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Nine dogs--and their owners--learn whether they have what it takes to succeed in the animal acting world Date published: 7/28/2007
By KIM BAER MIRIAM FIELDS- The workshop was located in an inviting spot: PAWS for Therapy Day Spa at The Shops at River Club in Spotsylvania County. Bright fuchsia carpeting covered the floor. The walls were decorated with flags--the kind proud dog owners fly on their front porches--of different breeds of dogs. Fields-Babineau arranged a display of treats and training books on the table, and checked out the animals as they arrived. She was friendly with the pet owners who filed in, but wasn't giving too much away. "Nice coloring," she said of Ajax, an English mastiff. When friend Thea Verdak, president of the Rappahannock Humane Society, swooned over Sugar and Tiffany, two show dogs from Northern Virginia, Fields-Babineau smiled. She broke from her objective demeanor when Randy Beavers came in, trailing behind his two basset hounds. "Oh, here are my bassets," she said. She had worked with one, Rupert, on two commercials. The workshop did not have the feel of a competitive tryout. There were no obvious "stage owners" primping pampered pets. The pet owners sat in metal folding chairs that ringed the table. Some pets stayed with their owners. Others were more comfortable in the crates that were lined up along one wall of the salon. These pet owners had gathered on a sunny summer Saturday, each hopeful that his or her pet could make it in the business. Would the nine dogs--and their owners--have what it takes to make it in the animal acting world? Fields-Babineau would find out. Looking for a starFields-Babineau is a tall, strongly built woman with long brown, slightly curly hair. She was dressed casually on this day, in brown pants and a sleeveless shirt. But she had a calm authority with the animals and owners that reflects her nearly 30 years as an animal trainer. For years, she did her work in the backyard of her Aquia Harbour home in Stafford County. She now runs an animal-training center and boarding facility on her 75-acre farm in Amherst.
Date published: 7/28/2007
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