In the arts, we talk a lot about how miserable the pay is out here but often justify it with following our dreams, how expensive it is to make art so of course there’s not much left for salaries, how difficult fund raising is… etc., etc., etc.
The vast majority of time I’m on the side of “pshhhht, this is bs.” If you can’t properly fund a project, don’t try to hire professionals to work it. However. There have been a few times over the years where I worked very low paying jobs and sometimes I actually took away a few life lessons from them.
Into the Woods, JR
I worked a summer for a regional conservatory and stage managed their summer camp production.
The most important thing I learned is I hate working with kids. Like… you really could never pay me enough to do a theater camp with kids again.
And sometimes learning what you hate to do is actually worth something. Because there are plenty of summer jobs out there working kids programs and some of them actually pay well. Now I know I want literally nothing to do with any of them.
Oddly enough, while learning that I hate working with kids, I learned I kind of love mentoring. My ASM was a college kid going into her senior year and I really enjoyed getting to know her, teaching her how to make scene shift plots and talking about stage management and her goals with her.
The Midnight Frolic
I learned I can do more than just stage managing during this job. I was hired on as PSM, but the job description was very vague and by the end I felt like I had taken on a massive pile of tasks I never would’ve thought I could do under other circumstances including dance captain and music director (not remotely as well as someone trained properly could’ve done them), as well as overhauling some of the spending on the show.
I also gained a greater appreciation for times where I do have a full team.
Tenderly: The Rosemary Clooney Musical
The only time I’ve worked an Equity-esque show was this strange little Equity Guest Contract, and it was with a performer who very much insisted on the Equity way of things. So I wound up learning a lot in a crash course during that little two week show.
I got to work in Hilton Head – which I’d heard about but never been to.
I’ve also gotten a lot of other job offers from the director. Unfortunately, they’re all in a similar pay range of Tenderly.
This show was such a travesty, there are no pictures.
Beat the Drum for Haiti
I learned some shows can’t be saved.
The King’s Players
The very first company I worked for was a tiny little theater company that toured around doing “don’t do drugs” skits and went to churches on Sundays to do a play about family communication to raise money for our company.
It was my first taste of touring at all and I learned I loved the challenges of trying to figure out each venue and seeing how the show would need to be tweaked in each new city to fit the new space. I learned I was fascinated in the spots you don’t usually get to go to – like prisons and juvenile detention facilities. I learned I could tolerate long stretches of time in a van.
Thanks for sharing, you’ve done some cool jobs there Mel.
I agree you can always learn something from a job, even if it is just “never take a job like this again”!
For me personally, it always takes a while, and a period of separation before I can really appreciate what I learned.
Ms ZiYou recently posted…Why I love running (ok jogging then)
20 years ago I went to a contest to become a radio DJ. I was on a ‘testing’ job for 8 months, while I worked 2-3 times more than those who were actually hired. It did help me a lot though, I learned so many things that, after these months, I got a contract and my own daily show. As long as there’s something to be learned from a job, a miserable pay (or nothing in my case) can be tolerated for a while
Ramona @ Personal Finance Today recently posted…The Benefits of Having a Student Checking Account
Yes, especially when you are young, learning what you DON”T want to do can be very valuable.
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