Cast of Java QuestSee the make-up? Mrs. St. James is under there somewhere.
The only hitch was that my wardrobe, which had been special ordered, wasn't ready. This will explain why you see me in these pictures wearing my comfortable--and wrinkled--oversize shirt that's perfect for road trips while the rest of the cast is in full wardrobe. What's a woman to do? Send someone to the mall, damn it! One lucky crew member got to go on a quest of his own for appropriate clothing for me. He came back with brown. I like brown. All was well.
"Location" for me ended up being an old abandoned warehouse where they built an absolutely amazing set. Honestly, you could have set up shop in there and never have known the difference. But lucky MSJ got to film in the attic of an old, creepy warehouse-converted-to-studio (I would love to have explored) and the orangutan exhibit at the Erie Zoo. It was a brilliant location -- looks just like Mayan ruins.

Creepy warehouse location, courtesy of Ed Bernik
Do you know how it is when you go to the zoo and you look right at the apes and they just ignore you? They won't look at you even if you're right in front of them. They'll just sit there or put a bag over your head or something? Well, I learned something that my biodiversity classes never taught me. Those apes are exhibitionists. The apparent apathy is simply a ruse. If you put black screens in front of their glass to control the lighting for, let's say, filming a commercial? Suddenly those bored-looking apes are sedentary no longer. They'll swing around, knock on the glass, try to peer around the screens to see what you're doing, and perform unimaginable antics to get your attention. This was my daughters' favorite part of the trip. Orangutans.

4 comments:
Is there any way to get the pampering part without the acting...I'd love to sign-up for that program :o)
When we were at Epcot, they were filming a scene for the next High School Musical movie and we were greatly amused by just how incredibly bad the singing was. J even declared it pitchy, followed by a "they're awful!" (It was really bad.) I was amazed at how much editing must obviously go into the songs recording. It was fascinating to watch though.
(Sorry, that's me making a mess of your comment section, posted and then noticed my spelling....oops)
The apes were horrible to work with! The director even declared, "I can't work with this guy!"
It seems they can fix anything in a film now. You think you see Mike on the screen, but that's really just an animated character that was made to look like Mike, but with more talent. hee hee
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