The strangest thing happened to me a little while ago. I got a callback. I never get callbacks. And this was for a TV show, of all things.
Then, a hysterical-Winona-Ryder-drawing-the-alphabet-on-her-wall Stranger Thing happened. I got cast. On Shrink. A new TV show for NBC's streaming service Seeso. Immediately, I thought it was a mistake. This is how I handle success, by the way. I immediately panic and reject it and decide someone made a mistake, that I'm a fraud, that I tricked someone. My first reaction to succeeding is to want to desperately apologize to the people who think I did a good job. I can't even look at texts that contain a compliment. As soon as I see a compliment is coming, or a heart emoji, I hide my phone because I don't deserve it. I tricked someone. Strange things happen in adulthood after you spent 22 years of your life hating yourself for being secretly gay in a conservative family living in a conservative small town. My internal dialogue growing up was that I was an anomaly. A mistake. Love wasn't made for me. Something fucked up on the assembly line and I ended up having an SUV's body with a jetski engine and rowboat interior. Since coming out and embracing my gayness and finding love, this sense of perpetual failure and being a walking mistake has hopped like a parasite to feed on my comedy career. And so I've spent the last decade and a half convinced I was a comedic anomaly, that success wasn't meant for me, that I was a forever going to be the Chicago comedy equivalent of the Feed The Birds lady in Mary Poppins (played by Academy Award winner Jane Darwell, goddess of my being). And, as a coping mechanism, I started to wear this sense of failure, this narrative of being perpetually overlooked, as a badge of honor. If I couldn't get a touring company or a stage at Second City or a Harold team at the iO, if I was never invited to perform in any classic Annoyance shows, then I would position myself as the tragically overlooked comedy martyr. I would "show them" by being the busiest comedy creator in the city, fueled by a sense of injustice and hairbrained conspiracy theories as to why the powers that be have, for a decade, chosen to ignore me. It was pretty cozy, this little narrative. I relished the sadness of it and wore it like a sharf (shawl + scarf). I love an underdog story. I use to LOVE rooting for the yellow sweater-ed Team 3 on Supermarket Sweep that never had a chance of winning the Final Sweep. And here I had brilliantly made myself the ultimate underdog. And then, I got cast. And I was confused. And panicked. And kind of sad for a moment. Because my painstakingly crafted narrative of loserdom had just gotten shattered. Who...what....HOW?! How could I continue being Chicago's Most Tragically Overlooked Gay Comedy Powerhouse if I had just booked a principal role on a TV show? I couldn't. And I can't. So I'm changing the narrative. Because that narrative was fucking dumb to the maxxx. I've had so many wonderful experiences and opportunities since I've been in Chicago. I'm extremely fortunate, and also I'm not entitled to a single goddamn thing. Not a single role, not a single stage, nothing. I can succeed just like anyone else, and I can fail just like anyone else. Yeah, okay, truth talk. I honestly feel like the major theaters fucked up in not casting me at any point in the last five years, because everyone and their uncle knows I could write 40 different mainstage or e.t.c. Second City shows tomorrow that Chris Jones would give at least three stars to (and three paragraphs devoted to fawning over the new white straight dude.) Writing sketch comedy is my superpower, but there are many factors that go into hiring someone and perhaps other skills I have aren't as strong. But also, just because I know something is within my capabilities doesn't mean I deserve it, or that there's been a grand conspiracy to deprive me of the opportunity. The narrative now is this: I'm a workhorse writer. I'm flawed but talented performer. I look great is pink glitter platform heels. And, I have the ability to get cast on a TV show. I can succeed. I won't always, but I can. I am capable. I will not always be right for the part, nor will I always knock every audition out of the park. Good things can happen to me that I actually deserve. Just as I can deserve to not achieve things. I am not an anomaly. I am a comedian, ever growing, ever learning, ever stumbling, ever achieving, ever experimenting. I am more than my failures and more than what I don't have on resume. I'm John Fucking Loos. And I can act on camera. And I can reference Jane Darwell in a blog about being an actor in Chicago. And I can write you literally anything. AND I CAN GET CAST.
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There's a Wall in my way. It's been there from the very beginning, even though it's location continues to change. It always blocks me from what I think I want/deserve.
There's no way over this Wall, or under, or through. I keep looking for the secret door, or for the Samwell Tarly who can show me where the secret door is and how to operate it. I keep constructing catapults to launch myself over this massive blockade, shooting desperate and frantic grappling hooks, but they never seem to get me even half as high as I need to go. I've been in the comedy community going on eleven years. I'm not on SNL, I've never gotten a callback for a touring company, I don't have a writing agent, my photo will likely never be on the wall of Second City. I'm not, it turns out (despite my grand desires to be so) the next Catherine O'Hara. It always seems so easy for everyone else. You log onto Facebook and see people getting cast, getting hired, getting great and deserved opportunities on the other side of the Wall. They're getting helped over, or through, or under, or they're launching themselves over with grace and ease. You go to a sports bar and see people you know selling cars and insurance and Hungry Jack pancakes. They did it. They got over the Wall. They got to peek at what's on the other side. But I am still here, facing this imposing psychological structure, trying to figure out what exactly I need to hurl myself over it. A web series? A web series with a production budget? How about a web series that wins an award at a festival? What about a podcast about web series? Or a clever Tumblr? Or an Instagram of just pictures of me farting? What will crack the engineering code and make the catapult strong enough to launch my 230-pound Dutch frame into superstardom? Fuck enjoying what you do, everything should be a calculated, sterile attempt at achieving a preconceived outcome. I'm writing this because I've realized the Wall will never go away. It will always be in the way, in some regard or another, no matter how much I accomplish or how high and fast and powerfully I soar in its direction. First, the Wall was blocking my attempts to get on a Harold team at the iO. Back in 2006, that goal seemed as important and huge as Mt. Everest to me. Later, it was blocking my attempts to get a callback for the Second City Touring Company. Lately, despite accomplishing more than I ever dreamed of when I started out eleven years ago, it's still stubbornly there, now blocking me from figuring out how to get material produced for television. Fucking Wall. My ambitions and goals have grown enormously. But the juvenile feeling of futility and the inability to control my destiny remains the same. Getting an NBC deal feels as huge as getting on a Harold team once did, and I'm still haunted by the (entirely self-created) powerlessness the Wall imbues in me. It's almost as I'm an addict to this feeling of comedy career impotence, this feeling that there is some grand conspiracy keeping me from having the fame and fortune I think I want (or think I should have) (or have seen others have and have decided for some reason I should want the same success). Because that's easier to believe than the truth, which is either I'm not ready yet for my dreams to come true or I never will be. Maybe my talent isn't as big as my ambition, which is absolutely fine and normal. So even though I've travelled thousands of literal miles, mostly back and forth on trains to and from shows and classes, the Wall has travelled with me. I have so many great opportunities and experiences at my back now, yet I seem to forget them almost as soon as they've passed me. I have hyper-focus on this goddamn Wall. What I don't have. I'm the idiot dog that just ate ten treats and immediately forgets this fact and can only focus on that last treat dangling precariously in my owner's hand. It's a lesson I've learned, re-learned and will continue to re-learn for many years to come. And it keeps me busy, I guess, building catapults. For solace, I return, as I often do, to the final words of the New York Ball scene documentary Paris is Burning from the enigmatic Dorian Corey: "I always had hopes of being a big star. But as you get older, you aim a little lower. Everybody wants to make an impression, some mark upon the world. Then you think, you've made a mark on the world if you just get through it, and a few people remember your name. Then you've left a mark. You don't have to bend the whole world. I think it's better to just enjoy it. Pay your dues, and just enjoy it. If you shoot an arrow and it goes real high, hooray for you." The only difference for me is, I'm desperately shooting grappling hooks. I just held auditions for a student show, and as always, there was a wealth of talent on display; more than could fit into the show. At the end of each audition group, I told the auditioners to A) not forget the ageless Ellen Barkin's unsung contributions to the history of cinema and B) keep auditioning regardless of the outcome. Audition, audition, audition.
Because I've been in their shoes. I've auditioned for student shows and not been chosen and spent evenings and afternoons checking my phone every five minutes for an email that never comes. It's shitty. It's also shitty to audition for a Playground incubator team five times. It's shitty to never succeed in a Harold audition and have to wait nine years (NINE YEARS) before you luck into an improv show at the iO, with an independent LGBTQ team. It's shitty to be in your (aggressively early, late early) 30s and have never gotten called back for TourCo auditions. It's shitty to send out letter after letter and email after email to agents, for a decade, and receive almost zero responses. Auditions are shitty. Rejection is shitty. But, it makes you better. It's made me better, by a long shot. After 10 years in Chicago, and two very brief dalliances with agents (one of which turned out to be a scam), I finally have one. And they're amazing. And I realize I wasn't ready for them five years ago, or two. But I am now, because I have something that's really invaluable: a powerful level of Giving Zero Fucks. That's not to say I don't care about my comedy career, or don't care about auditions or acceptance or projects I'm in. I always have and will continue to give my all. It's to say I finally Give Zero Fucks what people think of me, so a failed audition will no longer crush me, or even dent me. I like me. I know I have comedic worth and that there are successes still in store for me. If people are not on board with John Loos Inc., that's their problem and their loss, not mine. I'm not changing me. I'm being more and more me. Maybe part of this attitude shift is a result of nestling safely into my 30s, but I like to think that after years and years of casual and callous rejection, I've built up a superhuman immunity to it. Don't want me in your show? Cool! Totally understand. Casting is tough and there are a lot of talented people out there. Don't want me on your stage? I get it. I'm not right for every part. I'm John Loos. And sometimes (probably most times, actually) you don't need a John Loos type. But when you do, you know where to find me. Each of us has a unique value. Things about us that no one else has. Rejection taught me to not only seek comfort in that fact, but to embrace it wholeheartedly. At some point, I stopped trying to be what I thought everyone wanted me to be and I started to be myself. I started creating my own shit. And inviting people to be a part of it. I stopped asking for permission and started demanding attention. I use the phrase "throw myself in front of the bus" a lot, as in to get people's attention I've had to throw myself in front of a lot of (metaphorical) buses. I've realized they're never going to come to me. And that's fine. I've been invited to very few Cool Kids Parties, so I'm currently throwing my own party, with Sheryl Still Single and half-assed Ellen Barkin references, and making people want to be a part of it. In other words, I stopped seeing myself as one of a million American Idol-esque hopefuls lining up in a Best Buy parking lot and started seeing myself as a commodity. I stopped waiting for the magical hand that would recognize my unique genius and pluck me out of the crowd and make me famous and started seeing myself as a business. Thus, this site. Thus, this blog. Don't let others dictate your success. Don't wait for the email or the phone call. And don't fear rejection. It builds character, as every storybook grandpa would say. It makes you stronger, wiser, smarter and sharper. Because, in it's own weird way, it brings you closer to you. If you know me at all, you know I love to reference June Squibb. Like, it's right up there with sleeping and playing video games on my list of favorite hobbies. It's not because she has a funny name, or a funny persona, or that she's 86 and tends to play grandmothers with foul mouths (because it's apparently always funny when people who lived through the Depression, WWII, Civil Rights, Vietnam, Reagan and 9/11 say the word "fuck"). I love her because she's endured. Acting has to be one of the most psychologically difficult professions. Not in the same way being a soldier or an ER doctor or anything where lives are on the line, but in terms of the constant personal rejection. It's a lifetime of no. It's a lifetime of too fat, too tall, too gay, too black, too old, too this, too that. And that's why most people who don't find success early on drop out and become realtors. I've wanted to stop doing this and become a realtor, like, every day since I began. It's fucking tough. I haven't had an agent in almost three years, no producers or bigwigs came to my solo SNL show even though I shouted about it from the rafters, and I know I'm a very difficult type to figure out because I'm built like Dauber from Coach but basically want to be Linda Hunt in everything I do. I guess I just have a thing for underdogs. For unlikely success stories. For people who achieve their goals long after the world thinks they should've stopped. It's no coincidence I always rooted for the yellow-sweatered Team 3 in Supermarket Sweep growing up, even though they always had little or no chance of winning. They still gave it their all, despite the odds. Sorry spry John Cleese character and everyone's slightly alcoholic neighbor Patsy, you're not going to beat Monica and Kennedi in the pink. But goddamnit, you're going to try. So what does this have to do with June Squibb? Well, gurlfriend never stopped. She kept acting, and acting, and acting. She did Broadway in the 60s, theater all through the 70s and 80s. She made her film debut in Woody Allen's Alice in 1990 and age 61. She played tons of tiny, thankless grandmotherly roles on screen after that, with a few decent roles here and there (like when she was Jack Nicholson's wife in About Schmidt).
And then, at age 83, she gets cast in Alexander Payne's Nebraska as the opinionated, brusque wife of stoic Bruce Dern. And she goes to Cannes. And she gets all kinds of buzz. And she wins critics awards. And gets a Golden Globe nomination (not an easy feat when you're A) old and B) a no-name). And gets a Screen Actors Guild nomination. And she gets an Oscar nomination. In her 80s. When she's not some Jessica Tandy/Katharine Hepburn/Ruby Dee iconic elder actress in a glorious twilight role. Or she's not Gloria Stuart, a former star from the 30s making a comeback in a the biggest movie of all time up to that point. She's just a workhorse actress, a character actress, who no one knew who landed a plum role in a sparkling little indie film, and it took her all the way. She could've become a realtor at any point. In 1965. In 1971. In March of 1983 she could've been like "fuck this noise, I'm selling condos." She could've said the same in October of 1997. She could've walked onto the set of the terrible horror film Would You Rather and been like "Nope. This is ridiculous. I'm hammering my face into lawns and talking to everyone about referrals for the rest of my life." But she didn't. She kept going. Even though she was a unusual type, even though she'd faced god knows how much rejection, and suffered through god knows how many thankless roles. And she finally broke through. Now, she gets scripts sent to her. She got to star in the huge ensemble Christmas movie Love The Coopers with Goddess herself, Diane Keaton and Marisa Tomei and John Goodman. And she's made guest appearances on like half a dozen popular TV shows. She's gotten to play Queen Elizabeth. Who knows how much longer she can keep going, but you know she won't stop until her body stop hers. And that's what I love about June Squibb. She can't stop. Won't stop. And she kicked all that rejection in the balls and made it, even if it took her 83 years. Tonight is closing night of the second of my two SNL-themed shows. The first, "Hang In There, Carol!" served as my writing packet, a Best of John Loos if you will. The second, "John Loos' SNL Showcase," has served as my performance showcase. Two sides of the same coin-dream. It's been an overwhelmingly amazing experience doing these shows, after 10 years embedded in this absurd and wonderful and frustrating and lovely sketch and improv comedy world. And most of those years, feeling like a perpetual outsider, an anomaly, an uncastable, umarketable sideshow freak who doesn't fit any pre-existing "type" that has already been successful. The Carol cast was top-notch, brilliant and game for all of my scenes about desperate older women and/or dead babies. My director for my SNL Showcase, Anneliese Toft, and my musical director, Seth Kannof, have been fearless and kind and generous and incredible beyond reason. Anneliese, also kept my June Squibb references mercifully in check, which is no small feat. And the crowds. Carol's four shows were packed. My SNL Showcase has sold out most shows. Somehow, in the genesis of these two shows, I never once considered that people would actually want to see them, outside my boyfriend and few close friends. Having complete strangers compliment me is actually incredibly rare in this world. Usually, it's friends or family or other improvisers you sort of know who come to your shows. When Muggles come, it's a big deal. HUGE deal. (exits huffily with all my Pretty Woman shopping bags) But why these shows? And why now? What's my end goal? And why the fixation with SNL? Because I know I'm never going to be on SNL. It's okay, calm down, I've known it for a long time. Once you see the entirety of this Chicago comedy system and how it works, once you see how the sausage is made, you know pretty quickly if you have the right ingredients. I'm either too gay, too athletic, or too obsessed with playing older lady characters. At least, that's the stupid shit I tell myself to make myself feel better. I'm also not social enough. Or maybe I'm not ass-kissy enough. Or shrewd enough. Or self-promotional enough. Or, you know, maybe I don't have the talent level for what the job requires. It's quite honestly most likely the last one, but that's fine. I've know it for a long time. I did these shows because I spent 10 years doing everything right and I finally wanted to do something wrong. To say fuck the system. To stop giving any and all fucks. I spent those 10 years taking the right classes, doing the right shows, working with the right people, working with the right directors, doing the solo show, writing the original Annoyance extravaganza, performing on a Friday night iO team, performing at festivals, performing at theaters around the country, in the middle of the ocean, teaching, playing the game, keeping my receipts, waiting, wishing, hoping, silently in the corner like a good boy. And, to be honest, I've had more success than I probably deserve. Yet, interestingly, I've always felt like I was slowly and hilariously failing. Probably because we're trained, from very early on, to only want we have not got (10 points for the Sinead O'Connor reference BOIIIII!) See, despite the fact I get to DO THIS FOR A LIVING, I never got cast in the big marquee shows at the big theaters and thus I feel like failure. Because that logic makes sense and is completely healthy. In my selfish improviser brain, I followed the rainbow map to a T, but there was never a pot of gold for me. I never landed the big agent. Or got the bigshot manager. Or had meetings with important people to discuss my promising future. Or gotten the coveted SNL showcase slot. In fact, I've rarely gotten cast for anything that doesn't involve me taking off my clothes. That's fine. I'm not that castable. No biggie. I've known for a long time. The issue, I eventually realized, is that in Chicago, success is so incredibly narrowly defined. It's basically a pinhead. It's either a Harold team, or mainstage at Second City, or you're a failure. Or not good enough. Or just background noise. Everything young, upstart improvisers are told funnels them toward those goals, as if they are the only metrics of success. After all, that's how you get your SNL audition, which is how you get SNL, which is how you get your picture on the wall. And SNL, that wonderful, ugly, perpetually "rebuilding" beast, has always been this end-all-be-all metric for Chicago comedy success. But really, isn't it just another stage none of us are getting cast on? "This show will get me this opportunity." It's the mindset we all have to adopt if we want to climb the ladder. And we're lucky enough to get that opportunity, we immediately resent it, complain about it and want the next thing, oblivious to the fact there are literally thousands of hungry improvisers swarming around the city who would clean the Playground toilets for a year just to have HALF the success we have. "If I take this opportunity, it will get me this better opportunity." And so on, and so forth until we're all miserable, disillusioned and on the verge of moving to North Dakota and sobbing in an abandoned barn the rest of our lives. To be successful in the world of comedy is to be constantly feeling like you're not good enough. That's what keeps you producing. But I'm babbling. The short answer is, I did these SNL shows because I wanted to let go. I've known for a long time I don't fit what the system wants, and I've finally decided that's the greatest thing I have going for me. When I was in the closet for all those years, I felt constantly like I was an anomaly, that I was incorrect, that I wasn't what the system wanted. So it was a bit ironic when I began to feel the exact same feelings after being in the comedy community for years; that I wasn't "correct" or that I was a glitch." I did these SNL shows because fuck that feeling. I'm over feeling that. It's dummz to the maxxx. Enough. (starring Jennifer Lopez). I decided to go rogue, like X-Men Rogue, and I couldn't be happier. Because her hair is amazing. No, Lorne Michaels never came. No SNL scouts. No Chicago talent agents came. And honestly, I never expected them to. I've booked zero meetings from these shows, have zero Comedy Central shows in the works, zero Sonic commercials, zero development deals to produce web content for Tru TV, and I still haven't met Mary Steenburgen. But that's okay. Don't cry for me Uruguay. I got to create two shows that are entirely my voice. I got to put them up in two great theaters and make people laugh and work with astonishingly awesome peeps. And that sort of freedom is the best kind of success you can ask for. |
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