Every star sparkles
Alex Coolman
There are kids who are merely cute, and then there are kids who are
stars. The difference, Phyllis Henson said, comes down to a quality
called “sparkle.”
“It’s kind of like charisma,” said Henson, who runs The Kids Hollywood
Connection, a Costa Mesa company that helps parents get their children
into acting and modeling. “It’s the difference between a child standing
up there and having no personality and one that just glows. It’s a kind
of a glow.”But what looks like sparkle to a doting parent often looks
like a casting mistake to Hollywood agents, which is why Henson has been
offering her services as a consultant to families of would-be child
celebrities for more than 20 years.
A major error parents make is assuming that their kids need to be
extensively photographed and elaborately costumed in order to break into
modeling or acting, said Henson, who handles children up to 16 years old.
In fact, she said, very young children grow so quickly that
professionally prepared photography portfolios are almost useless. And
dolling up a child in some sort of contrived outfit can be the kiss of
death: the sparkle gets smothered beneath all the clothing.
“You have to know how to package your child,” Henson said. “You don’t
want them to look like they’re at a beauty contest. You want to see a kid
that looks like they just came off the playground.”
“Packaging,” as Henson calls it, often comes down to stripping off all
the unfortunate clothing and styling choices parents make in hopes of
rendering their child more attractive. Bows are a major no-no, she said.
Perfectly coiffed hair is too tidy, and ought to be mussed up slightly in
order to be optimally endearing. Gold jewelry should be taken off as
quickly as possible.
Costa Mesa resident Yvette Gagnier, who brought her daughter Araiana to
Henson after some less-than-satisfactory experiences with other
organizations, was given a crash course in packaging as soon as she
walked in the door.
“I was really big on hats and bows,” Gagnier recalled. “She said ‘No, no,
no.”’
The newly restyled Araiana, who is not yet 2 years old, went on to land a
job modeling for what was either a newspaper advertisement or a page in
the Sears catalog -- Yvette isn’t quite sure which.
“I think it was a Sunday ad, but I never saw it,” Yvette said. “There’s
really no way to find out. But she got paid, you know?”
The business of packaging and selling children to the marketing industry
is not without its ethical complexities, but Yvette tries to approach the
business in a way that will make sense for her daughter.
“If she gets a little older and says ... ‘I don’t like this,’ then I’m
going to stop,” she said.
But Yvette, who grew up in what she characterized as a poor household,
doesn’t want her daughter to have to go through the same experience.
“I just don’t want her to have to settle, or to have to marry young to
feel like she’s getting out of a bad situation and home,” she said.
The financial rewards for children who act and model can be significant.
Modeling jobs typically pay between $100 and $150 an hour, Henson said,
while a child who is a member of the Screen Actors Guild commands a fee
of nearly $500 merely to appear on a set.
Over the life of a typical television commercial’s airplay, Henson said,
a child can make upward of $35,000 in residuals.
When a child reaches the age of 6, they are legally allowed to spend nine
hours a day at a set, which dramatically increases their earning power.
“Six is the golden age” in child acting, Henson said.
All that money waiting to be earned can occasionally drive parents to
approach their children’s careers in a more mercenary fashion than might
be healthy, Henson said, but the types of adult she calls “stage parents”
-- those who live vicariously through the experiences of their children
-- are less common now than they used to be.
“I don’t see as many pushy parents as I did many years ago,” Henson said.
“Reality has set in to a lot of parents. Now, 99% of them are doing it
for the right reason.”
Henson’s first contact with families who want their children to be in
show biz is usually a consultation at her office, during which she
determines whether a child has the right stuff -- not only sparkle, but
also the appropriate sort of behavior habits -- to make it. In some
cases, she said, she can detect a potential star who merely needs a
little time to grow up.
“If I see a child that has a lot of potential, but they’re not quite
ready because they’re a little shy or they keep a finger in their mouth
or whatever, I might recommend a workshop,” she said.
Other times, it becomes apparent to her that, despite the adoring looks a
child receives from its parents, a kid is simply not good material for
the industry.
“Real clingy” children are a major turnoff, Henson said, no matter how
much sparkle they have. Extremely shy kids are also unlikely to make her
cut.
Despite what some parents think, tremendous energy in a youngster isn’t
necessarily very attractive either. Henson said casting agents aren’t
very excited about the prospect of hiring a hyperactive kid who takes too
much effort to photograph and film.
If a child isn’t right for the business, Henson isn’t shy about saying
so.
“For some parents, it’s kind of a letdown,” she said. “They say ‘If my
kid just gets two or three auditions, I know they’ll get something.”’
But the sparkle is a crucial commodity, Henson said, and kids either have
it or they don’t.
“We know it the minute we see it,” she said.
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