February 2012 Archives

For many years now, the Oscars have really strived for national and international diversity. And if you wanted diversity at the movies in 2011, you got it. The noms speak loudly for that diversity. The creators and stars of the 10 nominated films and the host of others in 24 categories will be celebrated Sunday on ABC at the 84th Academy Awards. Red carpet arrivals begin @ 7 Eastern.

BCrystalHost.jpgHosting for the ninth time will be Billy Crystal, who'll provide plenty of mischief and parody through the night of endless $1.7-mil-per-30-sec commercials right up to the credits crawl, and then more commercials. Veteran filmmaker Brian Grazer is producer. 

Marilyn Monroe's big news again. The failed musical of 1983 [51 performances] with music and lyrics by five composers [for the record, Alyson Reed and Scott Bakula starred]. Maybe it was simply bad or simply way ahead of it's time. Now, it's being examied closely again [could it pop up at Encores!

If you wait long enough, all things come back. So, no suprise, that on NBC's highly anticipated new series SMASH, the Bway community is all abuzz about a Marilyn Monroe musical. at again. Abuzz, because not only is the series [created by playwright Theresa Rebeck, also an exec producer] musical being developed on the series, but, with producers such as Steven Spielberg and such known theater names as David Marshall Grand, Scott Wittman and Marc Shaiman [who're writing the score] and Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, it's rumored to eventually land on Bway.

aMMlake.jpgWhich is by way of introduction to one of 2011's most mesmerizing movies, My Week with Marilyn [Weinstein Company], based on the diaries of Brit filmmaker Colin Clark, who during the shoot of 1957's The Prince and the Showgirl was in the employ of MM's stellar co-star Sir Laurence Oliver, who didn't take kindly to MM's delays and unpreparedness. Williams inhabited MM to a T, as well as Sir Kenneth Branagh cloned Sir Larry.

MWWM was so anticipated, and actually lived up to and beyond its hype, that it seemed to be a shoe in as leader of the pack, then came The Artist [Canal +, CinéCinema, Weinstein], a French silent homage to early Hwood, in B&W and presented in the old screen rati
o yet, and one of the few nom'd films actually made in Hollywood. Along with the French leads is a top roster of American names and a very special dog. Devoid of wide-screen, color, 3-D, martial arts, kick-boxing, car chases, full frontal, and erotic sexcapades, it still became one of the big blockbusters of the year. Though it was "silent," Ludovic Bource's stunning score actually added "voice."  

Clooney.jpgThen, George Clooney arrives not only in a film he co-wrote and directed, The Ides of March [Cross Creek, Sony Pictures]; Brad Pitt in Moneyball [Columbia Pictures], and Clooney again in the tropical family drama The Descendants [Fox Searchlight], which has audiences evenly divided [is it a great film, or simply an okay film with The Cloon maturing into character stage?]. Though A Better Life was alittle seen little film,  Mexican-born Demián Bichir's performance is one of the best, if not the best, of the lead noms. He won't win, but it's a tribute to the Academy to recognize him. He'll now forever more be known as Oscar nom Demián Bichir.

To give Michele Williams a run for the money, Meryl Streep [17 noms, with two wins - one, supporting; one lead] transformed herself [with the help of a huge make-up and hair department] into former Prime Minster Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady [Universal]. But then there was Viola Davis' acclaimed performance in The Help [Dreamsworks, Touchstone]. The game kept changing.
 

With noms from Poland and Iran, there's certainly tons of diversity, as you would expect, in the Foreign Film category. Everyone was expecting Pedro Almodóvar's very strange The Skin I Live In to be in one of the five slots. Because it was difficult to define as a drama or comedy, it landed with a thud. In a rare showing of distaste, it was derided by a majority at the NYFilm Fest media screenings, and Almodóvar's long been a Film Fest fav.

Since we can't write Uggie in for Best Lead Performance by an Animal and can't determine the winners [or wrangle an invite to the Vanity Fair soriee], we can at least take out our ballot and mark favs. The Academy members have. Now, we wait with baited breath for the envelopes to be opened.

In the past, winners didn't linger too long at the official Academy ball, in favor of making the party rounds, but the Academy's found a way to keep them there with an engraving department set up. Now, winners don't have to wait for their personal Oscar. They can tote it around all night and into the wee hours.

The Academy's web site, www.Oscar.com, is loaded with special features including trailers of nominated films, a ballot for you to vote,video features, photo galleries [such as Out of Character: Portraits of This Year's Nominees] and Unforgettable Heroes, trivia, suggestions for planning for your Oscar party, and special Oscar app for iPhone and iPad.


N
omination Highlights

For the complete list of nominees, visit Oscar's web site. You may drive away in a Hyundai.

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Special Awards

The Academy has presented the tech awards and also bestowed honorary Oscars on veteran actor James Earl Jones, Oprah Winfrey and make-up artist Dick Smith. Mr. Jones, who was feted by Alec Baldwin and Glenn Close, accepted his award by video from London's Wyndham Theater, where he's starring in Driving Miss Daisy with Vanessa Redgrave. Baldwin and Glenn Close feted the actor before Sir Ben Kingsley presented him with his Oscar onstage. Accepting, he said, "Receiving an Oscar in such a fashion is an actor's wet dream. I'm deeply honored, mighty grateful and just plain gobsmacked."

JEJones.jpgSmith is the groundbreaking veteran makeup artist [The Exorcist, The Godfather among  many others].

Ms. Winfrey, receiving the prestigious Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was introduced by Quincy Jones, John Travolta, Maria Shriver, and producer Larry Gordon and a student she'd never met but whose education she funded. "Receiving an Oscar for philanthropy is unimaginable," she cried. "It's also unimaginable considering my humble beginnings in Mississippi. It's impossible for you to even know what this journey has meant."

[It was quite a night for Mississippi, as not only is Winfrey from there, but also Jones and Gordon.]

"I'd like to do more films," Ms. Winfrey said, "but to receive the Humanitarian Award means more to me than any film, any acclaim, even an Oscar, because what it says is  understand what I've been trying to do, what I've been trying to say all these years, that all of us can make a difference through the life that we live."


Oscar's Top Film Score Nominee: John Williams

Awash in honors and still going strong after a nearly 60-year career, prolific composer John Williams is the best-known of contemporary film music composers. In the 2011 Oscar noms, he has two scores: The Adventures of Tintin and, continuing his long association with  Steven Speilberg, that director's adaptation of War Horse. 

To mark his 80th birthday, he's put together a retrospective featuring some of his favs and, of course, conducted by himWilliams himself, A Tribute to John Williams: An 80th Birthday Celebration [Sony Masterworks], which officially drops on Tuesday.

aaJWillComposer.jpgFrom the late 50s into the mid-70s, Williams was prolific as composer of TV sereies scores, and a couple of films and also as conductor and arranger. Then came Spielberg and Jaws [1974], and the rest is, as they say, history: Star Wars, Superman, Indiana Jones, the sequels and prequels, Close Encounters..., two Harry Potters and 47 Oscar noms for Original Score and Song - along with five wins: Jaws, Star Wars "Episode IV" A New Hope [1977], E.T., Schindler's List, and for scoring Fiddler on the Roof.

Of the countless films he's scored, two for which he was nom'd for standout as superior: Spielberg's Empire of the Sun and Lawrence Kasdan's The Accidental Tourist. In addition, there's music for the concert stage and festive occasion pieces. Williams has enjoyed a 40-year collaboration with  Spielberg, scoring all but one of the director's films.

The CD A Tribute to John Williams: An 80th Birthday Celebration [SRP, $16] contains 15 tracks, with extended tracks for Star Wars and E.T. themes. Other tracks feature Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, and the Boston Pops orchestra. 

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Brian d'Arcy James on SMASH

Multiple Tony and Drama Desk nom and DD winner Brian d'Arcy James discusses his good fortune being cast in NBC's very Bway SMASH, on which he plays Frank Houston, who's put his career as a teacher aside for his wife, Julia, played to the hilt by Debra Messing, to do one more show as one half of the composing team [with Christian Borle] as they pursue the adoption of a baby from China.

aaaBDJamesSmash.jpg"It couldn't have come at a better time, but then I guess in this business any time is a good time to be cast in a series, especially one with the potential that SMASH has. The miracle of it all is that we shoot here, so I don't have to be away from Jennifer [Prescott] and our daughter. 

I went out to Los Angeles this time last year for pilot season. It was difficult. You're away from your family and sleeping on friends' couches. It's harder the older you get.

There're a glut of people wanting to do the same thing, so it's very competitive. I give myself six weeks. But, for the first time, I had an embarrassment of riches. I got the pilot for J.J. Abrams' Person of Interest [co-starring James Caviezel and Michael Emerson], and the other was Theresa Rebeck's SMASH. About three weeks in, I was returning here to do a benefit. I got off the plane and got a call from my agent telling me I had the pilots, both of which shoot here, and that I didn't have to go back to L.A.

It's great that there's so much activity shooting here, good for the actors, good for the crews, every facet of our industry. It takes so many people to put together a TV show, so it's good all around. SMASH has been a terrific experience. Talk about being in good hands! We've now shot 14 episodes [which takes the show to the end of it's half season]. It's been a great joy working with Debra [Messing]. I can't say enough good things about her, and also what fun she is. Emory Cohen [who plays their son] is someone to watch. He's a fine actor."


SMASH Is Moving into Interesting Territory  

Ellis [Jamie Ceprois] is proving to be the ultimate snake in the grass, while Julia [Messing] reveals a secret she shouldn't have revealed [you never know what slimball is eavesdropping]. Director Derek Wills [Jack Davenport] is relishing playing up the old Bway casting couch stereotype [and is he also setting someone up for a fall?].

aDMesBDJamesSMAHS.jpgIvy Lynn's pursing the other end of that stereotype and may be in for surprises. Bway vet producer Manny Azenberg won't co-produce with Eileen Brand [Angelica Houston] mgelibecause she's estranged from hubby and producing partner - hissssss! -Jerry [Michael Cristofer]. She's quickly running out watering holes - and running up quite a tab on "spilled" Manhattans.

Betrayals, directors and producers bedding potential stars and "blonde bimbos," backstabbing, liars, running into producers and theatre honchos in restaurants that aren't Orso? Hmmmm, is this the show biz we all know and love? The only thing missing is Michael Riedel. How the hell did that happen?

Upcoming guest stars: Uma Thurman, Bernadette Peters, Nick Jonas. One of Bway's most personable and talented actors has a recurring role: Tony and DD nom Dylan Baker.

 

Love Really Never Dies: The Phantom Returns

We may not be able to see Andrew Lloyd Webber's Love Never Dies sequel to POTO but Tuesday and March 7 @ 7:30 there'll be a worldwide cineplex premiere of Melbourne's Regent Theatre's fully-staged production [NCM Fathom/Omniverse Vision]. The musical also drop on DVD/Blu-ray Memorial Day weekend. Directed by Simon Phillips and designed by Gabriela Tylesova, it was taped live. All this just as the West End POTO celebrated its 25th anniversary with a lavish Royal Albert Hall staged concert [now available on DVD/Blu-ray] and the Bway production's topping 10,000 performances to insure its rep as the longest running Bway show ever.

Lyrics are by Glenn Slater and Charles Hart [POTO], with book by Ben Elton, Slater and Lloyd Webber. The ecletic score boasts sensational power ballad, "'Til I Hear You Sing," sung by the Phantom. Daily Mail critic Michael Coveney wrote, "It's the best film of a stage musical I've ever seen"; a far cry from the London reviews of the original.

The telecast, another testament to the power of the Phantom and

Lloyd Webber's Really Useful marketing group, stars Ben Lewis as Phantom and Anna O'Byrne as Christine Daaé, among a cast of 36, spectacular sets, colorful costumes, and with a 21-piece orchestra.

aaaLoveComp.jpgOn the W.E., golden voiced Sierra Bogess [The Little Mermaid] and Ramin Karimloo [who headlined the POTO Royal Albert Hall concert], opened the show at London's Adelphi in March, 2010 [closing after just over a year]. Jack O'Brien directed, with Jerry Mitchell as choreographer. The show closed in November 2010 for substantial re-writes and reopened with new direction from producer Bill Kenwright [Blood Brothers]. A Bway production was postponed. Lloyd Webber, pleased with the Aussie production, is weighing his options.

Love Never Dies is set in 1907, about a quarter century after the original, which takes  place in 1881. Christine is invited to perform at a new Coney Island attraction, Phantasma by an anonymous impresario and, with her husband Raoul and son Gustave arrives unaware she's been tracked down by that certain gent, who kept a low profile for much too long "beginning a new life in New York."


Local theatres hosting are: AMC Empire and Kips Bay 15 and Regal's Union Square 14. Tkts, $18, available at participating theater box offices and at www.fathomevents.com/loveneverdies.aspx. Pre-order the DVD [Universal Studios] at Amazon.com [SRP, $20].


Mark Your Calendar

* TONIGHT@ 9, PBS telecasts David Bryan and Joe DiPietro's Tony and DD-winning Memphis, starring Tony and DD-nom Chad Kimball and Tony nom and DD winner Montego Glover.

* Sunday @ Noon, PBS Great Performances from the Met presents Tony winner Michael Grandage's new production of Mozart's Don Giovanni, starring Mariusz Kwiecien as the infamous serial seducer. Fabio Luisi conducts the awesome Met orchestra.
* Cherry Jones returns! Alas, not to the stage but to TV in another highly anticipated series, the psychological drama Awake [NBC] - what's a dream, what's reality, premiering March 1 @ 10. Tony and Emmy-winning Jones co-stars as therapist Dr. Evans, along side BD Wong, Jason Isascs, Laura Allen, Steve Harris, and in a decidely different type of role for him, Wilmer Valderamma.

* One of Europe's finest filmmakers, Romania's Lucian Pintilie, with a background steeped in theater directing, creates corrosive cinema that's at once original, ferocious, and hopeful. Memories of his ethnic mosaic growing up inform his. It's more than evidenced in MoMA Film's retrospective, March 1 - 12. Films include his controversial Sunday at Six [1965]; the briefly banned [in Romania] Reenactment [1969], a seminal work of the New Romanian Cinema; the equally controversial Carnival Scenes [1979]; his acclaimed Afternoon of a Torturer [2001]; and Niki and Flo [2003]. Upcoming at MoMA Film, in conjunction with Film Society of Lincoln Center: New Directors/New Film 2012, March 21-April 1. There'll be 29 features (24 narrative, five doc) and 12 short films representing 28 countries. Info, schedules: www.moma.org/visit/calendar.

aAaaCJBDAwake.jpg* Metropolitan Room: Loni Ackerman [Evita, Cats], tonight, March 2, 23 and 30, Next to Ab-Normal, stories of "family friends" such as Bob Fosse, Gwen Verdon and tunes from her Lloyd Webber shows. Sultry Tanya Holt, March 6 and 14, reprises widely acclaimed act Forever Home, a mix of jazz, Bway and pop. Jamie deRoy & Friends, March 18. Guests: Karen Mason, Lisa Lampanelli, Valarie Pettiford. All @ 7.
* March 4: PBS, 7p, Great Performances: The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall, the super-lavish 25th anniversary, fully-staged production of ALW's megahit. Ramin Karimloo and Sierra Bogess [both, Love Never Dies], with international cast. Former Phantoms and original Christine, Sarah Brightman, guest [though you'll have a difficult time recognizing her]. ALW also appears with Cameron Mackintosh.
* Alchemy Theatre Company/Playwrights' Playground's world prem of Michel Wallerstein's Flight, beginning Friday, DR2 Theatre. Vet Bway star and two-time Tony nom Maria Tucci [Requiem for a Heavyweight, The Rose Tattoo], Maddie Corman [Next to Normal], and Jonathan Walker [Divine Sister] co-star in drama of a man's search for truth and his identity before his mother loses her battle against dementia.Tkts, $65: TeleCharge, (212) 239-6200 or www.TeleCharge.com.
* March 13-18, the Martha Graham Dance Company will present eight performances embracing Inner Landscape at the Joyce. Tkts start at $10, Joyce box office, JoyceCharge (212) 242-0800, or www.Joyce.org.
* Broadway by the YearMarch 19, Town Hall: The Broadway Musicals of 1950 [Call Me Madam, Guys and Dolls, Out of this World]; May 14, ... 1975 [Chicago, A Chorus Line, Rocky Horror..., Shenandoah, The Wiz]; and June 11, ... 1987 [Into the Woods, Les Miz, Stardust, Starlight Express]. Tkts are $45 - $50 and 45, at T.H. box office and TicketMaster, (800) 982 2787, or www.ticketmaster.com.
* City Center Encores!Laura Osnes starring in Rodgers and Hammerstein's Pipe Dream, with Will Chase, Leslie Uggams, and Tom Wopat, playing seven performances March 28 - April 1. This is the first time the musical will be seen on the NY stage since the 1956. Jule Styne and Leo Robin's Gentlemen Prefer Blondes closes the season. Tkts., $25-$125, and season tkts: C.C. box office, CityTix, www.NYCityCenter.org, or (212) 581-1212.

 

Debonair funny man and host of Birdland's long-running and late-running Monday night series Cast Party [in it's ninth year], returns on Thursday @ 8 P.M. to Town Hall, once again side by side with music director Billy Stritch for The Best of Cast Party II. Recalling the performers from last year plus the antics of Caruso and Stritch, you can be assured this will be like several Toast of the Town/Ed Sullivan Shows rolled into one.

aAaCarousoStritchComp.jpgHeadliners of the star-studded revue, presented by Scott Siegel [Broadway by the Year, Broadway nplugged] to benefit the Actors Fund,  are Stephanie J. Block, Lisa Lampanelli, Linda Lavin, Marilyn Maye, Julia Murney, Laura Osnes, and Paulo Szot.

With the above-mentioned stars' tunes and Lampanelli's sassy, wicked comedy, it should be quite a party. However, much of the fun comes from Caruso and Stritch's dry-witted banter. Without a doubt, they should have their own TV show!


MMaye09.jpgaLLAVIN.jpgFrank Wildhorn and lyricist/composer John Bucchino will perform. Joining Stritch will be Daniel Glass on drums and Tom Hubbard on bass. Of course, Siegel's not satisfied until he can bring you all the stars that fit - proscenium to proscenium. 

Wait! It looks like he's already done it. Also appearing are jazz vocalist Jane Monheit, Stephanie J. Block, nine-time Grammy-winner [and founding member of  Manhattan Transfer] Janis Siegel, and Terri Klausner [singing "Hit Me With A Hot Note" from Sophisticated Ladies].

aLLampinelli.jpgThere's more! You know Scott. Folk singer Holly Near is scheduled along with tap master Andrew Nemr [performing a tribute to Gregory Hines with his company], and, among others, Liz Mikel [Lysistrata Jones]. The line up doen't include the last minute surprise(s) Siegel loves to pull.


Tkts for The Best of Cast Party II are $25 - $75 and available at the Town Hall box office and online from
TicketMaster.com or by calling (800) 982-2787. 

 

 

New Orleans: Post Mardi Gras

 

After the Mardi Gras bacchanal of krewe parades, souvenir beads and the three-ring circus of Bourbon Street, there's so much do in New Orleans after sanity restores on Ash Wednesday and beyond. The city's still in recovery mode following the devastation to more than half of the city from Katrina and the flooding.

With the return of tourists, come the old habit of outrageous hotel rates and a mandatory stay of three to four days. But, up St. Charles Avenue, along the streetcar line and a portion of the route [and a much less crowded one] for the parades, there are numerous excellent guesthouses and B&Bs.
aastreecar.jpgThe French Quarter boasts so many outstanding restaurants, you can eat yourself crazy which is better than drinking yourself crazy. There're the legendary landmark restaurants: Antoine's [Rue St. Louis], family-operated since 1840 and which, in addition to it's ala carte menu [$24-$100] is now offering an incredible $20.12 three-course lunch which can be accompanied by $.25 Martinis [your waiter will tour you through the historic rooms where Pope John Paul dined and which celebrate the history of the Bacchus and Rex krewes], Arnaud's [Bienville], and Galatoire's [Bourbon].

Then there's Brennan's [Royal], Court of the Two Sisters [Royal], Gumbo Shop [St. Peter] and Mulate's [Julia] famed for Creole dishes, the original Emirl's, Jimmy Buffet's
Margaritaville
[Decatur], and, keeping in mind this is just the tip of the iceberg, among many others, Tujague's [Decatur], the City's second oldest restaurant. 
 
a400aCathedral.jpgOnly steps off Canal Street, on Iberville is Acme Oyster House, long a celebrated spot for overstuffed oyster po' boys and moderately-priced excellent seafood and drink. Be sure to try fried alligator [tastes like chicken] at Cochon. Take the Canal Street streetcar up to Mandina's, one of the locals' fav neighborhood eateries famed for moderately-priced seafood and Italian dishes. You can't depart without chicory coffee and deep-fried, powered sugar beignets at Café DuMonde [Jackson Square/Decatur].

Uptown, some 20 minutes from the Quarter, is famed Commander's Palace [Washington Avenue]. Nearby, and much less expensive are Domilise's [Annunciation], popular for it's cottony French bread and standout po'boys; and famed but simple Casamento's [on a laid-back strip of Magazine comparable to the East Village]. For eccletic shopping, visit Hazelnut, co-owned by N.O. native and Bway and Mad Men star Brian Batt.


Things to do: stroll through the Garden District on and around the St. Charles Avenue streetcar line, with its magnificent antebellum mansions and wrought iron fences [you may even spot a replica of Tara!]; and walk along elegant Rue Royal, just a block away but a world apart from Bourbon Street, with its numerous antique shops and boutiques.

Cruise on the historic Natchez sternwheeler. Visit the Aquarium of the Americas and its IMAX theatre; St. Louis Cathedral; St. Peter's Cemeteries I and II [north of  Rampart], Lafayette Cemetery I [across from Commander's Palace], the recently-restored Art Deco Joy Theatre, now a concert club [sadly, the famed Saenger Theatre, badly damaged by Katrina flooding, is still under renovation]; the Audubon Park Zoo [with it's popular Louisiana swamp attraction with two huge white alligators [whom many think are fake since they are motionless; but at feeding time they come alive!].

 

Parking is a premium in the French Quarter and, if you don't read the fine print on the signs, lots are quite expensive. The Quarter's really made for walking. If you're on a budget, keep in mind that $3 buys an all-day pass good on the streetcars and buses.

 


National WWII Museum

N.O. is also home to a stellar attraction, the National WWII Museum [945 Magazine Street and Andrew Higgins Boulevard, Warehouse District near Convention Center and French Quarter; totally accessible by elevator], which has to be high on your must-see list. Opened June 6, 2000, the 56th anniversary of D-Day, the Museum has 400,000 visitors annually.

aaWWII.jpgThe focus is o
n contributions made by the U.S. to victory throughout the Pacific and Europe, and, in vivid video/audio exhibits, the human cost. The stories told by veterans and war correspondents are quite moving and great depth.

On entry, there's an atrium where aircraft are suspended from the ceiling and PT-boats are displayed. One of the most interesting exhibits is on the contribution of N.O. to the war effort. In the section on the Normandy invasion, visitors learn of the design by local Higgins Industries of the design and building of vital amphibious landing craft. Presently, there's an exhibit on the famed Tuskegee airmen.

The self-guided, well-documented tour is in chronological order. There are numerous stops along the way to explore uniforms, weapons, maps, miniatures, and see related videos. 

It's not all gloom and doom. There're dinner and performances in the Stage Door Canteen, where the Victory Belles star in the big band show Lullaby of Broadway [through June 27]. The museum's attached to the American Sector restaurant presided over by celebrated chef John Besh. For special exhibits and much more information, visit www.nationalww2museum.org.

 

Beyond All Boundaries

Across the street, in the huge Solomon Victory Theatre and also for separate admission, is the coup-de-grace, Beyond All Boundaries, a sensational, vivid and uniquely powerful 4-D [actually, I'd call it 6-D] presentation created exclusively for the Museum that you'll talk about for months. It's produced by Phil Hettema of L.A.-based Hettema Group studio, and as sensationally exciting as any roller coaster ride. 

Exec producer Tom Hanks introduces the presentation not only presented on a 120-feet wide immersive screen with front projection [additional screens in the rear are situated for rear projection to give the perception of 3-D depth] and surround sound and special effects. 

aaBoundaries.jpgYou've heard the expression "You are there"? You are! And swept into the conflicts of WWII from Pearl Harbor to the front lines of European battle including fierce air raids, and the fire and atomic-bombing of Japanese cities. As notable actors narrate, audiences' senses are engaged with digital effects, animation, atmospherics, and life-sized props that rise from the stage and descend from the flies. You're inside as tanks rumble across North Africa's deserts; you shiver as snow falls during the wintery Battle of the Bulge; you take off and ride in the gunnery section of a B-17 as anti-aircraft fire tries to bring down your plane down during a bombing raid over Germany. It's one-of-a-kind and will leave you breathless and excitedly exhausted.


 

Fred Before Ginger, Et Al
 

Long before there was Fred Astaire with Joan [Crawford], Joan [Fontaine], Eleanor [Powell], Paulette [Goddard], Rita [Hayworth], Joan [Leslie], Lucille [Bremer], and, most famously, Ginger [Rogers], there was a long forgotten duo: Fred and his sister Adele. They not only received raves and worldwide popularity for their performances but also embodied the Jazz Age's rhythm and soul. The Astaires: Fred & Adele [3/15; Oxford University Press, 272 pages; profusely illustrated with B&W photos, bibliography, source notes, performance chronology, index; SRP $28], by Kathleen Riley, is the first comprehensive book to discuss Fred and Adele's notable career.

It's a worthy companion to Astaire's autobiography, Steps in Time and Roxane Orgill and Stephane Jorish's  Footwork: The Story of Fred and Adele Astaire [2007].

aAstaires.jpg[Classical scholar and theater historian Riley authored Nigel Hawthorne on Stage. At Oxford in 2008 she convened the first international conference on the Astaires' art and legacy.]


Astaire's legacy as one of the world's   elegant, stylish dancer/choreographers is well-earned.
His stage and subsequent film career spanned 76 years. He influenced
many classical dancers and choreographers, George Balanchine, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Rudolf Nureyev, and Gregory Hines. But the importance of Adele's influnce on Fred and his acceptance by high-toned society and royalty has rarely been acknowledged.

Ms. Riley recounts the robust career of this dynamic duo well before Fred and Rita, etc. graced the scene. Riley traces the Astaires' rise to fame from their humble Midwestern origins and early days as child performers on small-time vaudeville stages to their 1917 debut on Broadway. Astaire's dancing was inspired by Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, John "Bubbles" Sublett, vaudeville dancer Aurelio Coccia, and Vernon and Irene Castle. On both sides of the Atlantic, they became ambassadors of an art form they helped reinvent. Adele was the more natural performer, spontaneous, and funny; while Fred honed his trademark timing through endless hours of rehearsal - a regimen that reverberated throughout his 31 film musicals.

 
What dissolved such a dynamic duo? According to Ms. Riley, drawing from numerous sources, it was romance. Adele retired when she wed [first husband]  Lord Cavendish, a son of the Duke of Devonshire. Though their phenomenal partnership ended, they remained close.

Going forward was difficult. When he created the dance for Cole Porter's "Night and Day" for Gay Divorce, new partner, stunning Claire Luce encouraged him to take a more romantic approach. "Come on, Fred," she cojoled. "I'm not your sister!" When Astaire recreated the dance for the film adaptation, it ushered in a new era in filmed dance.

aAstaireComp.jpgIn his autobiography, Astaire credits Ms. Luce as his inspiration. In fact, he wanted her for the film, but RKO Radio Pictures chose contract player Ginger Rogers - a partnership he wasn't at first fond of, but the rest is, as they say, history.

According to Astaire, "Ginger had never danced with a partner. She faked it an awful lot. She couldn't tap and she couldn't do this and that. However, Ginger had style and talent and improved as she went along. After a while everyone else who danced with me looked wrong." When told of his high accolades of his own abilities, Ms. Rogers, who could be a tough and determined "broad," famously quipped, "I do everything he does, but backwards and in high heels."

[Mr. Astaire is remembered as a much beloved icon, the total opposite of his ultra controlling estate. During the occasion of interviewing him during the filming of Finian's Rainbow, he was cold and disinterested. He was Fred Astaire, so you try to do your job. He gave Yes/No responses and soon his aloofness bordered on rudeness. He began to resond, "It's all in my book. You did read it, right?" The fourth time he spewed that, I replied, "Thank you," and walked away as he lay on a 2X4 so as not to wrinkle his costume. He called out, "Where're you going?" I said, "To find a bookstore and interview your book!" To his credit, he laughed and yelled out, "Touche! Come back here!" He wasn't having a good day and apologized for taking it out on me. He then spent a half hour being gracious.]  


On DVD:
Avoiding  Downton Abbey Withdrawal

Downton Abbey, Season 2 [PBS Masterpiece Classic; three discs, approximately nine hours with bonus materials] has dropped on DVD [SRP, $45] and Blu-ray [SRP, $50], so you can revisit the tragedies that resulted from the sinking of the Titanic [Season One], thwarted passions and rekindled romances, forgotten and fresh scandals, blackmail, betrayal, and enough new plot twists to weave a tapestry with Lord Grantham's family crest. 

 

Season 2 picks up in the middle of another disaster, World War I, which accelerated social change that transformed an age-old system of class and privilege. It also brings great changes to the serene Yorkshire countryside and the Abbey.  As the brutality of the Great War rages across Europe, family and staff alike struggle in their quickly changing world against a host of demons.aaDownton.jpgThe cast includes the memorable performances of Dame Maggie Smith, stunning Elizabeth McGovern [absent much too long from the screen] as Lady Grantham, Hugh Bonneville [Lord Grantham], Dan Stevens [Matthew Crawley], Laura Carmichael [Lady Edith Crawley], Michelle Dockery [Lady Mary Crawley], and Phyllis Logan [Mrs. Hughes]. New to the season are Maria Doyle Kennedy, Iain Glen, and Zoe Boyle. DVD and Blu-ray include a bevy of bonus features.

Downton Abbey's Season 1 won a host of prestigious U.K. awards and, here, six Primetime Emmys, one of which was for Outstanding Miniseries or Movie.   

And -
The Real High School Musical(s)

High school sports are lavished with funding, publicity, and scholarships, while theater departmentsasically struggle to put on the school musical hoping. PA schools in Lehigh Valley and western NJ decided to do something to challenge that - and that old Judy/Mickey axiom "Let's put on a show!" took on new meaning.  

aAStateTheat.jpgAnd t
hey did it, even garnering the broadcast of their Freddy Awards live on regional TV [in May] from Easton, PA's magnificently restored State Theatre/Center for the Arts, which dates to 1910.

They also came to the attention of Oprah and Rosie, who introduce the just dropped the 2011 award-winning doc Most Valuable Players [OWN Documentary Club, Virgil Films; DVD; 95 minutes with loads of speical features; SRP, $20]. The video should be mandatory for every state education department.

 

The doc follows three troupes on their creative journeys as they audition, rehearse, and put on Bway-caliber musicals. Among Freddy winners and noms are Les Miz, Thoroughly Modern Millie, Chess, Sweeney Todd, Cats, Beauty and the Beast, Hello, Dolly and, yes, Gypsy.

There're great voices, glitzy and authentic costumes, elaborate sets and lighting, revolving stages, and choreography. The enthusiasm's as high as that of Will Schuester's Lima OH McKinley High glee club, and there's no Sue Sylvester. There doesn't even appear to be a Rachel Berry-type diva [could that be possible?].  
What also impresses are the instructors who use the theater experience to instill life's lessons. Every school should have a Jennifer Woscoe, Rita Cortez, Mark Stutz, and Vic Kumma.  

 

Last Chance for Carnaval in NY

 

Carnaval is in full swing throughout Brazil, and you have only a few days left to get an invirgorating taste of it, through Sunday, at the New Victory with Brazil! Brazil! The five-member band, excellent singers, and an incredibly fast-on-her-feet dancer headline a cast of 15, blending samba hythms typical of Carnaval in Salvador and soccer-inspired street dance. You'll def leave dancing up the aisles. The show, with elements not exactly appropriate for children under eight/nine, is an intense one hour. Tkts are $14-$38 [members, $9-$25] and available at the New Victory box office or online at www.newvictory.org. 

 

 

Smithsonian Goes to the Movies

 

aJazz2.jpgThe Smithsonian's National Museum of American History has a state-of-the-art theatre, thanks to a $5-million grant from and named in honor of Warner Bros. It was created from the Musem's 46-year-old auditorium - totally renovated with front line audio and 3-D capability. With the studio's rich legacy of films dating back almost 90 years and their trailblazing development of the talkies, it'll be a rich collaboration.
"Warner Bros. realizes the importance and value of that history," said WB chair/CEO Barry Meyer. "This partnership with the Smithsonian, which signifies the preservation and presentation of all things with historical significance, is a great step towards reminding people that movies and television shows are an important part of our shared culture."

 

The Warner Bros. Theatre and the Smithsonian will co-host film festivals, screenings and displays of classic studio memorabilia. In June, there's a tribute to Clint Eastwood, featuring the doc, The Eastwood Factor.

aJazz.jpgIn July, Sound in Early Film, with the first talkie The Jazz Singer [1927; starring Al Jolson and Warner Olan, later Charlie Chan], Don Juan [silent, with synchronized score and sound effects; and controversial [for pre-Code depictions] Oscar-winner The Broadway Melody [quickly adapted into a talkie]. There'll also be screenings of the multi-nom'd Singin' in the Rain [1952]. which lampooned the segue from silents to talkies. In October: a remembrance of the Civil War Sesquicentennial with Gone with the Wind, Glory, Gettysburg, and Gods and Generals 

Most screenings are free with admission. Schedules are posted @ www.americanhistory.si.edu.


Remembering Whitney Houston

America's long-beloved pop diva Whitney Houston received a sendoff worthy of royalty. The nearly four hour funeral and celebration of her life's high points and spirituality at Newark's New Hope Baptist Church was star-studded, filled with recollections, gospel music and rousing eulogies. There were so many memorable moments, it was hard to keep track.


aawhitneyhouston1.jpgThe 20-minute remembrance by Kevin Costner was extraordinarily poignant. He revealed it was difficult to convince studio execs on his choice of Whitney as co-star of his The Bodyguard. They complained she'd have no appeal, would be unable to carry the role - and, though spoken of in round about ways, there was the issue of an interacial romance [and this was in 1991!]. Costner, deeply emotional and surprising the congregation with his elequence, faced many roadblocks but stood his ground. He postponed the movie for a year so Houston could wrap her tour.

aaKCostner.jpgHis recollections revealed Houston's insecurity and fright, even when she was at the top of her game worldwide. "She was uncertain of her own fame," he said, "and still wondered, `Am I good enough? Am I pretty enough? Will they like me?' It was the burden that made her great and the part that caused her to stumble in the end." 

Once she knew he was in his corner, she blossomed. Costner spoke of her beauty and sense of humor. It was obvious he had great affection for Houston. One had to wonder if they remained friends, because Costner was exactly the type of friend Houston needed.

Concluding his remarks, he choked up. "Off you go, Whitney. Off you go," he said, "escorted by an army of angels to your Heavenly Father. When you sing before him, don't you worry. You'll be good enough."

Concerning Houston's legacy of drugs and alcohol and how they nearly ruined her career, one thing kept running through my mind. Her demons and arrogant attitude about them were so addictive that even all those Christian principles and love of scripture weren't enough to pull her out of the quagmire. Where were those clapping-hands-swaying-to-gospel-hymns-shouting-amen spiritual people when Houston needed them? No one could make an intervention even as she spiraled out of control? Obviously, her mom Sissy did try. 

The turbulent marriage to Bobby Brown, once the love of her life, surely didn't help. If Brown was badly thought of prior to Houston's death, his sense of entitlement in the days before the funeral and then storming out of the funeral when his entourage of children and bodyguards were denied premium seating didn't help his case.

Sister-in-law/manager Patricia Houston and singer Cece Winans were also eloquent. Winans' rendition of "Don't Cry for Me" was a heartbreaker and tearjerker. R. Kelly didn't speak, he sang - leading the marvelous choir in Whitney's last hit, the poignant "I Look to You," which he'd written 10 years before she recorded it. His soaring rendition was a prayer of thanks to God.


When Whitney sang it at her Central Park/ABC Good Morning, America concert, she made it an anthem to her mom Sissy. Houston exclaimed "You never left. You stayed, I love you. I owe this to you." She embraced her Mom from afar and often looked to the heavens with outflung arms. The lyrics still reverbate strongly:
"As I lay me down, heaven hear me now / I'm lost without a call / after giving it my all / After all that we've been through / Who on Earth can I turn to? / I look to you, I look to you."
 

Mark Your Calendar

* Friday, @ 9, PBS telecasts David Bryan and Joe DiPietro's Tony and DD-winning Memphis, starring Tony and DD-nom Chad Kimball and Tony nom and DD winner Montego Glover.
*Sunday @ Noon, PBS Great Performances from the Met presents Tony winner Michael Grandage's new production of Mozart's Don Giovanni, starring Mariusz Kwiecien as the infamous serial seducer. Fabio Luisi conducts the awesome Met orchestra.
*Sunday night, on ABC, join the celebs on the red carpet for Hollywood's big night: The Oscars. Through Sunday, in Grand Central's Vanderbilt Hall, you can examine several winners' golden statues and be a  winner, having your photo taken holding your Oscar and thanking all the little people.

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