Interview: Joel Smallbone of “The Book of Esther” and For King and Country

Posted on June 19, 2013 at 8:00 am

Joel Smallbone of King and Country plays Xerxes in “The Book of Esther,” his first film role.  He was nice enough to take some time off from his For King and Country tour to talk to me about playing the Biblical king.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ko63DUcc8i4

How did you get involved with this project?

I’ve always had a real passion for film and music — the arts in general.  I’m one of seven children, five boys and two girls, and I’m in the middle.  The brother just above me, Ben, we did films growing up together.  We just had a Super 8 camera and we’d run around the property making films and submitting them to festivals.  And then I got older and the brother just under me, Luke, said, “Hey, what do you think about giving this music thing a shot?”  So he and I started leaning into music but the passion for film has always been alive in me.  My father, who also manages us, has some connections in the film world and he was in touch with David White of PureFlix.  When they were looking at doing “The Book of Esther,” David said, “I might have a role for Joel.”  They were so gracious — we were in the middle of a tour and I had just five days off.  We flew out from Virginia early Monday morning and was on set in LA Monday evening.  I did my whole role in five days and flew out the morning of the show from LA to Phoenix and performed that night.

It was really fulfilling, kind of a dream come true to be involved in film after all those years.

So you had no time to rehearse!

I’d gotten a script a month or so before.  What I wasn’t familiar with at that point was that they change the script all the time, up to the last minute.  And this film in particular is a period piece.  In order to make it feel more like the day and time, everything was spoken in old English.  Sometimes when you’re memorizing something it’s easy because you think, “I could say something like that.”  But this is all thees and thous and noblemen and stuff like that.  I spent about a month prior preparing each day.  I had a lot of dialogue.  About five or six days before the shoot, as we’re on our first headlining tour, I get the revised script.  And it’s not just a few changes.  It was dramatically changed.  I was pulling aside everyone in the band to help me memorize the lines.  I focused on the first few days so I could feel good about that and build my confidence going into it.  David White was very gracious and when I had to do a page-long monologue he really helped me pick it up and didn’t blow a gasket when I didn’t know a line.

What about the technical stuff, learning how to hit marks and where the lights are?

In music you have a cue and a spot on stage but not in the same way.  If you move your head a little bit you might be out of frame or out of focus.  So it was a trial by fire.  But fortunately, my character was stoic and pretty immobile.  Most of the scenes I was sitting on the throne or sitting at a table.  Which creates its own challenges itself because you’ve only got so much to work with, hand movements, facial expressions.  I stepped into it  not knowing a lot and after that five days I really felt like I had a good handle on what needs to happen in film.  Since then I made another film with Billy Ray Cyrus, “Like a Country Song,” and having “The Book of Esther” experience under my belt allowed me to step into this role with confidence.

How did you approach the character of Xerxes?

If you read Esther in the Bible you have to use some imagination.  What excited me about the story is that you can read these epic stories from history and never quite dive into the reality of what was going on.  Here’s a young man.  He’s just lost his father and is one of the most powerful people in the world.  The irony is that rather than being a bit of a narcissist and making decisions on his own and doing away with his advisors.  Instead he leaned into counsel, people who counseled his father, and he hung onto them for better or worse. And he really, desperately wanted to find love. He looked in the wrong places and made a political decision rather than from the heart with Vashti, which was a mistake.  Even when you look through the six months of preparation and the nonsense, in the end, if you really boil it down, the decision he made about Esther were about more than her physical beauty.  There was a love.  We really wanted to turn the lens on these four characters.  What are some of the pressures and strains and motives?  What were their fears?  That was he heartbeat of the film at the end.

 

 

 

 

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Actors Interview Music Spiritual films

The Ones Who Sing Behind the Scenes Or 20 Feet From the Front of the Stage

Posted on June 12, 2013 at 8:00 am

Sunday’s Washington Post and New York Times had two marvelous tributes to the people (mostly women) whose voices are all around us but whose names and faces we do not know.  The magnificent new documentary “20 Feet from Stardom,” opens with photos obscuring the faces of the singing stars so that we focus on the people singing backup, all the “da doo ron rons” and “toot toot beep beeps.”  What is astounding is how a very small group sings back-up on just about everything.  As one man explains, he and his family sang back-up on the biggest-selling album of all time, “Thriller,” the biggest box-office movie of all time (they did bird noises on “Avatar”), sang “It’s a Small World After All” for the Disney attraction, and some sitcom theme songs, too.  Brooks Barnes writes about the incendiary talent of Lisa Fischer:

Ms. Fischer had a hit of her own. She won a Grammy in 1992 for her first single, “How Can I Ease the Pain,” beating out none other than Ms. Franklin. But she never completed a second record, in large part because she decided that the heat of the spotlight wasn’t for her. Backup singing was her calling.

“I reject the notion that the job you excel at is somehow not enough to aspire to, that there has to be something more,” Ms. Fischer explained, speaking with her eyes closed, as she tends to do. “I love supporting other artists.”

She continued: “I guess it came down to not letting other people decide what was right for me. Everyone’s needs are unique. My happy is different from your happy.”

The upshot: Ms. Fischer has paradoxically emerged as a star partly because of her decision not to seek stardom.

And the Washington Post had a piece about Marni Nixon, who provided the exquisite vocals for Audrey Hepburn in “My Fair Lady,” Deborah Kerr in “The King and I,” and Natalie Wood in “West Side Story.”  Less well known is her work dubbing some or all of the singing for Janet Leigh, Marilyn Monroe, and others.  She also appeared on screen as one of the nuns in “The Sound of Music,” and provided the voice of the grandmother in Disney’s animated film “Mulan.”  Roger Catlin wrote:

She also went on to have concert success, toured for years with Liberace, and hosted “Boomerang.” a popular children’s television show in Seattle. (A son, Andrew Gold, who died in 2011, was a recording star in his own right, with the hit single “Lonely Boy” and the theme to TV’s “Golden Girls,” “Thank You for Being a Friend.”)

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Behind the Scenes Music

PBS: Memorial Day Concert

Posted on May 26, 2013 at 2:51 pm

Tonight, PBS will broadcast the national Memorial Day Concert, co-hosted by Gary Sinise and Joe Mantegna and featuring the National Symphony Orchestra and General Colin L. Powell, USA (Ret.), the U.S. Army Herald Trumpets, the U.S. Army Chorus, The Soldiers’ Chorus of The United States Army Field Band, the U.S. Navy Band Sea Chanters, the U.S. Air Force Singing Sergeants, and the latest American Idol, Candice Glover.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CslIvGv9odo

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Music Television

Listen to Jay-Z’s “The Great Gatsby” Soundtrack Free!

Posted on May 7, 2013 at 8:55 pm

  1. 100$ Bill – Jay-Z
  2. Back To Black – Beyoncé, André 3000
  3. Young And Beautiful – Lana Del Rey
  4. Love Is Blindness – Jack White
  5. Crazy In Love (Kid Koala Version) – Emeli Sandé, The Bryan Ferry Orchestra
  6. Bang Bang – will.i.am
  7. “I Like Large Parties” – Elizabeth Debicki
  8. A Little Party Never Killed Nobody (All We Got) – Fergie, Q-Tip, GoonRock
  9. Love Is The Drug – Bryan Ferry, The Bryan Ferry Orchestra
  10. “Can’t Repeat The Past?” – Leonardo Dicaprio, Tobey Maguire
  11. Hearts A Mess – Gotye
  12. Where The Wind Blows – Coco O.
  13. Green Light – Green Light
  14. No Church In The Wild – Jay-Z, Kanye West
  15. Over The Love – Florence + The Machine
  16. Together – The xx
  17. Into The Past – Nero
  18. Kill And Run – Sia
  19. Over The Love (Of You) – Florence + The Machine, SBTRKT
  20. Young And Beautiful (DH Orchestral Version) – Lana Del Rey
  21. “Gatsby Believed In The Green Light” – Tobey Maguire, Craig Armstrong

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Music

History of the Eagles

Posted on April 30, 2013 at 4:04 pm

The documentary about The Eagles is out today: It is a three-disc set including History of the Eagles Part One and History of the Eagles Part Two, as well as Eagles Live At The Capital Centre – March 1977, featuring never-before-released performances from the Eagles’ two-night stand at Washington, D.C.’s Capital Center during the legendary Hotel California tour and is available

 in both DVD and Blu-ray three-disc configurations – all with 5.1 Surround Sound and Stereo audio.  For the super fans, there is a limited edition box set, with three Blu-ray discs, a 40-page casebound book featuring still photos from the films, 10 archival-quality photographs of the band from throughout its storied history, and a specially created lithograph of the band’s desert-bleached skull icon. All elements in this limited edition deluxe set will be packaged in a specially designed foil-stamped and embossed box, with a Native American blanket-inspired liner, wrapped in a leather tie, and fastened with a bone button.

The Eagles partnered with Academy Award-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room) to produce the film. Directed by Alison Ellwood (Magic Trip: Ken Kesey’s Search for a Kool Place), History of the Eagles is a  features rare archival material, concert footage, and never-before-seen home movies that explore the evolution and enduring popularity of one of the world’s biggest-selling and culturally significant American bands.

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Documentary Music
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