The scene continued for two minutes, then Thomas yelled, “Cut. Print.”
“How was it?” Vance asked.
“We won’t need another one,” Thomas replied. “Next scene, places.” Calder, who had begun pacing again, took a breath. “Action.”
This scene, the dramatic one, played more slowly, and Calder used his own accent.
“Is he a Brit or an American?” Eddie asked, surprised.
“What, you didn’t know?” Rick replied.
The scene ran a little over three minutes, then Thomas cut but left the camera turning. “Face the camera, Vance,” he said.
Vance faced the camera.
“Smile.”
Vance smiled.
“He’s going to need some dental work,” Eddie said.
Thomas asked for left and right profiles and a rear shot, then asked Vance to face the camera again. “What’s your name?”
“Vance Calder.”
“How old are you?”
“None of your business.”
“Cut. That’s a wrap. Let’s go out to the back lot.” The projector stopped, and the lights went up. “He’s putting up the outdoor stuff,” Thomas said.
“I’ll send him to the dentist today,” Rick said. “After he meets Hyman Greenbaum.”
Eddie said nothing.
The lights went down again, and the film began with the camera pointing down a western street set. A man on a running horse appeared, headed straight for the camera. As he approached, he brought the horse up short, simultaneously dismounting, drawing a six-gun and fanning six shots directly at the camera.
The scene changed abruptly to a shot from a car with the horse running alongside. To Rick’s astonishment, Calder leapt from the running horse, hit the ground, vaulted over his mount, then back again, then into the saddle. He whipped a Winchester out of a saddle holster and began firing it at a full run, then he brought the horse up short and reared him, his hat raised in one hand. The shot was pure Tom Mix. The film stopped, and the lights came up.
“That’s it,” Thomas said.
“I asked you to shoot him roping,” Rick said.
“He refused to do it. Said he knows nothing about roping and he wasn’t going to make an ass of himself on film.”
Eddie burst out laughing. “Where the hell did you find this guy?”
“Glenna spotted him the day before yesterday on the construction crew out at our new beach house.”
“Is he American or English?”
“English.”
“You know what I’m thinking,” Eddie said.
“You’re thinking of Clete Barrow.” Barrow had been Centurion’s biggest star and Rick’s closest friend until he was killed in the war, at Dunkirk. “He’s nothing like Clete, except that he’s English, a terrific actor and a terrific athlete, but I know what you mean.”
“I hope you didn’t let him off the lot without signing him.”
“Later today. He’s having lunch with Hyman Greenbaum. Don’t worry; I’ll have him signed before the day is out.”
“Be careful of Hyman; he’s the best.”
“That’s why I sent Vance to him.”
Vance Calder entered the Brown Derby and was shown immediately to a table where a man in his fifties stood up and offered his hand. “Hello, I’m Hyman Greenbaum,” he said. He was a big man who looked like he had played football in college.
“How do you do, Mr. Greenbaum. I’m Vance Calder.”
“Call me Hy, Vance, and have a seat.”
Vance sat down and declined a drink.
“This is interesting,” Hy said. “The only other time Rick Barron ever sent anybody to me was the girl he married, Glenna Gleason.”
“Then I’m flattered,” Vance said.
They looked at a menu and ordered.
“Rick and Eddie Harris had a look at your test this morning,” Hy said. “I have an appointment out there at two o’clock. That means they liked it.”
“Who’s Eddie Harris?”
“He’s the chairman of Centurion Pictures, Rick’s boss.”
“I thought Rick was the boss.”
“No. He’s the head of production, which means he’s the boss of moviemaking, except he reports to Eddie.”
“I see.”
“Centurion is a good place for you to be,” Hy said. “They’re the newest of the major studios... well, nearly major.”
“Do you think they’ll offer me a contract?” Vance asked.
“Yes, but we won’t take it. We’ll take a three picture deal, with options. That means they can fire you whenever they like.”
“Wouldn’t a long-term contract be safer?”
“I’m glad you’re concerned about safety; I’m a cautious man, myself. But you don’t want to be a salaried employee of a studio; you want to stay independent, so you can work wherever you like. That’s what the smart stars are doing.”
Vance nodded. Lunch came, and they ate.
“Let me give you a little sermon,” Hy said.
Vance smiled. “I’m accustomed to sermons; my father is an Anglican priest.”
Hy nodded. “Then you know to sit quietly and not ask questions.”
Vance looked sober. “Yes.”
“Here we go. I’ve seen a lot of young people come out here since the advent of talkies — even before — and it goes something like this: most of them end up pumping gas and waiting tables. If they’re beautiful and talented, they get a studio contract, starting at two hundred a week, more, if the studio wants them badly enough.
“The studio puts them in whatever movies they need them for, never mind quality. If they think they’re going to be hot, they give them better pictures, and their salary goes up to five or eight hundred a week. If they’re star material, pretty soon they’re making two thousand.
“At first, they buy a new car, a convertible, usually, and get a better apartment. Then, after a raise, they get a mortgage and buy a little house. As the money continues to go up, they buy a more expensive car and a bigger house. Then, if they’re lucky, they go independent.
“One day, when they’ve been out of work for a couple of months, a script arrives. It isn’t a good script, but it’s being shot in a nice place, say the South of France, and the costar is somebody they want to fuck. Oh, and the mortage and car payments are overdue. The movie doesn’t do well, and the next script isn’t quite as good. Then they’re offered second leads in even worse pictures, and in a couple of years they’re pretty much done, and they haven’t turned thirty-five yet.”
“I understand,” Vance said.
“I’ll get you decent money for the first picture, and we’ll hold out for the lead. Here’s what you do: don’t buy a car until you can pay cash for it, and it should be used; you live modestly and don’t go to expensive restaurants, unless the studio or somebody else is paying. You keep putting money in the bank. You don’t marry a costar.”
Vance laughed.
“You don’t buy a house until you can pay cash. You don’t ever take a job because of the location or the costar or even the director. You take jobs for good scripts, that’s all. If you can stick to that program, you’ll become very rich, and I’ll help you invest your money. You’ll form your own production company and become a partner of the studio, instead of just working for a fee. And you can marry anyone you like.
“My agency gets ten percent of every dollar you earn, whether it’s from salary, profits, investments or partnership. That will get to be a big number, but we’ll earn it.”
“Of course,” Vance said.
“They’re going to want you to see a dentist,” Hy said. “I’ll make them pay for it.”
“Thank you for your advice, Hy,” Vance said. “I assure you, I’ll take it. Now let me tell you a little about me: I drive a Whizzer.”
“A what?”
“A Whizzer. It’s a little engine bolted onto a bicycle, and it goes about thirty miles an hour downhill with a tailwind. I live in a rooming house in Santa Monica, where I’m very comfortable, and I saved money when I was running a pile-driving machine. I promise you I will change my circumstances carefully.