A show is exhausting when it stinks. It's exhausting when you have to work overtime to make something work.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There's something in human nature, the trying-to-get-on-with-it quality of people, the struggle to maintain or keep the show going can be exhausting.
You do a job; your show gets canceled. You get used to it.
Eight shows in six days can become very tiring - actually, a grind. It's not that I ever dreaded going to work because I always maintained a level of gratitude.
When the show's in production, we work for three weeks at a time and then take a week off.
Every time you have to come up with a new body of work for a new show, you're aware that people are just ready to rip you apart, they're just waiting for you to fall or make the slightest trip up.
When you're on a series that's been cancelled, there's a little bit of a stink on you.
Usually if you're the center of a show, part of your job is to host its energy.
Well, television is grueling. The hours are grueling, it's hard work, and there's a lot of pressure to get it done without a lot of rehearsal time.
I've seen people who stink, but the film editor shows them just where they didn't stink. But if you're empty and manipulative on stage, it's clear.
Our show doesn't rely on the typical whistles and bells, and smoke and mirrors. It relies mostly on the music.
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