- Registrado
- 12 de Dic, 2022
I agree that the acting coach coming with her day after day is unreasonable. I am not familiar with the term “scene study” but I do know that anything that adds time to the shoot, as having a coach around may have done, costs money and pisses people off. Even if she were running lines in her trailer with the coach, it’s just another body crowding the set of a low-budget show. (And let’s remember that these were WB/CW shows, where the acting quality was highly variable.)Charisma is a weird case. She apparently brought her acting coach to set for YEARS, which, sure—she didn’t have experience, unless you count Baywatch and something called a “leasing agent.” But after five or six seasons, you’d think she could deliver a line like “I'm the dip” without needing a scene study. Apparently not. Whedon likely had a spreadsheet of reasons to fire her.
She had a specific energy Buffy and Angel needed—Joss always struck me as network television’s answer to Paul E. Dangerously: casting people who had no business acting and taking huge gambles. That’s probably why she got the part in the first place.
So my question is—why didn’t someone tell CC’s agent that it had to stop? She got her option picked up season after season, with a raise each time—why not just negotiate then? Instead, he picked an almost comically villainous reason and time in the actress’ life to kick her to the curb. I don’t get it.