Many moons ago, there was a little movie made at my high school called Three O'Clock High. No one "famous" is in it (at the time). It was directed by Phil Joanou who has since directed U2 in both documentaries and music videos. It starred Casey Siemaszko, Richard Tyson, and Jonathan Wise.
When the movie came to town and folks found out who was to be in it and hit the movie theaters to see Casey in Stand by Me (1986) as Billy Tessio. The other two did not have any work out that was easily accessible (remember - this is pre-Internet).
The photos in the slideshow are pictures of pictures and therefore the quality sucks. Sorry. Back in the day, there were no digital cameras. These photos were taking with a Kodak on developed on Inkley's paper December of 1986.
The following pictures is the actual proof that I got paid to be in the movie as an extra but only twice. If you wanted to be in the film, you had to arrive at 6am and stay until 6pm (unless you were under 18 - which a lot of people were since this was a high school).
I volunteered a lot of my time on the set because I could not meet the time requirements. I was enrolled at the local college for my first semester in the fantasic world/school of business so I had to attend classes in the morning. As soon as my classes ended, I took the bus to my "old" high school and join my friends.
This movie was filmed from October to December of 1986 at Ogden High School. Check out the postage - 22 cents and that BIG chunk of change of $40 a day for 12 hours of work. These two checks were earned on the two Saturdays that they filmed the "fight" scene and needed hundreds of kids to show up.
Making a movie as an extra ain't all what it is cracked up to be - especially if the story takes place in the same day. Do you know what that means?
It means that you have to wear the SAME clothes for duration of the movie. When I was originally "hired", I had on a Disney sweatshirt. The casting person says 'no, no, no'. You can't "advertise" another place (especially since MCA owns Universal Studios and Disney is competition).
So I had to turn my sweatshirt inside out and where it that way for two months. Along with gray pants and sneakers... for two months.
I could not possibly wear these clothes everyday to college so I lugged them around in my bookbag.
When the casting director first meet me, she treated it like the "Second Coming". I was over 18 years old and a graduate of OHS. She begged me to call all of my friends and get them to the set. They were desperate for older-looking students to be around the 20-22 year-old actors.
Ogden High had a freshmen class which means that kids as young as 14 were surrounding the actors in the hallways and classrooms and just wasn't working - well not much about the movie worked but with was a priority for them to correct.
I explained that I could call a couple but most of my friends were either off to college or on preparing for a mission (a Utah thing). I could never be a casting director - the team looked stressed for the first month of the show. They wanted older, they wanted them daily and they wanted them now... casting got a few but not many.
The other reason they really, really wanted older (adults) is so the filming was not restricted by Child Labor Practices. I am not sure of all of the law's details, but I know that a child could not legally work the hours that the director wanted. When casting learned of the 14 year old freshmen, they were banned immediately. No one under 16 years old was hired to my knowledge because of these legal restrictions which added to casting's already mounting stress to find "legal" bodies.
A lot of my "volunteer" time was spent sitting in the auditorium waiting for the call for the masses to come out of classrooms and/or invade the hallways. During this time you got to meet some people which four of us did and hung out together for years after the movie completed and better yet, two in the group married each other and as far as I know are still together.
The teachers were pulling their hair out during this production for obvious reasons and were very happy when they left. Of course, the school district got a nice chunk of change for the use of the building but it could have mattered less to the high school staff.
My understanding is that another movie came briefly to view at the school and after that the principal said no more. The school is on the National Historical Building List which adds to the restrictions and paperwork to film there now anyway.
I am sure that you are wondering, possibly, why I titled this Six Degrees of Separation from DD. If you look through the list of credits at IMDB.COM, you will see that Mitch Pileggi had a role in this little flick. I believe, it is not clear in the summary, that he played the campus "security guard" (Ogden High never had one of those but sure could have used one). If that is the case, then I have a picture or two of him in his blue security guard jacket and glistening head.
So there it is. My 15 minutes of fame. Of all the time I spent in hallways and parking lots, there is only one tiny moment of myself that I can pick out as I am hopping out of a pick-up truck heading for the big "fight".
That is cool. I had fun. It was quite the experience and I got to document the making of film while maintaining a 3.0 my first semester of college (with accounting no less). I had some game back then - not so much now 
So if I don't see you at the movies, maybe I will see you in the movies.