Casting Director Melissa Abesera of Abesera Casting thought that comedic
casting—finding that one person with the perfect timing—was her greatest casting
strength. But after casting 14 spots for MTV in collaboration with the Staying
Alive AIDS awareness program, Abesera finds herself rethinking those
strengths.
“We had to cast 14 spots in three weeks,” says Abesera, a feat that would be
daunting under normal circumstances. Throw in the added pressure of finding real
people between the ages of 15 and 24 from 14 different countries who were
willing to share their stories about everything intimate from sex to AIDS to
prostitution, and the challenge might begin to look impossible.
In a partnership between MTV Networks International, YouthNet spearheaded by
Family Health International, the Kaiser Family Foundation, USAID, UNAIDS, UNFPA,
The World Bank, DFID, SIDA and other organizations, Staying Alive was set up in
1998 to provide vital information on HIV/AIDS prevention and to campaign against
discrimination. Staying Alive works to bring global awareness by providing
documentaries, concerts and public service announcements such as the ones cast
by Abesera, free to broadcasters around the world.
“The key to these spots in my mind,” Abesera told 411, “was that we find real
people from different countries who still had their finger on the pulse of what
is really going on in each of their countries.” Abesera didn’t have the luxury
of flying off to any of the various featured countries—Brazil, Russia, Mexico,
China, France—so she had to work with what she could find in California.
“Casting for real people becomes a 24-hour job,” say Abesera. “For example,
after a full day of in-office casting, I was in my local Ralphs grocery shopping
when I overheard a French woman and her son talking in the next aisle.”
“I approached them and asked them if they’d be comfortable sharing their
stories. Their open and honest attitudes toward sex made me realize how closed
off to sex American attitudes can be and how we really don’t know how to talk to
our kids.”
Besides grocery store finds, Abesera’s search reached to youth hostiles,
tourist spots, exchange programs, as well as regular casting calls. She was also
in touch with various AIDS organizations including the UCLA AIDS Institute
under the expertise of Mr. Edwin Bayrd, Associate Director and Ms. Sherri Lewis,
Education Consultant.
Directed by Chris Brandi, the spots themselves are currently in their final
editing stages in London, England. Brandi spoke with 411 and explained his
involvement in the project and what it meant to him.
“This project changed my life,” explains director, Chris Brandi. “I grew
up in San Francisco, CA near Haight-Ashbury. The first time I heard of someone
dying of AIDS, I was eight years old. I felt like directing these spots was an
incredible opportunity for me to be able to give something back.”
Shot at Raleigh Studios in just two days, each spot of the Sex Drive series
features two or three people talking candidly in a car from the ‘80s. “I wanted
to create a sense of history and movement forward from the past into the
present. To accomplish this, we used that kind of Hitchcock old school style
rear projection behind the car with someone actually physically moving the car
back and fourth. The backdrops themselves were made up of vintage stock footage
provided by Third Millennium Films for all of the countries that were featured.
For instance, we used shots of Ipanema Beach for the Brazilian spot and tropical
jungle footage for the spots from the Philippines.”
The ’80s car and the vintage rear projection backdrops represent the past,
but the viewer is brought firmly into the present with the youth of the speakers
as well as the High Def letterbox 16X9 ratio shots. Bob Harvey of Panavision was
equally enthusiastic about contributing to such a worthy project and
provided all of the HD camera systems for free.
What is actually said in the spots, explains Abesera, in many instances came
directly from the conversations that evolved during casting calls. “Initially, I
was admittedly trying to manipulate an answer from each person about the AIDS
crisis. Ultimately, I wanted them to say ‘the solution to fighting AIDS is to
wear a condom.’ But what the creative director, Leighton Cheal, made me realize
was that there is no solution, or way to clean this up with one line, and it’s
within that unknown space that we learn the most about young people and sex,
AIDS and the prevention of AIDS.”
The learning curve for Abesera and Brandi was steep. The target
starting age range for the young adults cast for each spot quickly went from 18
to 15 or 16 as Abesera realized how much younger kids are starting to have sex
these days. “One American girl who we talked to confessed to be intimate with
more than 10 partners and how her biggest single regret is losing her virginity.
She was 16,” recalls Abesera.
“I was hearing terms and language I’d never heard before, like references
to Rainbow Parties and young guys bragging about how many girls they’ve had sex
with.”
“I was amazed,” says Brandi that of the 100 or so people that we
interviewed during casting only one or two knew what AIDS actually stands
for.”
A commercial project that changes lives as well as a veteran's perspective of
his or her business is probably pretty rare these days. But for Brandi and
Abesera the Staying Alive Sex Drive spots have done exactly that.
"There was no script. There were no characters," reflects
Abesera. "As a casting director, my challenge was to listen and not direct
or manipulate an outcome. I had to create a safe and comfortable
rapport with real people, concentrating on the subject matter, facts and
events. The script came from the powerful real-life stories and images
evoked by the individual's personal experiences."
www.staying-alive.org