Categories
SCTV

Without Moranis?!?!? Dave, what are you thinking?!?!

Moranis unsure of Bob & Doug Toon
TORONTO – The Fox network is eyeing the new Global-TV cartoon “The Animated Adventures of Bob and Doug McKenzie” – and Doug is ready to dump a reluctant Bob in order to continue with the show.
Dave Thomas says his McKenzie sibling, Rick Moranis, was a hesitant participant in the series, airing on Global this fall.
“He doesn’t enjoy doing any showbiz stuff anymore,” Thomas said Tuesday in an interview from Los Angeles, where he was busy working on scripts for the show.
“I can’t even guarantee his involvement long term in this, but whatever … if I have to drag a sound-alike in for his voice, I’ll do that. I don’t think anyone would care because it’s a new product.”
Thanks to Global’s haste in green-lighting the show, Thomas says, Fox executives were immediately interested when he pitched it to them and asked to see scripts and the pilot.
“We submit the pilot in early August, and we’ll hear after that. But I think they’ll go for it – I think they like this show. Just to get them this close is good, and means we can probably get someone else interested if they’re not.”
The series is based on the lovable hosers from the SCTV show, but Thomas says the beer-swilling brothers find themselves in a whole different environment in the new series.
“They are in a world that they weren’t in before, and they have some friends who are a little raunchier than they are,” he says.
“But Bob and Doug are tolerant guys and they like everybody. That’s why people like them – they’re so good-natured. They don’t hate anybody.”
U.S. fans have long loved the iconic Canadian duo, Thomas adds, and there’s been no push by Fox to have him Americanize the show in any way. The network has had runaway successes with its animated series, including “The Simpsons” and “American Dad.”
“They’ve got thoughts on jokes and stuff like that but nothing that would make it any less Canadian,” Thomas says.
“And Americans have been behind Bob and Doug from the get-go … ‘Strange Brew’ is a perennial college, beer-drinking movie here in the States. Americans are looking for stuff to laugh at just like Canadians.”
Thomas says he never dreamed that Bob and Doug would have such enduring appeal when he and Moranis dreamed up the concept almost 30 years ago as a raised middle finger to the CRTC’s Canadian content regulations during SCTV’s heyday.
Offended by the CBC’s request to add some obvious Canadian content into the show to keep the CRTC happy, Moranis and Thomas came up with Bob and Doug, who embodied every possible Canadian stereotype – from their fondness for beer, toques and lumberjack jackets to their use of the word “eh” in almost every sentence.
“I thought it was a bit of a nightmare back then, when I thought of myself as a young artist, but now that I think of myself as an old hack, I’m glad I have Bob and Doug,” Thomas says.

Categories
Lists

Who doesn’t love lists?!?

Best of 10: AFI releases top-10 genre film lists
LOS ANGELES – The American Film Institute’s top-10 lists of the best in 10 film genres:
ANIMATION
1. “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” 1937.
2. “Pinocchio,” 1940.
3. “Bambi,” 1942.
4. “The Lion King,” 1994.
5. “Fantasia,” 1940.
6. “Toy Story,” 1995.
7. “Beauty and the Beast,” 1991.
8. “Shrek,” 2001.
9. “Cinderella,” 1950.
10. “Finding Nemo,” 2003.
FANTASY
1. “The Wizard of Oz,” 1939.
2. “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” 2001.
3. “It’s a Wonderful Life,” 1946.
4. “King Kong,” 1933.
5. “Miracle on 34th Street, 1947.
6. “Field of Dreams,” 1989.
7. “Harvey,” 1950.
8. “Groundhog Day,” 1993.
9. “The Thief of Bagdad,” 1924.
10. “Big,” 1988.
GANGSTER
1. “The Godfather,” 1972.
2. “Goodfellas,” 1990.
3. “The Godfather Part II,” 1974.
4. “White Heat,” 1949.
5. “Bonnie and Clyde,” 1967.
6. “Scarface: The Shame of a Nation,” 1932.
7. “Pulp Fiction,” 1994.
8. “The Public Enemy,” 1931.
9. “Little Caesar,” 1930.
10. “Scarface,” 1983.
SCIENCE FICTION
1. “2001: A Space Odyssey,” 1968.
2. “Star Wars: Episode IV ó A New Hope,” 1977.
3. “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,” 1982.
4. “A Clockwork Orange,” 1971.
5. “The Day The Earth Stood Still,” 1951.
6. “Blade Runner,” 1982.
7. “Alien,” 1979.
8. “Terminator 2: Judgment Day,” 1991.
9. “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” 1956.
10. “Back to the Future,” 1985.
WESTERN
1. “The Searchers,” 1956.
2. “High Noon,” 1952.
3. “Shane,” 1953.
4. “Unforgiven,” 1992.
5. “Red River,” 1948.
6. “The Wild Bunch,” 1969.
7. “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” 1969.
8. “McCabe & Mrs. Miller,” 1971.
9. “Stagecoach,” 1939.
10. “Cat Ballou,” 1965.
SPORTS
1. “Raging Bull,” 1980.
2. “Rocky,” 1976.
3. “The Pride of the Yankees,” 1942.
4. “Hoosiers,” 1986.
5. “Bull Durham,” 1988.
6. “The Hustler,” 1961.
7. “Caddyshack,” 1980.
8. “Breaking Away,” 1979.
9. “National Velvet,” 1944.
10. “Jerry Maguire,” 1996.
MYSTERY
1. “Vertigo,” 1958.
2. “Chinatown,” 1974.
3. “Rear Window,” 1954.
4. “Laura,” 1944.
5. “The Third Man,” 1949.
6. “The Maltese Falcon,” 1941.
7. “North By Northwest,” 1959.
8. “Blue Velvet,” 1986.
9. “Dial M for Murder,” 1954.
10. “The Usual Suspects,” 1995.
ROMANTIC COMEDY
1. “City Lights,” 1931.
2. “Annie Hall,” 1977.
3. “It Happened One Night,” 1934.
4. “Roman Holiday,” 1953.
5. “The Philadelphia Story,” 1940.
6. “When Harry Met Sally …,” 1989.
7. “Adam’s Rib,” 1949.
8. “Moonstruck,” 1987.
9. “Harold and Maude,” 1971.
10. “Sleepless in Seattle,” 1993.
COURTROOM DRAMA
1. “To Kill a Mockingbird,” 1962.
2. “12 Angry Men,” 1957.
3. “Kramer Vs. Kramer,” 1979.
4. “The Verdict,” 1982.
5. “A Few Good Men,” 1992.
6. “Witness for the Prosecution,” 1957.
7. “Anatomy of a Murder,” 1959.
8. “In Cold Blood,” 1967.
9. “A Cry in the Dark,” 1988.
10. “Judgment at Nuremberg,” 1961.
EPIC
1. “Lawrence of Arabia,” 1962.
2. “Ben-Hur,” 1959.
3. “Schindler’s List,” 1993.
4. “Gone With the Wind,” 1939.
5. “Spartacus,” 1960.
6. “Titanic,” 1997.
7. “All Quiet on the Western Front,” 1930.
8. “Saving Private Ryan,” 1998.
9. “Reds,” 1981.
10. “The Ten Commandments,” 1956.

Categories
People

May she rest in peace!!

Actress-dancer Cyd Charisse dies in L.A. at 86
LOS ANGELES – Cyd Charisse, the long-legged beauty who danced with the Ballet Russe as a teenager and starred in MGM musicals with Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly, died Tuesday. She was 86.
Charisse was admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center on Monday after suffering an apparent heart attack, said her publicist, Gene Schwam.
She appeared in dramatic films, but her fame came from the Technicolor musicals of the 1940s and 1950s.
Classically trained, she could dance anything, from a pas de deux in 1946’s “Ziegfeld Follies” to the lowdown Mickey Spillane satire of 1953’s “The Band Wagon” (with Astaire).
She also forged a popular song-and-dance partnership on television and in nightclub appearances with her husband, singer Tony Martin.
Her height was 5 feet, 6 inches, but in high heels and full-length stockings, she seemed serenely tall, and she moved with extraordinary grace. Her flawless beauty and jet-black hair contributed to an aura of perfection that Astaire described in his 1959 memoir, “Steps in Time,” as “beautiful dynamite.”
“Her beauty was breathtaking,” Debbie Reynolds, who starred with Charisse in the 1952 classic “Singin’ in the Rain,” said in a statement. “The world will miss her dancing.”
Charisse arrived at MGM as the studio was establishing itself as the king of musicals. Three producers ó Arthur Freed, Joe Pasternak and Jack Cummings ó headed units that drew from the greatest collection of musical talent. Dancers, singers, directors, choreographers, composers, conductors and a symphony-size orchestra were under contract and available. The contract list also included the screen’s two greatest male dancers: Astaire and Kelly.
Astaire, who danced with her in “The Band Wagon” and “Silk Stockings,” said of Charisse in a 1983 interview: “She wasn’t a tap dancer, she’s just beautiful, trained, very strong in whatever we did. When we were dancing, we didn’t know what time it was.”
She first gained notice as a member of the famed Ballet Russe, and got her start in Hollywood when star David Lichine was hired by Columbia Pictures for a ballet sequence in a 1943 Don Ameche-Janet Blair musical, “Something to Shout About.”
Although that film failed to live up to its title, its ballet sequence attracted wide notice, and Charisse (then billed as Lily Norwood) began receiving movie offers.
“I had just done that number with David as a favor to him,” she said in “The Two of Us,” her 1976 double autobiography with Martin. “Honestly, the idea of working movies had never once entered my head. I was a dancer, not an actress. I had no delusions about myself. I couldn’t act ó I had never acted. So how could I be a movie star?”
She overcame her doubts and signed a seven-year contract at MGM. She also got a new name, the exotic “Cyd” instead of her lifelong nickname Sid to go with her first husband’s last name.
“Singin’ in the Rain” marked a breakthrough.
When Freed was dissatisfied with another dancer who had been cast, Charisse inherited the role and danced with Kelly in the “Broadway Melody” number that climaxed the movie. She stunned critics and audiences with her 25-foot Chinese silk scarf that floated in the air with the aid of a wind machine.
Charisse also danced with Kelly in “Brigadoon,” “It’s Always Fair Weather” and “Invitation to the Dance.” She missed what might have been her greatest opportunity: to appear with Kelly in the 1951 Academy Award winner, “An American in Paris.” She was pregnant, and Leslie Caron was cast in the role.
In 1996, Charisse recalled her reaction on entering the movies: “Ballet is a closed world and very rigid; MGM was a fairyland. You’d walk down the lot, seeing all these fabulous movies being made with the greatest talent in the world sitting there. It was a dream to walk through that lot.”
Her first assignment was a “Ziegfeld Follies” sequence in which she was one of the female dancers “flitting around Astaire as he danced.”
Like most young MGM contract players, she was schooled in drama and voice, and diction lessons eliminated her Texas accent. The singing lessons didn’t take, however, and the songs in her musicals were dubbed.
She graduated to featured dancer in sequences for such films as “Till the Clouds Roll By,” “Fiesta,” “On an Island with You” and “Words and Music.” She also appeared in such dramatic films as “East Side, West Side,” “Tension” and “Mark of the Renegade.”
“Silk Stockings” in 1957 marked the end of her dancing career in films, as well as the twilight of the movie musical. With the film business suffering from the onslaught of television, MGM dismantled its great collection of talent. Musicals were too expensive, and foreign audiences had soured on them.
Charisse continued with dramatic films, several of them made in Europe. She and Martin took their musical act to Las Vegas and elsewhere. In 1992 she finally made her Broadway debut, taking over the starring role as the unhappy ballerina in the musicalized “Grand Hotel.” The musical had premiered in 1989 with Liliane Montevecchi in the role.
“I’ve done about everything in show business except to play on Broadway,” Charisse said in a 1992 Associated Press interview. “I always hoped that I would one day. It’s the World Series of show business. If anybody tells you they’re not intimidated, they’re lying.”
In 1974, Charisse returned to MGM for a TV drama. Gazing over the half-filled commissary at lunchtime, she mused: “You never realize that good things are going to be over sometime. It all seemed so natural then: Clark Gable and Robert Taylor lunching at one table. Lana Turner would be lunching at a table in the corner. Ava Gardner, too.
“I grew up at this studio, and it didn’t seem unusual to see all those stars. Nowadays, you’d never find so many names in one commissary. In fact, there aren’t that many stars.”
Her name was Tula Ellice Finklea when she was born in Amarillo, Texas, on March 8, 1922. From her earliest years she was called Sid, because her older brother couldn’t say “sister.” She was a sickly girl who started dancing lessons to build up her strength after a bout with polio.
“I was so frail they were afraid to touch me,” she recalled in that 1996 interview.
At 14 she auditioned for the head of the famed Ballet Russe, and became part of the corps de ballet and toured the U.S. and Europe. To appear with the nearly all-Russian company, she was first billed as Celia Siderova, than as Maria Istromena.
At one point during the European tour, she met up again with Nico Charisse, a handsome young dancer she had studied with for a time in Los Angeles. They married in Paris in 1939.
The Ballet Russe disbanded after the war broke out, and the newlyweds returned to Hollywood. In 1942, a son, Nicky, was born.
In 1948, the year after she and Nico divorced, Charisse married Martin. Her second son, Tony Jr., was born in 1950.

Categories
Concerts

I am so glad that they finally announced this!! It has been a tough secret to keep!!!

Elton John set for two Regina shows
REGINA — The rumours of Sir Elton John coming to Regina are correct, with just one small qualifier.
For months rumours have been swirling around the Queen City that John would follow in the footsteps of the Rolling Stones and play an outdoor concert at Mosaic Stadium in September.
Well, everything but the location of the performance was correct — instead of playing Mosaic Stadium, John will play two shows at the Brandt Centre on September 16 and 17.
The Regina dates are part of a growing list of shows in Western Canada, joining Calgary (Sept. 12), Edmonton (Sept. 13) and Winnipeg (Sept. 19). Dates for Saskatoon and Vancouver might also be added in the coming days.
John currently performs with three different types of shows: He performs solo with his piano; he performs Red Piano shows in Las Vegas, which combines the music with visual imagery; and, he performs with a five-piece band. The Regina dates will be John and his band.
If ticket sales for the Winnipeg date are any indication, selling out two shows at the Brandt Centre shouldn’t be a problem. When tickets went on sale Monday for the show at the MTS Centre, which can seat up to 15,000 for concerts, the Sept. 19 show reportedly sold out in less than one minute.
The 61-year-old John is a rock and roll legend and it is estimated that he has sold over 200 million albums worldwide, including 100 million in the United States. “Candle In The Wind 1997,” a tribute to Princess Diana, is the No. 1-selling single in music history having sold more than 33 million copies. It also raised $30 million for the Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial Fund.
John’s list of chart success is equally impressive: 59 Top 40 hits, 16 Top 10 hits and nine No. 1 singles. Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on Jan. 19, 1994, John also has captured five Grammy Awards and one Academy Award. He also received the Grammy Legend Award in 1999.
His impressive catalogue of singles includes “Your Song,” “Rocket Man,” “Crocodile Rock,” “Daniel,” “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road,” “Candle In The Wind,” “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down On Me,” “Philadelphia Freedom,” “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart” (a duet with Kiki Dee), “Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word,” “The Bitch Is Back,” “I Guess That’s Why The Call It The Blues,” “I’m Still Standing,” “Nikita,” “Circle of Life,” and “I Want Love.”
A tireless worker on behalf of AIDS-related issues, John was knighted by Queen Elizabeth on Feb. 12, 1998.
Tickets for the Regina dates will go on sale at 10 a.m. on June 23. Tickets will be $149 and $99, with an additional $2 charity fee and the regular service fees. Tickets will be available at the Brandt Centre box office, by phone (543-7800) and online (www.ticketmaster.ca).
A limited amount of tickets will also be made available to members of the Rocket Club, John’s fan club. Members are given the opportunity to purchase tickets before they go on sale to the general public. However, the Rocket Club does not guarantee tickets with membership.

Categories
Uncategorized

I do love me my Anne Hathaway!!

Carell, Hathaway smarten up as new Max, Agent 99
LAS VEGAS – Steve Carell did not necessarily see the Maxwell Smart in himself. Everyone else did, including co-star Anne Hathaway and the studio behind the big-screen “Get Smart,” which simply called Carell in and offered him the job, no questions asked.
Carell takes on the title role created by Don Adams in the 1960s TV show about a brainy but bungling spy, with Hathaway playing his supremely capable partner, Agent 99, a part originated by Barbara Feldon.
Created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry as a comic response to James Bond and other espionage adventures, “Get Smart” has endured in syndication, in follow-up movies and a short-lived second TV series in the 1990s.
Directed by Peter Segal, the new “Get Smart” chronicles Max’s rise from crackerjack analyst to field agent for U.S. spy outfit Control, paired with dubious 99 as they try to foil a plot to distribute nukes to unstable governments.
The cast includes Dwayne Johnson as a star Control agent, Alan Arkin as the Chief and bad guy Terence Stamp, who played Kryptonian supervillain Zod and made Christopher Reeve kneel before him in “Superman II.”
Carell and Hathaway chatted with The Associated Press, fondly recalling Feldon and the late Adams, discussing the show’s longevity and sharing a funny Zod tale.
___
AP: People tend to be skeptical about TV adaptations, but when Steve was cast as Max, they kind of nodded and said, “Good choice.” What do you and Don Adams have in common?
Carell: There’s a bit of a physical resemblance that would be part of the equation. But aside from that, it’s hard talking about him in the same breath as myself, because I don’t aspire to be as good as he was. He’s iconic and the way he did the character is iconic, and I don’t have any pretense of trying to live up to that. If anything, I’m just trying to get an essence of what he did as opposed to any sort of imitation or channeling.
Hathaway: I thought it was perfect casting. He pays me to say this, but Steve’s being very, very humble, because his take on Max is just spectacular. I think the reason Steve Carell seems to fit (glances at Carell and laughs) ó I can’t look at you while I’m saying this …
Carell: I love it when you use my whole name.
Hathaway: The thing about Steve stepping into Don’s shoes that makes sense is Steve’s take on comedy. He can do the big, over-the-top, slightly absurd stuff really well, but he also does the real subtle moments really well. And the thing about Don Adams, he never played Maxwell Smart as a fumbling goon. He played him as a very serious man who didn’t know he was in a comedy. And Steve’s really good at doing that. A lot of his characters don’t know that they’re funny, and that’s what makes him hilarious.
AP: Now the same question for Anne. What do you and Barbara Feldon have in common?
Hathaway: I appreciate this question now. It’s a tough one. I’m so very different from Agent 99, and the bar that Barbara Feldon set and what Barbara Feldon’s 99 meant to people, I’m never going to be able to touch that. The world was in a very different place then. We needed Agent 99. When Barbara Feldon played her, we needed to see a girl who could keep up with the boys, who was smart and who was sexy while being smart. She inspired so many women. When you look at the kind of women we aspire to be today, a lot of them are very similar to Barbara Feldon’s 99. There’s no way I’m going to be able to touch that kind of legacy, but I do think I have good chemistry with my co-star, so that’s probably what I have in common with her.
Carell: Anne was the first person to come in and do a screen test. It was actually the first time I’d said any of the lines. And after she walked out of the room, we all looked at each other and knew it. It was almost as if everyone else could have gone home at that point, frankly. I’d seen a lot of Anne’s work, but there was a sophistication to her and a slyness and sort of a coolness and a deadpan. And she is a great improviser, too. I tend to play around, especially during an audition, just to find different moments and beats, and she was not only there, following, but leading and sharing it.
Hathaway: I always tell people regarding improvising, Steve’s an abstract expressionist and I finger paint. I’m a very good finger painter, but it’s on a different level.
AP: Why has “Get Smart” endured so well?
Hathaway: It’s sophisticated family humor. That’s what the show had going for it. My parents watched it when they were kids, and then when it was on Nick at Nite in reruns, I would watch it with them when I was a kid. In addition to it just being so funny was the chemistry that Don Adams and Barbara Feldon had. You couldn’t take your eyes off them. It was fun to watch them play. … Don Adams, people don’t remember that he was a fantastic actor. There’s this one episode where he has to pretend he’s gone bad and he has to convince 99 that he’s gone bad, and he plays it so straight. It’s a different Max. It’s colder and harder and harsher. Don Adams was a really, really good straight actor.
Carell: Also, look at who created it. Mel Brooks and Buck Henry. In terms of having longevity, “Young Frankenstein” is still one of my favorite movies. “The Producers,” obviously. His stuff just holds up. For the most part, it really does. That’s a huge element, the writing staff, if you look at the people involved.
Hathaway: Steve, you’re such a nice person. I’m like, “It was the actors. The actors are what endured.”
AP: The movie’s more an action comedy than a spy spoof. Were you trying to avoid parodying spy flicks?
Carell: When I first started talking to Pete (Segal the director) about just tonally what the movie could potentially look like, I said, “What about a comedic `Bourne Identity?'” You take the action in that and you make it a legitimate spy movie that’s funny, as opposed to taking the cliches of spy movies and turning them on their heads. If the villains are like Terence Stamp, these guys are scary and actually have some threat to them. There’s some sense of jeopardy. The comedy laid on top of that might resonate more.
Hathaway: There’s a great story about Terence. He was switching hotels when we were shooting in Montreal. He just went downstairs and he couldn’t find a taxi. He was standing around looking for a taxi and some guy just drove up and went, “Zod?” And he goes, “Yes.” And the guy goes, “What are you doing in Montreal?” “I’m making a movie. Can you give me a ride?” And the guy goes, “Absolutely.” So the guy drove him to his hotel.
AP: I hope the guy didn’t make him say, “Kneel before Zod.”
Carell: I’m sure he’s had to say it to like, cash a check.