The very occasional rays of success DO make it all worthwhile, although somehow when it comes to money IN, that all seems to go in DD's account, yet the money OUT always comes from mine?!


Moderator: busybusybusy
if you are given a 12 month licence, then your local authority is not checking on individual jobs to make sure chaperone etc arrangements are in place - thoough i see if this is a licence with oi]ne dance school, say, that makes sense - otherwise, it is a dereliction of the ewo's dutywissymo wrote:12 month licence ??
is that for modelling or acting?
It's for acting - and to be honest, I don't see the licensing authority as the people who should primarily be watching out for my DD's welfare anyway, even if that is their legal requirement. I see that as MY job, and I would only ever allow her to work in an atmosphere that I felt was appropriate, and I would always chaperone her myself.wissymo wrote:
12 month licence ??
is that for modelling or acting?
if you are given a 12 month licence, then your local authority is not checking on individual jobs to make sure chaperone etc arrangements are in place - thoough i see if this is a licence with oi]ne dance school, say, that makes sense - otherwise, it is a dereliction of the ewo's duty
if that has been your exprience - great - but:Nicola wrote:It's for acting - and to be honest, I don't see the licensing authority as the people who should primarily be watching out for my DD's welfare anyway, even if that is their legal requirement. I see that as MY job, and I would only ever allow her to work in an atmosphere that I felt was appropriate, and I would always chaperone her myself.wissymo wrote:
12 month licence ??
is that for modelling or acting?
if you are given a 12 month licence, then your local authority is not checking on individual jobs to make sure chaperone etc arrangements are in place - thoough i see if this is a licence with oi]ne dance school, say, that makes sense - otherwise, it is a dereliction of the ewo's duty
Well, I suppose it's horses for courses - it certainly works for us, but as you say, not all parents are perhaps as lucky as me that they would always be on set (although I would think that apart from professional shows and high budget TV productions, this would generally be the case anyway.) Personally, I wouldn't want my DD to be involved in a production where I wasn't on set, even though she's now 13, because her well-being is my primary concern.Nicola wrote:
wissymo wrote:
12 month licence ??
is that for modelling or acting?
if you are given a 12 month licence, then your local authority is not checking on individual jobs to make sure chaperone etc arrangements are in place - thoough i see if this is a licence with oi]ne dance school, say, that makes sense - otherwise, it is a dereliction of the ewo's duty
It's for acting - and to be honest, I don't see the licensing authority as the people who should primarily be watching out for my DD's welfare anyway, even if that is their legal requirement. I see that as MY job, and I would only ever allow her to work in an atmosphere that I felt was appropriate, and I would always chaperone her myself.
if that has been your exprience - great - but:
1. not all mums think like you and the ewo has to look out for everyone
2. not all productions will go with that - if they are low-budget, they will want a professional chaperone who will look after 8 kids for one fee - not one ti one - maybe yuo'll chaperone free of charge - how many mums do you think can afford that?
so - i go back to - open licences are not in the best interests of many performing kids