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Reality and the Fantasy |
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London’s Burning may not be the most accurate
of dramas regarding the work of the Fire Service. If we were as
busy as they are we would never be on the drill yard, doing T.A.P.S.’s,
having lectures, doing fire safety, showing school children around,
preventing arson…well you get the idea.
How does the work of an actor in the drama compare to ours? Well
there is certainly less risk for the actor if not the stunt person,
but who stands in for us when we are in danger? No one. But we do
at least have a secure income even if it is low. How does it compare
to those who pretend to be Firefighters?
Jim Alexander played Joe Walker in the programme for two years.
He made some telling comments in a recent interview.
"I make sure that I don't spend everything I earn. I always
put aside up to 20 per cent of my income to cover me against a bad
patch when the work dries up.”
All well and good but what about splashing out? I last went mad
and bought an overpriced football shirt for £39.99. And Mr
Alexander? "I bought a pair of Armani jeans with paint and
patches all over them for £170 but they look as though they
cost a fiver from a charity shop. Funnily enough, despite that I
do feel good in them..."
I would hope he does after all it may be just a tatty pair of jeans
for some but it is 27 hours take home pay for a Qualified Firefighter.
His first acting salary was £1,500 per episode, playing firefighter
Joe Walker for 16 instalments of ITV's London's Burning - not that
he's complaining. "I was in work for eight months but the pay
wasn't much for such a high-profile show," he says. "In
the next series, I got £3,000 an episode for the same run.
"Though I spent a bit on going out and having a good time,
I managed to save £20,000."
Jim took a drop in salary when he went on to star as Jamie Parker
in Sky's Dream Team, so he wasn't able to save as much. But between
his first and second series he was lucky enough to earn £12,000
doing an advert for an Alco pop called Sidekick. "I
earned £450 a day for four days' filming," he says. "The
rest came from repeats. The ad only ran for three weeks but, had
it lasted six months, I could have made a lot more."
Not a bad rate of pay is it? How does that compare to your daily
take home pay? Do a quick calculation….
In June last year the young star moved into his own place - a three-bedroom
flat on two floors above a curtain shop, which cost £118,000.
From his savings Jim could afford a deposit of "I've
also thought about getting a pension but I'd rather put any spare
cash into my home. I am slowly doing it up and have just spent £10,000
on a new kitchen."
Though Jim tries to be a good saver, he does have bad days. "My
weakness is when I put my credit card behind the bar and offer friends
a round or two of drinks."
Good luck to all workers who earn whatever they can. I don’t begrudge
Jim or anyone else who earns sums larger than those we do after
all we all have in choice in the career we take. I just happen to
believe that I should be paid a fair rate for the job I do. It may
be less than that of an actor. But it should at least I believe
be fair.
Dean Mills
Regional Secretary
Thank you for taking the time to read this. If you have any queries
or want any more information please contact me on:
Mob: 07956 502585
Regional Office: 01494 513034
email:deanmills@hotmail.com
Y...because
we're worth
it! |
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