• nocturne@slrpnk.net
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    29
    ·
    2 days ago

    The trailer near set, at base camp if you are doing location shooting, or on the lot if you are doing studio shooting, is not where the person is living, it is essentially their office while at work. Talent needs access to a shower, space to change, an area to eat, run lines, and unwind. They likely also have a hotel room where they are living for the duration of the shoot.

    My experience with the industry is Tamalewood (Albuquerque and Santa Fe) and all location shooting, meaning we go to a location to shoot, rather than have a set on a sound stage in a studio.

    A typical day is 12 hours, and an actor may have a long break between scenes. Long enough they need/want to be alone but not long enough to go back to their hotel. I worked on one project that was shot on a working ranch. We had to limit road traffic so it would not interfere with indoor daily operations, so running the 50 minutes back to Santa Fe was not an option, plus that 100 minutes of travel could be spent in their trailer.

    And while we have a hair and makeup trailer, some actors will want to have theirs done in their own trailer, be it privacy, or to run lines, etc.

    Sometimes base camp is a bit far from set, and shuttling talent back and forth can cause delays, in those cases we try and have a holding area for talent, with another for background.