Margaret Mitchell and Harper Lee Tonight on PBS

Posted on April 2, 2012 at 12:00 pm

Margaret Mitchell and Harper Lee, authors of two of the most popular and influential books of the 20th century are the subject of documentaries tonight on PBS.  Both films will stream after the premiere on the American Masters website.

Both were Southern women who had only one book published in their lifetime.  Both books were made into critically acclaimed movies.  Both created vivid and enduring characters: Scarlett O’Hara, Rhett Butler, Atticus Finch.  Both wrote about the searing divisions and resilient spirit of America.

Margaret Mitchell wrote Gone with the Wind.

Harper Lee wrote To Kill a Mockingbird.

 

Be sure to tune in to see these stories about women whose real lives are as fascinating as the stories they told.

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“John Carter” Director Andrew Stanton Talks to TED

Posted on March 10, 2012 at 8:00 am

Director Andrew Stanton wrote and directed Pixar favorites “Finding Nemo” and “Wall-E.”  This week’s release, “John Carter,” is his first live-action feature film.  Here he tells the audience at TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) about the clues to a good story.

 

 

 

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Interview: Paul Weitz of “Being Flynn”

Interview: Paul Weitz of “Being Flynn”

Posted on March 8, 2012 at 3:54 pm

Paul Weitz wrote and directed “Being Flynn,” which opens today, starring Robert De Niro and Paul Dano.  It is based on Another Bullshit Night in Suck City: A Memoir, Nick Flynn’s book about his experiences working in a homeless shelter, when his estranged father turned up looking for a place to stay.  I really enjoyed speaking to Weitz about how the themes of this story related to his relationship with his own father and about his mother, who co-starred in one of my favorite films and then retired to be a full-time mom.

How did you become involved with this project?

I was sent the book eight years ago.  It is quite poetic. But it boiled down to some form of fable about the central question: are we fated to become our parents?  How much are we pre-determined by our heritage or how much can we become our own people?  The details of the book are extreme. It’s about a guy who didn’t know his father growing up.  He would occasionally get letters from him from prison saying things like, “Never fear, I’m going to win the Nobel Prize in two years.”  Nick Flynn, the author, ended up finding a calling and a dignity and an excitement working in a homeless shelter in Boston in his 20’s.  And then it was completely destabilized when his father showed up at the shelter to live because he had hit the skids.  It was an odd experience.  It’s a story in which the real Jonathan Flynn, the character Robert De Niro plays in the film, really exists.  He has this delusion that he is one of just three great writers than America has produced.  He never published the novel he was working on over the decades.  But in terms of his being convinced of his own greatness, it is odd that he is now being played by Robert De Niro in a movie.

It was really marvelous spending time with Nick who has generosity of spirit and who has forged a relationship with his father.  He has really gotten though his demons.  Between Nick and De Niro, who has had to navigate this insane level of stardom and has a wonderful dry sense of humor and sense of irony about himself and is utterly devoted to the work.  I am interested in the idea of humility and the relationship between ego and creativity and how destructive ego can be.  This is really a stark example of someone who is so tortured by needing to be great that he never achieved anything and somebody else who had the humility it takes to become a writer.

There’s a wonderful example of humility and humanity in the movie when Nick is asked by one of the residents of the shelter for a new pair of pants and checks with someone else on the staff about what size to get.  The other staffer says gently, “Just ask him.”

The actor in that scene was one of the non-traditional actors in the movie and he had formerly been homeless.  This is at a point when Nick is learning how to work in the shelter.  I don’t feel qualified to talk about homelessness as an issue but I have spent time with homeless people and I have learned that each of them has an individual path through his life which leads them to this situation.  Just deal with them as people, and as individuals.  That is one great benefit of the job I have of telling stories.  You get involved in other people’s lives and learn that each one of them has a narrative going on.

Were there many “non-traditional” actors in the film, current or former homeless people?

There were a number of people sent to us by an aids services organization.  It was important to me not only to have Nick Flynn around but also to have people who had been homeless and could inform me whether we were doing things properly or not.  Actors are always trying to get to the point of erasing the acting, where you can’t see it.  Non-actors are starting there but they are confronted with the weird apparatus of film-making.  You might do the same scene five times without having the camera on you.  We had one guy who has a line about burning himself intentionally so he could get morphine and he was fine and then we said, “Now we’ll do it on camera” and he completely flubbed it.  I really enjoy that kind of challenge as a director, to go to him and say, “Don’t worry, we’ll do it as many times as we need to.”  It’s always exciting to direct non-actors.

That must be the opposite of dealing with experienced, highly trained professionals like De Niro and Julianne Moore (who plays Nick’s mother in flashbacks).

Absolutely.  Somebody like Julianne, coming in to do a supporting role, it’s so important with that role that the character not be someone you’re feeling sorry for throughout.  Nick’s mom was a great a and fun single mom who had a lot of dignity before she succumbed to her demons.  Julianne was keen to make sure that there was some humor and warmth in that character.

I was very struck by the music in the movie’s soundtrack.

My brother and I did a film called “About a Boy” with all the music by Badly Drawn Boy. In this case, with two characters doing voiceover there was a danger of feeling you were watching two movies.  I had temporary music while I was editing with some of his pieces and some pieces by Bach.  He and an arranger did some Bach-esque versions of the melodies of some of his music that tied everything together.

What are the challenges of voiceovers — to make sure they don’t over-explain?

Usually voiceover is used to horrible effect because the studio says no one understands what is going on in the movie.  In this case, because they are two writers, I liked the idea that they were competing over who owned the story and trying to steal the story from each other.  Nick said the part his father particularly enjoyed and laughed at the part was when De Niro, playing him, says, “You are me!  I made you!”  It’s happening on a dramatic level and I liked the two people trying to tug with each other over the ownership of the story.

You came from a show business family and went into the family business — and with your brother.

We share an office and look at each other’s cuts and try to be supportive of each other, which is great.  My dad was a fashion designer who wanted to be a writer.  He looked at it as basically a silly way to make a living.  I had the odd experience of growing up in a tie and jacket because my dad had a kids’ line.  The normal adolescent rebellion that might involve dressing a certain way was very explosive in my household.  He would write at night and thought of himself as a Hemingway-esque character, and he was, he had a very picturesque life.  I was always conscious that there was some battle going on with him and I identified with the characters in the book.

My mom was a successful actress in the 1950’s.  She was effortlessly graceful and humble and a really terrific mom.  It was a lesson in humility from a very intelligent woman.

I loved her in “Imitation of Life.”

They don’t make them like that any more!  Emblazoned in my mind is where she becomes kind of a stripper and sings this campy song.  Lypsinka does that as part of his act.  She’s remained friendly with the woman who played her mom, Juanita Moore, and I got to do a Q&A with them.

What’s next for you?

I’m hoping to make “Admission” with Tina Fey as a college admissions officer.

 

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Red Carpet: Drew Barrymore Comes to Town for ‘Big Miracle’

Red Carpet: Drew Barrymore Comes to Town for ‘Big Miracle’

Posted on January 26, 2012 at 12:11 pm

Drew Barrymore came to Washington for the premiere of her new film, Big Miracle, about the extraordinary real-life rescue of whales stranded in Alaska in 1987.  I had a blast on the red carpet, talking to the real-life characters who inspired the film as well as Barrymore, her young co-star Ahmaogak Sweeney, writers Jack Amiel and Michael Begler, and director Ken Kwapis.

It was a special treat to speak to Bonnie Carroll, who was working in the White House in 1987 when the whales were discovered and coordinated President Reagan’s involvement.  She told me that when she got on the phone for the first time with the military officer overseeing the rescue, she fell in love with him as soon as she heard his voice.  “I was in the West Wing and he was in Barrow, Alaska.  Just hearing his voice — we both knew, and we were together from then on.”  The closing credits of the movie show their real-life wedding photo.  “The world came together for the whales,” she said.  “My husband was the kind of leader who could make something like that happen.”  The premiere last night honored the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS) program she founded following the  death of her husband.  Bonnie and her husband are played by Vinessa Shaw and Dermot Mulroney in the film.

I also spoke to Cindy Lowry, the environmental activist who inspired the character played by Drew Barrymore in the film.  They spent a lot of time together and Barrymore wanted to know everything about where she lived and even what she wore.  “She’s really passionate about the things she cares about and has an appreciation for why I am so passionate about whales.”  Barrymore talked about the way Lowry inspired her.  “She’s willing to cross boundaries and be very forceful, but it is always in a very informed way, to articulate your point and do it with flair.”

Director Ken Kwapis: “When I read the script, what I fell in love with was the idea of a group of people with different agendas, often competing agendas, who had to figure out a way to set aside their differences and solve a problem.  That’s what attracted me, this idea of unlikely collaborators who have to work together.  I also fell in love with the whales!  They made me cry.  The fact that they were trapped in this hole.  I found it very emotional.  The reason to see the film is the emotional experience.  There’s spectacle, there’s humor, there’s romance, there’s wonderful characters but it is really an emotion picture.  Alaska was beautiful, the people were fantastic, but it was very cold and there was a dearth of daylight.  I had a huge ensemble cast and many of them had never worked in front of a camera.  And on top of that, we had three gigantic robotic whales that worked — most of the time!  There’s something for every member of the family — a wonderful coming of age story, a romantic triangle, a lot of layers.”  This was his second time working with Drew Barrymore (they did “He’s Just Not That Into You”).  “I wanted someone who could be very forceful and at the same time very accessible. As strong as she is, she wears her heart on her sleeve.  Audiences love her for that. ”

Amiel and Begler were writing sit-coms when they got a copy of the book about the whale rescue by journalist Tom Rose, who inspired the character played by John Krasinski.  They bought the rights for $1 (Rose was paid more later when the movie went into production) and worked for 15 years to get it made.  “People all showed up for their own reasons but got involved in a story that became a massive cause for them.  There were oil companies and Greenpeace and the Reagan Administration and Inupiat whalers all coming together for what seemed like their own purpose and it ended up being everyone’s purpose,” Amiel said.  “It was important to me to show all sides in this movie, and I think we did.”

First-time actor Ahmaogak Sweeney told me why kids should see the movie:

 

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Interview: Writer-Director Todd Graff of ‘Joyful Noise’

Interview: Writer-Director Todd Graff of ‘Joyful Noise’

Posted on January 11, 2012 at 8:00 am

I love Todd Graff’s first two films, Camp and Bandslam.  Both were fresh and warm-hearted stories about teenagers who are passionate about music and performing, inspired by his own experiences as a theater-mad kid.  His new film, “Joyful Noise,” has Dolly Parton and Queen Latifah as warring gospel choir leaders, and again he deftly manages to make the audience care about a group of exceptionally appealing characters and fills the theater with heart-lifting musical numbers.  It was a real pleasure to talk with him about growing up listening to his mother rehearsing the Hadassah choir in his home and his surprise homemade gift from Ms. Parton.

The closing credits of the film pay tribute to your mother’s work as a choir leader for the Jewish women’s group Hadassah.

It may seem strange, but Queen Latifah’s character is really based on my mother.

Not strange at all!  I think this is her all-time best performance, and I loved the scene where she tells her teenage daughter a few things about what beauty means. 

When Dana signed on to do the movie, I had not even written that scene yet.  After she joined, I said, “I want to see Dana do what Dana does!” And that’s when I wrote that scene.

Tell me more about your mother.

My mom was an amazing woman.  She was a housewife but she had a degree in music and taught piano.

She was a singer and a choirmaster and a community activist.  She was always down in the basement at the mimeograph machine running off handbills to hand out.  I would wake up and there would be a blind child there and she would say, “You should hang out.”  She just thought he could use a friend.  The bad thing is that it’s a lot to live up to.  One of the things she did was she had these ladies in the choir over to the house twice a week, Tuesdays and Thursdays for my whole childhood, and she was really tough on them.  For an amateur choir, where the most they would do was perform in a nursing home, she still treated them like professionals.  The line in the movie where Queen Latifah’s character says, “You have to look at me because Jesus doesn’t know where the cut-offs are” — that is my mom.  She’d say, “I’m thrilled that you’re into it but God doesn’t know where the cut-offs are.”  I couldn’t get her voice out of my head and this movie really took shape around that voice.

This is your third film in a row featuring teenagers.  What is it that appeals to you about featuring kids that age?

In all honesty, it just started out, as so much of my life, as fear-based.  They wouldn’t know if I knew what I was doing or not.  My first movie none of the kids had even been in a movie before so I thought I was safe.  I seem to have enough of an arrested maturity level that we could communicate well and those stories interested me.

Tell me how you go about casting a film like this.

In my movies, you have to sing and dance so I won’t read anyone until after the choreographer has winnowed down the people who audition to the ones who can dance and musically we have narrowed it down to the ones who can handle the singing.  So that gets rid of two-thirds.  Of that last third, even though I’m a big rehearsal guy and we rehearsed for a month on this, you don’t have a lot of time.  I don’t have the time to break kids of entrenched bad habits.  So I look for kids who are as natural as I can find while still having some degree of chops.  They have to be directable.  Because it is a musical and the musical numbers take up a big chunk of time that non-musical movies don’t have to worry about, I can’t just have the kid that you discover and has a quality but hasn’t done anything before.  I want someone who is honest and true and real but can hit a mark and stay in their light and talk to another actor believably.

The music in the movie, as in any religious setting, is half worship and half performance.

It’s a changing world and the influence of secular music and other forms of expression in sacred music is where we are now.  I did a ton of research and I would see huge gospel competitions in 18,000 seat arenas sold out.  There was praise dancing and stand-up comics did religious themed material.  There still is old-school traditional gospel and there will always be.  But I was interested in a character who introduces the concept of change with a character who has to feel in control of everything because she feels if she lets one ball drop everything is going to fall apart.  As it is, she’s treading water right up to her nostrils.  So this is the last straw.  She feels: “If you’re going to change what I do in church on top of everything else, I’m not going to be able to take it.”

Queen Latifah’s character has a son on the autism spectrum.  What led you to include that kind of disability in the film?

Autism is an umbrella term and a broad spectrum.  This version of Asperger’s is about the inability to understand social cues and so it makes contact difficult, difficult to connect with the community and with family even.  He won’t even allow his mother to hug him, even his father in the big emotional moment of the movie, dad can’t hug him.  That is very dramatic to me and germane to the stuff the movie is trying to talk about.

 

You worked with two very different ladies in this film.  What was it like to direct Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton?

Not as different as you might imagine!  But of course Dolly is her own special creation.  God bless her, I worship the ground she teeters on in those eight inch heels.  Precious!  She gets up an hour early no matter what time her call is and she cooks breakfast for everybody — pancakes, grits, eggs.  I would have a Hershey bar in the afternoon when my energy was down.  She came in one morning with four pounds of fudge in Tupperware she stayed up all night making.  She said, “I know you like your chocolate but I don’t want you eating that junk!  This is made with real milk and real butter and a whole lot of love and if you finish this, I’ll make you some more.”  She is real.  And Dana is also incredibly generous as an actor, as a person, kind to the extras and the crew.  She and Dolly had a love-fest.  They were a joy. They’re both real church girls, so they share that.  They both wanted to make a movie that uplifted people and touched people.  They saw it from the beginning as more than a comedy piece — it was really important to them that the message be evident.

We had no drama, no complications all through the movie and post-production.  It was almost too good to be true.  And then the tragic thing is that after it was all over Joe Farrell died.  Really really terrible and sad.

And Dolly Parton wrote some of the songs in the movie?

She wrote three songs for the film.  She would write them and send them to me with very elaborate demos, full orchestration.  And I would say to her, “This is great but for the scene in the movie you’ve written a song in 2 and I need one in 4 and you have a walking bass line and I need –” and she would say, “Honey, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”  She can play 12 instruments but she can’t read music.  She would say, “If you don’t like it, I’ll write another one.  It only takes me an hour.”  I’d say, “Why don’t we just fix this one?”  She said, “No, I’ll write another one.” She ended up writing 12 songs and said she would use all the other ones somewhere else.

What was your biggest challenge?

The big concert sequence because I only had four days to film three musical numbers with all the extras and all the backstage scenes, the cafeteria stuff, and kids who can’t work full hours.  There is not a single real choir in the movie.  I cast all those people and put them together.  Mervyn Warren and I turned them into choirs.

Why is choir music so moving?

Someone said that one star is just a star but many stars is a constellation.  You can’t harmonize by yourself.  When you can be part of a whole that creates such a gorgeous, layered, powerful, communal experience you are part of something that makes you feel more connected to the world and less alone.

 

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