Thursday, July 30, 2009

HBO announces April launch for 'Treme,' renews 'True Blood' for third season

HBO announced an April launch for "Treme," the New Orleans-set drama from "The Wire" creator David Simon on Thursday, and officially renewed the Louisiana-set Vampire drama "True Blood."

Simon shot the pilot for "Treme," set in the city's second-line and Mardi Gras Indian scene, earlier this year in New Orleans. Production on the rest of the first season is expected to begin in November.

Bowling, jambalaya and music by 27 Lights and Wizmar to benefit the Uganda Education Project

by Sheila Stroup

When Melissa Cochran and Zach Stewart went to Uganda as volunteers in June 2008, they had no idea what they'd find there.

"Before we left, people told us, 'Don't drink the water,' but there was no water," Stewart, 19, says. "We took special electric plugs, but there was no electricity."

The two friends, who graduated from Ben Franklin High School last year, got a different kind of education when they spent part of their last two summer vacations at the Nansana School in south central Uganda.

For more, click here.

S. Rep offers theater classes for children and adults

by Allison Good

This fall, there's a class for everyone at Southern Rep's Academy SRT.

The workshops, which specialize in theater performance, creativity and movement, will run from Sept. 20 through Oct. 13 on the Main Stage at Southern Rep Theatre, located on the 3rd floor in the Shops at Canal Place at 365 Canal St. in New Orleans.

Click here for more information.

Harry Connick Jr. collaborated with Clive Davis on forthcoming album of standards

Harry Connick Jr. joined forces with a record industry legend to shape his upcoming "Your Songs" release.

Clive Davis, the mogul who built Arista Records into a hit machine and is now the chief creative officer of Sony Music Entertainment, selected most songs for "Your Songs," due Aug. 25 on vinyl and Sept. 22 on CD.

They include Elvis Presley's "I Can't Help Falling In Love With You," Nat King Cole's "Mona Lisa," Tony Bennett's "Who Can I Turn To?," Frank Sinatra's "All The Way," Billy Joel's "Just The Way You Are," the Beatles' "And I Love Her" and an uptempto version of Elton John's "Your Song."

More here.

New Orleans Burlesque Festival gets the spotlight in September

The first annual New Orleans Burlesque Festival will be Sept. 11 to 13 at Harrah's New Orleans on Canal Street.

Rick Delaup, producer and founder of festival, announced the dates during a session of the Tales of the Cocktail session called "Jazz, Cocktails and Storyville" on July 10. He recently released more details about the three-night festival of striptease, jazz and variety acts.

Delaup is known around town as a documentary filmmaker and as the creator of "Bustout Burlesque," a retro striptease that began in March 2005 at One Eyed Jack's in the French Quarter and has gone on to play engagements at Tipitina's in the Quarter, Le Chat Noir, the Royal Sonesta and the House of Blues.

More here.

Stormy Daniels Arrested For Violence

Adult actress, director, and potential Senate candidate Stormy Daniels was arrested on Saturday for a domestic violence misdemeanor.

According to a Tampa Bay police report, Daniels "told cops that she did not intentionally hit her husband, but acknowledged tossing a potted plant in the kitchen sink, throwing the couple's wedding album on the floor, and breaking some candles."

For more, click here.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Mark Smith, former head of state film office, sentenced to 24 months after taking bribes for tax credits

From The Times-Picayune

by Laura Maggi
Mark Smith, the former lead recruiter responsible for recruiting movie companies to make films in Louisiana, will serve a two-year prison term for accepting bribes in exchange for giving lucrative state tax credits to a film producer, a federal judge ruled today.

U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt told Smith that he believed he was "sincerely remorseful," but said that his actions had tarnished the fledgling movie industry. "We live with the damage today," the judge said, as he put the finishing touches on two-year investigation of how the state awarded benefits to the companies that finance entertainment productions in the state.

Engelhardt said in determining the two-year prison sentence, much less than time Smith could have gotten, he balanced Smith's cooperation with federal investigators after his guilty plea in the fall of 2007 against the damage he wrought by accepting cash bribes from a film producer in exchange for doling out too many lucrative state tax credits.

That cooperation led to others being charged in the case: Malcolm Petal, the co-founder and head of the New Orleans company LIFT Productions and other firms and William Bradley, a Hammond attorney. Both men also pleaded guilty to participating in a conspiracy to bribe a state official.

The bribes, worth $135,000, were channeled from Petal to Bradley, a former law-school friend of Smith, who then split the money with Smith. Engelhardt ordered Smith to pay a $67,5000 fine, saying he couldn't allow him to keep the ill-gotten gains.

"The sentence is fair and justified," Smith told the judge at the end of the proceedings. He was ordered to report to prison on August 31.

As the state's film commissioner, Smith had the authority to determine how many tax credits to award to productions filmed in Louisiana. Federal prosecutors have said he gave "way more" tax credits to Petal than he deserved based on how much money he actually spent.

The credits were valuable because upon receipt producers could sell them at a slight discount, meaning that they generated instant cash.

The focus of the investigation was $1.35 million in tax credits received by one of Petal's companies, Break Beat, for filming the 2003 Voodoo Music Festival.

The sentencing today brings the case to a close. Bradley was sentenced to 10 months in federal prison by U.S. District Judge Lance Africk earlier this month. Petal received the stiffest sentence, a five-year prison term also handed down by Africk.

Africk said at the time that he gave Petal the maximum sentence because his actions bolstered the state's reputation for rampant political corruption at a time when residents are striving to shed that image.

Former La. film official to be sentenced

From The Daily Advertiser
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A federal judge is set to sentence a former Louisiana film commissioner who pleaded guilty to taking bribe money to secure tax credits for a movie producer.

Mark S. Smith faces a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison when he is sentenced Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt.


Smith served as the state's film commissioner from 2003 to 2005. He pleaded guilty in 2007 to taking about $65,000 in bribes to help movie producer Malcolm Petal secure about $1.3 million in state tax credits for filming live music festivals.


Petal was sentenced in April to five years in prison for his role in the scheme. William Bradley, a lawyer who was the middleman for bribe payments to Smith, was sentenced earlier this month to 10 months in prison.

Jazz Fest accepting band applications for 2010

From The Times-Picayune
Jazz Fest accepting band applications for 2010

by Keith Spera

Jazz Fest producers are accepting applications for performers for the 2010 event, scheduled for April 23-May 2.

Upwards of 80 percent of the hundreds of acts featured each year at Jazz Fest are Louisiana-based. Bands interested in performing should submit a recording, bio, photo, press clippings, contact information and an email address.


Send the materials to

New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival presented by Shell
Attn: Music Production
336 Camp Street, Suite 250
New Orleans, LA, 70130.

Applications are available online at the Jazz Fest Web site.

Submission deadline is October 10.

Former Tulane University Historian Douglas Brinkley takes a long, fond look at Theodore Roosevelt

From The Times-Picayune

by Susan Larson

Historian Douglas Brinkley finally has a moment.

Just in from breakfast with C-SPAN founder Brian Lamb, he stops for an interview with his former hometown's newspaper the day before he makes an appearance with Diane Rehm on NPR. Earlier this month he wrote a cover story for Vanity Fair, a postcard from a weeklong cruise in the Caribbean with actor Johnny Depp. Last month there was dinner with President Barack Obama and fellow presidential historians Michael Beschloss, H.W. Brands, Robert Caro, Robert Dallek, Doris Kearns Goodwin, David Kennedy, Kenneth Mack and Garry Wills.

What: Historian Douglas Brinkley signs "The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America" (Harper, $34.99)
When: 1-3 p.m. Saturday
Where: Garden District Book Shop, 2727 Prytania

For more, click here.

'Forest Gump' Author Winston Groom Highlights New Orleans Area Visits This Week

Winston Groom
What: The novelist and historian, author of 'Forest Gump,' 'Conversations With the Enemy' and, most recently, 'Vicksburg, 1863,' appears with artist William Dunlap and Ogden Museum of Art director J. Richard Gruber as part of the Southern Storytellers series.
When: Sunday, 2 p.m.
Where: Ogden Museum of Art. For information and to reserve a spot, contact Stephanie Spicer, 504.539.9618.

Jeff L. Rosenheim, curator of photographs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, presents a lecture, 'In the Spirit: The Achievement and Legacy of Michael P. Smith,' today, 6:30 p.m., the Historic New Orleans Collection, 533 Royal St. Free, but seating is limited. Call 504.523.4662 for reservations.

Martha Hall Foose signs 'Screen Doors and Sweet Tea: Recipes and Tales From a Southern Cook,' Thursday, 6-8 p.m., during Ogden After Hours, featuring Larry Sieberth & Friends, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art. Book-signing is free; concert is free to museum members, $10 general admission.

Bill Dixon signs 'Last Days of Last Island: The Hurricane of 1856, Louisiana's First Great Storm,' Friday, 6 p.m., Octavia Books, and again Saturday, 11 a.m., Barnes & Noble/Metairie.

Sherry Lee Alexander interviews Travis Bradberry, author of 'Emotional Intelligence 2.0,' Saturday, 8:30 a.m., on Writers' Forum, WRBH-FM radio. Program repeats Sunday at 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.

Douglas Brinkley signs 'The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America,' Saturday, 1-3 p.m., at Garden District Book shop.


Poets Chris Champagne, Danny Kerwick, Martha McFerren and Laura Mattingly present a reading, Saturday, 2-3:30 p.m., Latter Library.

Poets Julie Kane ('Jazz Funeral') and Robin Kemp ('This Pagan Heaven') read from and sign their books, Sunday, 3 p.m., Maple Leaf Bar.

Robin Kemp reads from and signs 'This Pagan Heaven,' Monday, 6 p.m., Octavia Books.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Lower 9th ward music students to perform at All Souls Church

Lower 9th ward music students to perform at All Souls Church
From The Times-Picayune

Thirteen students of All Souls Episcopal Church and Community Center music programs will perform a concert Friday at 6:30 p.m., in the church at 5500 St. Claude Ave., with the help of visiting artists from Trinity Wall Street Church in New York and the All Souls Summer Music Program staff. The concert is free and open to the public.

In addition to the Friday concert, the Trinity Wall Street Choir will perform a free concert Wednesday at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1329 Jackson Ave., and join All Souls' congregation Sunday to provide special music during the 10 a.m. service.

For more information about the performance or Sunday service, contact Lyn Koppel at 504.458.5548 or All Souls rector, the Rev. Lonell Wright, at 504.494.8021 or 504.218.8995.

For more, click here.

Brooklyn cemetery commissions new sculpture to honor New Orleans composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk

From The Times-Picayune

by Chris Waddington
One of New Orleans' greatest musicians got a boost in New York this month, but he couldn't join in the celebratory announcement. That's because Louis Moreau Gottschalk was laid to rest in Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery in 1869.

On July 6, the historic cemetery announced another step in its $200,000 campaign to restore the marble Angel of Music marker atop the world-touring pianist and composer's gravesite, which disappeared under hazy circumstances a half-century ago.

Green-Wood has selected four sculptors to submit models of their designs: Myra C. Weisgold of University Park, Fla.; Kirsten Kokkin of Loveland, Colo.; Tuck Langland of Granger, Ind.; and the team of Jill Burkee and Giancarlo Biagi of New York City.

For more, click here.

ATNO holding open auditions in Metairie

From The Times-Picayune

ATNO holding open auditions in Metairie
by Ann Maloney

The Actor's Theatre of New Orleans is holding open auditions for its fall season on Saturday, Aug. 1, from noon to 3 p.m. at ATNO, 4539 N. I-10 Service Road, Suite 200, in Metairie.

The season includes:
Beth Henley's "The Miss Firecracker Contest," Sept. 10-26;
Rene J.F. Piazza's "Camp Chaos," Oct. 8-14;
John Patrick Shanley "Four Dogs and a Bone," Nov. 5-21;
Rene J.F. Piazza's "A Christmas Carols: The Whole Story, The Movie," Dec. 3-20;
and
David Sedaris' "The Santaland Diaries," Dec. 4-19.

Neil LaBute "Some Girls," directed by: Rene' J.F. Piazza, is the opening show of the 2009-2010 season. It opens Aug. 13 and continues through Aug. 29. The play tells the story of a single's man odyssey through four hotel rooms as he flies across the country in search of the perfect woman. It is for mature audiences only.

A season brochure is available by calling 504.456.4111.


For more, click here.

Southern Rep Theatre Announces Their Seven Upcoming Productions For 2009-2010 Season

Artistic Director Aimée Hayes has announced the seven productions that make up Southern Rep Theatre's provocative new 2009/2010 Season - a mix of bold story-telling and innovative musical works, and the return of Southern Rep's new play festival, reborn as the SOUTHERN REP NEW PLAY BACCHANAL. As the Gulf Coast South's premiere professional theatre, Southern Rep's 23rd season includes two world premieres and five regional premieres. Following the critically acclaimed 2008/2009 season, it will focus on community partnerships with fellow arts organizations to embrace NOLA's own performing arts community.

This season, Southern Rep is proud to present the World Premiere of The NOLA Project actor and playwright Peter McElligott's WITH A BANG, a co-production with that young, fresh and ferocious theatre company, as well as the regional premiere of OPUS by Michael Hollinger. A co-presentation with JuneBug Productions, Ashé Cultural Arts Center, and Tulane University, Southern Rep is thrilled to bring the dynamic theatre group Universes' new project AMERIVILLE to New Orleans. Other regional debuts include Doug Wright's I AM MY OWN WIFE co-produced with All Kinds of Theatre and THE PIANO TEACHER by Julia Cho. THE PIANO TEACHER will open with the winner of Southern Rep's 10 Minute Play Riot, a part of SOUTHERN REP'S NEW PLAY BACCHANAL, a new amped-up version of the former SRT Fest of New Plays. Finishing out the season will be the regional premiere of the Tony winning musical, GREY GARDENS, in a co-production with Le Petit Théâtre du Vieux Carré on Le Petit's stage.

For more, click here.

La.'s growing film industry boosts need for student actors

From The Daily Reveille

By Xerxes A. Wilson

At first glance it could look like any library, restaurant, bar or student workplace with people mulling around like any typical day. But after that initial glance, the fabricated nature of the moment quickly becomes apparent.

Movie sets are becoming a more common sight throughout Louisiana, and more students are using the growing film industry as an opportunity to both make ends meet and pursue their dreams.

Many students find the easiest way to get involved in the industry is as an extra, said Andrei Constantenescu, extra casting manager for Glorioso Casting, which is based in Shreveport.

For more, click here.

‘The Collector’ Brings Hard 'R' Goodness



From http://www.rabiddoll.com/node/841

Bringing a visceral edge back to American horror, “The Collector” is a film inspired by the uncompromising early works of such masters of horror as Dario Argento, John Carpenter and Tobe Hooper.

“Saw IV-VI” and “Feast” trilogy writers Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunstan co-wrote the film, with Dunstan stepping behind the camera to make his directorial debut. They were at Comic-Con International in San Diego to promote the film’s July 31 theatrical release, and set down Saturday with RabidDoll.com’s Bryant Griffin to discuss the project.

Originally conceived as a prequel to the "Saw" franchise and developed prior to Dunstan and Melton writing their Project Greenlight film "Feast," "The Collector" was sold as a pitch to Fortress Features and subsequently cut as a $5,000 trailer that caught the eye of Dimension Films. With Dimension providing a $3 million budget, the film was born and shot in 19 days in Louisiana.

The film stars Daniella Alonso ("Wrong Turn 2," "The Hills Have Eyes II), Josh Stewart, Michael Reilly Burke ("Ted Bundy"), Andrea Roth, Madeline Zima, Karley Scott Collins, Robert Wisdom and Juan Fernandez.

Stormy Daniels's Political Advisor's Car Blown Up

 

The full video is here:

Book Review: MARK OF THE DEMON

From The Baton Rouge Advocate

MARK OF THE DEMON
By Diana Rowland
Bantam, $23 paperback

At first this book seems to have an identity problem: it reads like a romance, but there is some fantasy stuff with demons but then it’s a crime thriller with a cop chasing a serial killer. Somehow Rowland manages to tie it all together, but the knots are not all neat.
The cop, Kara Gillian, works for the “Beaulac Police Department” in a small city near New Orleans in “St. Long Parish.”

“A small, quiet parish with the city of Beaulac as its hub, it boasted only a few murders a year and not much other crime except for the usual mix of drug abuse and burglaries.” That quiet is shattered by a serial murderer called the Symbol Man. He is called that because he carves arcane symbols into the flesh of his victims. Gillian recognizes the nature of the symbol because she herself is a “summoner” who calls up demons in her spare time. The Symbol Man had been active years before, then went quiet only to start up again just after Gillian is promoted to detective.

Gillian knows a lot about demons, but she is still a novice summoner, and when she tries to call up a particular demon, something goes badly wrong. The being who comes into her basement (Rowland explains the rarity of basements in Louisiana) is not the creature she called. He’s a demon lord, and he is very powerful and very angry. Yet he calms down when he sees Gillian, and she reacts by having a steamy sexual encounter with him. Gillian is always complaining about how plain she looks and how she never gets any action. The demon is definitely action. Then there is the FBI agent with the pretty eyes who comes to help find the serial killer.

The best of the plot lines is the serial killer chase. Yet it is dependent on the arcane complications. The demon sex and romantic interests are just extras.

Somehow it all seems to work and provides a compelling story line by the time you get toward the end of the book. The local color is pretty good and pretty accurate (basement aside), as you would expect from Rowland since she is from south Louisiana. Her characters are strong, Gillian the most complex and nuanced, but her bad guys are deliciously bad and her demons, if unbelievable, are plenty scary.

Film Production Update, Last Week of July 2009

Welcome to (225) 342-FILM, the official hotline of Louisiana Entertainment. Here’s what’s happening for the last week of July 2009:

Pre-Production (9)

The Sony Pictures feature film Battle: Los Angeles starring Aaron Eckhart is in pre-production in Louisiana with shooting scheduled for Shreveport from September 9 - October 9 and Baton Rouge from October 11- December 10. Resumes and inquires are being accepted by fax at (225) 330-6961 (no headshots, please).

The Disney feature film Secretariat starring Diane Lane is in pre-production in South Louisiana with shooting scheduled from September 28 through December 4. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at secretariat.themovie@gmail.com.

The Screen Gems feature film Straw Dogs starring Alexander Skarsgard, James Marsden, and Kate Bosworth is in pre-production in Shreveport with shooting scheduled to begin August 17 for eight weeks. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at strawdogslouisiana@gmail.com.

The independent feature film The Somnambulist is in pre-production in New Orleans with shooting scheduled from August 10 through August 29th. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at tst.nola@gmail.com.

The Nu Image/Millennium feature film The Mechanic starring Jason Statham will begin pre-production in New Orleans on August 10 and will shoot for nine weeks beginning October 14. Contact details are coming soon.

The Films in Motion feature film Wrong Side of Town Part II starring Rob Van Dam and Batiste is soft-prep in Baton Rouge with three weeks of shooting scheduled for late August and September. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at info@filmsinmotion.com.

The Bullet Films feature film Monster Wolf is in pre-production in Lafayette with shooting scheduled from September 21 through October 14. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at jobs@bulletfilms.net.

The Bullet Films feature film Swamp Shark is in soft-prep in Lafayette with shooting in Lafayette scheduled from Oct. 26 – November 18. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at jobs@bulletfilms.net.

The independent feature film Keep It Together will begin pre-production in late August and will shoot for five weeks in the New Orleans area. Details are coming soon.

Now Filming (4)

Horizon Entertainment’s feature film Father of Invention starring Kevin Spacey, Camilla Belle, Heather Graham, Virginia Madsen, Johnny Knoxville and Craig Robinson is shooting in the New Orleans area through July 31. Inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at fatherofinvention2009@gmail.com

The second season of the September Films A&E reality television series The Exterminators starring Billy Bretherton is shooting in the Shreveport area through the end of August. Inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at vexcon@bellsouth.net.

The Disney Channel children’s television series The Imagination Movers is shooting in Jefferson Parish through September 17. Resumes and inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at. imnola504@gmail.com

The Most Wanted Films feature film Death House is shooting in Baton Rouge through August 15. Inquiries are being accepted by e-mail at info@mostwantedfilms.com.

And for more information about the film and television industry in Louisiana please visit us online at www.louisianaentertainment.gov

Royal Street artists, merchants announce 8th annual 'Dirty Linen Night'

From nola.com
by Keith I. Marszalek

Royal Street artists and merchants have announced that this year's 8th Annual Dirty Linen Night will be held on Saturday, August 8, 2009.

Join the celebration on Royal Street from the 200 block of Royal to the 1000 block ending at Ursulines Street, from 6 - 9 p.m

For more, click here.

Tulane School of Architecture's Preservation Studies students are learning the dying art of touching up New Orleans' tombs

From The Times-Picayune

by Molly Reid

The Taylor family residence on Washington Avenue was crumbling. Plaster was missing, a brick wall had collapsed and daily visitors only promised more damage.

The Taylors are in no position to make repairs: Their centuries-old bones lay in a tomb in Lafayette Cemetery No. 1, where tourists, weather and the tests of time have taken their toll on the family's final resting place.

So sprucing up the Taylors' tomb is in the hands of skilled preservationists and students of the art. To them, upkeep is a tribute both to the dead and to traditional building arts.

For more, click here.

JPAS auditioning actors, singers and dancers for its 2009-2010 season

From The Times-Picayune
by Ann Maloney

Many lead roles are still available for Jefferson Performing Arts Society's productions for its 32nd season.

JPAS is holding auditions for its 2009-2010 season on Aug. 15 and 16 from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Jefferson Performing Arts Center, 400 Phlox St. in Metairie (East Jefferson High School auditorium).

To make an appointment, call the JPAS at 504-885-2000 ext. 202.

JPAS is also accepting applications for technical positions in scenic, costuming, sound and lighting and stage managers. Resumes can be submitted to Company/production manager Brian Schrader at production@jpas.org, by fax to 504.885.3437 or by mail to JPAS, 1118 Clearview Parkway, Metairie, LA 70001.

Volunteers ages 15 and older are being south as well for house staff, administrative assistance and production assistance. Interested volunteers should contact JPAS Volunteer Coordinator Melinda Falgoust at callboard@jpas.org or call 504.885.2000 ext. 203.

The season includes:
"Viagara Falls," Oct. 2-18;
"The Rocky Horror Show," Oct. 23-Nov.7;
"Disney's Beauty And The Beast," Nov. 28-Dec. 13;
"Footloose," Jan. 29-Feb. 7;
"Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Review," Feb. 19-March 7;
"The Producers," March 19-28;
and
"The Sicilian Bachelor," April 9-25.

Season tickets go on sale Aug. 10.

Former Tulane University historian Douglas Brinkley does book on Walter Cronkite

From The Times-Picayune
by Susan Larson

Former Tulane University and University of New Orleans historian Douglas Brinkley is working on a biography of Walter Cronkite, to be published in May. "His papers are at the University of Texas, just a few miles from my house," said Brinkley, who now lives in Austin. "The last time I saw him was a dinner in December in his apartment, and I came away feeling after that that would be the last time I saw him."

Monday, July 27, 2009

New Orleans gets OK to enforce ban on selling art prints in Jackson Square

From The Times-Picayune

by Bruce Eggler, The Times-Picayune

A federal judge has cleared the way for New Orleans to enforce its law banning artists from selling prints on the sidewalks around Jackson Square.

U.S. District Judge Ivan Lemelle said the city is within its rights in permitting the display and sale only of works that "have been accomplished essentially by hand" and without the use of "any mechanical or duplicative process."

Although Lemelle had suggested three years ago that the city should adopt a "more narrowly tailored ordinance" than a total ban on prints, the City Council refused to go along with his idea.

Casting Calls, July 27th

According to a craigslist posting, the indie-comedy "A Hot Mess" is still looking for actors.

Casting Call:
Saturday, Aug. 1
11am-2pm
@ The Continental
2144 First Street
Slidell, La. 70458

If you are interested, email a head-shot and resume to ahotmessfilm@gmail.com.

Click here for more information.

_________________________

According to a craigslist ad, a new TV series is seeking Saints fans

A new television series on Coach Payton and the Saints is searching for the most die-hard, loyal, who dat fan(s) around.

Email iamasaintsfan@hotmail.com with your contact information, and a brief description of why you think you are the biggest Saints fan.

'Streets of Blood,' on DVD July 28, is a flimsy excuse to wallow in post-Katrina violence



From The Times-Picayune

by Michael H. Kleinschrodt, DVD columnist, The Times-Picayune

It's a bad week for police detectives on DVD shelves.
Not only is Harvey Keitel's "Bad Lieutenant" being re-released, July 28 also brings the direct-to-DVD debut of "Streets of Blood." Both hyperviolent films feature cops as crooked as the criminals, and neither has a compelling narrative.
"Streets of Blood," filmed predominantly in Shreveport in 2008, is set in New Orleans six months after Hurricane Katrina.

For more, click here.

Broussard begins second career in music

From The American Press.
Ben Broussard, the only Cowboy baseball player to ever have his number retired, is already considered the greatest slugger to come out of McNeese State. Now, he’s on a quest to become one of the greatest strummers produced by McNeese.
After 10 years of playing professional baseball, “Big Ben” has traded in his bat for a guitar, hoping to turn what was once a part-time hobby into a full-blown vocation. Just a few months after hanging up his cleats for the last time, Broussard has released his second full-length CD, “Renovated.”
“I’m trying to get around people that are about music and having fun with it, and being able to connect with other people through music,” Broussard said.
For more, click here.
Ben Broussard’s new album, Renovated, can be purchased at: www.benbroussard.com

Sean Yeh wins New Orleans International Piano Competition for Young Artists

From The Times-Picayune
by Chris Waddington, Contributing writer, The Times-Picayune

Pianist Sean Yeh won first place and a $5,000 prize in the New Orleans International Piano Competition for Young Artists on Sunday, giving concertgoers a taste of the skills that have already earned the Illinois teen concert engagements with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra and the South Carolina Philharmonic.
Yeh led a field of strong players who advanced to Sunday's final round at Loyola University's Roussel Hall. They had emerged from a week of juried performances at Loyola in which 12 semifinalists each got a chance to perform twice. The dozen competitors ranged in age from 15 to 18.

For more, click here.

Film includes Yes Men's post-Katrina pranks in New Orleans



From The Times-Picayune

by Dave Walker, TV columnist, The Times-Picayune

Anyone familiar with The Yes Men's act by now should know that "Oh, no!" is the only appropriate reaction to their arrival on any scene.
That, and running for the nearest exit.
Especially if you're a public figure. Extra-especially if you're a corporate chieftain or the underling charged with protecting him or her (but usually it's a him).

***

In the film, The Yes Men say that they make their entree into spoofy situations by posting fake Web sites and then waiting for conference organizers to invite them to speak.

That doesn't appear to be how they got to a 2006 conference in New Orleans, where their act fooled Mayor Ray Nagin, then-Gov. Kathleen Blanco and a big room full of rebuilding contractors.

They came then as subs for Alphonso Jackson, who was then secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and a key player in New Orleans' recovery.

The Yes Men's fake announcement at the gathering reversed HUD's actual policy at the time and reopened the city's public housing developments to residents. Also announced was a multibillion-dollar effort by oil companies to fund the rebuilding of Louisiana's coastal wetlands.

Reporters in the room -- WWL-radio's Dave Cohen is pictured as most forceful in debunking The Yes Men trickery -- weren't fooled, but the damage was done.

And kept getting done later at another Yes Men-staged event at one of the city's shuttered public housing developments.

OK, so the wetlands situation deserves all the attention it can get, and the film might be helpful to anyone in HBO's national audience who is new to the issue.

The debate over public housing in New Orleans is lot more complicated than it's depicted in this film, though, and satire, however sharply composed, doesn't ever really fix very much.

The Yes Men Fix the World Today, 8 p.m., HBO

For more, click here.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Saban returns to LSU days for movie

From The Shreveport Times.

HOOVER, Ala. - Alabama coach Nick Saban talked about the movies at the Southeastern Conference Media Days here at the Wynfrey Hotel.

Saban will portray himself when he was LSU's coach in 2004 and recruiting offensive tackle Michael Oher out of Memphis in the movie "The Blind Side," which will be released in November.

Asked if Alabama people will be upset by his return to purple and gold in the movie, Saban said, "I'm hopeful all of our fans will understand that the movie is an historical event. When this happened and it occurred, that was the part of history where I was."

Saban did say that his players are not interested in the film.

"Our team has already voted not to go see the movie," he said.

Oher, the subject of a book called "The Blind Side, Evolution of a Game" in 2006, chose Ole Miss over LSU and many other schools after Saban left to coach the Miami Dolphins. Oher was a first round pick in the NFL Draft this summer by the Baltimore Ravens. Saban's recruiting visit to Oher was a memorable part of the book and is recreated in the movie. Another scene has him in his office wearing LSU clothes with the 2001 SEC championship trophy.

Oher grew up poor and mostly void of any parental influence. He attended 11 schools in nine years before being brought in by a family in Memphis, and his life turned around.

"I think it's a great example to college football and college football players," Saban said. "I think it's a wonderful story. It's an historical event. It's no disrespect to anyone. We have special memories of the times and things we accomplished at LSU. Nothing that can ever happen is gong to change that. We have a tremendous amount of respect for our fans at the University of Alabama."

Saban said he learned an appreciation for the movie making process.

"It's not the takes that get you," he said. "It's the angles. You have to do seven takes because there has to be a wide angle. Then there has to be a close-up on every person."

Saban said director John Lee Hancock (The Rookie in 2002) let him have a say.

"The director was great," he said. "I would say, 'I wouldn't really say it that way. I would say it this way.' And he said, 'Say it however you wanted it.' That made it easier. I had a very small part."

NCLAC, Lincoln library team up for 'Oz' screening

From The Monroe News Star

Take a trip down the Yellow Brick Road at 6 p.m. Thursday when the North Central Louisiana Arts Council (NCLAC) and the Lincoln Parish Library will co-host a free showing of the classic musical fantasy "The Wizard of Oz."

The screening will be in the library meeting room and is part of their Art of Film series.

Moviegoers are invited to come as their favorite character and be in a costume contest. There will be popcorn, other treats and movie trivia.

"The Wizard of Oz" has been called the first truly American fairytale and gained popularity from 1959 to 1991 when it was shown annually on television. It has since become one of the most beloved films of all time and often ranks among the top 10 best movies of all time in various critics' and popular polls.

In addition, its signature song, "Over the Rainbow," sung by Judy Garland, who plays Dorothy, has been voted the greatest movie song of all time by the American Film Institute. Upon its release in 1939, "The Wizard of Oz" was nominated for several Academy Awards, including best picture, best visual effects and best song. The film is famous for its innovative mixing of Technicolor, sepia and black and white.

Begun in 2007, the Art of Film is a free, monthly film series that features notable movie classics in all genres.

What: "The Wizard of Oz"
When: 6 p.m. Thursday
Where: Lincoln Parish Library
Cost: Free
Info: (318) 513-6411 or (318) 255-1450.

Library to host discussion of 'American Experience: New Orleans'

From The Baton Rouge Advocate.

The East Baton Rouge Parish Library and Louisiana Public Broadcasting (LPB) are hosting an open discussion about New Orleans.

The event will be at the Main Library, 7711 Goodwood Blvd., at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 29, and will coincide with the re-airing of American Experience: New Orleans at 5 p.m. today, July 26, on LPB.

The public is invited to watch the special and then attend the program at the library. Mark L. Thompson will lead a discussion on the program which will include viewer evaluations of how well the televised program presented New Orleans past and present.
For more information, call (225) 231-3745.

Families fill 'Seussical' cast

From The Baton Rouge Advocate.

By Robin Miller

A person’s a person, no matter how small.

Or green or blue.

Or even a sour kangaroo.

And there is one, you know. A sour kangaroo, that is.

That was kind of a bad rhyme at the beginning, wasn’t it? Especially when compared to those penned by Theodor Seuss Geisel.

Best to use his pen name to avoid any confusion.

Dr. Seuss.

Yes, it’s his Sour Kangaroo that’s in question, the very same kangaroo who taunts Horton the Elephant about the Who population on the dust speck.

“The Sour Kangaroo is the leader of the pack,” Emma Graves said. “I wanted to be the Sour Kangaroo when I tried out for the play. She’s a nosey neighbor, and she’s always right until the end when she’s shown up.”

And the moral of the story?

“I know people like that,” Graves said, laughing. “We know people like all of the characters in this play.”

Graves is a 16-year-old Zachary High School student, one of 47 cast members in Central Community Theatre’s production of Seussical the Musical. The play opens Thursday, July 30, in Central High School’s auditorium.

“We thought it would be a great play for us,” Karen Clinkingbeard said. “It’s very family oriented.”

WHAT: A Central Community Theatre production.
WHEN: 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, July 30-Aug. 1. There also will be 2 p.m. matinees on Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 1 and 2.
WHERE: Central High School Auditorium, 10200 East Brookside Drive, Central.
ADMISSION: $14.
TICKETS/INFORMATION: Call (225) 615-7615 or visit http://CentralCommunityTheatre.org.

For more information, click here.

New Orleans celebrates Louis Armstrong

From The Baton Rouge Advocate

By Judy Bergeron

For the ninth year, New Orleans is celebrating Satchmo.

The annual Satchmo SummerFest honoring native son and jazz great Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong will run Thursday, July 30, through Sunday, Aug. 2, at the Louisiana State Museum’s Old U.S. Mint in the French Quarter.

The free, family-friendly festival sponsored by French Quarter Festivals, Inc., celebrates Armstrong’s life, music and legacy.

The festival is multi-faceted, with music on one indoor and two outdoor stages, seminars, movies, exhibits and a swing “dance off” contest.

The keynote speaker will be Robert O’Meally, a professor at Columbia University, who will talk at 6:30 p.m. Thursday on the Mint’s second floor. While there, visitors can catch the photo exhibit Jam Session: America’s Jazz Ambassadors Embrace the World.

Seminars are scheduled on Friday at the State Museum’s Presbytere, and move to the Mint on Saturday and Sunday. A “Happy Birthday, Satchmo!” birthday party is at 10:30 a.m. Friday in Armstrong Park.

The music stages have been renamed in honor of Armstrong and will be called “Back o’ Town,” “Red Beans and Ricely Yours” and “Cornet Chop Suey.” The stages will offer a mix of traditional/contemporary and brass band music on Saturday and Sunday.

The Lindy Hoppers swing dancers will host the “dance off” at 12:30 p.m. Saturday on Barracks Street, near the “Red Beans and Ricely Yours” stage. Swing dancers from eight states will perform.

The children’s area moves to the second floor of the Mint this year. Kids can watch an assortment of Armstrong cartoon and other historic, family-friendly shows and specials. Families can also create their own Armstrong-inspired collages noon- 5 p.m.

There will be no shortage of food choices at this year’s festival, from Vietnamese fare to traditional Louisiana dishes.

The festival is scheduled each year to coincide with Armstrong’s birthdate, Aug. 4, 1901. Armstrong died in 1971.

For more information, call (504) 522-5730 or go to http://www.fqfi.org.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Grammy recording deadline nears

From The Baton Rouge Advocate:

By John Wirt

The deadline for submitting recordings for Grammy awards consideration is July 31. Music industry professionals who are members of the Recording Academy of Arts and Sciences, the organization that presents the Grammy awards, may submit recordings and vote during the nomination and award process.

Louisiana is part of the Recording Academy’s Memphis Chapter, which also covers Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri and western Tennessee. The Recording Academy has 20,000 members, 12,500 of whom are voting members.

“We’ve really grown our membership across Louisiana in the last few years,” Reid Wick, senior project coordinator for the Memphis Chapter, said this week from his New Orleans office.

“We’ve also seen record numbers of nominations for Louisiana artists,” Wick said. “The ultimate benefit in increased Louisiana membership in the Recording Academy is being able to get Grammy nominations and wins.”

Eleven of the 30 Louisiana-connected recordings nominated last year for Grammys won awards, Reid said.

http://www.2theadvocate.com/entertainment/music/51502257.html

New Orleans Opera refuses to sing the blues over tough economy

From The Times-Picayune

New Orleans Opera refuses to sing the blues over tough economy by Ted Mahne

As the New Orleans Opera Association prepares for its upcoming season, in which a concert of Verdi's Requiem Mass will replace the usual fourth full-scale opera production, the company assures patrons that the move does not signal an impending death knell for the company.

"It is an economic issue," said Robert Lyall, general director of the New Orleans Opera. "However, it also is an artistic decision."

Originally, "at the height of optimism," the new season was to include new productions of "Aida" and "Porgy and Bess," two operas demanding massive productions to stage successfully.

"Meanwhile, across the country, companies saw a real slowdown in ticket sales," Lyall said. "Contributions also have slowed."

While ticket sales have remained steady and strong in New Orleans, Lyall noted that the fiscal crystal ball was still cloudy, with significant state funding for all the arts placed on the chopping block by the governor earlier in the year.

"When faced with having to make financial cuts, I've always been in favor of tightening screws at every corner," Lyall said, rather than entirely slashing a particular program or merely shortening the season altogether.

The decision was made to present Verdi's Requiem instead of a fully staged opera.

"We could've gone with a smaller chamber opera that audiences would find too esoteric," Lyall said, or staged an inexpensive production such as "Hansel and Gretel" and gotten away with calling it a "family opera."

"But we still wanted to do something grand. The Requiem, in fact, has been called one of Verdi's greatest operas, it is so theatrical and dramatic," Lyall said.

Because the company will be saving significantly on production costs, it is able to bring in singers for the concert that the New Orleans Opera otherwise couldn't afford for a full-blown production and the required weeks of rehearsal time.

"Our principal singers for the Requiem are in demand by opera companies all over the world," Lyall said. The massive work demands a massive chorus. "We will have more than 200 voices in the chorus, including our own New Orleans Opera Chorus." Supplementing those ranks will be the New Orleans Vocal Arts Chorale and choirs from both Loyola and Tulane universities.

The alteration to the traditional season also is as much about the company's long-term future as it is the immediate season.

"I'm a risk-taker, but a prudent one," Lyall said. Indeed, having shepherded the company through its recovery and vibrant comeback after Hurricane Katrina, Lyall laughed at the notion that a national recession could do them in.

"This is the best accommodation for us now," he said. It is because of the company's prudent fiscal management that "we're now in the position to ensure that the artistic decisions remain the driving force."

One such decision was shifting from the previously scheduled "Aida," also by Verdi, to Puccini's "Tosca," which will open the season.

"We landed happily on our feet" through the schedule changes, Lyall said, noting for example that although the principal singers for "Tosca" originally were contracted for "Aida," the vocal types and ranges for each opera match up well, and the members of the cast include both operas in their various repertoires.

In addition, ticket sales and renewals for the season already are off to a strong start, at a time when the New Orleans Opera Association and all arts organizations are still measuring the depth of the performing arts audience.

"When we returned this spring to the Mahalia Jackson Theater for the Performing Arts, I didn't know if the audience would be there or not," Lyall said. Planning two large-scale but ever-popular operas -- "Carmen" and "La Traviata" -- worked. All performances sold out.

"I knew where they were on those nights," Lyall said.

http://www.nola.com/arts/index.ssf/2009/07/new_orleans_opera_refuses_to_s.html

Thibodaux artist hopes new gallery boosts other artists

From The Daily Comet. For more information, visit http://www.dailycomet.com/article/20090724/ARTICLES/907229890/1275?Title=Thibodaux-artist-hopes-new-gallery-boosts-other-artists

THIBODAUX — The detailed pen-and-ink drawings of local landmarks and wildlife drew interest for years but the artwork received a major boost in attention with its debut at an upscale home-furnishings store.

Brady Bullock of Chackbay, started displaying his drawings at Kenla Designs on Canal Boulevard about a year ago, hoping that customers might like images of plantations and alligators with their new sofas and drapes.

The 35-year-old Thibodaux native opened BB Gallery, named after his initials, in May, following several months of remodeling the roughly 600-square-feet space at 408 W. 4th St. in downtown Thibodaux.

Most of Bullock’s customers live in the Houma-Thibodaux area, but he also has created work for residents of Mississippi and Tennessee.

The gallery includes paintings, drawings and mixed-media pieces by 17 artists, most from Houma-Thibodaux. A lot of the work stems from newfound artist friends Bullock met through art shows.

“I wanted to keep it Louisiana,” Bullock said.

The gallery includes Bullock’s own work, mostly pen-and-ink drawings of bayou wildlife like alligators and local landmarks like Laura Plantation, St. Joseph Co-Cathedral, the Olde Icehouse and the Lafourche Parish Courthouse.

Bullock sometimes dabbles in painting and color pencil, so gallery visitors also can find two acrylic paintings created by Bullock within the last month or so as well as a pen-and-ink drawing filled in with color pencil.

Bullock said the gallery has received a warm welcome, with its May grand opening, attended by more than 80 people.

Customers bought two of Bullock’s paintings the day the gallery opened, and visitors have scooped up work by renowned Donaldsonville folk artist Alvin Batiste, he said.

Bullock plans to promote the arts by holding pen-and-ink classes for children and featuring a different artist every other month.

Batiste serves as the gallery’s first featured artist, which means his work sits in the gallery’s display window and another room to the side. A meet-and-greet with Batiste is scheduled for 4 p.m. July 25 at the gallery.

For information, call BB Gallery at 447-3640 or e-mail Bradybgallery@yahoo.com.

'Princess and the Frog' firefly character creates wrong kind of buzz


From The Times-Picayune

By Mike Scott

Judging by the snippets of footage released so far, Disney's forthcoming New Orleans-set animated fairy tale "The Princess and the Frog" would appear to be a lovingly crafted affair, casting the city in a flattering light and giving the world Disney's first black princess.

Not everyone is ready to second-line over what they've seen, however.

The Council for the Development of French in Louisiana, or CODOFIL, a state agency charged with the protection and promotion of French in Louisiana, is taking issue with the portrayal of a Cajun character in the film, a toothless, lovesick firefly voiced by former New Orleans resident and preeminent voiceover actor Jim Cummings.

"It's a continuation of the stereotyping of Cajun people, which is inaccurate," CODOFIL President Warren Perrin said of the character this week from his Lafayette law office. "It has been done in so many movies over so much time, people think that's the way we are -- and it's just wrong. I can list several other movies where they have portrayed us as backward, toothless, illiterate people who fart."

This week, Perrin sent a letter to Robert Iger, the president and CEO of the Walt Disney Co., expressing his concerns and offering his organization's free assistance in answering "any questions the movie's producers, directors and promoters might have regarding the Cajun people, as well as south Louisiana history and culture in general," according to a draft of the letter provided by Perrin.

Throughout, the letter maintains that same cordial tone, while pointing out that derogatory portrayals of Cajuns wound "the pride and morale of all ethnic groups."

A studio spokeswoman said the letter had been "referred to the appropriate office at Disney," although Disney officials had not responded as of Friday.

Of the footage released so far by Disney, the Cajun firefly character -- named Ray -- figures prominently in only a few seconds of a short teaser trailer.

Set against the backdrop of a beautifully lit French Quarter, he flits into the frame as the movie's Princess Tiana agonizes over the idea of kissing a frog, prince or no. Ray points a thumb at the couple and says to the camera in a heavy Cajun accent, "Oh, ho! Look like this gonna take some time!"

His jagged, jack-o-lantern smile never shows more than eight or so teeth.

With a Dr. John song as musical accompaniment, the sleepy-eyed Ray then buzzes over to a neighboring building that has a sign emblazoned with the movie's title. "That's a catchy title right there," he says, before a Dr. John lyric -- "Dreams do come true in New Orleans" -- brings the trailer to a close.

Perrin acknowledged that he is basing his judgment on only a tiny piece of film, but he said if his objections help head off a potential insult to Cajuns, then it's worth it. "I'm simply saying, 'Let me help you not make a mistake,'¤" Perrin said.

The firefly flap isn't the first controversy to spring up around the movie, which is set for wide release Dec. 5. Shortly after the project was announced, objections were raised over reports that the film's princess worked as a chambermaid and would be named Maddy, which some saw as a lower-class "slave name."

Soon after, online sources quoted Disney spokeswoman Heidi Trotta as saying that reports on certain details of the movie were incorrect.

"Princess Tiana will be a heroine in the great tradition of Disney's rich animated fairy tale legacy, and all other characters and aspects of the story will be treated with the greatest respect and sensitivity," she was quoted as saying.

Also, earlier this year, online users expressed concern that the movie's prince doesn't appear "black enough."

"The Princess and the Frog" will mark Disney's return to hand-drawn, 2-D animation, its first foray into the format on which the studio was built since 2004's "Home on the Range."

The score is by Randy Newman, and the voice cast boasts Anika Noni Rose, Terrence Howard, John Goodman and Oprah Winfrey.

Ron Clements and John Musker -- the same team behind Disney's "The Little Mermaid" and "Aladdin" -- are directing.

In an interview last fall with The Times-Picayune, Disney animation chief John Lasseter described "The Princess and the Frog" as a break-out-in-song musical that offers a twist on the classic "Frog Prince" story.

In Disney's retelling, when Princess Tiana kisses a prince imprisoned in a frog's body by a nasty curse, instead of him turning back into a human, she also turns into a frog.

Lasseter said Disney animators have made several trips to the city in an effort to make sure they accurately capture the region's culture and its residents.

"There's so much wonderful magic in that city," he said in October, "with the combination of the city itself, the Garden District, the French Quarter, the voodoo -- the good voodoo and the bad voodoo -- the music, the jazz, the zydeco. You have the bayous with all the great animals. There's such richness."

Watch the trailer in question here.

Louisiana Film Museum to Open September First

From http://www.examiner.com/x-15171-New-Orleans-Sightseeing-Examiner~y2009m7d24-Coming-attractions--The-Louisiana-Film-Museum

Louisiana Film Museum to Open September First

From the 1908 movie Faust, to the The Curious Case of Benjamin Button nearly a century later, Louisiana has been a popular location for the film industry. More than 400 major motion pictures and documentaries have been filmed in the Bayou State. Very soon, those interested in learning more about Louisiana’s film history will have a place to go: The Louisiana Film Museum (www.louisianafilmmuseum.org.)

The museum is scheduled to open September 1 at the Riverwalk Marketplace #1 Poydras Street (www.riverwalkmarketplace.com), inside of the Southern Food & Beverage Museum (http://southernfood.org/). It will feature memorabilia and displays, telling a detailed story of movies filmed in the state, as well as educational sessions and outreach for local students. The museum will also be available as a venue for private and corporate events after hours.

The museum is a 501(c) 3 corporation. In addition to ticket sales, its revenue will be generated from individual and family memberships, corporate sponsorships, event tickets and promotional items to raise Museum operating revenue.
For more information, visit www.louisianafilmmuseum.org

Documentary planned about unsolved slayings

From AmericanPress.com

Documentary planned about unsolved slayings

By DORIS MARICLE
AMERICAN PRESS

JENNINGS — The mystery surrounding the deaths of seven women in Jeff Davis Parish in the last four years has caught the eye of a documentary film crew from Switzerland.

“I’m pretty much addicted to trawling through the Web sites of the media outlets of small towns across America and Europe, trying to find stories that haven’t hit the mainstream or national media yet and may be suitable for a documentary,” Paul Nixon of Kodiak Productions wrote in an e-mail to the American Press.

After reading a short post about the deaths on a crime forum, a little Googling led Nixon to Jeff Davis Parish.

“I felt there was a great sense of injustice in what I was reading about the cases,” he wrote. “I have no links to Jennings and nothing tying me to anyone involved, but I couldn’t stop thinking about it. There are families searching for answers, a community not knowing what’s happening and a police force struggling to solve the crimes.”

Nixon was also concerned about the lack of statewide and national attention given to the deaths.

“I live in a town roughly twice the size of Jennings and I know for sure that if seven bodies had been dumped in and around town over a relatively short time period, that we would have been inundated with media.”

Jeff Davis Sheriff Ricky Edwards said Friday that he welcomes Nixon and his crew. “I will be happy to work with and answer their questions,” he said.

Edwards said he and Nixon have e-mailed each other several times concerning the project.

“I think this is a story that needs to be told,” Nixon further wrote. “For people outside of Jennings and outside of Louisiana to hear what’s going on, what better way than to meet the people of the parish and to put their story into words and pictures?”

Nixon said he is unsure what direction the documentary will take.

“I’ve read a lot about these cases and spoken to people in Jennings, but until you get to the town and get a firsthand sense of what’s happening, then it’s almost impossible to know exactly what the film will be about,” he wrote. “Once we meet the characters and spend a little time in the parish, then I believe that all will become much more clear.”

Nixon said he hopes the film will help bring some closure to the mystery.

“We’re certainly not coming in as vigilantes, trying to be heroes and solve the cases. Absolutely not. But we are hopeful that we may speak to someone or discover some information that helps everybody move a step closer to finding a solution.”

The crew is scheduled to be in the parish Sept. 4-12 and film as much as possible and make as many contacts as possible, Nixon said. They could return near the end of the year for additional filming to finish the project, he said.

Nixon said the long-term plans for the project depend on what suits the story best.

“Once we’ve been to Jennings and we know what we’re dealing with, then we can decide if it’s a documentary aimed at a TV audience or something more suited to a theatrical release. The main goal is to get it to the widest audience possible, to raise the profile of the town’s plight to the wider world.”

Nixon has worked in sports media for many years, and Matthew Clyde, co-director at Kodiak Productions, works in the commercials and music video industry.

The project will be their second documentary. Their first, “Me, Joe and B.T.K.,” was completed last year and is doing well on the festival circuit. The film focuses on the hunt for Dennis Rader, who was known as the “bind, torture, kill strangler,” after he reportedly killed 10 people near Wichita, Kan., between 1974 and 1991.

http://www.americanpress.com/lc/blogs/wpnewssum/?p=5829

Friday, July 24, 2009

Acadiana theaters offer 3 play options

From the Baton Rouge Advocate:

By STEVEN K. LANDRY

LAFAYETTE — Acadiana theater patrons have three options this weekend, with tragic comedy “Crimes of the Heart” at Cite des Arts, Disney-based “Aladdin Jr.” in New Iberia and Roald Dahl’s famous candy-man piece “Willy Wonka” in Opelousas.

At Opelousas Little Theater, “Willy Wonka” is based on Dahl’s story of the world-famous candy-man and his search for an heir, as adapted from “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” said co-director Ashley Brown. She directs with Dana Reed.

The play features songs from the classic family production as played on piano by Eugina Hagood. “She is amazing. She saved us,” Brown said Thursday.

“It’ll be a great time for the kids, I can tell you that,” Brown said. “A lot of people were telling us, ‘Well, this won’t keep my child’s attention,’ but 5-year-olds will love it.”

The theater is along Cresswell Lane off Interstate 49, “right behind the fire station,” Reed said. The play is set for today and Saturday at 7 p.m. Call (337) 351-2591 or (337) 948-4367 for more ticket information. Tickets are $10.

In New Iberia, the Iberia Performing Arts League is sponsoring “Aladdin Jr.” and features youngsters playing the main character’s pitiful, but handsome, “street urchin” and his future princess-bride, Jasmine. Students from Iberia, St. Martin and Lafayette parishes are participating.

With Jasmine’s father and others watching with dismay, Jasmine must marry for the sake of her kingdom, though her handlers are not pleased with her street-urchin choice.

Some might recall the “Aladdin” cartoon version with Robin Williams in the pivotal role. “Aladdin Jr.” is set at the Essanee Theater through July 26, with performances today and Saturday at 7:30 p.m., as well as July 24-25, and Sundays at 3 p.m.

Call IPAL at (337) 364-6114 for more information.

In Lafayette, “Crimes of the Heart,” by Beth Henley, involves three sisters — the Magraths — who reunite at their grandfather’s Mississippi home to wax drama, hurt and pain over one sister’s alleged shooting of her husband, all amid a longtime, dysfunctional-family backdrop. Charlee Halphen directs.

Tickets are $15 for “Crimes.” Call (337) 291-1122.

http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/suburban/51535182.html

Sci-Fi movie to be shot in Baton Rouge

According to the Baton Rouge Advocate, the sci-fi movie "Battle: Los Angeles" will begin filming in Baton Rouge this fall. The movie, by Columbia Pictures, is about a platoon of Marines fighting alien invaders on the streets of Los Angeles. Aaron Eckhart (Thank You For Smoking, The Dark Knight) will star as a Marine platoon commander. Johnathan Liebesman ("The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning") is set to direct. The production will be based at Raleigh Studios at the Celtic Media Centre in Baton Rouge.

Executive Producer Jeffrey Chernov said “Battle: Los Angeles” will involve an attempt by aliens to tap Earth’s water supply. The film style will be reminiscent of “Saving Private Ryan,” he said, with a U.S. Marine platoon going behind alien lines to foil the attempt. The project should average 150 to 200 jobs during filming, with up to 1,500 extras and 25 acting parts available for locals, Chernov said. Several weeks of the filming will take place in Shreveport to take advantage of a closed freeway ramp, he said, but most activity will be centered in Baton Rouge.

The film is based upon a sighting of one or more unidentified flying objects which took place from late February 24 to early February 25, 1942 in which eyewitness reports of an unknown object or objects over Los Angeles, California, triggered a massive anti-aircraft artillery barrage. The Los Angeles incident occurred less than three months after America's entry into World War II as a result of the attack on Pearl Harbor. The incident was part of the inspiration for Steven Spielberg's 1941. Information on this incident is available here.

Interested crew members can fax resumes to the Baton Rouge office at (225) 330-6961. (No actor resumes.)

See the news report on the film here.