Inappropriate Kiss Consequences

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(Caution: The question deals with a 22-year old movie actor kissing a 13-year old on set.)

I'm making another run at "Cory's Story", which I first mentioned in a Forum entry twelve years ago called "What Happens Now?" and later cannibalized for my 2018 contest entry "Corey's Last Concert". (Both Cory and Corey are anatomically male young Disney entertainers portraying 12-to-14 year old girl cheerleaders named Bonnie circa 1980, but their back stories are quite different.) I didn't know where the story was going in 2010 (the reason for that old forum note); I do now, or at least I think I do.

It does mean, though, that a 15-year old is telling the story in 1983 instead of a 37-year old in 2005, as I'd been planning, or an all-knowing narrator. I'm not sure yet if that works for me.

Thing is, I know what I want to do in getting Cory to Hollywood (well, Burbank) and where s/he ends up when it all falls apart. It's the part in between, when she's Bonnie at the movie and recording studios and he's Cory, sort of, elsewhere, that's looking thin, to the point where I've thought about basically skipping it ("If this were a movie there'd be a montage right here of calendar pages and magazine headlines. We are planning to sell the movie rights, aren't we?").

Getting to the point of this note -- I always do, though I tend to take so long that I'm not sure my readers are patient enough to follow me there -- one event that I'm considering has to do with the issue in the title here and at the top.

The second Bonnie film involves the character developing a crush on Robb, a 17-year old boy celebrity played by Karl, a 22-year old journeyman actor. (The producers don't want to use a real star, not only because they don't want to pay for one but because that kind of fame can be so fleeting that it's liable to date the film.) There's a brief dream sequence in which Bonnie gets to meet her idol one-on-one and give Robb a peck on the lips. But when the cameras start rolling, Karl grabs the back of Cory's head and starts giving her the full treatment; Cory's surprised and repulsed and slaps Karl's face once she can escape his grip. (Not because Cory's a boy -- something few if any people in the studio are aware of and that Cory himself is getting a little confused about -- but because like the Bonnie character, Cory's 13 years old. Cory's definitely not attracted to Karl, and this adult actor has no business doing that.)

Anyway, this is happening in 1980, decades before #MeToo and even social media. This isn't the first day of shooting; if Karl's fired, his previous scenes will have to be re-shot. In Bonnie's dreams, it's not unlikely that she'd want Robb, only four years older, to make out with her; if this weren't a Disney film it might even have been scripted that way. (That's probably going too far since Bonnie's demographic is preteen girls.)

So do they fire Karl? Cory and his mentors -- he's staying with his agents, a husband-and-wife team, because his parental situation is untenable -- certainly would want them to. I don't know which answer's more plausible, or makes the story better. Karl's not a continuing villain; if I leave this in, it's more to have one more event during this stretch and to illustrate Cory's gender confusion.

Eric

Feels Icky

I would never say anything out loud. I'm of another time when such things were not acceptable.

Hmmm…

0.25tspgirl's picture

Reference how Judy Garland was treated as a child star. Also check out what Drew Barrymore has said about her tweens. I believe Disney was good at sweeping things under the rug too.

BAK 0.25tspgirl

Depends

Whose the bigger name? What do the contracts say? Which actor has more scenes in the can. Because they could decide it's cheaper to cut Cory.

I know you say Karl is just a journeyman actor, but I don't have a feel for Cory's standing. Karl might make a useable "teen heartthrob" and make the studio some bucks on the cheap. He's cheap, get say three movies in the can before he gets more popular (and more expensive) then cut him loose. Classic B movie plan - cheap vehicles and cheap actors, make a quick buck then shove him out the door. A number of the 50s-60s beach and monstor movies were done that way. Sally Fields is the only one I can think of that had a succesful movie/TV career after the beach (Gidget) movies were mined out. Annette Funacello converted her movie career into a succesful life, but not on film.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Thanks...

Cory's by far the bigger investment; the Junior High Cheerleader series in which Bonnie's the lead role includes records and concert tours in addition to films. Karl was hired as a one-shot; the Robb character he plays isn't particularly sympathetic.

Eric

Knowing that scene is in there, I'm not likely to read it

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

However; it does have merit as part of the storyline. (I won't read it because I'm a bit of a prude about such things.) But ignoring my feelings on adults with under age minors, it's the kind of thing that happens in real life. I personally know someone who was caught, at about Cory's age, wearing something feminine by their step father who "showed them what it was to be a woman" repeatedly.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

If it were my story

I'd err on the side of putting in the message I'd *hope* would be delivered, rather than the one I think is necessarily actually most likely.

So, if it were me, there would be serious consequences for the guy's actions including re-casting/re-shooting, because that's what I would HOPE a real studio would do to keep their child stars safe, at minimum.

Sometimes it's good to try and be realistic. Sometimes, the goals of a story are better met by embracing a bit of fantasy to create a better world. So, decide which is more important for you.

*hugs*

Melanie E.