(Credits: Far Out / YouTube Still)
Mon 30 June 2025 19:35, UK
In 1987, Brad Pitt finally landed his first movie roles after several years of struggle since leaving his hometown of Springfield, Missouri, to pursue acting in Los Angeles. The 20-something actor’s years of lessons hadn’t led him to a breakout role as a superstar-in-the-making, though. In fact, the first four parts he booked on the silver screen were uncredited roles as an extra.
Pitt knew everybody has to start somewhere, though, so he gladly accepted these non-speaking parts in the comedy Hunk, the Bret Easton Ellis drama Less Than Zero, the Kevin Costner thriller No Way Out, and the Charlie Sheen crime drama No Man’s Land. In these films, Pitt, sporting a marvellous mullet, inhabited the showcase parts of ‘Man at beach with drink’, ‘Partygoer/Preppie guy at fight’, ‘Party guest’, and ‘Waiter’.
In these nascent days of his career, Pitt knew he was in a catch-22 situation. He hadn’t been able to land a prominent speaking part yet, so he needed to accept background artist roles as a way to pay his rent. However, in those days, an actor couldn’t achieve the required status to apply for a Screen Actors’ Guild card with non-speaking roles, as one of the prerequisites was that an actor needed to speak at least one line of dialogue on-screen.
Why did a young star need a SAG card, though? Well, SAG (now known as SAG-AFTRA) is the union that advocates for actors, voice performers, and other professionals in the entertainment industry. A union member will benefit from its collective bargaining agreements, ensuring fair compensation for their work and health benefits.
Naturally, the young Pitt was desperate to get his SAG card, and he decided to take a gamble while shooting his part in No Man’s Land. He figured he had nothing to lose, after all. Surely, the worst that could happen is he’d try to sneak a line into the scene, but it wouldn’t be used in the final cut. However, the inexperienced star would soon learn there was a much, much worse outcome than that.
“It’s a restaurant scene,” he told the Armchair Expert podcast in 2025. “The main characters are Charlie Sheen and DB Sweeney, and a bunch of other actors that I wasn’t necessarily aware of. I am the waiter.” Pitt was instructed to bring champagne to the table, pour a glass for one of the actors, and then walk off-screen – but that’s not what he did.
“Like a jackass, they’re doing the scene,” Pitt chuckled. “I get to the last actor, and she seemed lower on the totem pole, maybe. And, literally, the scene is going on, I pour her champagne, and I go, ‘Would you like anything else?’” Suddenly, to Pitt’s horror, the director yelled, “Cut! Cut! Cut!” The first Assistant Director then hurried over to film in a rage and scolded the young star by warning him, “You do that again, you’re out of here!”
To the uninitiated, it seems silly for there to be such a hostile reaction to a young actor chancing his arm with an innocuous improv. However, as Pitt tells the story, it was treated extremely seriously at the time, and he really did nearly get fired. He recalled, “It was just shame for the rest of the night,” before semi-seriously adding, “It still haunts me.”
Thankfully for Pitt, it’s safe to say his career turned out OK, despite this embarrassing gaffe. Even at the time, he didn’t need to wait too long to get his SAG card, as that very year, he began landing roles in TV shows like Dallas, Freddy’s Nightmares, and Growing Pains, all of which were named characters with speaking roles. Phew.
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