• Time Out New York
    • Time Out Worldwide
    • Travel
    • Book store
    • Subscribe to Time Out Chicago
    • Subscriber Services
  • Time Out Chicago
  • Ad Space
    (728 x 90)
  • Search
  •  
    • Home
    • Art & Design
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Gay & Lesbian
    • Home & Living
    • Kids
    • Museums & Culture
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Gyms
    • Sports & Rec
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV & DVD
  • « BACK TO SEARCH
    • In this series

      • Articles
        • Tip No. 1: Get mauled by a pit bull

        • Tip No. 2: Leave town

        • Tip No. 3: Avoid the union for as long as possible

        • Tip No. 4: Join the union ASAP—you might need the health insurance

        • Tip No. 5: Lie your ass off

        • Tip No. 6: Get paid not to act

        • Tip No. 7: Be ambiguously ethnic

        • Tip No. 8: Sell drugs


    • Tools

      • E-mail

        E-mail a friend





        • * Mandatory

        • View our privacy policy
      • Print
      • Rate & comment
        [X]

        • (will not appear on site)
          *Required
          •  characters left

        • View our privacy policy
      • Report an error

        Report an error


        • View our privacy policy
      • Share this
        • Delicious
        • Digg
        • Facebook
        • reddit
        • StumbleUpon


  • Summer festivals

    • Complete street fest listings, plus the best food, drinks, and bands this summer.





    TOC Blog

    • Bored at work: The dark knight returns*

    • Published on 7/25/08

    • Click-pound-upgrade.

      ...

    More posts »





    Survey

    Tell us...

    • We're considering adding social networking and other interactive features (profile pages, calendaring, etc.) to our site. Tell us which ones you'd like to see.

    Take the survey »





    TOC Poll

    • We want to know what you think. Click here to answer this week's poll question.





  • Ad Space
    (120 x 240)


  • Sign up today!  

    Newsletter

    • Events, discounts, and the best of Chicago delivered to your inbox every week.





    Prizes & Promotions

    • Win prizes and get discounts, event invites and more.





    TOC Staff

    • Who does what and why.





    Student Guide

    • Essential advice for our scholastically minded citizens.





    TOC Free Flix

    • Get free tickets to hot new movie releases.





    Subscribe

    • • Subscribe now

    • • Give a gift

    • • Subscriber services





  • Theater

    Time Out Chicago / Issue 165 : Apr 24–30, 2008
    Chicago actors

    Applause don’t pay the rent

    Think it’s hard out here for a pimp? Try being a Chicago actor.

    By Christopher Piatt and Kris Vire
    Photographs by Michelle Nolan

    Everybody’s job is hard. Most people’s jobs are thankless. And in a gloomy economy, it’s tough to feel bad for anybody who just wants to pretend to be other people for a living.

    Yet despite all of this, you still have to feel a unique sympathy, even an affection, for Chicago actors.

    They are the public faces of our theater scene (both when it’s thrilling and when it’s wretched), but unlike, say, Chicago professional athletes, they exist in uncelebrated anonymity and borderline poverty.

    This spring, New York’s award nominations and gushing press are being justly lavished on the hardworking Chicago casts of August: Osage County and Adding Machine. But the national media attention those shows garner tends to focus more on the glory of the Chicago actor than the reality.

    Chicago actors know their shots at fame (to say nothing of fortune) are slim to none. They often can’t get health insurance because they hold temporary jobs. Their work, no matter how good, is usually seen or ignored solely at the whim of a critic or two. They serve food they can’t afford to order. They live in tiny, crappy, makeshift studios so they can perform in tiny, funky, makeshift theaters. They scheme, scrape and hustle to get by. The lucky ones enjoy the support of spouses, parents or other patrons with decent day jobs.

    To be honest, sometimes we wonder why the hell they stay here when there’s surely more money to be made on the coasts. But the actors who do stick around are fiercely devoted to their craft, their theaters and their city, and they’re willing to do nearly anything—from lying their butts off to living out of luggage to selling drugs—to feed their passion.

    Here, eight of our favorite scrappy Chicago actors offer tips on what it takes to survive, and even thrive, in the city’s theater scene.


    Get mauled by a pit bull: Lance Baker is one of Chicago’s finest stage actors, which is why we’re happy to report a pit bull mauled his wife in 2001.
    Leave town: Chicago leading lady Hollis Resnik works constantly, but rarely in Chicago.
    Avoid the union for as long as possible: After a decade of acting, a gig at a major local theater outed the beguiling Nicole Wiesner from obscurity.
    Join the union ASAP—you might need the health insurance: Michael Patrick Thornton wasn’t about to let a little thing like quadriplegia get in the way of his art.
    Lie your ass off: What advice does veteran actor Laura Fisher have for actors starting out in Chicago? Fib like you’re Tony Rezko.
    Get paid not to act: Trista Smith’s steadiest acting gig so far was the one that paid her, for the most part, not to act.
    Be ambiguously ethnic: Monica Lopez can play Latina, Egyptian and “color blind” (that’s industry-speak for productions that cast nonwhite actors in traditionally white roles).
    Sell drugs: Let’s face it: Rich Cotovsky looks like a dude you’d expect to sell drugs. But you might not expect the drugs you’re buying from him to be your antidepressants.
    Web-exclusive
    Act for change: Can Chicago be a union town and a theater town?






    • Comments
    • |
    • Leave a comment
    [X]

    • (will not appear on site)
      *Required
      •  characters left

    • View our privacy policy

    • 5850 Amy Thu, Apr 24, at 03:21pm
      Look at this article....this is EXACTLY the problems I have been having. It is REALLY hard to be an actor here!!!! REALLY HARD!!!!

      Flag as inappropriate




      • Subscribe now and save 90%!

      • Time Out Covers
        • • One year of Time Out Chicago for $19.97
        • • Special issues and guides throughout the year include: Cheap Eats, the Spa issue, Summer Concert Preview, Fall Preview and the Holiday Gift Guide.
        • • Day-by-day listings for events, clubs, artists and restaurant openings that you won't want to miss!

      • Time Out Chicago respects your privacy. We will only use your e-mail address in order to contact you regarding to your subscription and to send you our weekly e-newsletter. We will not share this information with anyone.

  • Ad Space
    (320 x 110)


    Ad Space
    (300 x 250)


  • Most viewed in Theater

    • Articles
    • Venues
    • The Porno Zombies
    • Porno
    • Metaluna and the Amazing Science of the Mind Revue
    • Letts play doctor
    • Cyrano: Translated
    • Ruby Wilder
    • Multi-Purpose Doom
    • Nude descending a copyright case
    • Wicked
    • Ghost Stories: Crucible the Musible!
    • First Folio Shakespeare Festival, Mayslake Peabody Estate
    • Steppenwolf Theatre Company
    • Admiral Theatre
    • Bailiwick Arts Center
    • Victory Gardens Theater Greenhouse
    • Gorilla Tango Theatre Chicago
    • Chopin Theatre
    • National Pastime Theater
    • Bank of America Theatre
    • A Red Orchid Theatre


  • More Theater

    • <em>Milly's Orchid Show</em>
    • Free Milly

    • Deadpan’s labyrinth
    • Deadpan's labyrinth

    • Teddy bears
    • Teddy bears




  • Ad Space
    (160 x 600)


    Ad Space
    (160 x 600)
    • Copyright © 2000–2008 Time Out Chicago
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit & Advertising
    • Get Listed
    • We're Hiring
    • Subscribe
    • Subscriber Services
    • Site Map
    • Home
    • Art & Design
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Gay & Lesbian
    • Home & Living
    • Kids
    • Museums & Culture
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Gyms
    • Sports & Rec
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV & DVD
    • Visit our sister sites:
    • Time Out New York
    • Time Out New York Kids
    • Time Out London
    • Time Out Worldwide