Chapter 1. The Return
AS SOON AS he returned to England, Walker made enquiries with a network of contacts in the film and television industry with regard to securing work as an experienced walk-on extra. Surprisingly quickly, considering the circumstances, he picked up a few walk-ons for the odd TV soap and a domestic comedy pub scene, more he suspected for his novelty value than anything else.
He also managed to pick up the odd film, averaging a day's filming every couple of months or so. He found that the film work in England was much more seasonal than his previous home in Burbank, California, where filming was pretty much an all-year round occupation, but he persevered and hoped that persistence would in time bring its own rewards.
"Walker Pickering?" the young receptionist reading the name off of her tablet screen at the end of an impossibly long painted fingernail, addressed the room, full of theatrical hopefuls. They were there for a 10am appointment in competition to fill one advertised temporary three-month role, with a six-month extension option, on a twice weekly soap opera. It was already half an hour past the time of that appointment without a single movement toward the impending auditions, or any explanation forthcoming for the long delay. Most of the individuals were therefore tense with anticipation and surreptitiously sizing up all the competition sitting around them.
One man who gave the clear impression that he wasn't the least bit nervous, was a tall, slim man, at least a decade and a half older than the next oldest man sitting in the room. He rose at the receptionist's mention of his name.
"That's me," he drawled, sounding like a world-weary cowboy, recently stepped off the overnight stagecoach from some frontier town way out West, somewhere over near hostile "Injun Territory" no doubt. He strolled up to the receptionist as if he had all the time in the world.
Sitting in the seat next to where Walker had immediately vacated, the beauty salon-tanned young actor muttered to no-one in particular, "Must be an established actor. He only walked in here two minutes ago and he gets to see Ted Silvers straight away; we've all been kept hangin' about here for three-quarters of an hour at least."
"Nah, he's not an actor at all," someone a little older than the impetuous young man sitting opposite him said, "He's only an extra, I can assure you; he only does walk-on parts. Mind you, he's famous in the industry already and the chances are that he'll probably always be way more famous than you ever will be, son."
All around the room, more than two-thirds of the participants were nodding in agreement, the first smiles to be seen in that nervous room that morning.
One of the others added, "That bastard Silvers probably only wants to take the piss out of the poor sod and send him packing with his tail between his legs, just for the satisfaction of putting the rest of us off our strides before we have our auditions. Just don't look Pickering in the eye when he storms through here on his way out."
Several nodding heads added a collective murmur, read as being in complete agreement with the last speaker.
"Famous?" the first young actor queried. "Just an extra?"
"Believe you me son, when you get home, search YouTube for 'Walker Pickering Extra'," the man opposite added, "I guess you must be the only person in this room that hasn't seen it. That video went viral several years ago, maybe before you even joined the profession. Watch it my friend, watch it and weep ... weep for that man Walker."
***
Walker Pickering wasn't his real name, but he hated his given name "Walter" and, perhaps because of that, he disliked his parents just a little bit too, for imposing his grandfather's currently unfashionable name on him. All right, that was an exaggeration, he didn't quite dislike his parents exactly, and certainly not his surviving mother, having lost his father to cancer about twelve years before. But he hated the traditional name that they had saddled him with. And Walker couldn't even fall back on his second name, that one he considered was even worse; not that Walker had ever used it or divulged whatever that unmentionable name was to anyone of his acquaintance. The middle name, somehow, wasn't even on either of his passports, as he held joint UK and US nationality.
The name Walker, he had decided while he was still in school, was just a single subtle consonant different from his original name but the way that it was perceived, and how he felt about the name, were whole worlds apart as far as Walker was concerned.
What exactly was he doing at the Regional TV Studios, speaking to the Producer of a screened-twice-a-week Soap Opera? Well, he was about to find out in more detail than Mr Silvers' private secretary had hinted at when she rang him the day before.
Walker was led into a cavernous office, with a portly gentleman in his fifties, maybe five to ten years older than himself, Walker guessed, sitting behind a huge, impressibly imposing desk, made of Brazilian mahogany he noted with interest. There was also a video cameraman setting up his equipment and taking light readings around the desk.
"My apologies for the cameraman, Mr Pickering," the Producer said smoothly, "But we have a few screen tests to do in here later on this morning but I believe you were anxious to meet with me as soon as possible."
"Yes, Mr Silvers, it was about the terms your assistant Julie was offering for the temporary position of technical advisor covering a particular story line for the 'High Street' soap."
"Oh, we never call it a 'soap' here, Mr Pickering, never; it is regarded as a very much-loved and successful family drama series," the tacked-on Producer smile was vaguely unsettling, "Now, shall we get down to brass tacks?"
***
Walker had worked in the States for more than twenty years until returning home to England. As we have just heard, he was not employed as an actor in the media and entertainment business but supplemented his main income as a casual TV and film extra. For his full-time job he had once worked night shift for the Burbank city electrical power company in California for several of the twenty years that he had lived in that city. He had no formal training in the electrical industry and knew nothing at all about the supply of electrical power, other than what he picked up casually during his employment. They had plenty of guys on hand with college degrees who knew all of that technical stuff, though. All Walker had to do was take the calls, log all the details and, in timely fashion, send out engineers to deal with whatever emergencies they were informed of. Also, he would book specialist investigations and routine inspections as required. If he needed any advice about some problem he had not had to deal with before, he'd call the duty officer, who would use his specialist expertise to decide the appropriate response.
He had enjoyed the night shift work, it was varied and interesting, he enjoyed the technicalities involved in the business of providing enough power as demanded by customers, while keeping down costs and eliminating delays in the system. It had paid reasonable money in compensation for the unsocial working hours and he was happily employed on permanent night shift.
Walker really lived for the days, though. Then he worked as a TV film or TV series extra, doing the rounds of the various studios, spending maybe a couple of hours here or half a day there, either by appointment or simply waiting to be selected or rejected. He was picked reasonably regularly, at least often enough to earn a respectable amount in fees as well as enjoying the high quality free lunches and refreshments, which were generally laid on for everyone involved in the production of viewing entertainment, whether it be for home viewing or theatre screening.
Walker was always adamant, whenever asked what he did in the studios, that he wasn't an actor. Most of the other extras were desperate wanna-be actors. He had no aspirations whatsoever to join the theatrical profession at all. The last thing that he wanted to do was to have to pretend emotions and learn lines. He had never had any amateur theatrical experience and certainly no formal thespian training, nor was he interested in taking future acting lessons.