Monday, November 19, 2007

Jeremy Piven Honored at Chicago Impact Awards

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Actor Jeremy Piven (on the red carpet with friend Steve Pink) was honored at the 5th Annual Columbia College Chicago Impact Awards at the Monmartre Lounge in Hollywood on Saturday, November 17.

Piven, who comes from Chicago-theatre royaltyhis parents founded The Piven Theatre Workshop—has appeared in more than 40 feature films from Serendipity, Gross Pointe Blank, and The Family Man to Smokin' Aces, Runaway Jury, and Black Hawk Down, as well as TV shows, including Cupid and Ellen. Well, Piven's time has come. The two-time Emmy®-award winner for his role of agent Ari Gold on HBO's Entourage is currently starring in The Kingdom with Jennifer Garner and Jamie Foxx, and is about to start shooting The Goods: The Don Ready Story, a comedy about a used-car salesman who is brought in to save a fledging dealership.

Piven was raised in Chicago, and when he is not working in Los Angeles, he goes back to his first loves: theatre and Chicago

"Chicago has in my opinion the best theatre in the world," Piven says. "I miss going to The Piven Theatre or The Goodman and just seeing some great plays. Walking along the beach and seeing the skyline and the architecture or even jumping in a boat and seeing the skyline from the water [is] incredible."

The Impact Awards honors Windy City natives who have made an indelible impact on the entertainment industry, while maintaining the work ethic and loyalty that are synonymous with Chicago. The ceremony was emceed this year by Steve Kmetko, Columbia College alumnus ('76) and entertainment reporter, and hosted by actress Cindy Marinangel (below with Piven). Proceeds benefit the Bob Enrietto Scholarship Fund, which helps outstanding Columbia students attend the college's innovative Semester in L.A. program.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

The New TV Season Begins

Talk about going from 0 to 60 in a few days flat... The new TV season just officially started, and already I am struggling to figure out what to watch, when, and how to have a life that doesn't require pictures and sound from an electronic source.

Prison Break had its second ep last night. It's not that I'm a neat freak--okay, well, maybe a little--but the grime and filth of this new prison is making me not want to watch. Plus, it's up against Chuck, which is Alias-reminiscent with real-life-ish people thrown in for good measure. It may be my favorite hybrid of the season.

Tonight, the Dr is in. Oh, how I have missed House. There is some Tuesday-night viewing overlap--tonight's 90-minute Boston Legal season premiere starts at 9:30, but I have a plan: watch House live, record BL for later in the week. Yes, Boston is a guilty pleasure, but I am not quite ready to give it up; I look forward to seeing how The Practice v3.0 is going to reinvent itself...again.

Wednesdays means Private Practice/Gossip Girl/Back to You, and Dirty Sexy Money. And Pushing Daisies hasn't even started yet. Thursday - ABC extravaganza - Betty, Grey's, and Big Shots. And there's Fridays, complete with actual good programing--yay Friday Night Lights. Don't even get me started on Sundays. Ooh. Getting overwhelmed just thinking about it.

As they say in Episodic television, to be continued...

Monday, September 10, 2007

Where Eagles Dare

To commemorate September 11th, here’s a poem, written by W. Eric Weiss, as his response to the events on that faithful day just 6 short years ago. It was put to music by Ken Kingsbury; the song can be found here: http://www.kenkingsbury.com/Eagles.html. But the lyrics speak for themselves.

Where Eagles Dare

By W. Eric Weiss

A plane flew away before the dawns early light
Buildings falling down a world forgot to spin round
Blasting a hole in the heart of freedom’s dream
As freedom screams… as freedom screams

Like the day the music died
The good old boys drank some more rye
As we cried in our hearts for Lennon’s sky
A sad world could only cry

Only where eagles dare shall eagles fly
We are stronger we are one… We will survive
Only where freedom dares shall the stars and stripes fly
We are stronger we are one… Freedom will survive

Imagine the children at play
Had no idea peace was attacked today
But still we dream a dream that will never die
As we still fly in Lennon’s sky

An eye for an eye only God knows why
Different faces and different names
But our children’s blood is still the same
Still our freedom flies… our freedom flies

Lady Liberty stood tall through it all
And passed the torch to the world today
The world shall answer the call
Freedom will not fall… Freedom will not fall

Only where eagles dare shall eagles fly
We are stronger we are one… We will survive
Only where freedom dares shall the stars and stripes fly
We are stronger we are one… Freedom will survive

God bless America… Our home sweet home
God bless the world… Our home sweet home
God bless the world… Our home sweet home

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Jeff Greenwald's "Strange Travel Suggestions"

In a world where TV, film, and the Internet give us access to anywhere in the world, it’s nice to get out of the house once in a while and explore something in real life. You don’t always need to get on a plane to travel the world. Sometimes, you just need to get in a car and travel to a little known venue in West Los Angeles, located beneath a piano store, called Steinway Recital Hall.

Tonight, Parlor Performances at Steinway Hall hosted award-winning international travel writer Jeff Greenwald, whose books include Shopping for Buddhas, The Size of the World and Scratching the Surface: Impressions of Planet Earth from Hollywood to Shiraz. Greenwald’s show, “Strange Travel Suggestions” is pretty much that. He has his audience members spin the “Wheel of Fortune.” Where it lands determines which story he will tell.

In the course of the evening, Greenwald had an unfortunate food mishap in Nepal (Meals of Misfortune), which lead to his becoming a travel writer—he figured such stories should have a purpose, an audience. He also discussed Star Trek with the Dalai Lama (Bird Bath of Memory)—yes, that Dalai Lama—and traveled the Atlantic in a cargo ship (Dark Waters). He capped off the evening with Left Luggage (Full of Complaints), where in Calcutta they have a truly inconvenient (understatement!) system for storing luggage.

It’s not just the subjects of the stories that are engaging, it’s Greenwald’s way of telling them. He has a command of the language—the English and I can only guess how many other languages—that few can claim. Greenwald is witty and intelligent, and his tales unfold in an easy and effortless manner.

Sometimes the best travel stories are the ones from someone else’s experience.

Live performances seem like a dime a dozen in Los Angeles—musicians, performance art, open mike. Quality presentations, like the one I saw tonight, not so much.

For more information on Jeff Greenwald, go to http://www.jeffgreenwald.com/.

For those who live in the area, Greenwald will be performing tomorrow night as a part of Parlor Palooza Mega Showcases, which will benefit disaster relief charities. For more information on this and other Parlor Palooza events, go to http://www.frankentertainment.com/.

Steinway Recital Hall at Fields Pianos is located at 12121 W. Pico Bl. (one door W. of Bundy under Fields Pianos, level P2).

(Pictured: Jeff Greenwald, Jeannine Frank of Frank Entertainment, and Jeff's Wheel of Fortune.)



Monday, August 20, 2007

Old TV Friends in New Places

I am so relieved that my "friends" from other shows got new jobs. Just today it was announced that Veronica Mars (Kristen Bell) was cast on Heroes. Guess I'm going to have to start watching that one.

Kristen is the third Veronica Mars cast member to secure work for the upcoming season--Logan Echolls (Jason Dohring) will be seen on CBS's Moonlight and we already got a sneak peak at Piz (Chris Lowell) on ABC's Private Practice.

The prize for the show with the most actor relocations goes to The Nine. Detective Nick Cavanaugh (Tim Daly) is joining Piz on Private Practice. Lizzie (Jessica Collins) and Felicia (Dana Davis) are joining Ronnie on Heroes. (Btw, Davis did a 2-ep stint on Mars in its second season). Bank manager Malcolm (Chi McBride) will be Pushing Daisies on ABC. And Franny (Camile Guaty) is moving to NBC's Las Vegas.

Come midseason, Lucas (Owain Yeoman) is in the pilot of Fox's The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Kathryn (Kim Raver) will joining NBC's Lipstick Jungle, while dearly departed Eva Rios (Lourdes Benedicto) will be on ABC's Cashmere Mafia.

Although Egan Foote (John Billingsley) doesn't have a permanent new home, we've seen him on a variety of TV guest spots, as well as the big screen. I'm not so concerned. Egan seems to always land on his feet.

The only other main character not jumping into a show for the new season is Dr. Jeremy Cates (Scott Wolf). But, dry those tears. Wolf signed a development deal with ABC over the summer. We'll be seeing him--and his dimples--again real soon.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

America's Favorite Dancer

Another season of So You Think You Can Dance has come to an end.

Few things in life work out the way you want them to. Thank you, America, for voting with your hearts for your favorite dancer: Sabra.

When Danny and Sabra were standing up there as the top two, I decided I would be happy if either of them won. Danny's grace, style, and talent are unparalleled. We will be seeing a lot of him.

Sabra was my early favorite. Her spark, her style, her passion came through--along with her talent--right from the start.

www.fox.com/dance

The Nine - Number's Up

I have accepted the fact that The Nine has been canceled. I get that I may never know the complete story of "What Happened in There." But I was very disappointed when I came home last night to see racing something-or-other when I should have seen my Nine being tracked by the feds. This whole bait and switch was completely uncalled for.

ABC did announce today that the rest of the eps will be shown online. Fine. Whatever. I will take what I can get. But at least let them leave with some dignity. Haven't The Nine, who have been trapped in that bank for nearly a year, suffered enough?

www.ABC.com

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Hair Care at the Movies

Now available on video, DVD, or at a theater near you.

- Hairspray (1988, 2007) - a campy musical about integration in the 60s
- Grease (1978) - a musical--where boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl--in the 50s
- Shampoo (1975) - Warren Beatty, Goldie Hawn, and lots of product

There's Blow Dry (2001), Barbershop (2002), Beauty Shop (2005). The list goes on and on.

Coming soon(er or later):
- Mousse
- Gel
- Conditioner

When and where did our obsession with tresses begin? Hair (1979), When Harry Met Sally (1988), The Tortoise and the Hare (1935).For more information on these films and other hair-raising titles, go to http://www.imdb.com/.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

So You Think You Can Dance: The Final Six

So You Think You Can Dance is by far my favorite summer reality show. Watching these young dancers on the path to realizing their dreams is fun, exciting, and delightful.

I was annoyed as anyone about the massive nepotism at the start of the season. Siblings and a "friend of the show" took 4 of the top 20 spots: Travis' brother, Benji's sister/Heidi's cousin, a choreographer's assistant from last season, and Stanislav's sister. Stas's sister—Faina—was voted off the second week (lasted one week longer than big bro), but the other three—Danny, Lacey, and Lauren—are in the final six.

As six becomes four, I can only hope that one of the aforementioned woman (preferably Lacey) gets kicked off the dancing island to make room for Sabra, the 20-year-old contemporary dancer who has been dancing for just 4 years. Sabra has heart, but more than that, she taps into her passion every time she steps out on stage. And that's the kind of energy that transcends the TV set and goes into the audience's living room.

Speaking of amazing dancing, Danny has certainly earned a place in the top four. Words cannot describe the beauty and power of his movement, his seemingly effortless talent. Is it enough for him to win? Maybe, maybe not.

Which brings us to Pasha and Neil. As far as I'm concerned, the final four can be the three boys and Sabra. (No offense, Lauren, but it has taken you a long time to come into your own in the competition, and you are not quite there yet.) Pasha looks good, but has versatility issues. On the other hand, Neil, who was not my favorite, to say the least, has proven himself over the past few weeks. He has shown the most growth, which is a big part of what this competition is all about.


This week we get SYTYCD overload: results Monday, Finale part 1 on Wednesday, and Finale part 2 on Thursday. I'm sure Benji would be happier than anyone to pass the torch to his sister, who has talent but is lacking the maturity befitting a professional. She clearly isn't ready for the crown.

The final four should be Sabra, Lauren, Pasha, and Neil. And in my heart, Sabra's already won.

For more on So You Think You Can Dance, go to: http://www.fox.com/dance/