May 3, 2002
Searching for a northern
star
Vancouver agency trolls
Nunavut looking to make one lucky young woman famous
MIRIAM
HILL
Nunatsiaq News
Maggie Qillaq ties her
hair back and puts on her coat. She has just finished an audition for the female
lead role in the movie version of Farley Mowats The Snow Walker.
She speaks animatedly
about the audition in stark contrast to moments ago when the camera was
rolling and she was speaking in broken English, pretending to be the withdrawn,
shy Inuit woman the script requires. "I was pretty shy," she says.
The 25-year-old was working
at a bar in Iqaluit when one of the bouncers approached her and told her there
was a man who wanted to speak with her.
"He just introduced
himself and asked my name," she says. Then he asked if she wanted to audition
for a role in a movie. "I just smiled and said, What? Then
we started talking."
Jared Valentine, the casting
director with the Vancouver-based agency, Valentine Casting, is looking for
a beautiful young Inuit woman to play the role of Konala in the film. The shooting
location hasnt been determined yet, but production is expected to start
this year sometime between July and October.
"Whats with
the green light?" Qillaq asks Valentine, gesturing to a waist-high free-standing
light covered with a green filter.
"Its just a
diffuser," he explains, "so you wont have shadows cast on your
face."
Valentine has been in Iqaluit
for about two days looking to make someone a star. He and his casting assistant
Jolene Arreak have been scouting coffee shops, restaurants and bars, as well
as the high school and college, looking for the woman who will play the female
lead role opposite Barry Pepper, a Canadian actor who has been in films such
as Saving Private Ryan and Battlefield Earth.
"This is one of the
most challenging castings Ive done," Valentine says, "because
its so specific and for one character." Minor characters will be
cast from the area where the film is shot.
Twenty-one-year-old Linda
Kownark walks into the darkened room for her audition. She brings a friend along
for support. Kownark wears a white T-shirt and jeans and has her long, dark
hair pulled back in a ponytail. Valentine asks her to let her hair down.
Shes directed to
sit cross-legged on a large rectangular box near a corner of the room. Overhead
lights shine down on the set and a man with a small video camera trains his
lens on Kownark. Valentine sits on a chair in front of her.
"Just relax,"
he tells her before asking some general questions about her background. Then
he asks her to read lines of dialogue from a script, while he reads the part
Pepper will play.
The story is about a cocky
bush pilot who crashes in the Arctic and is saved by a demure Inuit woman who
helps him survive and dispel his prejudices.
The script requires Kownark
to speak in broken, halting English, but shes not quite sure what this
means. Her friend suggests she try to speak like her father.
They run through the dialogue
with some problems then Valentine asks her to stand with him in front of the
camera to get an idea of her height. He goes to check who will read next, but
comes back in and asks Kownark if she will try it again.
This time he explains the
story in greater detail. He encourages her to speak more slowly and no worry
so much about the words on the page, or about the spots where shes required
to translate words into Inuktitut.
"Were all white
people back in Vancouver who have no idea what youre saying," he
says. "We want to see your eyes and your face.... Dont worry so much
about the words."
They do the dialogue again,
and Kownark appears much more relaxed and in character.
"Ive never done
anything like that before," she giggles after Valentine says cut. "I
was a little nervous but Im better now."
The hardest part of the
audition, she says emphatically was pretending she doesnt speak fluent
English. "Most of it was easy, but that ... that was weird," she says
shaking her head.
Once the auditions are
complete, the women speak with casting assistant Arreak, who makes sure all
their personal information has been recorded. Each potential actress has a "profile"
recording her height, weight and contact information along with a Polaroid snapshot.
Arreak says she can tell
how nervous the women are and she tries to calm their worries. "Sometimes
they chicken out," she says. "And I convince them to come back by
telling them itll be fun, a good experience."
The reluctance is something
Valentine isnt used to.
"In Vancouver and
Toronto people really want a part," he says. "Here they dont
necessarily care."
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