It's the holiday season and with the holiday season comes holiday parties. Since
I’m currently working as a cater waiter that means a lot of hours and a lot of
money…okay not a lot of money but it’s far better than being unemployed.
I think just about everyone knows what a cater
waiter is. For those who don’t, cater waiters are the people who work at
parties, weddings and charity events. They take your coat, serve your food,
serve your drinks and clean up after you’ve gone. Cater waiters are the people
who work during a party so that no one else has to.
Doing this kind of work is a double edged sword. For
every good thing about being a cater waiter there is a not so good thing. Most
often the work itself is quite easy. However standing on your feet for 15 hours
at a time is not. You have the luxury of making your own
schedule. However you also have to deal with the periods where there isn’t much
work.
There are two definitively great things about being
a cater waiter. The first is the community of people. Practically everyone you
work with is an artist in some way. I’ve met painters and sculptors, vocalists
and instrumentalists and just about every other kind of performing and visual
artist you can think of. The second is, even though I’m just “the help”, I get
to go places and see things that aren’t available to me…yet.
Once I was setting up for a charity event. I was on
napkin folding duty. Three of us sat around a table artistically folding dinner
napkins for 600 people. While gossiping away I happened to look up. Coming down
the aisle was a group of about 12 guys. All of them in their early 20’s. All of them non-descript and really quite bland in appearance. My first
thought was oh god, they must be the entertainment. We’re in for it now.
At almost every catering event there is some sort of
“entertainment”. It can range from a deejay, to a magician, to a band, to a
string quartet, to a circus troupe. Sometimes this entertainment is sub-par. As
a performer it can do a number on your head. You compare yourself and wonder
how a trumpet player who consistently plays flat gets a performing gig while
you struggle to get a callback. Apples and oranges maybe, but it still can be
disheartening.
The young guys took to the stage area. They chatted
a bit, set up microphones and then went to their assigned spots. This group of
boys that were so unnoticeable and lacking in anything remotely distinctive began
to sing. Their voices were glorious. I sat enrapt watching and listening to
their sound check, as if they were angels announcing the coming of God. Every
hair on my body stood on end. Tears fell from my eyes, literally tears, while
folding napkins for 600 people, at a catering gig.
At another party for about 120 people there was
equally impressive entertainment. During our staff meeting of what would be
happening that evening we, the caterers, were told that it was a sit down
dinner with a choice of entrĂ©e and a few extra courses. If you’ve even been a
cater waiter or worked in a catering hall you know what a headache that could
turn out to be. On top of all of that there would be a cocktail reception
before hand and a dessert reception afterwards.
During the dessert reception we were to breakdown the entire room and set it up as a lounge and dance floor. The guests would then come back into the space and enjoy the entertainment for the evening, Journey. The mega-hit band Journey was scheduled to play for this company’s party. Journey!
During the dessert reception we were to breakdown the entire room and set it up as a lounge and dance floor. The guests would then come back into the space and enjoy the entertainment for the evening, Journey. The mega-hit band Journey was scheduled to play for this company’s party. Journey!
The evening went as planned with the cocktail
reception, dinner and dessert reception. We set up the lounge and with the
exception of cleaning up afterwards our work for the evening was finished. We could relax.
It’s a rare event were cater waiters actually get to enjoy the entertainment. So
most of my colleagues decided to go up to a balcony area to watch the show. I
decided to stay in the backstage area. Lots of people have seen Journey
concerts, but not many have seen one from the wings of the stage. We all waited
with baited breath for the band to ascend.
Journey was amazing. They sang all their greatest
hits as well as some of their lesson known tunes. They sounded just like their
albums and they were singing live. Journey was singing live right in front of
me. It was incredible.
With so much money making work going on, catering,
it’s been a challenge to do potential money making work, auditions.
Auditions can pop up at any time. If it’s an Equity
Principal Audition (EPA) or an Equity Chorus Call (ECC) the postings for these
have to be announced no later than a week before the actual audition takes place.
If you submit yourself for a show, most often an audition can be scheduled
around your previous conflicts, for example catering. If you’re signed with an
agent or even freelancing with an agency (working with them without benefit of
signed contract) auditions can literally come up within a few hours.
As a cater waiter, the companies that you work for
want to know your availability as far into the future as possible. A cater
waiter can be scheduled to work a party anywhere from about 2 months to right
up until 2 hours before the party starts. Although that’s usually for emergency
replacements. Right now I have gigs scheduled for late February.
You as an actor have to have the foresight of an Oracle.
It literally comes down to predicting when you think auditions will come up. And
the auditioning just doesn’t happen by itself. There’s a whole lot of work to be done before
you step in front of the people behind the table. On top of your third eye
sight, it takes some expert planning and time management.
Imagine you’re an actor who makes money outside of
theatre as a cater waiter. You’ve been on your feet catering for 10 hours,
which is the average length of one of my catering shifts. You finally get home
at 1am. You wake up at 5:00am to go stand in line outside in all kinds of
weather. You wait for three hours to be able to pick your audition time. Even
though the audition runs from 9:30 until 5:30pm, your audition must take place
between 9:30am and 2pm. You have to be dressed in a tuxedo and at your next
catering gig at 3:30. It’s the holiday season so you’ve been on this type of
schedule for a few weeks now. When do you take care of all the preparation of
auditioning like warming up or learning material or making sure your audition
outfit is clean? How do you make time to make your audition perfect?
While watching Journey perform live from the
backstage area, someone pointed out that the lead singer was using a
teleprompter. Being a theatre performer and having to be completely memorized
for shows I couldn’t believe it. I had to see it for my own eyes.
I walked over to where a tech guy was looking at a
computer screen. I peaked around him and indeed saw that the lyrics were
streaming on a monitor. To me this was unfathomable. Not as unfathomable as the
day I discovered that the people in movie musicals weren’t wearing tap shoes
during tap numbers but it was high on the list of “oh my god I always thought…”
Because of my previous vantage point, the lights and
all the movement, I could never really see who was singing the lead on the
songs. Behind the teleprompter there was a different view. I raised my eyes up
from the screen and I looked out onto the stage. I saw the guy who was rocking
out. I turned to one of my colleagues and said “Since when
does Journey have a metro-sexual Asian dude as a lead singer?” My colleague
gave me the scoop on how the band found the replacement for their lead singer.
After folding 600 napkins, serving dinner and
dessert it was time for the charity event’s entertainment. “Ladies and
gentlemen please welcome to the stage…”
Well that certainly explained a lot. The “non-descript
and really quite bland in appearance” group of guys who’s music moved me to
tears during their sound check was
actually Yale University’s Whiffenpoofs. They are the pinnacle of perfection in
male a cappella groups. Dressed in their white tie and tails they took to the
stage. Again their voices stunned and silenced those who were listening. Again
it was as if the gates of heaven opened and allowed this glorious sound to
float down on angel’s wings. And then it happened. His voice cracked.
I can only surmise that the lead singer pushed a bit
too hard on the top notes of the song. It was barely perceptible, easy to miss.
The singer kept going of course not even registering anything was amiss. When
the same phrase came around again so did the crack. The only reason I knew it
was there was because it wasn’t there during the sound check. I’m sure no one
hearing the concert for the first time even noticed it.
Back before I was catering I had a day job where I
could pick and choose my schedule. I’d put in my schedule request a week beforehand.
Whenever there was an audition announced I would simply ask for the day before and
the day of off. I could make up any lost hours and money another time. Many of
my peers laughed at my obsessive compulsive scheduling. They couldn’t understand why I did this.
I had a system. It allowed me to take as much time
as I needed to prepare, reserving the day before for any final tweaks to my
material, including a last minute lesson if needed. It allowed me to make sure
I had the audition outfit I wanted to wear picked out, cleaned and pressed. I
had time to assemble pictures and resumes. There was ample time to warm up. Most
importantly I had time to rest and clear my mind and focus on theatre. In short
I had time to make sure everything was perfect.
Before seeing the little Asian dude, I was convinced
I was listening to the original Journey with Steve Perry singing the lead. Steve
Perry doesn’t sing with Journey anymore. Yet their sound was virtually the same
and everyone, including myself, enjoyed it just as much.
Who cares about a slight crack? Even at their worst
the Whiffenpoofs are better than the vast majority of groups at their absolute
best. A tiny vocal imperfection doesn’t derail them from their domination of
male a cappella groups or their world tour.
In watching these two extraordinary performances, while I was catering, I realized something…again. We do live theatre. Being alive is complicated and messy and for most of us not perfect. Why do we expect our Art to be anything else?
I love to always be prepared with appropriate
audition material. I love to always wear something to the audition that I feel
great in and makes me look my best. I love to sleep nine hours so I can
function at my peak. The time I feel my
voice is soaring is about 4pm. That’s when I love to audition. However right
now my time is all but my own. I no
longer have the luxury of my obsessive compulsive audition rituals. I mentally
and physically prepare for auditions as best I can, when I can. And that’s all
I can ask of myself.
Neither Journey nor the Whiffenpoofs were “perfect”.
However they were perfect to the people seeing and hearing them at that time. So
don’t wait for the perfect opportunity or the perfect song or the perfect
outfit or the perfect amount of rest. Just go to auditions. You as an actor can
never know what the people behind the table are looking for. Nor can you predict
what talent they’ll see. In the end just showing up can make you...
Practically perfect in every way.