Author Archives: Bahiana Ana Maria

The Daily Star Quote: Betty White

Betty White

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HFPA’s Golden Globe Awards lecture in Uruguay

 HFPA member Erkki Kanto gave the directors and producers attending the 31st International Film Festival of Uruguay a special lecture on the Annual Golden Globe Awards. A selection of 20 attendees, movie makers from various countries, had numerous enthusiastic questions about submitting their films to the annual awards. The event concluded with an HFPA-hosted Uruguayan lunch.

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Estimados,

Erkki Kanto, miembro de The Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), invita a directores y productores que participan del 31º Festival Cinematográfico Internacional del Uruguay a una presentación informativa sobre cómo aplicar para la categoría de Film Extranjero de los Premios Golden Globes. La cita es este viernes 5 de abril a las 10.30 hrs en Madredeus, Acevedo Diaz 1156 esquina Canelones. Luego de la charla compartiremos un almuerzo.

 Saludos,


Magela Richero
31ºFestival Cinematográfico del Uruguay
www.cinemateca.org.uy

Erkki Kanto with some of the attendees of the Golden Globe Awards lecture and lunch.

Erkki Kanto with some of the attendees of the Golden Globe Awards lecture and lunch.

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From the archives: James Woods

by Jack Tewksbury

James WoodsFor forty years the HFPA has recorded interviews with famous and celebrated actors, actresses and filmmakers. The world’s largest collection of its kind — over 10,000 interviews — is now in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Library. The audios are fascinating. Below is an excerpt: a memoir of a very intense and rather colorful collaboration between James Woods and director Oliver Stone on the set of Salvador, in 1985.

“We  fought  like  cats  and  dogs.  I  mean,  we  really  were brutally  at  odds  through most   of  the  film,  although  I like Oliver  Stone  very  much,  and  I  think  he’s  a  great  screenwriter.  Anyway,  the  movie  worked,  I  think  we  both  agreed.

We  have  each  gone  on  record  as  saying  it  was  an  unbelievably  difficult  time  but  a  very  valuable  time  although  we  didn’t  talk  once  for  three  whole  days. If  he  said , “Action,”  I  wouldn’t  do  anything.  I’d  say, “Tell  the  first  assistant director.”  Once  he  called  me  a  rat  and  a  weasel and  he  told  me,  “I  hate  you.”  So  in  the  very  next  scene I shout,  “Okay, I’m  a  f***  weasel.”

I just  threw  it  in  and  he  said, “You  had  to  say  it, didn’t you?”  And  he  added,  “I’m  not  going  to  print  it,”  and  I said, “Yeah,  you’ll  print  it,  cause  it’s  good.”  And  there  it is  on  the  screen.”

 

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From the archives: Brad Pitt

Brad

 

by Jack Tewksbury

For forty years the HFPA has recorded interviews with famous and celebrated actors, actresses and filmmakers. The world’s largest collection of its kind — over 10,000 interviews — is now in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Library. The audios are fascinating. Below is an excerpt: way back in the early 1990, when an unknown Brad Pitt was starting out in Thelma and Louise, Kalifornia and A River Runs Through It, this is how he described his background, his vocation and his first forays into Hollywood.

“Where  I’m  from  is  a  million  miles  away.  I  call it  the  Ozarks.  A little  bit  of  Huckleberry  Finn,  with  rivers  and  lakes,  trees  and  places  to  go  get  lost.  I  come  from  a  very  stable  Christian  family. I have  a  younger  brother  and  younger  sister,  both  married.  Dad’s   into  the  outdoors,  and  had a business. I’m  crazy about  all of them.

I  just  went  home  and  spent  three  weeks  there.  There’s  so  much  going  on in Hollywood, it  was  good  to  get  home  for  a  while.  It’s  funny  when  you’re  sitting  home  in  Missouri,  you  see  fame,  you  see  money, you see all  these things. They’re definitely  an  attraction, but  when  you  come  out  here  it  turns  into  something  else.

If  you’re  going  to  last,  you’ve  got  to  love  what  you’re  doing. I’m  not  saying  I  despise  money,  but  my  dream  was  not  about the  fame  or  the  money.  It  was  about  those  movies  I  watched sitting  by  myself  in  the  dark. Seeing  films  offered  me  a  different  way  of  looking  at  things.  They gave  me  reasons  why  people  do  the  things  they  do.  They helped me  realize  that  I  could  leave  Missouri  if  I  wanted  to.

After  high  school I  went  to  college  but  I  got  bad  grades,  and  I  got  it  into  my  head  it  was  time  to  go,  so  I  left  two  credits  short. Acting  wasn’t  available  there  on  any  level  that  you  could  respect, but  once  I  figured  out  in  my  head  that  I  could  leave,  I  left  two weeks  later.  Since  then,  however,  they’ve  called  and  asked  me to  come  back.

When  I  first  arrived  in  L.A. I  had  a  million  jobs.  I  slept  the  first  couple  of  nights  in  my  car,  and  I  lived  six  different  places  the first  eight  months.  I  met  people  where  I could  kind  of  crash.

The  first  week  I  started  doing  work  as  an  extra  but  I  also  I delivered  chickens  and  refrigerators.  I  rented  a  room  where  I   told  the  landlady,  “It’s  so  small  you  couldn’t  swing  a  cat.”  She replied, “No  problem.  I  don’t  allow  animals.”

And  then,  about  nine  months  later,  I  got  my  first  part  in  Dallas. Then,  episodic  television  and  Movies  of  the  Week  until  I  got  Thelma and Louise.

I  was  in  this  acting  class,  and  a  woman  in  the  class  had  an   audition  with  an  agent.  She  needed  a  partner  to  do  a  scene. It  was  one  of  those  classic  stories  I  did  the  scene  with  her  and  ended  up  with  the  agent.”

 

 

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A Visit with “Da Vinci’s Demons”

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Premiere of “Da Vinci’s Demons” in Florence, Italy: Composer Bear McCreary performes his soundtrack

by Elmar Biebl (text and photos)

A delegation of the HFPA attended the World Premiere of the Starz original series Da Vinci’s Demons April 2nd in Florence, Italy. David S. Goyer, creator and head writer of the series, welcomed an international press corps  ”to experience life through the eyes of young Leonardo Da Vinci“.

Part of the schedule included key landmarks of Da Vinci’s early years:

  • His birth place (born April 15, 1452) in the picturesque village of Vinci whose Mayor Dario Parrini invited the visitors to imagine Leonardo’s spirit within the ancient stone buildings of his town
  • The Museo Leonardino with an impressive collection of models built according to Da Vinci’s visionary , hand-drafted, technical inventions
  • Florence, Tuscany’s Capital with the majestic Duomo (Dome) and the power center of the Medici family, the Palazzo Vecchio
  • The Hotel San Michele in the hills of Fiesole with a panoramic view of Florence.

In this Michelangelo-designed former monastery the journalists met with the main characters of the cast: Tom Riley (title role), Laura Haddock, Lara Pulver and Blake Ritson. David S. Goyer pointed out that the pilot was shot in Wales and has already been sold to 120 territories. Goyer, known as the co-writer of The Dark Knight trilogy, added: “The series is not a documentary about the original Rennaissance Man. The series is meant to be an entertaining historical fantasy paying tribute to the legends and myths of the man with one of the most recognizable names on this planet“.

HFPA President Aida Takla-O’Reilly thanked the organizers for their hospitality and efforts to introduce the media representatives firsthand “to the fascinating world of one of the greatest geniuses in world history“.

Da Vinci’s Demons premieres in the US on April 12.

A model of one of Leonardo’s inventions placed in his birthplace, the Tuscan town of Vinci

Statue in Vinci in the spirit of “Renaissance Man” Leonardo: “Man is the center of the universe”

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From the archives: John Huston

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by Jack Tewksbury

For forty years the HFPA has recorded interviews with famous and celebrated actors, actresses and filmmakers. The world’s largest collection of its kind — over 10,000 interviews — is now in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Library. The audios are fascinating. Below is an excerpt: in this anthology of quotes from the late 1980′s, master filmmaker John Huston reflects on his life and the craft of directing.

“I was born in Nevada, Missouri. My grandfather won the town in a poker game.

Walter Huston, my father, was an actor  who  traveled the West with a theatre  troupe. For a brief  period, he did a  vaudeville  act  with  a  chicken  that  danced  on  one  leg. Times  got  hard.  Other  vaudevillians  said Walter  ate  the chicken. He  said  that  was  a  bold lie! He ate  only  the  leg the  chicken  didn’t  dance  on.

My mother and I  traveled the West  with  him. I  got  a taste  for  colorful  people. Making a  movie,  I  like  casting  best. No  question , my  films  are  successful  because  of  my casting.  I  choose  charismatic  actors  with  the ability  to play  a  certain  role.

I  directed  Marilyn  Monroe  in  her  first  movie, Asphalt  Jungle,  and  last,  The  Misfits.  She  was  the  embodiment of  the  characters  she  played.  I  give  artists  as  much  freedom  and  encouragement  as  I  can  to  be  themselves.

Very  often,  as  in  Prizzi’s  Honor, I get  the  actors  together  and  say, “Look, work  this  scene  out  between  yourselves.” I’d send  the  crew  away  and  tell  the  actors, “Send  for  me when  you’re  ready.”  Half  or  three  quarters  of  an  hour   later  they  would  have  put    a  scene  together.  Usually  it was  ideal,  and  I  wouldn’t  have  to do  any  directing  at  all. That  is  what  being  a  director  is knowing  when  not  to  direct. Someone  asked  me  a  question  about  having  conflicts on  the  set. You  don’t  have  conflicts  with  an  actor.  You  get as  much  out  of  him  as  you  can  through  encouragement.You  give  him  heart  and  boldness  and  freedom  to  exercise his  artistry.

Jack  Nicolson  has  the  greatest  virtuosity  of  any  actor   in  the  business. He  is  not  necessarily  the  greatest. De Niro  is. There  was  never  a  better  actor  than  De  Niro.  I’m  often  asked, “Why  haven’t  we  got  actors  like Bogart  and  Cooper  today?” Well,  Bogart  and  Cooper  weren’t  like anyone  who  preceded  them. But  the  very  nature  of a  star is  that  he  isn’t  like  any  other  star. We  have extraordinary actors  today.

The  Nineteen-Thirties and Forties  male  stars  were  unique because  each  was  a  defined  personality,  supported  over  and  over again by screenplays  written  specifically  for  them.  Their  voices  personified  them. Each  one  not  only  sounded different  from  the other, but  no  one else  on  the  planet  had their  accents  and  manner  of  speech.  Even  some  of  the   women, particularly  Hepburn  and  Davis.

Again, we  have  extraordinary  actors  today, but  not  personalities.  Well, Nicholson.”

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From the archives: Nicolas Cage

For forty years the HFPA has recorded interviews with famous and celebrated actors, actresses and filmmakers. The world’s largest collection of its kind — over 10,000 interviews — is now in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Library. The audios are fascinating. Below is an excerpt: in 1992, on the set of Honeymoon in Vegas, two fiery individuals — Nicolas Cage and James Caan – met each other’s match. Cage told us what happened and reflected on the mixed blessings of being a member of the Coppola clan.

Nicolas Cage“Acting  with  Jimmy  is  formidable.  He’s  very  unpredictable,  and  has  a  totally  different  approach  than  I have. He  likes  to be intentionally  unprepared, so  that  things happen  accidentally.  I  like  to  have  an  idea  of  where  I’m going  and  mix  it  up  with  a  little  spontaneity.  He  would constantly  try  to  get  some  sort  of shock  out  of  me.

In  one  scene,  for  example,  a  poker  game,  out  of  camera  range  he  surprised  me  by  pulling  a  switchblade. Now,  if  I  were  nineteen  and  hadn’t  been  doing  this  for eleven  years,  it  might  have  been  helpful,  but  I  didn’t need  that.  I  can  get  there  on  my  own,  in  my  own  time. It’s  what  I  get  paid  for. So I  said,  “Jimmy,  that’s  great.  Thanks,  but  you  know,  it’s  all  right.  You  don’t  need  to pull  a  switchblade  out   on  me.  Our  approaches  are  different,  that’s  all.” After  I’d  say  my  lines,  he’d  a  stop  and  say,  “Nicolas,  if you  ever  come  unprepared  again,  we’re  all  going  to  go  home  and  forget  about  work.”  But  when  I  look  at  the  movie,  I’d  have  to  say  the  balance  is  pretty  good.

I  have  been  acting  since I was sixteen. At that  age people can  say  things  that  aren’t  very  nice.  I  just  decided  I  didn’t need  the  pressure  so  I  changed  my  name  from  Coppola  to Cage. Other  young  actors, I suppose,  felt  that I  couldn’t  act  because  I was  related  to such  a  powerful  director. I had  a lot  of  proving  to  do.  I had  to  feel I was  my  own  man, but  I was  very   young. I  would  walk  into  casting  offices,  and  they  wanted to  know  what  Francis  was  doing.  I  was  prepared  for  my  audition,  but  all  they  wanted  to  do  was  talk  about  my uncle.

After  I  changed  my  name,  the  first  movie I auditioned for  was Valley Girl, and  I  got  the  part. And I  didn’t   have to  talk  about  him.  At  the  time  I  really  needed  to  do things  apart  from  family,  to  prove  I  was  an  entity  unto myself  and  not  just  part of  the  Coppola  dynasty.”

 

 

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From the archives: Michael Douglas

by Jack Tewksbury

michael douglasFor forty years the HFPA has recorded interviews with famous and celebrated actors, actresses and filmmakers. The world’s largest collection of its kind — over 10,000 interviews — is now in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Library. The audios are fascinating. Below is an excerpt: in 1989, promoting  the Danny De Vito-directed War of the Roses, Michael Douglas reflected on the never ending conflict between women and men.

 “I  think  it’s  very  appropriate  that    this  movie  War  Of The  Roses ends  the  1980′s.  The  decade  has  been  about yuppie  hard  work  and  material  values.  If  you  spend  that much  time  working, and  very  little  time  on  a  relationship, what  do  you  expect?  That  is  why  we  have  so  many  divorces.

Marriage  is  wonderful,  when  it  works,  but  too  many people  were  sold  a  bill  of  goods  about  its  dreamlike  qualities.  I  totally  support  the  feminist  Movement, but I think  women  created  a  monster. I’ve  seen  working  women  spread  themselves  very  thin, and  when  they’re  not  happy  they  blame  their  husbands. Now  in  the  1990′s  we  begin  to  come  full  circle.  There’s got  to  be  a  balance,  a  rekindling  of  love.

A  friend  of  mine  told  me  recently,  “They’re  smarter   than  we  are,  and  they  don’t  play  fair.”  After  twenty years  of  the  Feminist  Movement,  I  hope  we’ll  end  up kinder  to  each  other.  I  hope  women  will  be  nicer  to  guys and  their  husbands.

We  tend  to  be  more  polite  to  strangers  than  we  are  to   the  person  closest  to  us.  One  of  the  best  lines  in  the  film is,  “A  civilized  divorce  is  a  contradiction  in  terms.”"

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Brando’s Golden Globe for sale

by Elmar Biebl

Brando-Globe

Marlon Brando didn’t show up to collect his second Best Actor Oscar in 1972 for The Godfather,  sending an actress in his stead to decline as a protest to Hollywood’s portrayal of Native Americans.

However, back in 1954 Brando was keen to win the award, after being skunked three previous times. His losing streak began in 1951 when his Streetcar Named Desire castmates (Vivien LeighKarl MaldenKim Hunter) prevailed in the other three acting categories but Brando was bested by Humphrey Bogart (The African Queen). The following year, he lost his bid for Viva Zapata!  to Gary Cooper (High Noon) while in 1953 his nod for Julius Caesar was edged out by William Holden (Stalag 17).

Brando had been surly and uncooperative while on the derby track those three times. So he switched strategies. First up was the Golden Globes on Feb. 24. As the LA Times reported, “Unusual was the fact that Brando appeared to accept his award.” The Mirror-News added, “Marlon Brando showed up a the banquet wearing impeccably tailored dinner clothes and a charming smile. In fact, he was so downright human that one old hand cracked, ‘What happened to all his false reserve?’”

Brando also won the World Film Favorite award, which was decided by a poll of film fans in 40 nations.

Both of these awards are up for sale this month at Heritage Auctions. Also on offer is the draft of his rejection speech from the 1972 Oscars.

However, Brando’s estate is precluded from selling the Oscar he won for On the Waterfront as all winners since 1950 are required to sign an agreement that they will offer the academy right of first refusal.

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HFPA members Ruben and Janet Nepales make the front cover

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HFPA members Ruben and Janet Nepales have been featured in a front page story of the March 11 2013 issue of the Los Angeles Downtown News. Ruben and Janet write for the two most important — and competing– newspapers in the Philippines, the number one Philippine Daily Inquirer (Ruben) and the runner-up Manila Bulletin (Janet), and  for five years have been residents of Downtown Los Angeles. As an extra treat, the couple was photographed by the legendary Gary Leonard, who has been taking pictures of LA’s denizens for over 30 years. “ I got to say ‘Take my picture, Gary Leonard’”, says Ruben.

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