You have read here about my experiences of growing up in a town that was a crossroads for the movie industry and how I had brushes against celebrity for various reasons. Some people want to grow up to be movie stars. There was one job I always wanted in the field. I wanted to grow up to be a Script Supervisor. While you have heard about producers, directors, cinematographers, set designers etc. - all of the people eligible for Oscars, very few people in the audience have a clue about this job. They do get credit at the end of the movie if you stay for the credits, but that is about it. What you don't know is that whether or not you liked a movie was often on a subliminal level the result of whether or not this person did their job well.
What is even more remarkable about this job is that even from the earliest days of film, it was a woman's job. The earliest incarnation was "Script Girl". This was the exercise of male dominance who knew they needed a "girl" to make sure everything looked good when it hit the screen. Just as secretaries have now become Administrative Assistants, Script girls have now moved up to become supervisors because rarely are they men. What you don't hear is that most directors have "girls" they always ask to be their assistants. They now get paid very, very well to save the director's ass ... daily.
Definititon: Maintains an accurate shooting script and recording in detail all information related to each take, including length of shot, scene and take number, camera placement, and printable takes, as well as any notations on dialogue, action, props, set dressing, wardrobe, make-up, and hair in order to provide continuity during shooting and to facilitate editing.
What You See On The Screen
How it looked to the actor
How it looked to the director
How it looked to the Script Supervisor
So life didn't quite work out according to plan, but that early urge for a job I knew I would love led to jobs as a researcher, editor, administrative assistant - the person in the background who makes sure everything is correct. Still, even now, I would have loved being a script supervisor.