Titles, Clapperboards, and Magic
Well, Hard Right Productions is beginning
to look more like an actual company all the time! Hopefully, this
is a good thing, though we don't want bureaucracy to overshadow our
purpose....and that is to make a movie! Peigi Midey is now
officially our Executive Producer, which is basically a euphemism for
THE BOSS. I have given Peigi a mind meld, so that she has a very
clear vision of what the movie should look like, so things can happen
when I'm not around, and vice versa. Peigi has a very keen eye,
and that rare commodity known as "taste." I trust her implicitly
with my vision of Plasma Dreams.
We also have a Script Supervisor, Hosanna Tolman, whose job it is to edit the scripts as we rehearse, and alter them to fit the particular characters. Unlike the novel, which is chiseled in marble, the script is a living document...and it's a BLAST watching it evolve. We want to catch those rare, spontaneous lines that the actors throw in...sometimes intentionally, sometimes not, and incorporate them into the script. Hosanna is also a capable acting coach.
My ninth-grade daughter, Jasmine Nichols, is the Camera Assistant...she gets to mark and clap the clapperboard before each scene, and will also be responsible for making sure there's a clear path for the cinematographers to maneuver. It's a grunt job but extremely important....and Jasmine loves doing the clapperboard thing.
Jasmine's friend, Stephanie Smith, also a ninth grader, has been showing up regularly at our rehearsals, also, and is showing some talent as an acting coach and cheerleader, as well. It's so good to have some young eyes on this project...they catch inconsistencies we old geezers easily miss.
And now for the most exciting news. Her name is Marlene Young, an Athabaskan woman who just returned from Arizona. Tonight, as a first blush audition, we had Marlene fill in for the role of A.M., since Veronica couldn't make rehearsal. She did a fine job for a first reading, and showed some promise. On a lark, we had her try out Scene One as Vengeance Toy, with Hosanna reading Lisa....and.....
MAGIC HAPPENED
It's one of those things you can never explain, but you know it when you see it. It's that fleeting moment when you KNOW you have an actress and a movie. The first line out of Marlene's mouth.....I knew that was Vengeance Toy....exactly as I envisioned her twenty years ago when I penned (literally) Plasma Dreams. The fact that Marlene is not Chinese, but Athabaskan, was/is immaterial. (With a bit of makeup and Venny's dark shades, she WILL be Chinese, easily) I never would have predicted this...I might have seen her as A.M., or one of the minor Indian characters in the story. But Marlene Young is Vengeance Toy.
Case closed.
We also have a Script Supervisor, Hosanna Tolman, whose job it is to edit the scripts as we rehearse, and alter them to fit the particular characters. Unlike the novel, which is chiseled in marble, the script is a living document...and it's a BLAST watching it evolve. We want to catch those rare, spontaneous lines that the actors throw in...sometimes intentionally, sometimes not, and incorporate them into the script. Hosanna is also a capable acting coach.
My ninth-grade daughter, Jasmine Nichols, is the Camera Assistant...she gets to mark and clap the clapperboard before each scene, and will also be responsible for making sure there's a clear path for the cinematographers to maneuver. It's a grunt job but extremely important....and Jasmine loves doing the clapperboard thing.
Jasmine's friend, Stephanie Smith, also a ninth grader, has been showing up regularly at our rehearsals, also, and is showing some talent as an acting coach and cheerleader, as well. It's so good to have some young eyes on this project...they catch inconsistencies we old geezers easily miss.
And now for the most exciting news. Her name is Marlene Young, an Athabaskan woman who just returned from Arizona. Tonight, as a first blush audition, we had Marlene fill in for the role of A.M., since Veronica couldn't make rehearsal. She did a fine job for a first reading, and showed some promise. On a lark, we had her try out Scene One as Vengeance Toy, with Hosanna reading Lisa....and.....
MAGIC HAPPENED
It's one of those things you can never explain, but you know it when you see it. It's that fleeting moment when you KNOW you have an actress and a movie. The first line out of Marlene's mouth.....I knew that was Vengeance Toy....exactly as I envisioned her twenty years ago when I penned (literally) Plasma Dreams. The fact that Marlene is not Chinese, but Athabaskan, was/is immaterial. (With a bit of makeup and Venny's dark shades, she WILL be Chinese, easily) I never would have predicted this...I might have seen her as A.M., or one of the minor Indian characters in the story. But Marlene Young is Vengeance Toy.
Case closed.






Hey what a day we had Monday! November 12th. With the Thanksgiving Holiday coming up, we here at Plasma Dreams Progress, get to celebrate getting yet another scene in the can, as we wrapped up some location shooting out at Chena Hot Springs Road!
First, THANK YOU LORD! For provision, safety, and inspiration.
THANK YOU Bob Kreiser for the use of an awesome Winnebago, and especially for taking a part in the acting, after only a night to prepare.
THANK YOU Ray Midey, for buying the gas and propane we used to keep that thing running all day.
THANK YOU Jenny Tse, for your focused acting of the part Lisa Tang. You are wonderful, and such a trooper for spending several hours being exposed to the cold.
THANK YOU Steven for coming with us, and all the help you added from blanketing Jenny, to sharing the knowledge you have of film making to general encouragement for our project.
THANK YOU Archie Wollman and Family!! (Hi Kelsey) Your skill and resources of shooting film outdoors, is over the top wonderful! And thank you for spending most of your time that day outdoors. I know some of us got to enjoy the inside of that Winnebago, more than others. I thank your family, because I also know scheduling our project, is done between meeting the needs of your family, and I appreciate their patience.
THANK YOU Eric. Author and cheerleader
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