“Let's take the gown she's wearing right now as an example. Originally, the director wanted a higher slit—he wanted it all the way up to her upper thigh—but Evelyn refused to agree to that. There were two kiss scenes in the morning, too, but Evelyn was adamant not to film them either. The actor is currently in the break room, waiting to find out if the scriptwriter is going to make adjustments to the script,” Nikita continued.
After listening to her complaints, Donald glanced at her and asked, “Did you read the contract from Werner Brothers Studios?”
“I did.”
“Isn't there a clause in the contract stating that they would fully respect Ms. Shabelle's wishes and keep her public image in mind during shooting?”
Nikita was stumped by his words.
“Yes, but no one in the entertainment industry can avoid kissing scenes,” she explained.
In a less confident voice, she continued, “Mr. Campbell, Evelyn has the potential, but she's a little too reserved, and that's why she hasn't been able to rise to fame.”
As a professional manager, Nikita knew there was only one way for female artistes to become popular, and that was to expose their skin.
That had been done since the seventies and eighties.
Each of the women who skyrocketed to stardom made their way there by taking off their clothes. Every one of them had a sexy image.
Their popularity was more important than the damage to their reputation and the ensuing public scrutiny that would come after achieving fame.
The more unblushing the attractive female artistes of the silver screen were, the richer the men they would end up marrying.
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