Thursday, January 25, 2007

The Cynical Career Counselor Explains Your Future as a

Movie Makeup Artist

Hmm--somebody punch you in the eyes? Oh really? I guess I just don't get "heroin chic". But isn't that passé now? What do I know, though? You do? For a living? Hmm--okay, it might go something like this:

You'll first go to some esthetician school or something, where you learn to wax, buff and pluck. After you pay your dues trying to find the outer beauty on some truly scary looking clients, you are taken under the wing of the head makeup artist. She teaches you the same sort of skills you see used to work miracles in those makeover t.v. shows. Then she turns you loose on the weekend mall demo crowd, and soon you'll prove you can not only work the makeup magic, but you can charm the customers, which helps book appointments and sell product.

Still, your dream is to do makeup for the movies, right? You'll save up your money, while living in your parents' house, until you head to L.A. to the "Hollywood Makeup Artists" school or some such sketchy operation--it will be overpriced and overhyped, and after you finish your course, their "inside track" to the movie business is handing you a sheet with out of date studio contact numbers on it.

When you take a job at an upscale day camp in Laguna Beach painting faces for pampered rich kids you get your first break. The owner of an exclusive salon chats with you after his daughter gushes about how great you are, and next thing you know you're hired to work at beauty spa.

There you begin to finally make the connections you need, and although most of the in-town shoots are filled with union makeup artists, you hear about a movie that's filming on-location in the Andes, and you sign on for your first screen makeup stint.

You are the junior makeup person on the crew, so you get to do the extras and the minor characters, but you also get to help the special effects team create the "cannibal zombie Inca warriors" and everyone is quite pleased with your work.

You head home with your bank account fatter, and more imporantly, with your foot in the door of the movie industry. Soon you're one of the regulars, and everyone admires your artistry, but you have one problem that gets you several warnings from crew chiefs--you tend to get chatty with those whose egos feel you beneath their conversational efforts.

This rubs you the wrong way, and soon you're one of the most relied-upon moles feeding information to gossip columns and blogs--all the while making sure no one would ever suspect you.

It all comes to a head when you're called in to work exclusively with the geriatric star of a much-anticipated remake of a classic. The actor first repulsively hits on you, which you deflect as gracefully as possible, then complains when you can't make him look 35 years old. He's gone almost a decade since last performing on camera and he attributes the deterioration he sees when watching some of the first day's filming to your lack of makeup skills.

The movie staff acquiesce to his demands and give him another makeup artist, who quits when he targets her with even more disgusting overtures than you faced. You are forced to keep working with him, while he continues to make your life miserable.

The final straw is when you are doing a touch-up on set while he's giving a quick soundbyte to some tabloid infotainment show. As you lean in to try to blot out a few more wrinkles, he laments to the interviewer the "sad state of hollywood makeup artists compared to the good old days". You bite your tongue when the interviewer sticks the microphone in your face for a response--you know your place in the food chain.

Still, you are observant, and when you are called to his trailer for yet another touch-up later that day, you notice a bag of adult diapers in the corner. He may have noticed you look at them; he seems in a rush to get you out of that room and out of the trailer a little too quickly.

You wait a suitable 24 hours to call your friend who pays you two thousand for the exlusive. The actor and his agent deny it, of course, but your camera phone's evidence allows the reporter to avoid a lawsuit and the quick backing off by the studio and the actor's agent just proves to all the truth of your story.

Somehow, despite the reporter's promise to protect your identity, your name gets out as the alleged "leak about the leaker", as some gossip-monger phrases it. You are finished in the movie makeup business, but you have a variety of other opportunities sent your way, and you accept the offer to make you a partner in an upscale salon in Beverly Hills.

You head back to the studio to pick up your effects, and are surprised when the guard who escorts you to the back lot from the gate suddenly complains of stomach problems and leaves you unsupervised to head back to the makeup area.

You never notice the Lexus until it's too late. The actor, of course, is shocked and horrified by the accident, and after sending a lovely bouquet to your funeral, has his agent explain to the media he will be surrendering his driver's license, since it's clear after this unfortunate "accident" he's simply too old to drive.

You will be an answer in trivia games for years to come.

1 comment:

Berkeley G. said...

That last sentence is the most brilliant part. I hope Nylon and you are really going to get your stuff published--you're great.