Film Caterers / Photo Credit: Reel Deal Caterers
WHAT DOES A CATERER DO? (In the
Entertainment industry. What Does a Caterer
Do?)
What Does a Caterer Do?
Napoleon once said that an army marches on its
stomach; as anyone in the film industry knows, this is also true for the
hundreds of people it takes to make a movie. Caterers are not just useful for
providing massive quantities of delicious food at corporate events and
weddings, but are also pivotal to the movie-making process, feeding everyone on
the film set from the actors to the grips and all in between.
Duties
The duties of a caterer seem pretty straightforward:
You cook some food and serve it to people. While this is true, catering
requires a great deal more. Catering is different than running a restaurant in
that caterers bring the food to the location that the customer requires, which
often requires the use of large mobile kitchens and a staff of chefs and
servers. Caterers usually begin by putting together a proposal for the
producers, which goes over variables like the date and length of the shoot, the
number of people to feed, and menu ideas. From this the caterer will be able to
come up with a final budget for food and, equipment, and staff. On larger
films, there may be full-service catering, which includes setting up the décor
and layout, from linens and flatware to flowers, for added ambience; on smaller
films, a caterer who can make something (delicious) out of nothing is a
godsend. Once the details are set, the caterer can use any number of CAD-based
software programs to help plan his or her attack. Meticulous planning and a
very detailed schedule is crucial in order to meet the tight deadlines and
unique demands of catering a movie set.
Once equipment and mobile kitchen are secured, it is
time to set up, cook and serve. Feeding a crew on a movie set is a task that
often begins before sunrise and lasts until sunset. Crew call can be as early
as 5 a.m., with cooks arriving early enough to prepare the food. Catering
breakfast usually takes a few hours and can include anything from Belgian
waffles and pancakes to custom omelets, fruits, cereals, pastries, and gallons
of strong coffee. After breakfast, the few hours until lunch give the catering
staff a little time to break down the breakfast set-up, clean up, and start
preparing lunch. Union rules require a large meal six hours after the crew
arrives, and timeliness is crucial to the caterer. While meals are sometimes
catered, the buffet layout is most common. A selection of entrees will be
presented, and enough food to feed anywhere from a handful to several hundred
crew members must be available. Lunch is the caterer’s moment to shine, as on
movie sets it is considered the highlight of the day for the cast and the crew.
Skills & Education
Caterers almost always have experience in restaurants
and other dining facilities before going into catering. Many caterers also
obtain degrees from culinary institutes or technical schools. Business
education is also a plus, as many of the planning, proposal, and bidding
activities require at least a cursory knowledge of costs, expenses, staff
management, and marketing. A detailed résumé that shows a wide range of
culinary skills and experience will gain entrance into a catering company,
though a beginning caterer may have to start out at a smaller company to start.
A financial investment is required—equipment and serve ware can be rented, but
owning as much of your own rig as possible adds to profits. Some caterers are
also licensed commercial drivers who can handle the big trailers that carry
mobile kitchens, and in some states they must also be Teamsters. Mechanical
skills are considered a plus, as there are sometimes kitchen equipment repairs
that must be made on the spot. Caterers must also be sociable and easy to get
along with, not to mention clean, as few people will hire a catering staff
filled with unhygienic misanthropes. Finally, the single most important skill
that any caterer can possess is the ability to cook a large quantity of tasty
food in a minimal amount of time.
What to Expect
You can expect to be busy and tired. Caterers must be
comfortable working in cramped and hot mobile kitchens while remaining
congenial to cast and crew. You must be able to handle multiple food
sensitivities and dietary restrictions with grace and flair. Shoots don’t
always happen within the handy confines of a studio stage; you may find
yourself stirring soup on a frozen tundra or flipping burgers at the beach.
(Try not to get sand in the potato salad.) Cleanup of the serving station,
dishes, and mobile kitchen, as well as the requisite paperwork, completes the
14-to-16-hour day for the caterer, then it’s time to restock for tomorrow’s
meals. In the instance of a night shoot, you may be serving waffles at midnight
and sleeping in the truck.
Sources, References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, WikiBooks,
Pinterest, IMDB, Linked In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New
York Film Academy, The Balance, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Media
Match, Quora, Creative Skill Set, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, Daily
Variety, The Film Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Career Trend,
Producer's Code of Credits, Truity, Production Hub, Producers Guild of America,
Film Connection, Variety, Wolf Crow, Get In Media, Production Beast
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Film Caterers / Photo Credit: Reel Deal Caterers
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