The Rocca Files
August 12, 2009 11:34 AM

Stage Mommy Madness

(CBS/iStockphoto)
The other day I auditioned for a supporting role in a major motion picture. I won't name the movie or anyone involved because I really want the part. (I'll only say that the script is hilarious and the director is brilliant!)

Anyway the cast includes a 2-year-old girl. While I was waiting to read for the director, three sets of blonde identical twin girls, all of them adorable, showed up. (The auditions were taking place behind a closed door just off the waiting area.) Each pair of toddlers was accompanied by her mother and at least one other person.

The first pair's entourage included the mother (we'll call her Mommy) and grandmother (we'll call her Grandma). The auditions were running behind but Mommy wasn't about to complain. Each time the casting director apologized for the delay, Mommy smiled tightly, as if to say "No problem! The girls love waiting. We only wish we'd been stuck overnight on that Continental jet on the tarmac in Minnesota. Hey, the family that waits together celebrates together!"

To be clear: I am not casting judgment on parents who bring their toddlers to auditions. Some kids undoubtedly have fun performing. And times are tough. As for Mommy's solicitousness, well auditions bring out the neediness in everyone. (Did I tell you how funny I think the script is?!)

But then something happened that seemed kind of perverse.

The casting director called Mommy and the two toddlers into the audition room. The girls skipped in, the door closed behind them and Mommy. Grandma stayed with the rest of us in the waiting area. About two minutes later Mommy marched out of the audition, all business, and straight toward Grandma. With more than a little bit of urgency she issued orders:

"They need to see the girls cry. Walk into the room, then walk right out."

Grandma hesitated. She might have been slightly embarrassed because everyone else in the room, most of us slack-jawed, turned to her. But Mommy was having none of it: The girls needed to cry, and it was Grandma's job to pry open the spigots.

Grandma, her head bowed, followed Mommy into the room. As the door closed, I could hear something sweet from Grandma. ("Hi, girls"? "My darlings"?) Then a minute later, the door abruptly opened and Grandma came back out shutting the door behind her.

It worked: through the closed door, you could hear the wailing of girls terrified that Grandma was going away forever. The wailing that will haunt them as young women with serious trust issues. The wailing that they'll describe four days a week for six years, if they opt for classic psychoanalysis (which they should probably start saving for now, since no health care plan is going to cover what they need).

Was this their baptismal abandonment? Or had this played out at other auditions? And what had Grandma told them? "My darlings … you'll never see Grandma again"? "Sweeties … if only you were nicer, Grandma wouldn't be dying …"?

All this for a Rom Com! (Did I tell you it's a really good script?)

When Grandma sat back down in the waiting area, she herself burst into tears. It was a dirty job she'd been forced to do and she knew it. (I had to wonder if Mommy was exacting some revenge on Grandma by making her play bad cop.)

When the girls came out with Mommy, they were still sobbing. Grandma rushed to scoop up the twins and smother them with affection. But the girls seemed inconsolable.

What do you think? Was this all kind of sick? Or am I reading too much into it? And do you think I'll get the part?
Tags:
mo rocca ,
movie ,
film ,
child actors
Topics:
Mo Moments, Mo Problems
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by cidaia October 20, 2009 3:23 AM EDT
The problem IMO is that our entire culture has a very toxic view of childhood. We no longer view ourselves as here to take care of kids, let alone to build a better world for kids. Instead, we see kids as something that we "have", to use or to enjoy as we see fit. It's not just stage moms or Little League dads. It's our whole culture...we do not care about future generations. We are focused only on ourselves, and only on this moment.
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by Larry-D-Lobster September 29, 2009 5:18 PM EDT
Wow!
Having a stage must have hurt; escpecially if it were a thrust--p.s. didn't the Puritans make apses of themselves?

How do we know Grandma wasn't Sycorax, who pinched the little darling before her departure?

I say: "Let there be more McCaulay Caulkins of this world!"

At the end of the day, we all end up in the orchestra pit anyway. Anyone know any Dr. Hook songs?
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by Booka62 September 16, 2009 12:59 AM EDT
Wow, Mo.

The political discussion last year was so much more civil than this!

I wonder if it counts that the hair on my fat a$$ is long or is it only relevant when it's the hair on my head? And since I have no children, do you think I get special dispensation to text and talk on my phone all I want?
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by realspace August 15, 2009 12:14 AM EDT
I'm sure the same tactic has been used by adult actors by having their agent or dealer come in the audition and then abruptly leave.
Of course you touched on the bigger question of bringing your child to an audition in the first place. That's the sort of thing that makes me want to cry.
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by Spithapns August 14, 2009 4:50 PM EDT
I am a Stage Mom and was laughing so hard while reading this that I realized I have the exact same laugh as the son I ***** out.

Even funnier is how the story elicited so many fat-woman jokes. What the hell does being a Stage Mom have to do with being fat? Look at Dina Lohan, she hasn't eaten in years.

Still laughing (while forwarding to everyone I know).
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by 2catnight August 14, 2009 8:12 AM EDT
This entire story is a bunch of BS!!
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by guest173 August 14, 2009 3:31 AM EDT
selling their souls for the love of money and losing their children's respect
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by proudmilvet August 13, 2009 10:22 PM EDT
Fat Women should be outlawed! OOPS! Their goes the whole South!!
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by qwerty6209 August 14, 2009 5:25 PM EDT
God, it must be exhausting to be so clever.
by micheleisfree August 13, 2009 5:07 PM EDT
Wow. I wish you misogynists good therapists.
Say hi to YOUR imcompetent, abusive mothers for me.
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by -SGS August 13, 2009 2:41 PM EDT
Why do I get the feeling that, years from now, when posed with the question "Grandmothers or Grandfathers" by a bespectacled stranger on the street, these girls will answer "Grandfathers"?
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by Larry-D-Lobster October 1, 2009 11:48 AM EDT
Why do I have the strange feeling we have met somewhere?
by jr88fan August 13, 2009 7:56 AM EDT
As a grandmother myself I could never - for no amount of money - treat my grandson in this manner. Grandmothers are there to love, spoil, protect, and comfort their grandchildren when they cry , not cause it!!! This is absolutely ridiculous - what is this world coming to?!?!?
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by DolfanD August 13, 2009 6:02 AM EDT
I've often wondered if these child actors are traumatized by their roles. It has to be very confusing to them.
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by proudmilvet August 12, 2009 11:45 PM EDT
Most American women today are just too Fat & they think they can Boss everybody around. Perfect example is that stupid show, Wife Swap! Most of the women are These Ten Ton Tessies who try to Boss around their swap family. Demanding this & Demanding That & Screaming"These are the Rules!!" The minute the Husband/Father Stands up to them they start crying! I know this is only a TV show but a lot of American Women are like that!
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by pw08-2009 August 13, 2009 1:37 PM EDT
You are exactly right! But take their man out of the equation and they cannot financially support themselves for the most part.
by tigermatic September 25, 2009 3:02 PM EDT
pw08, YOU and your scummy views are what is wrong with American society. For every overweight middle-aged woman I've seen, there is an equally fat, balding, idiot of a man to match. Are this mother's actions despicable? Of course. But just as despicable are the actions of American youth coaches that push their child athletes on the field until puking-point. I've seen it firsthand. You are a sexist bigot whom I suspect must routinely be slighted by women who hate you, to have such a distorted perspective. As a bright, informed, FINANCIALLY SECURE (on my own terms, no less) American woman, you offend me.
by cidaia October 20, 2009 3:19 AM EDT
Just like there's no reason for women to behave like doormats, neither should men. Of course if you're watching reality TV shows you are not seeing normal healthy people; true self-respect is not compatible with selling your dignity for ten minutes of fame and maybe a shot at lots of cash...but let's be real here: if the mom shouldn't have brought those kids in, one way or another the dad is just as responsible. Men being conspicuously absent seems to be why women are blamed for all the really bad parenting, but the reality is that dysfunctional comes in pairs...it takes two to really screw up a kid.
by tmittelstaed August 12, 2009 6:44 PM EDT
"the director is brilliant"

And the casting director would pull a stunt like that? Some brilliant director, to hire a casting director that would pull that kind of crap.

The casting director should have asked the mother to have the girls cry, and when it was obvious the mother could not do something that would get the girls to cry on command, the casting director should have told the mother "I'm sorry, but obviously your girls are not trained enough yet for this part. NEXT"

It is perfectly possible to teach a toddler to fake-cry on command. I've seen it done. Not to mention anyone who has watched America's Funniest Home Videos has seen dozens of these types of clips of toddlers who will cry at the top of their lungs when a parent makes a face, then stop crying when the parent stops, then start crying again when the parent makes the face again, over and over, like turning on and off a light switch. it's a game to the toddler.

The problem here is people like these mothers that dragged the girls in, figure that when the call goes out for casting a child in a movie, that any old kid will do. Sorry, charlie, it don't work that way. Not everyone can be an actor, and not every child can be a child actor.
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by dahizzle August 12, 2009 6:07 PM EDT
Mo, I agree with you...it was perverse and the worst type of 'stage-mother' behavior. I have a hunch that you will get your part and the girls will not. Who wants Grandma crying on the set for weeks?
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by tammydel2009 August 12, 2009 5:28 PM EDT
These are the same type of parents that make playing sports miserable to some children. What happened to learning teamwork and having fun as a child?
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by anonymom August 12, 2009 4:34 PM EDT
doesn't anyone think it's a little odd the casting director wants to make a toddler cry at an audition?
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by bluegrass101-2009 August 12, 2009 4:22 PM EDT
Mo Rocca the most unfunny man in the world. Man does this guy suck.
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by kerry4ever August 12, 2009 4:21 PM EDT
Apparently in the Sasha Baron Cohen movie he asks a mom if she would be willing to dress her child in a Nazi uniform, and wheel a baby in a pram into a gas oven. The mother replies "OK, as long as he gets the gig!"
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by juliuswillis August 12, 2009 3:35 PM EDT
...or those twins might thank grandma later when they accept their oscars for best actresses.
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Tomorrow Show host and Sunday Morning Contributor Mo Rocca shares his opinions on a range of topics that concern him. This is the place to meet Mo, get to know him, share your thoughts, and maybe even establish a long-term relationship with him.

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