about that audition…

About three weeks ago, I had my first audition in … um … in so long, I can’t even tell you when the last one was, or what it was even for. I average about 4 auditions a year these days, because most of what acting work I do get is offered to me, and I’m not going to complain about that even a little bit, because I am not an ass.


Anyway, this was the first audition since I had some explosive and life-changing emotional revelations, making it literally the first audition in my life where nothing more than just booking a job was at stake.


I don’t know if I can properly explain it, but that difference was fucking immense to me, and I think is one of the reasons it was the best audition I’ve had in … I want to say a decade? I think the last audition I felt this good about was when I booked Criminal Minds, so yeah it was a long time ago.


I’ve been thinking about it, and I feel like this audition was so great because of how I prepared as a human, as much as how I prepared as an actor. As an actor, I read the script, broke down the scenes, learned the lines, and made clear and specific character choices*. I’m good at that kind of homework, because I’ve been doing it for forty years, literally thousands of times. I enjoy it, and it comes very naturally to me, but I wouldn’t call it “easy”, if that makes sense.


So I did all my creative and professional preparation, like I’ve done for my entire life, and when the usual stress and fear and anxiety didn’t show up, I realized that all the emotional pain and the recovery work I’ve been doing to heal my childhood trauma was actually working! Remember when I wrote about ? It was similar to that. Maybe I’m making something obvious or uninteresting into something profound, but for the first time in my life, there was nothing more than a role at stake for me, and that freed me up to enjoy every step of the process, including the part where I knew, deep in my heart, that I wouldn’t book the job, because I never book the job**. Since I wasn’t carrying the existential and practical expectation or responsibility to book this job, and didn’t have anything to prove, I just had fun with it. I allowed myself to enjoy the entire process, and I honestly, sincerely, totally did not care if I booked the job. I knew that I’d do a good job, because I always do a good job. You don’t get to keep doing this for forty years if you don’t do a good job. But doing a good job or not really doesn’t matter, because everyone who auditions comes into the room with the same presumed level of competence and talent. We aren’t some of us special and some of us not. There are no sharks or dead money in the waiting room. The thing that’s going to decide who gets this job has nothing at all to do with anything any of us do on the audition. It isn’t about if we are good or bad. It isn’t about being worthy or unworthy. It isn’t about finally booking the job that will make me so famous and successful, my father will finally love me and my mother will finally be happy. It isn’t about any of those things. It’s just about being the best match for the role. And whatever it is that makes the actor they cast the best match is NEVER something that actor did in the room. It’s always something we have no control over, from looking too much or not enough like another actor, to some unconscious energy that hangs around us and makes us who we are. You know how the difference between a gold medal and not making the podium can be .003 seconds? It’s like that, more often than it isn’t.


Again, maybe I am making something simple and obvious into something profound, but I didn’t fully realize and internalize this until very recently. For my entire career, which started without my consent when I was seven years old, I carried so much emotional baggage into auditions with me, it’s a wonder I could even fit it through the door. On occasion, it helped (I have more in common with Gordie than just wanting to be a writer, it turns out), but mostly it just hurt me and weighed me down. Being able to prepare and go into an audition without it was more fun than I ever imagined possible.


Okay. So I had a great time on the audition. This character is so great. He’s misunderstood by the other adults in the picture, but the kids he ends up mentoring believe in him as much as he believes in them. He’s got some incredibly funny bits, and I felt like I could relate to him in a lot of ways that weren’t obvious on paper. I felt like I made some meaningful connections with everyone in the room, and they all felt genuine to me. When I left, I knew that I had done precisely what I set out to do, and did not want to change a single thing. I knew that I had nailed it, and given them the best version of myself. All I could do now was wait and try not to think about it.


About a week went by and we hadn’t heard anything. My manager called casting and they said the producers were taking their time, and that I was in a very small group of actors who were being considered. That was encouraging, and I allowed myself to imagine, just for a minute, how much fun it would be to play this character, and how much I would enjoy being a mentor to a bunch of young actors.


Another week went by, and casting told my manager that I was great, they loved what I did, they loved me as an actor, they loved me as a person, … and they cast someone else.


Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.


I’m disappointed that I won’t get to play this character, and I’m disappointed that I won’t get to be a mentor on the set to a bunch of kids, and I’m disappointed that I won’t get to work in something that I know I would have genuinely enjoyed, and felt proud of. But I’m not wrecked. I’m not bitter. This is the same thing I’ve heard, nearly verbatim, for going on twenty years now, but since I’m not hauling around all this emotional baggage, I have a healthy and positive perspective on the entire thing. It isn’t about me as a person, or me as someone who never really had a say in what his career was going to be. It isn’t about proving my worth to people who I shouldn’t need to prove anything to. It isn’t about proving anything to myself.


It’s about a different person being a better match than me, and that’s it. That’s literally all it is, and if I hadn’t been emotionally abused so much as a kid, maybe it wouldn’t have taken me until I was 47 to have my “this is water” moment.


So I can feel disappointed, but I don’t feel like I am worthless, or stupid. That is a HUGE thing for me, and I can’t believe I spent literally my entire acting career — and my entire personal life until recently — feeling that way about myself.


*Doing that preparation is my favorite part of being an actor. The joy of discovering what a writer is asking us to do, and the satisfaction that comes with finding that interpretation and bringing it to life is what keeps one of my feet in the acting world, no matter how hard I try to step away from it entirely.


**Criminal Minds aside, it always comes down to me and one or two other actors. I don’t even have to ask for feedback from casting anymore, because I don’t need to hear, “you were great, but they went another way” ever again in my life.


 




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Published on August 05, 2019 16:03
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message 1: by Shirly (new)

Shirly I'm so glad you were able to let go of some of your childhood trauma. That is a huge thing! Every time I catch myself reacting with newfound awareness to something triggering, I definitely have a slight reaction like what you described. Thank you for always sharing your journey so honestly.


message 2: by Ann (new)

Ann Thanks for sharing this post - I really enjoyed reading it. I'm a music teacher and I think some of my students would really benefit from reading this perspective as well.


message 3: by Terry Z (new)

Terry Z I think you are awesome!! :)


message 4: by Doreen (last edited Aug 07, 2019 09:33AM) (new)

Doreen Vasquez OMG I loved you as I was growing up, you were one of my first BIG crushes! I had no idea that your childhood wasn't one of (near) perfection! (I say "near" cuz nobody's perfect).

I'm sorry for what you had to deal w/ in your past, but I'm glad you're now at a place where you are no longer feeling held back by that childhood trauma.
BTW - My childhood was less than ideal also (to put it mildly)


message 5: by Argentrose (new)

Argentrose Kind of disappointed that I won't get to see you in whatever this was, too, since it sounds like you really thought the role was one you wanted to do--both as an actor and as a mentor. Still, I'm glad that you realize that your worth isn't tied up in what others think of you--that you felt you did your best, and that was the important thing--not whether or not you got the gig.

Congratulations for finally being okay with you. <3 I think for a lot of us, that's just going to keep being an uphill battle, but maybe one day....


message 6: by Lisa (last edited Aug 08, 2019 08:36PM) (new)

Lisa Vegan Lovely, Wil. I'd have loved to see you in this and it sounds as though it would be something I'd enjoy. You express yourself beautifully and what you say I'm sure will help other people. I hope you get the next one and it will be something you'll enjoy just as much.


message 7: by Jay (new)

Jay Merin That sounds like everything is going in the right direction for you, personally if not professionally in this instance. Glad to hear it, and I hope that you continue to have the positive attitude going forward!


message 8: by Tim (new)

Tim I'm happy for you Wil. It sounds like you're not only in a good space now, but you have the grounding and tools to stay there. Congratulations.


message 9: by Smicki (new)

Smicki Childhood trauma can be so subtle at times that we do not always realize how it still affects our lives and effects our adult personalities and decision making habits. I love that you are not only working on your own growth and healing but, that you are also using your platform to help others. Setting an example for others that regardless of where you are in life you can heal. Thank you for being courageous enough to be so open and honest with your struggles.


message 10: by Jeid (last edited Aug 12, 2019 09:07AM) (new)

Jeid Those THINGS about the kids and mentors sound STRANGERly familiar... no?


message 11: by Eddie (new)

Eddie You are great....But I went with another blog.


message 12: by Linda Martin (new)

Linda Martin I am sorry you didn't get the part. I think you would have been great. I hope a quality role happens for you soon. I think you would be terrific in a Halmark family movie too.


message 13: by Colleen (new)

Colleen Thank you so much for the follow up post, and the awesome insight into your mental space for this. You are amazing!


message 14: by Debbie (new)

Debbie Tremel Thanks so much for sharing this. It is monumental...and sadly too few get to experience the breakthrough you did. Very powerful message.


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