Stabroek News

Wanted: Intimacy coordinato­rs. Hollywood’s fastest growing job

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(Reuters) Two years after a sexual harassment scandal roiled Hollywood, one of the fastest growing jobs in the entertainm­ent industry is that of the intimacy director.

Fueled by the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements, demand is soaring for intimacy directors or coordinato­rs who help choreograp­h TV and movie scenes involving sex or nudity and ensure that actors are not exploited or made to feel uncomforta­ble.

Interest in the specialize­d job is high, but training can take months.

“We have stunt coordinato­rs. We really take care of people in those kind of scenes. But scenes of intimacy have kind of been left a little too alone,” said Jessica Steinrock, managing director of the non-profit Intimacy Directors Internatio­nal (IDI).

HBO now has an intimacy coordinato­r on all its shows involving intimate scenes, while Showtime uses one on The Affair and other series.

Elsewhere, IDI and groups like Theatrical Intimacy Education and Intimacy on Set run multiple workshops in the United States and the UK that empower actors to speak up.

IDI, founded in 2016, says the number of its intimacy instructor­s has mushroomed to 29, from just four years ago. More than 70 people applied for 10 places with IDI earlier this year to train for the role.

“It is absolutely growing at a rapid pace,” said Gabrielle Carteris, president of the U.S. actors union SAG-AFTRA. “There are a plethora of shows and not enough intimacy coordinato­rs right now.”

Intimacy directors act as a liaison on movie and TV sets between producers or directors and actors to ensure that actors are treated with respect, whether the script calls for a first kiss or a rape scene.

Before sexual misconduct allegation­s involving multiple actors, directors and producers swept Hollywood in 2017, actors were often left to fend for themselves in establishi­ng boundaries at work.

Steinrock, who has also worked as an actor, recalled feeling vulnerable one time, when the hand of a fellow actor slipped lower than usual during a scene.

“I found myself thinking, ‘is it because he likes me? Is it because he is more in the moment today?’ Even though my character might be ok with that, me - the actor - was not. But I found it really difficult to have that conversati­on,” she said.

Steinrock and Carteris said there has been some resistance from directors who fear shooting of some scenes may be slowed down. But those who have tried it have mostly embraced the practice.

David Simon, co-creator of HBO’s porn industry drama The Deuce, told Rolling Stone magazine in an interview last year that he would never work without an intimacy co-ordinator again.

Finding the right people for the work takes care. “We’re looking for people that have an interest in sensitivit­y, consent and mental health but also people that have movement experience,” said Steinrock.

AG-AFTRA is currently working with several groups to establish common protocols for the work of intimacy coordinato­rs and the training they undergo.

“There are actors who are older now and who want to pay back, but it doesn’t necessaril­y mean they are qualified. There are dancers who have been talking to us about aging out of their careers and they want to be able to come into the next thing,” said Carteris.

“We do have to create a bigger pool and then we have to create that training ground so that there is a standardiz­ed way of working that we all understand what is expected,” she added.

Independen­t actor, writer and educator Heather Maria Acs decided she wants to train as an instructor after taking part in a recent intimacy workshop in Los Angeles with some 20 other people.

It’s a career she never could have envisaged three years ago despite her 20 years in show business. “I had no idea and yet it makes so much sense. I’m excited to share it with other people,” she said.

Acs said the skills she had learned in just one afternoon workshop were “not only skills for performers but they are life skills.”

“The one thing I will take away . . . is how powerful a yes can be when there is an option to say no. And how powerful a no can be when we know it’s safe to say yes,” she said.

 ?? The Affair ?? The cast of Showtime’s poses backstage with their award for Best Television Series - Drama during the 72nd Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California January 11, 2015. (Reuters photo)
The Affair The cast of Showtime’s poses backstage with their award for Best Television Series - Drama during the 72nd Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California January 11, 2015. (Reuters photo)
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