Chapter Five
My Life as a Dog (Part I)
I didn’t land the role as the
voice of Wishbone because I was an
awesome actor. I got it because I could make shit up. In October of 1993 I was
asked to audition for the voice of a character for a new children’s television
show. Except it wasn’t a show, yet. It was just an idea. I showed up to the
audition with only one piece of information: the character was a dog. I didn’t
ingratiate myself to the audio engineer who was recording the auditions, as I
started asking a bunch of questions that, had I thought a few seconds about it,
I would have realized he couldn’t possibly have the answers to: Is this a cartoon? Is it a dude dressed up
in a dog suit? (Which was followed immediately by a question I managed to
keep in my own head - (Oh Christ, if I get this gig will I have to
dress up in a fucking dog suit?) What
kind of dog is it? What’s the dog’s motivation? Is he more into toys, food, or
licking his own balls?
Whatever I did at the audition was at least enough to get me invited
to the callback. A callback, for those of you not familiar with the term, is a
second audition, usually one attended by the director, the producer, the
writers, etc. This provides you with an opportunity to get more information
about the project you are competing for, and gives the director a chance to see
just how direct-able you are. That’s the upside. The downside is that a
callback also gives you the opportunity to suck in front of a much larger group
of people, thereby bringing shame and dishonor to your clan. This would turn
out to be one of the strangest callbacks of my career, which, in the end, was
probably a good thing.
I was given an address by my
agent and told to go there for the callback. I assumed this was another
recording studio, but it turned out to be a house in the fashionable M Streets
district of Dallas. I walked in to a living room packed with people. I was
quickly introduced to the executive producer and creator of the project, the
line producer, head writer, cinematographer, etc. Then I met the star of the
show, which turned out to be a Jack Russell terrier, and I met his trainer. So,
okay. It was a real dog. I would not have to dress up in a dog costume and
dance around, which, for the record, I would have done for the right amount of
money, and which also would likely have sent me down the path of alcohol and/or
drug abuse.
I had the opportunity to see
how the callback would work because there was one voice actor in front of me to
audition. They handed him a page of script, and told him that, while he read
from it, the trainer would put the dog through a series of behaviors that were
supposed to correspond with what he was reading. They recorded the auditions on
a boom-box set up in the living room. So off he went, giving it his best, but
the problem was the trainer was speaking commands to the dog at the same time
this guy was trying to read the script, so it was kind of chaotic. Plus the dog
wasn’t being terribly cooperative at the moment. The actor finished his read,
everybody thanked him, and he left. I panicked, because I could think of no
good way to do a good read the way they had it set up. I could tell everybody
in the room was kind of stressed. Things were not going well. Just as the
producer called me over and gave me the script, the trainer announced that the
dog needed a break. With that, she took a tennis ball out of a pouch on her hip
and tossed it to the dog – who immediately went bat-shit crazy with a ball in
his mouth.
Maybe it was because I had
already written this callback off and felt I had nothing to lose. Maybe it was
because the moment I saw how happy and animated that dog became with something
as simple as a ball, I connected with something in the universe that drove me
at that precise moment. I don’t know why
I did what I did, but here is what I
did: without being asked to or given any direction, I put down the script,
opened my mouth, and started speaking what I thought must be going through the
dog’s head at that moment. It was completely free form, stream-of-consciousness
blather, Improvisation 101. Just me riffing on what I thought a dog with a ball
might be thinking. I won’t try to recreate that moment on paper; it wouldn’t be
funny, and I can’t remember exactly what I said, anyway.
I had a vague notion of people
in the room laughing, and I heard somebody say, “Thank you. That was great.”
When I asked if they wanted me to go back and read the script, they said no.
Turns out they had recorded the whole thing the minute I started talking and
making shit up. That turned out to be my audition. I walked out of there
thinking, Well, I fucked myself out of
THAT gig. But I suppose I didn’t care. I made them laugh, and that was
enough for that moment. A few months later I was sitting in a cabin in the
Smoky Mountains when my agent called and told me I had the gig. When she told
me how much money I’d be making per episode, I broke out in a rash. It
certainly wasn’t much compared to a network television series (we landed on
PBS), but to a poor white boy from Conroe, Texas, it was the freaking lottery.
On the drive back to Texas, that’s all I was thinking about. I wasn’t thinking
about what it was going to mean to be working on a national TV series.
I had no idea what I was
getting into.
1994-1995 was a Big Year. I
was still young enough to do a whole bunch of Life-Changing Things at the same
time and think it wouldn’t have any adverse affects, as only the young and
truly ignorant can think. In a single year I got married, moved to a new town,
built a house, and started what amounted to a new full-time job. Basically four
of the five most stressful things you do in your life. The only thing I didn’t
do that year was murder a guy – which might actually have relieved some stress. I was working six days a week on the show.
Monday through Friday was principal photography – the actual filming of the
show. But dude, you may ask, you’re a voice actor. Why would you be
needed on the set during filming? A
fair question. The first reason was they were paying me what I considered to be
a shit-load of money. I would have done anything they asked me to do, up to and
including crapping in my hand and throwing it around in a festive manner like a
zoo monkey.
The second reason was, I was
needed. Speaking on set in character made life easier for the other actors, the
director, and the editors. So that’s where I was five days a week. While on set
I created a rough voice track for the editors to use after the show was in the
can and in post-production. Saturday was my day to actually go in the recording
studio and record “clean” on an episode that was most of the way through the
editing process. We’d start from the beginning of the script, and I’d watch the
episode on a monitor and open my mouth and speak accordingly. A lot of people
have asked me over the years how many of the words that came out of my mouth
and made it into the show were on the page, and how many were made up. I don’t
really know. I can tell you that I worked for folks who trusted my instincts,
and when something on the page didn’t seem to make sense, they would more often
than not turn me loose on the scene to see what would happen. A lot of times it
would turn out funny. A lot of times it would turn into a train wreck. But I’ve
always enjoyed that kind of creative challenge.
A dog and his boy, circa 1995.
The
difference between voicing a cartoon versus a live-action sequence is one of
chronology. In animation, you do the voice acting first. Sure, you have storyboards, and you know what your
characters look like, but the acting performance comes first, and then the
animators work with what you give them. On Wishbone
we did just the opposite. The on-camera work had to come first. Soccer
(that was the dog’s real name) would get suited up as Robin Hood, or Oliver
Twist, or whoever he was going to be that week, and the trainers would put him
to work, and all the human actors would play off of that, and that’s how you
shoot a television show. Thing was, Soccer didn’t always stick to the script.
Some times, he would do something that he was definitely not asked to do, but
it was so charming or interesting or funny that the director would want to keep
the shot. So now it’s in the final edit, and there are no scripted words for
it. That’s when I would make shit up. It wasn’t always comedy gold, but it beat
the living hell out of working in a cubicle.
Next week, Chapter Six: Planned Parenthood, And A History Of Dumbasses
Totally buying your memoir when, not if, but when it gets published.
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