This is from Mark Evanier's fantastic blog News From Me. For the entire piece go here:
http://www.newsfromme.com/
Mark Evanier:
http://www.newsfromme.com/
Mark Evanier:
Here’s a little notice
that Jason Alexander has had to put out about people who
converge on him with stuff to get signed. Like most famous folks, he has to
differentiate between people who want one autograph as a treasured momento and
people who have a whole pile o’ stuff they want signed so they can sell it on
eBay. Whenever you hear that a celeb is bitchy or rude about signing
autographs, make sure you know which kind they’re talking about. The seekers in
the latter category can be very intrusive, very demanding and sometimes even a
menace to public safety.
I’ve met Jason on a
number of occasions and for whatever my reporting is worth, he seems to be one
of the nicest, most approachable stars around. He’s especially good if you have
something more to say to him than, "I’ve always enjoyed your work."
Not that he’d probably mind just that.
One night, we were
both at a one-performance-only performance of a musical out in Glendale. Being
a one-time event, everyone on stage had most of their friends and family
there…and most of these performers were young and new at this. After the show,
there was an informal party out in the parking lot by the stage door. There,
much of the audience mingled with the actors, congratulating them and heaping
deserved (in most cases) praise on them. Jason was mingling too and I noticed
and was impressed by two things he did.
One was that he
approached each and every actor and made a point of giving them some non-gushy,
sincere compliments and gentle advice. I didn’t exactly eavesdrop on the
conversations but I heard enough to know he was finding something positive and
encouraging to say to each performer and none of what I heard sounded phony. It
took him a while to make the rounds and make sure he didn’t miss any…and that
alone was a fine gesture. But I figured out something else he was doing…
Neat article -- I followed the link to read the rest. I'm sure that putting out karma like that has helped him, too -- not that he's doing it for selfish purposes, but when you're that good to people, people want to work with you. Everybody wins.
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