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RUNWAY MODELS   - Project ID # 35543
Project Type   Live Event Submission Type   Open Call
Location   Sacramento,CA Union   Non-union
Rate/Pay   n/a Release Date   05-29-06
Audition Date   06-17-06 Submission Deadline   06-16-06
Shoot Date   12-31-69    
Casting Category   Modeling - Runway
Market(s)   Los Angeles, CA>San Diego, CA>San Francisco, CA

Hello!

Runway models needed for upcoming fashion show.
SHOW DETAILS: Saturday, June 17th, 10pm,You'll have to be available by 5pm that evening for hair/make-up/prep/etc.

We're setting up auditons/fittings now. You'll have to demonstrate your walk at that time. Also, please MAKE SURE you meet the size requirements...the clothes don't lie!

Please email a headshot (does not have to be professional) along with the best way to contact you.


NOTE: ALL TALENT UNDER THE AGE OF 18 MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY A PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN AT ALL TIMES

Role # 1 - Female Submit yourself for this role
Seeking 1 talent(s) for this role
Girls who are 5'7" or taller, sizes 3-6. These criteria are FIRM. Also please have a positive, fun attitude and a GREAT WALK!!! No experience neccessary, but be ready to really work it and command that runway.

Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Female
Age: from 18 to 35
Ethnicity: Any -
Hair Color: Any -
Built: Any -


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He was in touch with his feelings " Albom's chronicle of his mentor Morrie Schwartz's deathbed seminar on life has sold more than 5 million copies, inspired an Opray Winfrey-produced television movie that won multiple Emmys and was even made into an off-Broadway play He wasn't particularly well-educated It took six years for Albom to release a follow-up, and the time appears to have been well spent "I began to think, `What's the best way for me to follow that up and to not try to be capitalizing on it or look at all like it's something of a sequel?' "So, I think I just sort of gravitated to fiction because it was so different, and I'd always wanted to try it anyhow ' I just didn't want to be a self-help author or franchise writer," Albom said in an interview with The Associated Press "I used to write five columns a week for the Free Press 11 1/2 months a year " Albom based the Eddie character on his uncle, Edward Beitchman, who, like his fictional counterpart, was a street-tough World War II veteran who died at 83 wondering what good he had done during his living years " The result is a less than 200-page take on the age-old question: What happens when you die? The story centers on Eddie, who spent the majority of his life as a maintenance man at a decaying seaside amusement park "It probably feels like, `He must be going a million miles an hour,' but none of it is full time and none of it is all the time Eddie, who fears he never accomplished anything in his life of any substance or meaning, dies not knowing if he saved the girl â€â€? whether the last action he took in life was a success or a failure But don't call it a sequel "I wanted to write a book about the Eddies of the world, who I think there are a lot more of than the Morries of the world," Albom said " While Tan is an unabashed fan of the novel, it has been met with decidedly mixed reviews "Morrie was an exceptional man But Albom, who in "Tuesdays With Morrie" portrays himself as a workaholic who had lost touch with what really counted until Schwartz reminded him, insists that he's really not that busy Albom's fiction debut, "The Five People You Meet in Heaven," spent its first four weeks atop the New York Times best seller list "We are all connected " Besides being a best-selling author, Albom is an award-winning sports columnist with the Detroit Free Press, the host of a nationally syndicated afternoon radio program and a frequent panelist on ESPN's "The Sports Reporters," which airs on Sunday mornings He is killed on his 83rd birthday trying to save a girl when a malfunctioning cart from the park's tower drop attraction, Freddy's Free Fall, hurtles toward her I'm lucky if I work seven months a year now Entertainment Weekly was less kind, saying, "From the man who brought you `Tuesdays With Morrie' comes another trite-and-true primer on how to live, this time a simpleminded and shamelessly sentimental novel " Amy Tan, a best-selling author and friend of Albom's from their membership in the informal author band the Rock Bottom Remainders, says basing the book on a real person aided in the authenticity of the story The last thing he feels are two little hands in his and then everything goes to black " â€â€?â€â€?â€â€? On the Net: http://www "The book is really a sort of valentine to my uncle He finds himself in heaven, but in Albom's version, singing angels and bright lights are nowhere to be found com/ "It's an old story with as much heft as a fluffy cloud, but there's comfort in Albom's unwavering conviction that our lives have meaning even after we're gone," said a review in People magazine 'Morrie' Author Returns With Best Seller Oct 29, 1:23 PM EST Mitch Albom promised he wouldn't rush into anything after his 1997 best seller, "Tuesdays With Morrie You can no more separate one life from another than you can separate a breeze from the wind He spoke in kind of clipped, gruff sentences Instead, Eddie meets five people who impress upon him the central message of the book â€â€? that all lives intersect in some way and one's actions change others' lives in unimaginable ways "After its success, everybody kind of wanted `Wednesdays With Morrie' or `Chicken Soup With Morrie Eddie couldn't do that "This book has more freedom to create a dreamlike reality â€â€? the element of fiction in which you can depart from those conventions of what's real â€â€? and yet you have the feeling that it's an authentic character," Tan said albom "There are no random acts," says The Blue Man, a former sideshow member at the amusement park and the first person Eddie meets in heaven " And he didn't That's the last thing Albom wanted to write after "Tuesdays With Morrie He could put everything in words "And I think that has very much to do with him basing (Eddie's) personality on his favorite uncle "I don't do any of them full time," he said