‘You just kinda do what you gotta do’
Young Chang
It’s 4 p.m. on Monday and Marjoe Aguiling has just located the
last-minute European submission “His Wife’s Diary” only 17 hours before
the piece is scheduled to be screened at the Newport Beach Film Festival.
The Russians told him it’s in Los Angeles, on South Beverly Drive. The
information was exchanged over a conference call made from Aguiling’s
cell phone.
Second perhaps only to his disco-tinted sunglasses, which he doesn’t
bother to take off when indoors (how can he with at least three people
talking to him at once?), the phone is Aguiling’s main accessory of late.
In the morning, it beckons the volunteer’s attention with 19 plus
unchecked messages, while fresh calls beep on the other line.
He carries the charger with him to spare visiting filmmakers -- not to
mention their brothers, wives and husbands, consulates around the world
and relentless reporters (God bless ‘em) -- the anxiety of having to wait
for a call back.
And he eats lunch right about when the sun begins to set, while
crossing the street from Edwards Island 7 Cinemas in Fashion Island to
the Marriott Hotel, where he’ll likely meet with a filmmaker for
pre-screening touch-ups.
To the average visitor, the seven-day festival which ends Thursday is
all about screenings, galas, kickoff parties and awards. For the
volunteer who ends up, sometimes, being known only as the voice on the
phone, the event is a year-round project that culminates in a week of
film frenzy a midst stars, eclectic movies and more than 20,000 visitors
from around the world.
Todd Quartararo, director of marketing for the festival whose firm
handles all the public relations and advertising work for free, says he
never knows what will be thrown at him each day.
“Everybody here wears several hats,” he said.
Quartararo seems to wear many. Monday, he dealt with media callers
needing press passes and other amenities. He talked with members of the
Newport Beach Premiere Cinema Guild to finalize details for a Harbor
Cruise being put on for guests. In between all this, he made sure
filmmakers got in their requested workouts, yoga classes, what have you.
He also ate his first meal of the day at about 4 p.m.
“You just kinda do what you gotta do,” Quartararo said.
Aguiling knows this attitude well.
Take what happened Sunday. “The Stranger,” a feature film, didn’t make
it to the festival for the 1:30 p.m. screening. The Austrian consulate in
New York shipped it off last minute, not taking into account that UPS
employees take Sundays off, so “Innocents” screened instead for a second
time.
And then the buzz spread. Other producers wondered why their piece
screened only once. Now they are lobbying for second showings in empty
spots. The hot slots? 1:30 p.m. Tuesday and 6:30 p.m. Thursday.
And then there were the “Go Tigers!” fanatics. Organizers ran into
problems concerning rights with the scheduled film and canceled it at the
last minute. But unaware fans showed up, hunted down Aguiling and hounded
him to organize at least a special screening just for them, which he’s
working on.
“But to save the face of the festival, we try to remain calm, cool and
collected,” he said. “Because if there’s panic hidden in our eyes, it
says the wrong thing.”
In the case of the Russian film, he made sure to look unfazed. Still
needing someone to pick up the print in Los Angeles, Aguiling says the
fire’s still not out.
He sees Erik Forssell, a fellow volunteer. Forssell says he’s willing
to sit in rush hour traffic and get the film.
“On a daily basis, something definitely goes wrong,” Aguiling says.
“Someone comes up to me and I have about 11 seconds response time to come
up with a solution.”
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