Being A Movie Extra: Graham Curry On 'War Horse,' Steven Spielberg's Home Movies and Horse Flatulence (PHOTOS)

The Huffington Post     First Posted: 01/19/12 08:24 AM ET   Updated: 01/19/12 09:22 AM ET

A long time ago (2004, before I became a writer), in an upstate New York town far, far away (Athens), yours truly had the pleasure of being an extra on a Steven Spielberg film ("War of the Worlds") for one night. It was the scene where a flood of refugees rushes down a hill toward a ferry in hopes of escaping the alien ships, and the experience was nothing short of incredible. Throughout the shoot, I could hear the director's voice projected over microphones strung along the street we were running down, but I never saw him until the very end, when he came out and thanked everyone -- all 1,000 of us. He said, "You've all been fantastic -- I wish I could take you back to L.A. with me!" I'll always respect him for that. And I still have my Paramount pay stub to prove I was there.

With "War Horse" receiving all manner of accolades this awards season, I got to thinking: Did the extras on the set of that film have a similarly special experience? So I got in touch with Graham Curry, London-based production professional and supporting actor extraordinaire. Graham played three characters over the course of his one-month stint as an extra in "War Horse," and has also appeared in "Hugo," "Captain America" and "The King's Speech," among other films.

Graham filled me in on what it was like to work on the "War Horse" set, a place filled with beauty and danger (in the form of Styrofoam explosions -- and equine bodily functions).

I have nothing to compare it to, but something tells me a Spielberg set is different than any other.
I definitely agree with that. I've done about six big Hollywood blockbusters in the last year, and it was a completely different experience. And Spielberg is actually my favorite director.

So how does being a professional extra work exactly?
I've actually got six casting agents. You just kind of get in with every single one of them and they just take a commission out of your paycheck.

Your IMDb page says you played a Scottish Highlander at auction in "War Horse" -- what exactly did your role entail?
I played quite a few things. I was a Scottish Highlander first, and we had to wear kilts, which was another experience -- out in the cold wilds of England. Wearing that at Christmas wasn't too fun, but it was a lovely outfit -- the detail of all the costumes was incredible. Spielberg is so on those little details. I don't think I've seen anyone else be that involved in it. He was coming out: "Oh this isn't right," "Is this the right era?" and things like that. We got a lot of face time with him and he was really with us, whereas some other directors basically sit in a tent all day with a microphone, shouting at us.

What other roles did you take on?
I also got to play both a 1914 and a 1918 German soldier. The very last shoot day was just one scene of us all marching as 1914 soldiers -- soldiers going to war -- but for the previous month we'd been shooting as 1918 soldiers, all the ones getting killed in the battle camps and things like that. So I got to wear all these outfits. And I also got the opportunity to have gas burns under one eye, so I got the full prosthetics treatment as well.

There were generally about 300 of us on set on the big battle days. We shot for an amazing period of time on this set in a big airfield in Surrey, just south of London. They had created the whole no man's land -- about two American football fields, size-wise -- of all these dead trees that looked burnt. There were the actual trenches, so we got to climb over the top on ladders, and run through fake barbed wire. And there were fake dead horses everywhere, which were quite freaky when you stood on one -- you actually thought it was real. And then we got to run with the explosions going off. Proper stunts. You couldn't help but act, because you just felt like you were in there when they're firing these Styrofoam rocks at you.

Did they give you any preparation or were they just like, "Hey, try to avoid all those fake cannons with exploding shrapnel!"
Oh no, they were very good on the health and safety -- we did do a two-day boot camp. They had proper army personnel that took each group and showed us all the maneuvers -- how to hold a gun, how to put bayonets on, things like that -- so it was good training. But yeah, those days they just kind of pointed out where all the explosions were going off. These were big explosions filled with polystyrene. All this dirt was going up. That was probably the hardest bit: you did get real dirt flying in your eyes and down the back of your costume. So you felt absolutely filthy by the end of it.

They had a lot of assistant directors in the crowd with us, and they dressed them up in the costumes as well, and they all had earpieces, so they would kind of just crop up and give you a bit of direction. But it did all come from the top, because Spielberg is one of those people who really see every minute detail. He came out a lot to talk to the actors who were in the scene, and we were all very respectful. I think everyone was just so proud to work for him.

The one thing I remember from my scene in "War of the Worlds" -- and there were probably 1,000 of us there that night -- is that they still put us all through full hair and make-up. I thought that was really astounding attention to detail for a bunch of extras who would hardly appear on camera, especially because the scene took place at night. And they split us up into groups led by production assistants who had signboards labeled A through J, and we were assigned a PA, and we stuck with them all night -- it was such a well-oiled machine.
Yeah. That's exactly my experience as well. We definitely had our regiments, we all had our team captain who took us around. We were in a platoon, basically. Regiment A, Regiment B, Regiment C -- so it was very tightly run, it didn't feel like we were wasted. I see a lot of films where so many people just sit around doing nothing.

Do you have any interesting Spielberg stories?
First day we arrived, we were working on the ridge of the no man's land in silhouette. They positioned us around this little fire. I sat with about 20 people, and Spielberg came around the corner with his iPhone out and he says, "You guys are going to laugh at me, but I've got to do a little video message to my granddaughter." And so he stood right in front of me, and he starts filming a little voice message of him and he said, "Hi, it's Pappy, I'm just down here on the set of 'War Horse.'" And we all start laughing, and he started filming us on his phone and says, "Ah look -- they're all laughing at me now!" So I'm actually in one of his home videos, which is just mind-boggling for my first day of work! And then he said, "I'll be flying home to you in four weeks. I'm going to be on a plane." And he started swirling around making plane noises, like "Weeeee," and I just sat there going, "What the hell is happening here? This is my hero!"

Sounds like he's exactly like you'd expect him to be, based on the films he makes -- this really heartfelt, genuine, child-like man.
Yeah, absolutely!

So I want to know more about the details of the sets -- what were those fake dead horses on the battlefield made of? Were they made of Styrofoam?
Yeah, I think most of them were. They also had some rubber soldiers that they put into costume and just had them lying in the mud so they looked dead. It was actually the training day that we were first going through and we were so adrenaline-rushed that you weren't really looking where you're stepping. And I hadn't seen these props yet, and I just went to step after a puddle and literally just saw this dead horse under my foot and it made me jump -- I nearly fell over.

What was it like watching the horse that played Joey interact with his handler in the movie? I was really amazed by the stunts he pulled off -- I didn't even know horses could be trained to do some of that stuff.
They were so well trained. They actually used about 12 different horses for Joey. There was one I remember called Abraham, I think. He was the one in most of our scenes where Albert [Jeremy Irvine] has his eyes blindfolded and he's whistling. They'd actually shout, "Mark!" and he'd run up and stand on his mark!

So you shared screen time with the main actor in the film -- Jeremy Irvine. How about Tom Hiddleston and Benedict Cumberbatch?
Jeremy Irvine at the time was an unknown, so we would just hang out with him thinking he was a supporting actor. He was a cool guy -- nice to everyone. I actually didn't see Tom Hiddleston at all, which is surprising, and Benedict Cumberbatch -- I literally saw them on the red carpet and that was the first time I saw them. The biggest star was the horse, and we were in most of the scenes with the horse while we were filming.

But I did grow a bit of a fear of horses, because we were around them so much and, although they're lovely animals, they are quite imposing things. You've got old army trucks driving past, you've got tanks going by, you've got explosions going off. They just said, "March behind the horse" and I went, "What if it kicks out?" They're quite unpredictable. When a gun is shot or an explosion went off, they did make noises and rear up sometimes. The thing about the horses that's funny is they go to the toilet a lot. So they ruined quite a few takes going to the toilet. And one thing I didn't know -- they actually fart as well. I wouldn't have thought a horse could make a fart noise like a human, but ...

So you were dealing with two very different types of explosions on the set of "War Horse"!
[Laughs] That's right, you can quote me on that!

PHOTOS:

Loading Slideshow...
  • "War Horse" Extra: German Soldier, 1914

    Said Graham: "I only did this for one day and it was the last day of principal photography." Photo: Graham Curry

  • "War Horse" Extra: German Soldier, 1914

    Photo: Graham Curry

  • "War Horse" Extra: German Soldier, 1918

    Said Graham: "This was the bulk of the second half of shooting, on the main German Camp. There's me in various poses, one with a prop dead horse limb which is a favorite, and a nice one of me with a famous horse (not Joey but in fact Russell Crowe's horse he used in Robin Hood!)" Photo: Graham Curry

  • "War Horse" Extra: German Soldier, 1918

    Photo: Graham Curry

  • "War Horse" Extra: German Soldier, 1918

    Photo: Graham Curry

  • "War Horse" Crew With Steven Spielberg

    Photo: Graham Curry

FOLLOW MOVIEFONE

'FONE FINDS
A long time ago (2004, before I became a writer), in an upstate New York town far, far away (Athens), yours truly had the pleasure of being an extra on a Steven Spielberg film ("War of the Worlds") fo...
A long time ago (2004, before I became a writer), in an upstate New York town far, far away (Athens), yours truly had the pleasure of being an extra on a Steven Spielberg film ("War of the Worlds") fo...
 
 
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04:14 PM on 01/29/2012
Isn't this a re-make of Lassie Come Home using a big clean shaven Lassie?
03:59 PM on 01/29/2012
I AGREE WITH JUTTER, WHO IS THIS NO NAME THAT YOU FOUND NAMED GRAHAM---AND THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS AN EXTRA!! SO GET YOUR TURMS CORRECT--THESE GUYS ARE --WAVIERS!! NON UNION PEOPLE WHO GET WORK WHEN THEY NEED EXTRA PEOPLE--THE CORRECT TERM IS, BACK GROUND ACTORS ,NOW, AND HAS BEEN FOR A FEW YEARS. EVEN THE QUESTIONS ASKED AS WELL AS ANSWERED WERE THAT OF A NOVICE ON THE MOVIE SETS!!! AS FOR ME I DID OVER 200 TV SHOWS 30 MOVIES, AND DOUBLING AND STUNTS IN 20 MOVIES AS WELL, AND WHY IN THE WOULD WOULD AN 'EXTRA' HAVE 6 AGENTS--THERE ARE CASTING AGENCYS WHO HANDLE THE BACK GROUND ACTORS FOR THESE PEOPLE. PROUD TO BE A MEMBER OF SAG AND AFTRA!! AND THERE ARE A NUMBER OR GREAT DIRECTORS RIDLEY SCOTT,AND OLIVER STONE FOR TWO!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dean M Miller
I Feed On The Tears Of Liberals
03:34 PM on 01/29/2012
ill watch it when a bootleg comes out :)
03:16 PM on 01/29/2012
Hollywood has put so many spins on WW1 , WW11 and the German people, you can't believe anything they put out.
03:41 PM on 01/29/2012
Very True!

IMO: The absolute worst was John Boy Walton as 'Paul" along with Ernest Borgnine in a horribly re-written "All Quiet on the Western Front".

It had some nice, color scenes that are often re-rendered, but the original black and white followed Remarque better and there really isn't much better than that.

"German Warfilms" has a lot of period films, like 'Die Brucke: and the 'Wochenschau" which, of course, you also have to be careful about, but it's the other side of the story and often done better than Hollywood, especially the black and whites. 'Stosstruppen 1917" gives a great visual of the actual tactics used in a trench raid, which Hollywood never does.
If you read Grandmussen, you'll recognize what they're doing.

The major problem with WW1 films is the lack of extras in a war that was fought on the operational level with whole divisions, versus the few dozen soliders you'll ever see, over and over, from a dozen different angles. U.S. Civil war is also bad for that, unitl they started using reenactors.

Turth is, it's just not possible to portray battle in which 10,000 men would die a a few hours unless you can hire a lot of extras.

Finnish war movies about the Winter War and Continuation War aren't bad, if you don't mind subtitles.
"Talvisota" is great, because they used hundreds of extras and real T29 tanks, I'd guess from army inventory and completely operational.
03:14 PM on 01/29/2012
Why do commercials use the same people over and over again. One minute they are on Tampon commercials, then on Geico commercials then on some antacid commercial. Can't they find enought talent out there to use different actors ?
02:59 PM on 01/29/2012
Someone in here said: "all that for a movie that was pretty mediocre." I really beg to differ. It was a great movie with great special effects and terriffic acting. A week later we saw Mission Impossible...yikes it was bad news...it couldn't have held a candle to War Horse. Go see it! Jeeze...I sound like a commercial!
03:13 PM on 01/29/2012
I have to agree, like most of Spielberg's work, it was OUTSTANDING.
02:46 PM on 01/29/2012
During WW1 military tacticians quickly realized horses were not suited “for fighting” in modern warfare, battles. Putting a horse against a machine gun is not wise, which was just as smart as pitting an equine and rider against a German tank, a romantic concept though. The role of horse was later utilized for hauling carts, troops, and parades. I liked the movie however.
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sdmartintc
If it's broken, fix it!
04:00 PM on 01/29/2012
Many countries, in fact, did not abolish horse cavalry units until after World War I but some armies still had horse cavalry at the onset of World War II. Polish horse cavalry were actually used against German tanks at the beginning of World War II.
02:32 PM on 01/29/2012
I, too worked on War of the Worlds for 9 days. 3 were at night in the rain and mud, next 3 in the studio where they made it rain and 3 more outside. I got my 3rd SAG voucher the first day and was SAG from there on. It was an incredible experience as I was one of 12 chosen for what has become known in Spielberg movies as his vingette. Got to meet him and Tom Cruise as we were preparing for that special little scene. Appeared in many TV shows and feature films but War of the Worlds was the most fun.
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realwoman8
Curioser and curioser
04:06 PM on 01/29/2012
War of the Worlds scared the c r * p out of me! lol
02:09 PM on 01/29/2012
I thoroughly enjoyed the movie, but I'd LOVE to see the play (or video of the play) to see the amazing life-sized horse puppets in action. I've seen some videos of them online and they are FANTASTIC!
02:02 PM on 01/29/2012
what a crock, click on the send them a message link and get a form with a enter words so we know you are not a cyborg Imput error no words no line to type.
posting it hereso being an extra in a movie once is news? Why does no one interview me I was in over 40 movies as an extra and stuntman and starred in about 10 and was nominated for 2 cable ace awards in 86, movies as big as Dune, Krull, and Conan the destroyer. I starred in films like Def-con 4, Santee, the Patriot and OSA former employee of Extra's Inc NY Christopher Stewart oh, IMDB? give me a reason to pay 50 a year that I spend on postage to get an agent and I'll list my resume.
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Dean M Miller
I Feed On The Tears Of Liberals
03:33 PM on 01/29/2012
are you having a bad day? o.O
02:02 PM on 01/29/2012
I have made it a point not to go to movies these days due to the cost. It is just more cost effective for me, being retired & living on a 'fixed income', to wait until movies come out on 'redbox' sites so I don't have to pay for the high dollar popcorn and cokes, however, I am looking forward to seeing this movie, as I know it will be a great one.
01:39 PM on 01/29/2012
"War Horse" is a beautifully shot, beautifully choreographed movie and tells a wonderful story. It does, though, seem more like a childrens' movie, as every situation is taken to its extreme, both men and horses would look a whole lot more messed up in the actual situation, and horses are in general nowhere near as intelligent as this horse was shown to be. Aside, to author of article - oh how far from nature we have come. 100 years ago, horses were everywhere, on every street. Horse poop, and huge quantities of it, were constant obstacles when crossing. And to not know that horses can fart. I nearly burst out laughing. Horses are the masters of farting. And they are masters of getting themselves covered in mud. Keeping horses in as good condition and grooming as those shown - well, I'd like to know the number of grooms and hours of grooming that went in on that film. But yes, horses are astoundingly beautiful, powerful, magnificent animals and any abuse of them whatsoever is pure evil.
02:55 PM on 01/29/2012
"more like a childrens' movie" -- No one in their right mind would expose children to the kind of evil and carnage depicted in War Horse. The film is beautifully crafted to expose the horrors and obscenity of war from a completely new perspective.
01:10 PM on 01/29/2012
Not to be picky but it's speakers not microphones.

"I could hear the director's voice projected over microphones strung along the street we were running down"
03:32 PM on 01/29/2012
Not to be picky; BUT the writer, Katie Calautti also said:

"And I still have my Paramount pay stub to prove I was there."

All of the "War of The Worlds" Extras, were hired by "Central Casting" located in N Y City.
If Katie Calautti has a pay stub, it would not have "Paramount" on the pay check, or stub.
Central Casting of New York would be the payer and not Paramount.
#743. War of the Worlds (2005) ... Extras Casting
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filliperogers
the huff post has standards??
06:36 PM on 01/29/2012
Hmmmm... apparently someone is not being truthful !
01:10 PM on 01/29/2012
I'm a big fan of WWI but I heard this wasn't all that good?
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seanrm92
The Radical Neutral
12:57 PM on 01/29/2012
All that for a movie that was, frankly, pretty mediocre.