FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
(Un)Becoming
(of) a Grandfather
By
Jack Burditt
PAGE
TWO:
We
shot the scenes in a sweltering apartment. As the director sketched
out the date rape scene, he too inquired about my underwear. When
I answered "boxers," he made a face, then told me the
boxers could be a problem.
"Some
woman in Iowa will complain?" I offered. He nodded. I didn't
like where this was going. But instead of asking me to lose them,
or worse, having me swap underwear with one of the crew guys, he
asked if I could scrunch up my boxers to make them look like briefs.
It
didn't make sense. I was either going to look like I had one weird-ass
pair of briefs or a serious wedgie problem. All I really knew at
that moment was that I truly don't understand this nation.
In
real life, the sleazy rapist waited until his drugged victim passed
out in a chair, then he carried her to the bed. The director asked
me if I was up to it.
"No
problem," I replied. And I meant it. Because in my mind I'm
still an athletic 20-year-old with a strong back and knees, not
some aging bag of bones moments away from being a grandfather. Besides,
Michelle looked light enough. Of course I wasn't figuring she would
be playing passed out so convincingly, which automatically doubles
one's body weight.
During
the first rehearsal I almost lost my grip on Michelle. My knee buckled.
My back threatened to explode. I quickly carried her to the bed
then fell on top of her, which given the situation we were playing,
I was able to get away with.
"You
okay?" the director asked with concern.
I felt
insulted. I'd like to see him do a better job. Poor actors, always
exposed to an unforgiving world. People just don't understand our
plight.
The
director asked if I was ready to go again. Of course I wasn't ready.
Quite frankly I never wanted to do that again. But I wasn't about
to give him or anyone else the satisfaction. Unprompted, Michelle
offered, "I think I can play it more passed out." I nodded,
then turned away so she couldn't see the tears in my eyes.
We
did seven takes in all. I had no idea I was working with the Stanley
Kubrick of AMW directors. To my complete surprise nothing broke,
tore or burst inside me. Except, perhaps, my pride. I felt a sense
of relief thinking I had gotten through the toughest part. But I
was wrong.
Next
thing I knew I was on top of Michelle, my shirt on, my boxers bunched
up, simulating a sexual assault, which I had no idea how to do.
I wish I could say it was the first time I suffered performance
anxiety in bed.
To
make matters worse, there were dozens of voices screaming at me.
It took a minute to realize they were all mine. My head was humming,
"What are you doing? Am I supposed to be, I don't know, humping
her? I'll just move this way and
Yikes, I accidentally touched
her boob. Oh, good, she didn't notice. How could she not notice?
That's right, she's playing passed out. Did she know it was an accident?
Is she seething inside? Am I going to get sued? Good lord, now I
touched the other boob. She thinks I'm a perv, I can tell. No I
can't, I can't tell anything. I know she's acting, but when a guy's
on top of you in bed he likes a little feedback. Jesus Christ, Jack
will you shut up. Shut the fuck up. Oh my God, is it two hundred
degrees in here? I'm sweating. Sweat's dripping on Michelle. She
must think I'm a pig." Drip. "Don't sweat."
Drip. "Stop it, think cool thoughts." Drip.
"This is ridiculous. Can I call cut? It's no big deal; once,
on a sitcom I wrote for, we had an actor call cut. Oh, that's right,
he almost got fired. That guy was a dick." Drip.
"Cut."
Did
I just call cut? No, phew, it was the director.
He
called for a break so he could reset the camera and Michelle and
I could cool off. The director pulled me aside. "I know this
is tough," he said, "but you're being
you're not
being
"
He
was struggling to say something. I realized what was going on. I
was screwing up and this poor guy was afraid of hurting my feelings
because, that's right, he thought I was an actor.
I'd
been on his side so often, trying to figure out how to finesse a
criticism. As a writer-producer you learn early on never to tell
an actor he's wrong. I should have just told the director that I
wasn't a real actor and that he could tell me I was screwing up
because I'm used to it. As a writer there is an endless stream of
people who will eagerly go out of their way to let you know you
suck.
Pitifully,
I was enjoying the actor treatment too much. So I let him struggle.
He finally said, "This isn't supposed to be nice. I need you
to be more
rapey." I immediately felt horrible I had
made him say it. There was only one way to make it up to him --
by being the rapiest I could possibly be.
I saw
Michelle on the balcony trying to cool down. I grabbed my cell phone
and joined her. I had a voicemail from my wife. I was officially
a grandfather, some time in the last few minutes, which placed me
squarely on top of Michelle at the time of the birth. Probably while
I was accidentally touching her boob. I felt like scum.
I turned
off the phone because I couldn't think off what else to do. Michelle
smiled and shrugged, "Weird, huh?" I nodded. But I decided
not to tell her about the grandfather thing because it was already
beyond awkward. We made small talk, and then it was back to the
bedroom. I'm not proud when I admit that I was a great deal more
rapier.
The
director offered, "Real good job." I lifted myself off
Michelle and said, "Thank God that's over with." Michelle
didn't look happy. Maybe that's not what a woman wants to hear after
you've spent the past 15 minutes on top of her.
The
next scene we shot was the early part of the date. We were supposed
to act like two friends chatting it up, laughing and such, while
I secretly drug her. We ad-libbed a conversation and they filmed
it. The producer commented he liked the genuine casualness between
the two of us. Of course I seemed casual, I had my pants back on.
Besides, I was a grandfather now. Casual is all I have left to offer.
I didn't
tell anyone that I filmed an episode of AMW, which led to serious
confusion when it aired a few weeks later. I never knew so many
of my friends and extended family watch the show. And I doubt even
half of them truly understood that I was only playing the date rapist.
AMW
has a long history of actors mistaken as actual criminals and then
being chased down by the citizenry. I figured if that happened to
me I was going to go down in style, shirt off, kicking out the back
window of a police car, the whole thing being filmed for Cops.
Indeed,
the day after the episode aired I got pulled over by the LAPD. I
had my story ready, how I'm not actually some sleazy date rapist
but instead a highly skilled thespian. It turned out I simply had
a license plate problem.
The
officer wrote me a ticket and I drove away feeling a little down.
She didn't mistake me for a date rapist. Either she hadn't seen
the show or, if she did, my performance made absolutely no impact.
All I wanted was a little validation.
Later
I realized how ridiculous I was being. Validation? That's something
insecure actors need. I'm neither insecure nor an actor. Being a
grandpa is all the validation I need. Hell, I'll even climb up a
mountaintop and yell for all to hear, "I am a proud grandpa!"
Because I want the whole world to know that that's all that really
matters.
Of
course if a casting director happens to hear it, well, I'd just
like to make it clear that I can definitely play younger.
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