American ones.

"As for the audition process itself, the main difference I've found is how British people use language to disguise what is a difficult experience. Early in my UK career, my agent sent me to a meeting at the National Theatre to have a little read and a chat with the director. Earnest American that I was, I made the mistake of taking my agent literally and thought I really was just going to chat. I thought there might even be tea and cakes as we casually got to know each other. Little did I know the translation was, 'You're going to an audition, so thoroughly prepare your scenes, learn the lines if possible, then have an interview with sir big shot, the director."

dear john sums up...

John Byrne is an entertainment industry career advisor and the author of several career guides for performers, including The Right Agent Right Now ebook written with Mary Elliott Nelson and available for download from www.showbusiness-success.com.

As in many other areas of transatlantic interaction, it is often the fact that British and American culture look superficially similar that leads to more misunderstandings that might occur when an actor is aiming to work in a more overtly different market, such as Bollywood or Japan. The things that can trip you up aren't always to do with the casting process itself, as much as the subtle differences in interpersonal communication or cultural norms. Probably the best way to approach work in a new country - and indeed new work in this country - is not to assume that any job will be the same as any previous one and be alert to spot and adapt to different ways of doing things as they arise. While you might not be able to predict where the curve balls will come from, honing your skills and going the extra mile in preparation is a good basis to approach every casting from, no matter where in the world it is happening.

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June 01, 2009

NAAA Playreading Festival 2009

If you were curious about joining the NAAA here's your chance to see it in action. Details for the 9th annual North American Actors Association Playreading Festival:

Crossing the Divide
6 American plays. 6 Canadian plays. 12 UK Premieres.
Chosen from hundreds of entries, Crossing the Divide is an eclectic, startling mix of work by both new and established playwrights.

June 22nd - 27th, 2009
Staged readings at Bridewell Theatre
Bride Lane, Fleet Street, London EC4Y 8EQ
Tickets from £8 (£5 concessions)
Box office: 020 7353 3331

Performance schedule:

Monday, 22nd June
6.30 - CANADIAN TUXEDO (Short Play) by Nicole Pandolfo; 7-10 SPLIT by Michael G Wilmot
8.00 - BOBBY by Marc Israel-LePelletier

Tuesday, 23rd June
6.30 - FAITH by James McLindon
8.00 - FATHER LAND by James Holden

Wednesday, 24th June
6.30 - DELUSIONS OF A GOVERNMENT WITNESS by Louis Lippa
8.00 - REPEAT PLAY

Thursday, 25th June
6.30 - THE ELEPHANT SONG by Nicholas Billon
8.00 - MATTER OF INTENT by Gary Earl Ross

Friday, 26th June
6.30 - THE HUM by Robert Tsonos
8.00 - CAT AND MOUSE by Michael Wolfson

Saturday, 27th June
3.00 - IN FLIGHT by Jenny Lyn Bader
7.30 - LILY, ALTA by Kenneth Dyba

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