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About Secrets of Paris

American-born travel journalist and guidebook author Heather Stimmler-Hall created the Secrets of Paris in 1999 to share the hidden side of the City of Light. Discover what you've been missing:

* Private Customized Tours
* Free Paris Resource Guide
* Calendar of interesting Paris events
* Opinionated Hotel Reviews
* Monthly Secrets of Paris newsletter
* Secrets of Paris Videos

Read more about the Secrets of Paris here

Calendar of Paris Events

April 29
Sip wine and enjoy appetizers in the company of David Lebovitz, with music by Cat Jahnke, all for a good cause! Help support the SOS Helpline, the emotional support line in English by attending their "Apéro-Dinatoire" evening, at Verjus Restaurant (just outside Palais Royal, 47 rue Montpensier, 1st) from 6-9pm. The fee is €60/person, and I will be there as Master of Ceremonies for the evening. RSVP on their website. See you there!

May 19
Tonight is La Nuit Européenne des Musée, a free all-night museum festival with special events and expositions to lure even the most reluctant culture-phobes through the door. Stay tuned for the program on the official website...

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL CALENDAR

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Tuesday
Mar232010

Moonlighting as a Film Extra

The extras getting into wardrobe, and our casting director, Laurent, calling us to attention.

For the past five years I've been moonlighting as a film extra in Paris. The first time I responded to an ad I saw somewhere, perhaps the American Church, specifically looking for American extras for a vernissage scene of the film L'Un Reste, L'Autre Part (the logic being that Americans buy art, they wanted our voices in the background).We stood around for two days in a gallery on the Quai Malaquai drinking Canada Dry (they don't give extras real Champagne, of course) for a five second scene. After that, the same casting director calls whenever he needs someone who fits my "profile" which they keep on file. Being a freelancer, I tend to be available when most other people have to be at work. The pay is low (usually €100 for a full day), the job mostly requires standing around waiting to be called on set, and the food at the table for "figuration" (extras) usually consists of cookies, Pringles, soda and coffee. But you meet some really interesting people and get to see the behind-the-scenes of the film industry. And it gives me an excuse to go watch French films. ;-)

Director/actor Kad Merad at work (actually, checking his iPhone), and the back of the child star.

I've been a White House journalist in a convincingly recreated set of the White House Press Room out in the Parisian suburbs (ironically, my original career plan was to be a White House correspondent, before Paris distracted me), one of the party-goers in a Jaguar commercial set in a château just outside Paris (the same one used for Teabing's house in Da Vinci Code), and part of the audience in a theatre scene in the Audrey Tautou film L'Ensemble, C'est Tout (I was actually standing next to her in the bar scene at Harry's, too, but you can only see my elbow). The most embarrassing part as an extra was in a teaser/trailer for American show, The Bachelor (the season set in Paris...I was one of the ladies in white standing at Trocadero as the sun rose behind the Eiffel Tower...all of the French extras were so happy it would only be shown in the US....I was trying to hide behind the others). One of my favorites was last winter where I got to walk past the lead characters of Trésor with my doggies, Pedro & Lena (the movie was not that good; unfortunately it was director Claude Berri's last).

This time it was a film directed by Kad Merad (one of the stars of the French hit film, Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis. We were only told that it was a restaurant scene at Tokyo Eat, in the Palais de Tokyo. We were told to bring two summer outfits and two winter outfits, along with our paperwork and ID (you have to have French working papers and prove you pay taxes here to work as an extra). Extras in France, at least in the movies I've done, don't get any hair or make-up assistance, we do it ourselves. The smart ones bring books, magazines, or other things to serve as quiet distraction.

After being registered and getting dressed (with a wardrobe woman telling us which outfits she prefers), we're all herded into the restaurant and choose our table. I'm with Philippe, a classical musician in his real life. We're served "molecular cuisine" dishes from the Tokyo Eat menu (and instructed not to touch them), along with glasses of what looks like red wine, but is in fact grape juice.

Philippe and I get our dishes at 3pm. And the same dishes mostly eaten with our "wine" at 8pm.

We have to pretend we're eating and talking without actually making any sounds or touching the food. We can drink the juice, which we do until we start feeling ill four hours later. Then we break for dinner. When we go back, the same food is sitting there, and this time, because they can actually see us in the shot, they tell us to eat it. Philippe wisely asks for a fresh plate. My cold lentil dish doesn't need heating, so I try and eat it. Anything is better than more grape juice! Then we change into our winter outfits and move to other tables. Since I'm now in the back far from the camera, I start dozing off between takes (there are huge pauses between them as the director chats with the actors, one who is a young boy who seems amazingly calm despite the hours of repetition). We wrap at midnight and everyone packs up and heads out. When Monsieur Papa (the working title) comes out, look for me at the table behind the kid in the restaurant scene. ;-)

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Reader Comments (1)

How exciting! It almost makes me want to see the Bachelor, but I think instead I'll go for Ensemble, C'est Tout!
March 24, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterKate
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