The Columbus Dispatch

Big role is achievemen­t of a lifetime for Norton actor

- Alan Ashworth

Scott Davis was all-in for his latest acting role.

The Norton resident plays the grandfathe­r in a locally filmed and produced independen­t movie, his meatiest role to date. He’s in about half the film and his home and 3-acre lot became one of several area shooting locations.

His wife, Maureen Davis, even fed the cast and crew and helped design sets.

After all that, “The Other Side of Darkness” Director Adam Deierling and Producer Vinny Sisson burned down his house — something that doesn’t bother Davis a bit.

There’s a good reason for his calm acceptance — mainly that the raging inferno seen in a film trailer was only a visual effect, and no Davises were harmed in the filming.

The acting bug

Davis, a retired U.S. Postal Service mail career, has wanted to act as long as he can remember, and is eagerly awaiting the Feb. 2 premier of “Darkness.” The film’s first showing will be at the Highland Square Theatre in Akron, where he’s hoping for a sold-out audience. It’s been a long time in the works. “I‘ve just liked to act since I was 11,” Davis said in a recent interview at his still-intact Norton home.

He met Maureen Nutter, at the same age, and they’re now preparing for their 40th wedding anniversar­y. She has done some performing of her own over the years, with plays and voiceovers, and currently works as a real estate agent.

Scott Davis plays the grandfathe­r of the main character, a teenage girl searching for extended family. Along the way, she becomes aware of a plot to take down the U.S. power grid.

Davis said it is his biggest role to date, and it’s an important one in the film, said director Andy Deierling, a Canton native.

“He’s probably in about half of the movie,” Deierling said Thursday. “I was very happy with his performanc­e.”

A mailman actor

Davis said he gained early performing experience by reciting scripture as a teenager.

“I memorized the Sermon on the Mount when I was 15,” he said.

Speaking to an audience helped him get over some of his live-performanc­e jitters, and he further developed his acting skills in high school. Maureen sometimes acted with him, and they grew closer with the shared experience.

Davis’ acting dreams were put on the back burner as marriage and four children intervened, and he took on a second career that paid the bills and occasional­ly allowed him to perform.

He acted in some plays at Weathervan­e in the early ‘90s and more with the Actors’ Summit Theater later that decade. He’s been in recent advertisem­ents, including a training video for a Cleveland hospital system and an Ohio Lottery ad.

But juggling work, family responsibi­lities and foster parenting with his desire to act was difficult, Davis said. At one point a few years ago he needed four hours off from his job for an all-expenses-paid gig in Los Angeles, but couldn’t get approval for the time off.

That experience still roils him, and he began to plan for his acting life after the post office, reaching a decision to retire after 32 years.

“He used to tell people, ‘I’m an actor who works as a mailman,’” Maureen Davis said.

Scott Davis said retirement gave him the opportunit­y to commit to projects without worrying about conflicts with a day job.

“I would look at these [roles] and was saddened when I couldn’t get what I really wanted to do,” he said.

Down on the farm

Davis auditioned for “Darkness” on the front porch of his Norton home on a Sunday after church.

The director and producer liked what they saw.

“We started filming [a] couple of weeks before we cast him,” Deierling said. “Scott came in two days before we were going to shoot his first scene.”

The decision to cast Davis proved beneficial beyond Davis’ role, Deierling and Sisson said. They filmed parts of the movie in different locations in the area — Stark, Trumbull, Columbiana and Portage county locations among them — but needed a farmhouse for much of the movie’s setting.

While talking with Deierling, the topic came up.

“[Adam said] if anyone knows another location [to] shoot, speak up,” Davis said. “I said, ‘Why not here?’”

The crew spent about nine days at the Norton house, filming inside the Davis home and in the woods of their 3-acre property. During the filming, Norton police made a house call to inquire about the activity.

“[They] came up and said, ‘Hey, what’s going on?’” Davis said.

‘The Other Side of Darkness’

Deierling and Sisson are mum on many details of their movie, but they’ve released a couple of trailers that hint at its storyline.

The story began developing about five years ago, Deierling said, as he started brainstorm­ing for a concept he hoped would engage audiences but still be economical to film.

Both men had learned the ins and outs of the movie business from schooling and work in Los Angeles, but they moved back to Ohio for its lower cost of living. When the time came, they reasoned, they would be able to do much of the financing on their own, using local talent.

The question, then, became simple. “What could we do on a limited budget that would be interestin­g to people?” Deierling said.

He created a story about a teen on a road trip who becomes entangled in a plot against the U.S. power grid. She locates her grandfathe­r, but what happens after that will remain a mystery until the premiere.

“I don’t think it goes the way people will expect it to go,” Deierling said.

Both Deierling and Sisson are Ohio natives (Canton and Garrettsvi­lle, respective­ly) and the actors are all Ohioans or originally from the state.

“That is one thing we wanted to push,” Deierling said. “Using local places and people.”

 ?? AKRON BEACON JOURNAL KAREN SCHIELY/ ?? Scott Davis talks of his experience acting in the movie, “Other Side of Darkness” that was filmed in his hometown of Norton. The movie’s premiere will be at the Highland Theater in February.
AKRON BEACON JOURNAL KAREN SCHIELY/ Scott Davis talks of his experience acting in the movie, “Other Side of Darkness” that was filmed in his hometown of Norton. The movie’s premiere will be at the Highland Theater in February.

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