Yeah, I'd get that checked out if I were you, Mid.
"You! You are the worst thing to happen to musical theatre since Andrew Lloyd Webber! And you, well, I just plain don't like you."
~Stewart Gilligan Griffin
"I think "friend" is a term used SO loosely these days that it's hard to distinguish true friendships from acquaintances. The lines get blurred. It's easy to get confused...
For instance, Alice once introduced me as her "friend" to a friend of hers. Yes, I *know* her and am a fan, but we don't hang out and she doesn't call me when she's down, etc. I certainly wouldn't consider her a "friend", but someone I know and admire. I mean, we all know what makes up a TRUE friend... but *everyone* throws that word around like it's going out of style for the mere reason that sometimes you just don't know HOW to refer to a person. You don't introduce people as acquaintances... I've never heard anyone say, "HEY, this is my acquaintance, !" It's just not done.
Soooo... I always take it with a grain of salt when someone refers to another person as their friend. In ANY situation, actor/fan relationships aside. God knows I've introduced people as my friends who I barely know and wouldn't call if I really needed something.
Also, there are all different levels of friendships. Different friendships consist of different things, so it's really just all relative."
Well said, Daisy. (Sorry, this is a useless post here, but I have experienced this too, and I totally agree with you.)
"It's not always about you!!!" (But if you think I'm referring to you anyway, then I probably am.)
"Good luck returning my ass!" - Wilhemina Slater
"This is my breakfast, lunch and f***ing dinner right here. I'm not even f***in' joking." - Colin Farrell
I think we need to distinguigh between "friend" and "friendly." I'm friendly with a lot of people. I'm only friends with a few of them. There's a difference.
Rath, of course we're friends sweetie! And once you get cast in a big Broadway production, we'll be BFF and we'll make friendship bracelets and braid each other's hair! And once I get cast in a big broadway production...we'll still be friends. I mean, I may stop returning your calls and send back those locks of hair you seem mailing me, but it's just because I'll be really busy.
"It's not always about you!!!" (But if you think I'm referring to you anyway, then I probably am.)
"Good luck returning my ass!" - Wilhemina Slater
"This is my breakfast, lunch and f***ing dinner right here. I'm not even f***in' joking." - Colin Farrell
Well I'll be friends with anyone who starts a fan club for me.
But seriously, I think you have to break down "fan" Are you someone they bump into at parties, someone who obsessively waits at the stage door for them, someone that "happens" to bump into them on the street? Or do you not need to see/talk to them on a daily basis and just view them as someone with a cool job? Because I think there are a lot of crazies out there that think they're friends with some Broadway actors/actresses and it's just the performer being nice to them. Still acting.... And I think age plays a big part in the whole thing to. How old both parties are.
I think the downside of it is when they want to break off the "friendship" they don't do it themselves, they send a member of their entourage. always seemed cowardly to me.
and there you are stuck a thousand miles from home with no way back.
but hey, the 70s were different.
I'd fire you... if you weren't so g*dd*mn beautiful out there. - Blades of Glory
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I have to agree with you regarding age. I think it's a key factor in actor/fan relationships. 'Younger' fans tend to lack the discernment when it comes to distinguishing lines in the "relationship". I've seen many circumstances where a kid really admires an older person and tends to cling and cross boundaries, regardless of the field they're in. I've been on BOTH ends of that.
Age can really play a big part in it all, I think.
"You! You are the worst thing to happen to musical theatre since Andrew Lloyd Webber! And you, well, I just plain don't like you."
~Stewart Gilligan Griffin
"You! You are the worst thing to happen to musical theatre since Andrew Lloyd Webber! And you, well, I just plain don't like you."
~Stewart Gilligan Griffin
But seriously, I think you have to break down "fan" Are you someone they bump into at parties, someone who obsessively waits at the stage door for them, someone that "happens" to bump into them on the street? Or do you not need to see/talk to them on a daily basis and just view them as someone with a cool job? Because I think there are a lot of crazies out there that think they're friends with some Broadway actors/actresses and it's just the performer being nice to them. Still acting.... And I think age plays a big part in the whole thing to. How old both parties are.
Also, do your moods hinge on whether or not you get to talk to your "friend" and whether you're happy with the encounter. I've heard stories of people whose "friend" didn't email them back right away or wasn't especially attentive at the stage door and ruined their whole weekend, and on and on.
I think older people are just as capable of blurring friendship lines as younger people. And in fact older fans can be more aggressive and have a tendency to think they're entitled to be treated better than younger fans simply because they're older and "aren't teenyboppers."
Hi, I'm new to this whole thing so please don't pelt me with stones or anything if I sound like a dork. But how cool would that be to become friends with someone you're a big fan of? But then again, wouldn't it be really hard for the fan to be 'friends' with someone they admire due to the fact that most people tend to get really nervous when approaching or approached by someone famous in the first place?
I met someone I was a big fan of at where I used to work, and I couldn't even get the word 'hi' out without sounding like a complete idiot. And I had to take his clothes into the fitting room. My heart was racing and I wanted to scream like a silly fangirl. It was so difficult for me to even look the guy in the eyes. Needless to say, I stood there in a daze until the guy left.
But if I could become friends with someone I'm a big fan of without being a complete idiot, that would seriously be totally awesome.
~Chris(tie) Clemens
"He says... he wants to be obsessed with art, like me. He says... he wants to redevelop the creative side of his brain." - Mark NYTW RENT
I think balance is an essential part in the concept of friendship. If the relationship is far more important, or significant to one of the persons involved...then you probably aren't really friends, but rather, friendly acquaintances.
Sueleen Gay: "Here you go, Bitch, now go make some fukcing lemonade." 10/28/10
People (other fans, mostly) question the validity of said "friendship", but... he threw my last birthday party with another actor that he's close with, I was at his birthday, I stayed with him when he did a project out of town (and once when I was too drunk to go home; I plead the fifth on that one)
There is a lot of doubt involved in the beginning, as someone else mentioned... wondering if you're just being placated or if the friendship is really that, a friendship. Mainly because it's their job to act. Now when I look at pictures of this person with fans and in performances, THAT is the part which is surreal, because I know him more as my friend and not as an actor.
Updated On: 11/20/04 at 04:34 PM
well i was a big fan of shoshana bean and then i ended up seeing her a lot cause we have the same voice teacher and well we keep in contact thrue email and see each other now and then
"what? what is it? do i have something in my teeth? ok lets get this over with : no im not seasick,yes ive always been green, and no i didnt chew grass as a child "
I was a fan of opera singer Jerry Hadley and became friends with him. He invited me to dinner at his home on several occasions. Unfortunealtey, I learned he was a habitual liar and stories he told me had very little resemblance to the truth. This concerned not only his personal life but also those of other celebrities that he worked with. He'd go on and tell me stories about Luciano Pavoratti, Cecelia Bartoli, Frederika Von Stade, Andrew Lloyd Webber and hosts of others. None of the stories were true.