Playing Against Type
When I began acting, I assumed that I would usually get typecast as "the nice guy." Why? Well, when friends in high school signed my yearbooks, the theme was usually "stay sweet." In regular life, I shy away from confrontations and am a "pleaser." So, I thought that would translate directly to the screen.
Instead, I've been pleasantly surprised to get cast as ... a killer, an abusive boyfriend, a violent environmental activist, a scheming husband plotting his wife's bodily takeover by his dead witch mother. I still get enjoyable nice guy roles -- such as the gay neighbor in the upcoming feature Eve -- but there are enough wild roles in the mix to keep me coming back for more.
In the feature The Two Sisters, currently in production, I play Todd, a rich, arrogant, football-playing fraternity senior in college. If you know me at all, those adjectives will sound odd ...
- Rich: I grew up eating lots of Taco Bell and Kraft macaroni and cheese
- Arrogant: When arranging an outing with someone the first line out of my mouth is usually, "Wherever you want to go"
- Football-playing: I was usually the last person picked for teams in middle-school P.E. and got pummeled in dodgeball, although these days I'm certainly able to ride my bike from San Francisco to L.A.
- Fraternity: Never went to a frat party my entire four years at Stanford
- Senior: Yes, I was once a senior in college, but it wasn't last year. Or the year before ...
This is what's making it so fun to be Todd. My first two days of filming for this thriller were June 15 & 16 in Modesto. Director Terri-Dawn Arnold cast me based on my performance in the short film A Walk in the Park, which my co-star Vince Lasalvia had sent to her as his audition (he was cast as one of the leads). On my first day, we shot a scene on the football field where I'm telling my buddy how I "can't figure out this chick" that I recently had sex with -- Lannie, one of the sociopathic Two Sisters of the title, played by the incandescent Eve Lorraine -- and that I'm about to dump the girlfriend I cheated on. The next day of filming my buddy and I go on a double date with the sisters, and I'm repeatedly telling Lannie that "I know you like me." (Who wouldn't?) That scene concludes with Lannie kissing me aggressively (ah, the hard life of an actor).Playing this guy, I've been focusing on lowering my "power center" -- a concept that came up often in Ed Hooks' class. I walk confidently, and a smirk lurks just underneath my skin, even if it doesn't always surface. But most importantly, I let loose the arrogant fratboy that's deep within me. We all have deep feelings roiling inside us -- rage, passion, vindictiveness -- but actors are given license to bring these emotions out. Acting is one of the most liberating professions I could imagine.


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