How to Get Your Cat Into Movies
The post How to Get Your Cat Into Movies by Jeff Siegel appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com.
It seems like Cathy Pittman has heard some version of the question thousands of times: “My cat is so cute. How can we get into the movies? And will we get rich?”
The Hollywood animal trainer sighs as she tells the story. If anything, the number of people who want fame and fortune for their pet has increased in the YouTube age, when cute – and the next Grumpy Cat – is just a click away.
“So the first thing I always ask them is what happens when they put the cat in the crate to take them to the vet,” says Cathy, the matriarch of the Performing Animal Troupe, which has been supplying animals for TV, movies, and commercials for more than 30 years. Among her credits: TV’s Salem, the black cat in “Sabrina, the Teenage Witch,” which ran seven seasons, and more.
“And when they tell me, ‘My cat hates it – they start hissing and biting.’ I ask them, ‘If your cat doesn’t like being in a crate for the trip to the vet, then how will the cat take being in a crate for hours on a set?’”
In other words, there’s a reason why Cathy has used what the trade calls a private party cat (owned by an individual, and not a trainer) just once in her career. In fact, most performing cats aren’t an individual, but a team of two or three animals. That allows for cats’ peculiar eccentricities.
“Dogs like to please their owners, and cats like to please themselves,” says Cathy. “ Dogs don’t have to be convinced to do a scene the way cats do. A cat can hide under a table, and there’s not much you can do about it when that happens. And you have to take into account how the actor will react to a cat.”
The other thing to keep in mind, Cathy says – the cat’s owner almost certainly won’t get rich, no matter what stories they’ve heard on the Internet. Prices are fixed by contracts with producers: The trainer gets $50 to $60 an hour, while the owner is paid $500 a day for letting the production use its animal. However, the owner has to split that money with the trainer.
“So finding a cat that will fit for a part off the street? That’s about a one in a million chance,” says Cathy.
Featured image: Alessandro Dangelo/Getty Images
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The post How to Get Your Cat Into Movies by Jeff Siegel appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com.
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