MovieMaker The Art and Business of Making Movies » Login | Register  

May 26, 2012

ABOUT | CONTACT | NEWSLETTER | Search

producing

Email
Print

Master of the Movie Prop

Kevin Hughes makes a career out of putting things in their place

Just about anything an actor touches in a film that isn’t nailed down is a prop. Props serve to enhance a character’s backstory, improve the look of a location or, in the case of fake projectile vomit, simply gross out the audience. The talented artists who furnish the canvas of cinema with their treasures are called property masters. MM spoke with Kevin Hughes, an industry veteran who began his career as an assistant on Apocalypse Now, and more recently has worked on such films as Boogie Nights, Borat and Bobby. With the support of his wife, Dody Dorn, the Oscar-nominated editor of films like Memento and Matchstick Men, Hughes, 55, has made a career out of putting things in their place.
-------------------------
Brian Malik (MM): What is your background in show business?

Kevin Hughes (KH): My grandfather had the now-automated job of opening and closing the curtain at Grauman’s Chinese and Egyptian Theatres and when I was a child my brother and I used to play behind the screen. I remember watching Ben-Hur from the wings and being blown away by the chariots and armor. My dad had the awe-inspiring job of flying in the duck on “You Bet Your Life” with Groucho Marx when someone said the “secret word.” It seemed like a logical thing for me to go into show business, so I joined the union.

MM: How did you become a property master?

KH: I started working in TV when I was 20 as an assistant prop master on “The Price is Right,” “All in the Family” and “The Sonny and Cher Show.” Francis Ford Coppola had been a neighbor of mine and my sister used to babysit Roman, Gio and Sofia. When Apocalypse Now was in its second year of production a telex was sent out asking for someone to bring some wine and cheese and a few films from L.A. out to the Philippines to help boost the morale of the crew, who were growing weary. My name was on a long list of people who might drop what they were doing and be a courier for a week or two and I jumped at the chance. When I got there Francis introduced me to Doug Madison, the film’s last remaining prop master, who gave me a job as a production assistant in the prop department and I stayed on until the movie wrapped. With Apocalypse Now on my otherwise blank feature resume, I was able to get Jon Davison and Joe Dante to interview me for Piranha—and I got the job.

MM: How do you prepare for a film when you are first offered a job?

KH: Usually I’m offered the job by the production designer, who sends me a script and we talk about the overall look of the film. On the second read I do a breakdown, listing everything the characters touch or eat or look at, and then I make a timeline to chronicle what happens to each of the props as the movie goes on. For example: Sometimes there will be a need for a surfboard with bullet holes and one without. You can’t count on shooting in sequence, so you need to budget two or three phases of a single prop. Before I meet with the director, I try to watch all the films he or she has made and research the general subject matter of the story so that I can come to the interview with answers as well as questions.

MM: How closely do you collaborate with the director?

KH: The more I know what a director is thinking or wants the better I will be at my job. Once the director trusts me, I can become a sort of conduit between the printed page and the realized film. Props are the three-dimensional objects that help establish where a character is in space and time, so it helps an actor relate to the scene and it allows the director something to make the actor do. “Pick up that gun slowly and point to the door with it,” or, “Grab the gun and poke it into his rib this time.” Props make the difference. The director and the production designer are the two people I try to work with most closely; if I get inside their heads I can do my job a lot better.

MM: Where do you find most of your props?

KH: Every picture is different. If the story takes place in the present day, finding props is easy. Finding the right props takes a bit more time.
Prop houses are great for weapons and specialty items like airport security metal detectors, plus I have many huge rolling boxes filled with props I have collected over the years. My assistants and I enjoy rummaging through them, looking for that perfectly weathered briefcase or my sterling silver Mr. Peanut coke spoon or the bent fountain pen from Blast from the Past. I like to use things that look random or even wrong, because in real life sometimes the wrong thing is what you end up using.

Period films require a different approach: Every prop has to be checked out to make sure it works well and that there are at least two of them because you never know. Until recently, I have been reluctant to go online for props because I like to hold something in my hands before choosing it. But on Bobby, I was able to acquire a lot of great items from eBay by just typing in “1968” and “Robert Kennedy” and “Ambassador Hotel.” At one point during prep, Emilio Estevez and I were bidding on the same item without knowing it.

MM: With Borat, Freddy Got Fingered and Boogie Nights on your resume, you must have some pretty raunchy props stashed away in those rolling boxes. Any details?

KH: I love making vegetarian vomit, which isn’t as easy as it sounds. I start with the script to see what food or drink may actually be eaten before the vomit scene. If there are no “on-camera” eating scenes to guide me, I create a “plausible off-screen scenario” of likely foods the character could have eaten and then make a batch. Then it’s time to convince the actors that it isn’t real vomit, so I usually drink some in front of them to gain their trust. After that it’s just a matter of funneling it into their mouth before takes and mopping it up afterwards.

I’ve also made several practical penises for actors to use in the ever-popular peeing scenes. An I.V. bag with Mountain Dew and warm water (for steam) hidden under the actor’s arm lets him press on the bag like a bagpipe to control the pressure and distance. They love that.

The Banger Sisters required a shoebox full of Polaroids of men’s penises. I downloaded a few from the Web and doctored them to look like Polaroids. I even recruited a woman friend of mine to hang out at a bar and ask the men waiting to use the restroom if she could take their picture for a movie. She did great. The most fun from that was watching the look on Susan Sarandon and Goldie Hawn’s faces when they saw the pictures for the first time—it’s in the movie.

MM: Any advice for aspiring prop masters out there?

KH: Get a job as a production assistant and watch the prop man. Watch as many classic movies as you can and note the props. I tell people that I am a “Method” prop man. I like to “become” each of the characters in the script. I ask myself, ‘What would my keychain look like?’ or ‘Where would I have gotten that car and when did I put that stuff in the trunk?’ It takes a long time to prep a movie that way, but by the time you start shooting you know as much, if not more, about the characters as the actors—and sometimes even the director. That gives you an edge and the confidence to choose the right prop at the right time. The director and the actors will thank you. MM


SHARE THIS STORY

Del.icio.us this itemDel.icio.us

Reddit this itemReddit

Yahoo this item Yahoo

TAGS

COMMENTS | POST A COMMENT

Comment by Egypt Property on 8/27/08 at 8:04 pm

LOL, I loved the story about your friend who took photos of the blokes. I tell you now, if she met me, I would have probably fallen for this too.

Very smart indeed. :-)
Best wishes Ravi

Comment by Courier Services on 10/29/09 at 12:01 am

Does anyone in the UK knows about the company Global Courier Express?
Courier Services

Comment by adams on 1/30/10 at 4:17 am

Kevin Hughes he is great man....

ucvhost

Comment by ellinawilliams on 5/14/10 at 11:26 pm

The conversation seems to be excellent.I agree every film is different.We can find right prop with little bit more time.Now people expecting different stuff of stories.So most of the film makers are trying to give different films.carrying cases

Comment by paul on 6/29/10 at 8:39 pm

Hello, i would like to be connected with mr kevin hughes if possible cos am a young peops lad in my country whom got freed by his masters and has started doing his job. Thanks all d same i benefitted from dis bloc.

Comment by Jhon on 7/24/11 at 12:55 pm

This is fantastic! I love it! I think so its very useful and knowledge able. I would like to thank you for the efforts you have made in writing this article. I am hoping the same best work Quotes future as well.
Banner Prints

POST A COMMENT

OUR PRIVACY POLICY | We will not publish or sell or share your email address or other personal information. Read more.

Name:  
Email:  
URL:  

Type the word you see below:

Comment:

MovieMaker Magazine

Magazine cover: Summer 2007This story was published in the Summer 2007 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:

My Life As A...Prop Master

View this issue

Order this issue | Subscribe to MM

 

Blog/Forum/Poll navigation

Blog Forums Polls
Latest from the blog:
 

Blog

SITE DELIVERY OPTIONS

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

  1. Food Film Festivals
    A new wave of film festivals are taking the tried and true "dinner and a movie" combo to a whole new ... read on
  2. Cook Up Your Own Food Film Festival
    Have you got a hankering to cook up a food and film festival close to home? Here’s some handy information about the dollars and cents you’ll need to make it all ... read on
  3. Mixed Reviews: Guilty Pleasures
    From 1970s Euro sleaze to Italian Neorealist classics, it's time to admit some guilty pleasures. DVD and book ... read on
  4. Virginia’s Indie Film Revolution
    Whether you’re aiming to make the next Revolutionary War epic or just need a film-friendly rural locale for your low-budget indie, Virginia will welcome you with open arms. Here, a few members of VA’s independent ... read on
  5. Master of the Movie Prop
    Just about anything an actor touches in a film that isn’t nailed down is a prop. Props serve to enhance a character’s backstory, improve the look of a location or, in the case of fake projectile vomit, simply gross ... read on
  6. Classic Movie Title Sequences
    Take a closer look at some of the most memorable title sequences of the past few years. ... read on
  7. Using Movie Title Sequences Effectively
    Released in the mid-1950s from the relatively static role of simply assigning credit, title sequences have evolved into an art form in their own right. ... read on
  8. Neil Jordan's Golden Rules of Moviemaking
    "Never tell the truth on a junket" and other lessons from the director of The Brave One and Interview with the Vampire, Neil ... read on
  9. All the Right Moves: Stabilizing Your Camera
    Not every director likes to move the camera. Some simply can’t afford it. Go back and look at Kevin Smith’s Clerks, for example. Almost every shot in that movie was a locked-down tripod shot—no movement at all. At ... read on
  10. Julie Delpy's 2 Days in Paris
    After sharpening her multi-tasking skills with Richard Linklater, Julie Delpy is writing, directing, producing, editing, scoring and starring in her own take on cross-cultural romance with 2 Days in ... read on
  11. Random Thoughts From the Set of Jeff Garlin's I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With
    From soundless filming to nausea on the set, Jeff Garlin relives the experience of writing, directing and starring in his directorial debut, I Want Someone to Eat Cheese ... read on
  12. Silent Movies Are Still Creating an Echo
    From Griffith and Eisenstein to Chaplin and Keaton, MM revisits the 15 greatest directors of the silent era. ... read on
  13. The Robert Rodriguez Effect
    When it comes to getting an education in film, there is no such thing as a one-size-fits-all option. But apparently the same can’t be said for a film school’s “model ... read on
  14. Ethan Hawke Grows Up in The Hottest State
    When I was 21 and under the influence of books like James Baldwin’s Go Tell It on the Mountain, Jack Kerouac’s The Subterraneans and Larry McMurtry’s All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers, I started writing a ... read on
  15. John Carpenter’s Business of Insanity
    In Hollywood these days, it sometimes seems easier to find an actor who’ll admit to having had plastic surgery than it is to find an original idea for a movie. Case in point: Legendary horror director John Carpenter. ... read on
  16. Halloween, Too
    Given his predilection for stepping behind the lens it shouldn’t have been a surprise when Rob Zombie announced his foray into feature moviemaking with 2003’s House of 1000 Corpses. But Zombie remaking John ... read on
  17. David Levien & Brian Koppelman: Ocean’s Two
    Brian Koppelman and David Levien are among the movie business’ most sought-after screenwriters. If all falls into place, they’ll soon be turning their attention to scripts for Robert De Niro (he’ll reportedly star ... read on
  18. Moviemaking: The Eternal Balancing Act
    ... read on
  19. Jodie Foster: The Brave One
    An Oscar nominee at 14 and still at the top of her game after more than four decades, Jodie Foster knows how to get what she wants--like director Neil Jordan and a killer script for her latest thriller, The Brave ... read on
  20. The Signal: A Collaboration in Three Parts
    A hit at Sundance, The Signal offers a new chapter in the world of cinematic collaboration as three directors each take a turn in the director's ... read on

RELATED ARTICLES FROM THE ARCHIVES

  1. 5/24/2012: James Franco vs. the Fact Checkers Unit
  2. 5/21/2012: Having Big Fun in the Big Town
  3. 5/10/2012: “It’s Only Forever…”
  4. 5/3/2012: Water Takes Center Stage in Last Call at the Oasis
  5. 4/27/2012: Over the Rainbow with Jonathan Kalafer