A Capitol 4th on PBS — 2013

Posted on July 3, 2013 at 8:00 am

Be sure to tune into PBS tomorrow to see the annual “Capitol 4th” concert in front of the Capitol Building.

This year’s “A Capitol Fourth” on PBS welcomes back host Tom Bergeron, the two-time Emmy Award-winning television personality (“Dancing With the Stars”), and stars music legend Barry Manilow. Back by popular demand following his powerful debut performance on the show in 2009, Manilow will lead an all-star cast, including Candice Glover, the Season 12 winner of “American Idol;” country music artist and “American Idol” winner Scotty McCeery; actor and singer Darren Criss (“Glee”); musical prodigy and classical crossover star Jackie Evancho; Broadway and television star Megan Hilty (“Smash”); Broadway’s new hit “Motown The Musical;” and five-time Academy Award-winner John Williams conducting music from the Oscar-winning blockbuster “Lincoln,” with the National Symphony Orchestra under the direction of top pops conductor Jack Everly.

Watch Celebrate Live with Megan Hilty! on PBS. See more from A Capitol Fourth.

In celebration of America’s 237th birthday, the show will be capped off with a rousing rendition of Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” complete with live cannon fire provided by The United States Army Presidential Salute Battery, an audience favorite and now an “A Capitol Fourth” tradition. Also participating in the event will be The Choral Arts Society of Washington, along with The U.S. Army Herald Trumpets, The U.S. Army Ceremonial Band, Members of the Armed Forces carrying the State and Territorial flags and the Armed Forces Color Guard provided by the Military District of Washington, D.C.

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Interview: “American Idol’s” Brooke White on Hallmark Channel’s “Banner 4th of July”

Posted on June 27, 2013 at 5:00 pm

American Idol star Brooke White talked to me about her role in “Banner 4th of July,” premiering on the Hallmark Channel this Saturday at 9/8c.  White plays Desiree Banner, who once was in a successful band called The Banner Project with her brothers Mitchell (Christian Campbell) and Johnny (Michael Barbuto).  She left the group, and had not seen them for ten years when she comes home to help care for her Rosalind (Mercedes Ruehl), who has had a heart attack.  Shortly after Desiree arrives in her hometown of Pinewood Hills, she learns that the town will face bankruptcy if it can’t make a bond repayment by the July 4th Holiday. As the Fourth of July approaches, it is up to Desiree and her siblings to put into action a plan that will save Pinewood Hills. If you think that will involve a performance by The Banner Project, you have the right idea.Banner4thOfJuly_0003G_1860

I talked to Ms. White about the movie and what Mercedes Ruehl has taught her about acting.  “I’m the rookie of the bunch. This is basically my second and both were lead character roles and I was fortunate to work with patient and kind and talented people who really helped me and were so generous with me.  They were really encouraging and made the whole experience really fun.

I would ask her things and she was just so kind and so open in sharing with me.  Vocal exercises, more even than acting.  Making sure that I enunciate things.  If you don’t enunciate things, then you have to record it again later.  When it comes to emotional scenes, getting to a place of crying.  That makes me nervous.  I’m a really emotional gal and my emotions are really close to the surface.  But when you have to do it — on demand — and movies are not shot in chronological order — you could have just done a funny scene and now you’re having a big fight with your brother and mourning the last ten years of your life — and the camera is on you — that is difficult.  She really helped me by being honest about how difficult it is.  And I have a really loud voice naturally, due to the anatomy of my vocal chords.  I have to really push to get the sound.  Long story long, this is sometimes a struggle when you’re making a movie because a little goes a long way on screen.  I had to find a tone that was not too loud or forceful.  The director was really helpful as well. She has such a high level of energy, you want to come back at her with the same level of energy.  She really elevated my performance and helped me to be more creative, to have fun with it, be free with it, try different things.  It’s helpful to have more experienced actors tell you — yes, this is fine, you can do this.”

Banner4thOfJuly_0001G_KeyArtShe wrote songs for the movie, which are now available on iTunes, including  “XYZ,” “Sun Up, Sun Down,” and “Fly Fly Fly.” One is the hit the band had when they were all still together, ten years ago.  It’s got a country, Americana feel.  I was really inspired.  I rarely sit down to write a song about a specific subject.  I let the song-writing process dictate itself.  It was a positive experience, so I’m going to start songwriting with more intentional ideas and concepts.  The other song is for a poignant moment in the movie, called “Fly Fly Fly.”  It was by far the most rewarding thing for me, to see the songs come to life in the story.  We had this whole audience of people singing along, the pinnacle of the movie, a really awesome thing for me.”

She said she is inspired by real life.  “I can’t say that every song is about me or comes from my life, but if it isn’t about it it comes from someone close to me.  Songs revolve around relationships, humanity and people and their imperfections.  There are conflicts but I like to have some kind of redemption or hope, or life.  You can’t experience joy without sorrow and music is one way to play with that notion of opposition and how it plays into our life.  And mu daughter, who is one, she really inspires me.  The whole time I was pregnant I was recording and on the road.  So I always had a guitar up against my belly and this kid came out with so much natural musicality!  She loves music.”

And she is very proud of the themes of the film.  “The music brings everyone back together and heals everyone and it’s a Hallmark movie so of course there is a little bit of romance happening, but overall it’s about the family mending their fences and coming back together.”

 

 

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Father’s Day on TCM: Mankiewicz and Mankiewicz

Posted on June 16, 2013 at 12:00 pm

Celebrate Father’s Day on Turner Classic Movies with the father and son team of Ben and Frank Mankiewicz picking the line-up.  The TCM host and his politico father are the grandson and son of the legendary Herman Mankiewicz, who wrote the screenplay for the movie many people consider the greatest of all time, “Citizen Kane.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyv19bg0scg

Adam Bernstein writes in The Washington Post:

“Citizen Kane” co-screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz, who died in 1953, wrote some of the best and most popular movies of all time. His son Frank skipped a career in film and became a top aide to Democratic Sens. Robert Kennedy and George McGovern during their presidential runs.

Frank’s son Ben Mankiewicz grew up in Washington in the 1970s and 1980s in what he called the “political wing” of his family. But on TCM for the past decade, he has found a niche bringing movies of his grandfather’s day to a modern audience.

On Sunday, Ben and Frank Mankiewicz are hosting a Father’s Day lineup on TCM that includes “Citizen Kane” (1941), which ranks first among the American Film Institute’s greatest films of all time. As a tribute to Frank Mankiewicz’s political career, TCM is also screening “All the King’s Men” (1949) with Broderick Crawford and “The Last Hurrah”(1958) with Spencer Tracy.

The wild card is “Smokey and the Bandit” (1977), essentially one long car chase between Burt Reynolds and an exasperated sheriff played by Jackie Gleason. Ben Mankiewicz, who is 45, chose it because it was the first film he remembers seeing with his father.

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Classic Holidays Television

Tonight on TNT: The American Film Institute Tribute to Mel Brooks

Posted on June 15, 2013 at 3:24 pm

Be sure to tune in tonight at 9 (8 Central) for the American Film Institute Tribute to Mel Brooks, writer/director/actor and very, very, very funny guy. From his early days as a writer on the legendary Sid Cesar television variety show to “Get Smart,” the Oscar-winning “The Producers” (later a record-breaking Broadway musical and a movie again), “Young Frankenstein,” “Blazing Saddles,” the 20,000 year old man comedy duo with Carl Reiner, Mel Brooks has kept us laughing.

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Add Your Vote to the Critics Choice Television Awards

Posted on June 7, 2013 at 11:20 pm

The Broadcast Film Critics awards for television will be given out on the Reelz Channel on June 16.  Viewers will decide the winner of the best TV moment award.  Was it the finale of “The Office?”  The sad death on “Downton Abbey?”  Daenereys’ dragon on “Game of Thrones?”  The reveal — finally — of the mother Ted will be meeting — finally — on “How I Met Your Mother?”  Cast your vote for the one you think deserves to win.

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