Acting Up
A Jack Russell Terrier steals the show in the Oscar-winning film "The Artist"
When the fire broke out, Uggie, a Jack Russell Terrier, was inside the apartment
with his owner, silent film star George Valentin. Madly jumping
and barking, Uggie tried in vain to get Valentin to leave the building.
In desperation, Uggie ran out of the open door and down the street until he found a
policeman, persistently trying to get his attention, even tugging on a pant leg. Finally,
Uggieโs relentless coaxing convinced the cop to follow him home, where smoke was billowing
from the building.
As the unconscious Valentin was pulled from the burning building and laid out on
the sidewalk, Uggie quickly approached, sniffing all over his body, determinedly searching
for signs of lifeโuntil the director yelled โCut!โ With the camera no longer rolling,
Uggie bounced off for some well-deserved play time.
Sarah Clifford, one of Uggieโs two principle trainers, was on the set with Uggie during
the lengthy sequence of events that brought the fire scene to life on film. Her company,
Animal Savvy, a California-based agency that rents highly trained animals to the entertainment
industry, had been hired to provide the dog for the movie The Artist, a silent
film shot in stylized black and white, which was named the best picture of 2011 by the
New York Film Critics Circle and is highly touted in the race up to the Oscars.
โI knew when I read the script with all the running and jumping and barking action,
it was an amazing fit [for Uggie],โ Clifford explains. Her instinct was proved correct
when the terrier walked away with a Palm Dog Award during the Cannes Film Festival.
His performance in The Artist has been widely praised, with New York Post film critic
Lou Lumenick calling it โthe best performance, human or animal, Iโve seen this year.โ
Thereโs even a Facebook and Twitter campaign to have Uggie made eligible for the big
acting awards. Quite a lot of buzz for a dog that almost ended up in the slammer.
Uggie was adopted by animal trainer Omar von Muller when his original owners
found the busy little terrier had far too much energy for them. The future film star was
headed for the pound when von Muller stepped in.
Von Muller has been working with dogs since childhood. โMy whole family were
animal people,โ he says. โWe had tons of dogs.โ At the age of ten, von Muller trained
his German Shepherd and, four years later, he was getting paid by friends and family to
do training. โAnything Rin Tin Tin or Lassie did on TV; I would train my dogs to do,โ
he says.
Von Muller had done film work with another Jack Russell Terrier, but that dog was
growing old and the trainer was excited to discover his new petโs talents.
โUggie showed me his ability at just six months old,โ von Muller says. Most notably,
Uggie wanted to work and paid close attention to learning anything new.
According to Clifford, it is Uggieโs natural abilities that allowed him to deliver a stellar
performance, especially considering that Uggie spends so much time in front of the
camera in The Artist. Dogs that adapt well to the movie business are fearless, she says,
and are not scared or distracted by different sounds or movement of equipment like dollies and cameras.
โThe fire scene,โ she explains, โwas really intense; a lot of
elements; a big sequence with different locations. For the interior
scene, he was in the house barking. There was a smoke
machine. Jean was going crazy [as part of his performance].
โUggie does a lot of big live performances, so he has extra
confidence and isnโt scared in new situations. He does skateboarding,
which is very, very popular, jumps into arms, plays
dead; a lot of high-energy behaviour.โ
Typically, a dog actor wonโt get to spend much time with the
movieโs stars prior to filming but in the case of Jean Dujardin,
who played Valentin, Uggie spent several days at the actorโs
home. Dujardin worked with the dog and learned the behindthe-
scene parts of his on-screen tricks.
โIt made all the difference,โ says Clifford. โActors and dogs
must bond and feel comfortable. This translates on camera.โ
Filming in general, she says, is the hardest medium to work
in, as far as dog training goes.
โYou have to know how to read the dog,โ she says. โThe animal
trainer is the director for the dog. Itโs not something everyone
can do. People constantly approach me saying they want
their dogs in movies. Really, one in five hundred dogs have the
ability to do movie work.
โBesides doing what heโs told, Uggie has a lot of character
and he loves people and the actors and the directors,โ says von
Muller. โHe kisses them all at work.โ
Uggieโs talents and personality have made him a popular dog
on set. Before The Artist, he appeared in countless print ads and
TV commercials, and his film work includes Mr. Fix It, Whatโs
Up, Scarlett, Life Is Ruff and Water For Elephants).
No matter how experienced a dog actor is, the constantly
changing demands of movie work always present challenges. To
get Uggie to sniff Dujardinโs body for signs of life required some
ingenuity.
โWe hid hot dog pieces in his clothing,โ Clifford explains.
โThe command โgo withโ means to stay with an actor but
normally that actor is awake. When they called โactionโ and I
said โgo with,โ Uggie stayed right with Jean. As soon as he was
dragged and they laid him out, Uggie was sniffing for the hot
dog. It looked like he was sniffing to see if he was still alive.โ
Uggie is all business on set, but once the work day is finished,
he heads home to an ordinary life as one of the von Muller familyโs
nine pets, playing Frisbee in the park and sleeping in his
own bed next to von Mullerโs.
โHe doesnโt act like a Jack Russell when heโs inside,โ says
von Muller, adding that Uggie at home is calm and relaxed. But
clearly, this talented dog deserves a far wider audience than just
one family.
โHe makes people laugh. People come and hug him and kiss
him. Heโs one of the greatest dogs we have.โ
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