tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18122921948538822752024-03-12T16:21:53.681-07:00It Is What It IsAngelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-76424976156120104452010-02-04T08:20:00.000-08:002010-02-04T08:32:09.321-08:002010 so far...Life has been a bit of a whirlwind lately. As I'm sure you know, we've finally launched the first episode of The Undead Diaries. Feedback so far has been really great. Two of my friends (and the age of my target demographic) got a sneak peek at a couple of episodes and were literally laughing outloud. I can't begin to tell you how good that made me feel. Now, I just need to get about a million other people to do the same thing! For all the marketing I feel like I did, the numbers seem really low for that first episode. I dunno....wait and see? Start email blasting? Episode 2 comes out tomorrow so I guess I need to make a decision by then. Oh! And I think I finally figured out how to upload the damn things so there decent quality. I cannot begin to tell you the countless hours I have spent exporting, uploading, deleting, exporting again, etc., etc.<br /><br />2010 seems to be in super speed or something. On one hand it seems like the holidays were ages ago but I woke up this morning asking how it was February 4 already? January seemed to just come and go in a blink. <br /><br />I'm on a major push to make something happen with my acting career. I've been here for over 4 years now and have really nothing to show for it. I've always heard that 5 years is the mark. That's when people start knowing your name, your face, etc., that's when the wheels really start turning. Well, this year will tell. I have dropped so much money on workshops that have resulted in nothing, sent headshots to countless agents that resulted in nothing....I wonder if that 5 year mark isn't so much about people finally knowing you exist but more about you getting to that point where you're so frustrated that you just don't care anymore. Then any fear you had of pissing someone off goes away and makes you more bold? I'll let you know because I'm REALLY at that point. I'm beyond at that point. I have a workshop this weekend for a show I desperately want to be on before it gets cancelled and I plan on putting my theory into practice.Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-53467008949602096612009-12-01T15:30:00.000-08:002009-12-01T15:44:21.968-08:00VAMPIRES ARE COMING!!!!I am pleased to announce that we are in the home stretch of production for season 1 of <a href="http://www.theundeaddiaries.com">The Undead Diaries</a> We're shooting the last four episodes this week along with a new promo or two. You can check out the current promo on our <a href="http://www.youtube.com/theundeaddiaries">YouTube</a> channel. Why not subscribe while your there? : )<br /><br />I am incredibly proud of what we've accomplished and I can honestly say I've chosen my friends wisely. They have all been so gracious with their time, energy, passion....each helping out every way they can. I am truly humbled by them all. <br /><br />There's still a lot of work ahead. I've been editing as we've gone along so post-production isn't going to be a complete nightmare (I've been there before and it ain't pretty!) but there are still a couple of snafoo's I need to address. I've also started writing Season 2, which is a really interesting experience. I swear when I came up with this idea two years ago I had written down an outline for 5 or 6 seasons. For the life of me, I can't find it. Since then, every teeny tiny idea I have gets put in my gmail account. I won't be letting that happen again! I'm pleased with what I've written thus far, I just hate the thought of having some great idea disappear because I can't keep ahold of a piece of paper! <br /><br />In between the writing and editing and filming is the marketing/promotion. Now I don't feel like I'm doing too badly in this area. I actually feel more confident marketing the web series than marketing myself as an actor. It just feels different when it's a "thing" instead of a "you". I am very proud of my awesome postcard idea that has been implemented. Greg and I have been posting everywhere we can think of...Facebook, IMDB (although that post was buried quickly), MySpace, any vampire forum I come across....it's been a lot of work. I think it's going to quickly get to the point where we have to just back away and let it take on a life of it's own.Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-27114496159003304282009-10-21T08:22:00.000-07:002009-10-21T08:30:28.425-07:00Can I get a Whoop Whoop?Two years in the making (I can procrastinate sometimes) I am pleased to announce that we have finally starting filming my webseries "The Undead Diaries!" I'm really proud of my little project. It proves I have a sense of humor (it may not be YOUR humor, but they make me chuckle) and am capable of original thought (unlike, oh say, every studio in this town). What's baffling me is that the first season was a breeze to write. I couldn't make my hand move fast enough. Now we're actually filming season one, I'm trying to start writing season two and some ideas are there but the actual writing not so much. To all you writers out there, when I hear you complain about writer's block now, I get it and boy, do I feel for you. I have no idea how these people who write for weekly t.v. do it. Yes, I know there's a team of you and that's all you have to do all day (unlike me who must spend 8 hours in hell daily) but really, how do you guys do this? I was watching bloopers for one of my favorite shows the other day, Will & Grace, and I am in awe. Seriously, to the writers of that show, I bow down to you!Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-56027403816696984282009-09-12T20:51:00.000-07:002009-09-12T21:57:08.680-07:00Mercury MayhemThe last several weeks have been.....what? Frustrating, rewarding, stressful, exciting...weird. Yep, that's the word I was looking for, weird. I've had some major ups and downs going on. Car accidents, bookings, failed transmissions, auditions, it's been a roller coaster. That's not even counting the internal mental struggles I've had going on. I've finally gotten to a place where I feel secure in my talent. Hollywood, however, seems to have a way of poking and prodding you until it finds something you ARE insecure about and then just slams you with it. Over and over. Lately, for me, it's been about my age. I have become completely freaked out about my age. I'm a vegetarian, exercise every day, drink lots of water, take vitamins kind of girl because I want to be healthy but I've actually been thinking about botox. Something I NEVER thought would even cross my mind. What's wrong with aging naturally, gracefully? I've had a lot of life experiences that enrich my acting. I wouldn't have those to draw upon if I was 22 because they hadn't happened yet! I should be proud that I have wrinkles around my eyes when I smile because it means I've smiled enough to create them! There are actually celebrities that pay $650 an ounce for a night cream that's supposed to stave off wrinkles. The sad part is that I know that all of it's fake. I know about the collagen injections for bigger lips, veneers, hair extensions, spray on tans, false eyelashes, eyeshadow techniques that can make your eyes bigger, smaller, closer together, further apart, spankz, photos being airbrushed, flattering lighting when they film or have a photo shoot...these people aren't any different looking than you and me in every day life. I've seen several of them in person and they just look like normal people. So why am I letting the age thing get to me? I'm not even that damn old...yet. So I started wondering where this freakiness with my cars and ageism was coming from. I was on Facebook the other day and someone mentioned that Mercury is in retrograde. I don't normally put a lot of stock into that kind of stuff, but there's been some freaky stuff going on lately. Like who totals 2 cars within 6 months? Neither accident being their fault? Yep, Mercury mayhem.Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-71465826595457128092009-05-23T12:14:00.000-07:002009-05-23T12:20:58.493-07:00TechnologicI have been meaning to redo my website for a looooong time. I don't mind doing stuff like that. It feeds the creative monster in me. So, after fighting between iWeb and GoDaddy, I finally got it up and running. iWeb lets you just put a blog right on in there. GoDaddy wants you to pay for blog hosting. So every time I tried to FTP the files over I kept getting error messages. And of course they don't tell you exactly what's wrong just a "one or more file(s) could not be uploaded". Great. Thanks for all the helpful information there! I was planning on replacing this blog with that one but looks like it 'twas not to be. Maybe now that I know this is attached to my website I'll be a lot better about keeping it updated. The whole reason I started this thing is because I'd like to have a record of this crazy journey I'm on. I think it would be awesome to sit down when I'm 80 and read this stuff. Although I'm sure by then they will have developed a way for us to extract memories from our brain and project them straight onto a screen for all to watch. Wouldn't THAT be cool!Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-25329380440054765832009-05-15T10:53:00.000-07:002009-05-15T11:19:34.689-07:00Break TimeI'm on a break. From acting. The thing I'm most passionate about in the world and I'm taking a self-inflicted mental break before I had a mental breakdown. It's amazing how little things can really get under your skin and make you doubt everything about yourself. I had an audition recently. I'm not there to brown nose you, not there to argue with you. I just want to go in say hello, do my thing and go home. I call this pleasant professionalism. Having said that, I had an encounter with someone who could potentially provide me with work recently. Said encounter did not go well. For whatever reason, their energy just did not mesh with mine. After doing the scene, they wanted to chit-chat. I don't do well with chit-chat. I like deep conversations. All the small talk that goes on in this world drives me nuts. Point being, you're not going to have a deep conversation in an audition situation. Ever. This is something I need to work on. Anywho, so the chit-chat started and this person just seemed insistent on making me as uncomfortable as possible. They wanted to know where I was from (ok, fair enough) and then launched into how hard it is to be an actor in LA (ummmm, DUH?) and just kept harping on that point. This person was just insistent on damaging my calm. What I should have done was reminded myself that they had just said that they had tried to be an actor. Operative word there being tried. We finished our chat and I got my feedback. I don't know if I was pms-ing or if the wind was blowing the wrong way or if the conversation we had strummed every insecure nerve in my body but I promptly came home and threw away the outfit I was wearing. Total drama right? Yeah, that's what I think too. I don't let things make me neurotic and I guess after almost 4 years in the trenches, it finally got to me. There's something about this industry that can make you feel like it's never enough. You're never enough. You're to tall, to short, not blonde enough, not skinny enough, not talented enough...it's always something. BUT those things can only bother you if you let them and I, unfortunately, let them. The break won't last forever, but a regrouping every now and then never did anyone any harm.Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-50584521520415374742008-05-10T10:09:00.000-07:002008-05-10T10:49:05.414-07:00Things That Make You Go HmmmI ran into an old friend recently. Someone that really helped me begin to navigate the shark infested waters of LA when I first moved here. As always, he had some interesting information regarding the casting process. There is a point to all of this, so just bear with me...he recently helped cast an independent feature that had a decent budget. Decent enough that they were talking to some big name actors. Because of his role as CD (short for casting director for those of you that don't know the lingo) the production company set up an account on Breakdown Services for him. Breakdown Services is an electronic submission service for agents, managers and actors. Basically, they list all the roles for a project, with a description of each character and the agents and managers can send the headshot/resume of actors that fit those roles for consideration. Sometimes these roles are released to actors, but a majority of the time only the agents and managers have access to that information. A local casting director once figured out the average number of submissions for any one role. That number came to roughly 2,000. TWO THOUSAND PER ROLE. And that's just the electronic submissions. That doesn't even take into consideration the actors who don't have someone submitting for them and have to do it themselves. When the agents/managers submit, casting sees a thumbnail of your headshot. There is an option to click yes or no under each photo.<br />That information I already knew. Cut back to the old friend I ran into. He told me that when the agents submit, a folder is created for that agency and casting also has the option to click yes or no to the whole folder. What does this mean? You can have an entire team of people submitting you for a role and if you're not with an agent or manager that that particular office likes working with, you're not getting seen. Period. I couldn't understand for the longest time why people who gave up their entire lives to move here and do this would give up so easily. But, when you start getting information like this, it shows you that they really do everything they can to stack the odds against you. Unfortunately for Hollywood, all it does is make me even more determined to find the loophole in the system. And there's always a loophole : )Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-26938568185217301632008-03-11T11:04:00.000-07:002008-03-11T11:05:46.010-07:00Crayons PleaseT<span style="font-style:italic;">hese brilliant words were written by Hugh Macleod (who was introduced to me by a friend). You can read more of his writting at gapingvoid.com<span style="font-weight:bold;"></span></span><br /><br />Everyone is born creative; everyone is given a box of crayons in kindergarten.<br /><br />Then when you hit puberty they take the crayons away and replace them with books on algebra etc. Being suddenly hit years later with the creative bug is just a wee voice telling you, "I�d like my crayons back, please."<br /><br />So you've got the itch to do something. Write a screenplay, start a painting, write a book, turn your recipe for fudge brownies into a proper business, whatever. You don't know where the itch came from, it's almost like it just arrived on your doorstep, uninvited. Until now you were quite happy holding down a real job, being a regular person...<br /><br />Until now.<br /><br />You don't know if you're any good or not, but you'd think you could be. And the idea terrifies you. The problem is, even if you are good, you know nothing about this kind of business. You don't know any publishers or agents or all these fancy-shmancy kind of folk. You have a friend who's got a cousin in California who's into this kind of stuff, but you haven't talked to your friend for over two years...<br /><br />Besides, if you write a book, what if you can't find a publisher? If you write a screenplay, what if you can't find a producer? And what if the producer turns out to be a crook? You've always worked hard your whole life, you'll be damned if you'll put all that effort into something if there ain't no pot of gold at the end of this dumb-ass rainbow...<br /><br />Heh. That's not your wee voice asking for the crayons back. That's your outer voice, your adult voice, your boring & tedious voice trying to find a way to get the wee crayon voice to shut the hell up.<br /><br />Your wee voice doesn't want you to sell something. Your wee voice wants you to make something. There's a big difference. Your wee voice doesn't give a damn about publishers or Hollywood producers.<br /><br />Go ahead and make something. Make something really special. Make something amazing that will really blow the mind of anybody who sees it.<br /><br />If you try to make something just to fit your uninformed view of some hypothetical market, you will fail. If you make something special and powerful and honest and true, you will succeed.<br /><br />The wee voice didn't show up because it decided you need more money or you need to hang out with movie stars. Your wee voice came back because your soul somehow depends on it. There's something you haven't said, something you haven't done, some light that needs to be switched on, and it needs to be taken care of. Now.<br /><br />So you have to listen to the wee voice or it will die... taking a big chunk of you along with it.<br /><br />They're only crayons. You didn't fear them in kindergarten, why fear them now?Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-8592749802601686352008-02-23T13:38:00.000-08:002008-02-23T13:50:50.672-08:00AWOLOk, ok, I suck at this. Honestly, I completely forgot I had a blog until I was redoing my website the other day and remembered that I needed to add a link to it (which I haven't done). So, we're into 2008 now, almost 3 months in, wow. Things have been weird here, as I'm sure anyone in the industry in LA knows. Since my last blog, we had a writer's strike which brought everything to a grinding hault. Thankfully it's over now and hopefully the writer's got a deal they're happy with. I was certainly backing them! So, casting is now slowly but surely opening back up. It's been quite dead for me and making me rethink whether or not I need new headshots. I read somewhere though to NOT change up your headshots too often because casting actually does start to recognize it if you're persistent enough with it. I am nothing if not persistant so I'm hanging on with the current headshot right now, hoping there's recognition soon. I've also updated my demo reel so fingers crossed that gets me some calls. I did some more workshops but I'm really tired of throwing money into them and not seeing a return. I've been doing them consistently for about a year now and nothing. I'm at a loss. Time to sit down and rethink my game plan. I think a LOT of it has to do with my agent. I've been with them for a year now and can you believe that last week was the FIRST time they've called me for an audition? Ridiculous. Time for them to go. So I've started researching new agencies and sending out packets to them. From what I've heard, all the agencies are scared to bring on new people right now as noone is sure what's going to happen with the industry from here on out. The writer's strike really threw things in an uproar. For example, there's no pilot season this year. But when have I ever followed the rules? : )<br /><br />Ok, I'm off to prep for an audition I'm completely terrified of. Wish me luck!Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-82647144428513804862007-08-04T12:57:00.000-07:002007-08-04T13:05:00.505-07:00Votin' Time!This week has been crazy (in a good way). In addition to attending my weekly acting class, a friend and I have started teaching a class as well. It's amazing how much you learn by watching other actors and even more amazing how much you learn when you're in the director's seat. I was a little nervous about having constructive feedback at first, but once I got in there, I found I had no trouble at all. In addition to those two classes, going to cd workshops, working a full time job, and having two auditions this week, I shot a spec commercial last weekend for Heinz Ketchup. I've since found out that it's for a commercial contest so please be sure and vote for our spot! It's called "Closing the Deal"<br /><br />http://www.youtube.com/contest/topthistvchallengeAngelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-54594691979965325682007-07-15T13:05:00.001-07:002007-07-15T13:05:10.206-07:00Band Of BrothersSo I went to my audition yesterday morning for the lead in an indie feature. Thankfully, this time (because it doesn't happen very often) we were given the sides 3 days in advance, giving me loads of time to work on it. When something is written well, I can usually see it play out in my head like a movie, which helps tremendously because I can actually SEE me doing it. This time though, I had about 8 pages of dialogue and action to contend with so I called a couple of friends to help. In addition to them reading lines with me, one of my friends spent a good hour on the phone talking about the scenes and the characters. I found in talking with her that I had come up with choices much more specific than I thought I had. CUT TO: Saturday morning. I walked into that audition confident that I had done everything I could to prepare. I went into the room and did my thing. As I was leaving, the casting director said "Thank you so much for coming in. I hope you get it." She probably said that to everyone as they were leaving, but it was still a nice little pat on the back. As soon as I walked out I turned my phone on and it started ringing. Everyone who had worked with me was calling to see how it went. I cannot tell you how much that meant to me. I know I have a cheerleading squad behind me and that makes a huge difference in this business. I just wanted to use this post to say thank you to everyone who spent their time prepping me and caring enough to see how it went. You guys are truly amazing.Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1812292194853882275.post-51686895817111309912007-07-13T20:43:00.000-07:002007-07-13T21:06:42.887-07:00Sheesh!What can I say, I can be indecisive. I have a blog, I don't have a blog, I'm blogging on MySpace, I delete it...I'm a girl. It's a given. I decided to start blogging again because I really need to chronicle my life as as an actor here in La La Land as a reminder to myself. It's just too good to pass up. Every time I think I've seen it all, I see something else that just cracks me up. Like the homeless guy pushing a grocery cart the other day while talking on his cellphone (not kidding!). It was just SO LA. Anywho, on to why I'm here...I've been here for two years now. Some complaints, but not that many. How can you complain when you're going after your dream? I'll never understand people who are content with just going through the motions...anyway I digress...in those two years, I feel like I've accomplished some stuff, but I'm not even close to where I want to be. Since arriving, I've booked 5 indie films, 4 of which disinegrated, 1 is on hold, had some callbacks for some national commercials, shot some student films, did some workshops, met some people, have had who knows how many auditions..all of the things you're supposed to do. But there seems to be one area that is just not within my reach, tv. Why is this? I'm doing everything I can to let the tv people know I exist. I attend the workshops, I postcard, I submit..so wtf? Every single one of my friends that's an actor (which is most of them) have at least had a co-star role on something. So where am I going wrong? What about me is so intrinsically NOT television? I've even gotten good feedback in the workshops. But alas, no calls. There are those that say some actors are tv actors and some are not. I refuse to believe this. I think it boils down to the show and I KNOW there are some shows that I'm just right for. Hello? Grey's Anatomy casting, have you seen me? Seen my headshot? Ya know your character Addison? She has no siblings? The ironic thing about it is that before I moved here, when people would ask what kind of actor I wanted to be, I would always answer "a film actor." My answer hasn't changed. I love film. I love the whole process, but that doesn't mean I don't ever want to do tv! Here's my catch 22 though (and everything in the entertainment industry seems to be a catch 22) most of the credits on my resume are for film. Why? Because the market I came from pretty much only has film. I can't exactly get a tv credit when we didn't have any tv! Of course once I move one of the casting offices starts working for One Tree Hill and Prison Break..but that's another story. I'm sure I'm not griping about anything that almost every other actor in LA isn't griping about but SHEESH! when is it my turn?<br /><br />Griping over and on to more positive things...I've taken several classes since arriving here (Shannon Eubanks WHERE ARE YOU WHEN I NEED YOU!!!) and have finally FINALLY found a class that I LOVE. This class is NOT for the meek. They will rip you apart. Sometimes that's what we need to break old habits or to get to the next level. Well, I got ripped a new one last week and guess what, it pushed me to the next level. Since joining this class, I have my first audition tomorrow (for an indie feature film) and I CAN'T WAIT to use the things I've learned! I'll let you know how it goes. Peace Out!Angelique Mechelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14546446702435787543noreply@blogger.com0