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February 2008 | by: Tom Hollander | Comments (3)

A daunting experience

Tom Hollander’s first meeting with a theatrical agent didn’t turn out quite how he expected

It was the late Eighties and it paid to be brash. But I wasn’t brash I was green. Just down from university and wearing a second-hand double-breasted suit I had a meeting with London’s Most Powerful Agent. On Wall Street, Gordon Gekko. In Soho, Michael Foster. A man whose legendary temper had caused him, telephone in hand, to break his own finger while dialling. The extent of his rages were matched only by the size of the deals he got for his actors — deals rumoured to be so huge that other actors binge-drank at the thought of them.

A week before, I had received a note while backstage at Richmond Theatre, halfway through a performance of the amusingly titled Sheep Go Bare (the 1988 Cambridge Footlights Revue). It was the kind of note young actors want to get from powerful agents. It was scrawled in red ink. It said: ‘You’re great. Call me.’

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Anon ymous

February 21st, 2008 9:19pm Report this comment

I used to work for Michael Foster and that is all frighteningly accurate.

Yvonne

February 22nd, 2008 2:05pm Report this comment

I saw the second episode of ‘Freezing’ last night and thought it was very funny. What a perfectly grotesque character Leon is. He's like a petulant 5 year old with the added self centeredness of a cat. Everything belongs to him and everything gets done his way. And if it doesn't, he'll shout and whine until it does. It’s amazing that people like that actually exist. They don't really. Do they?

Lisa Marie

September 12th, 2009 6:05am Report this comment

I very much enjoyed reading this piece...very well written. And he said he wasn't a writer! Saw a few clips of 'Freezing' on You Tube...Mr. Hollander does an absolutely fabulous job of playing a!@#$%& characters...

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