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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Nov, 2005 08:16 pm
love flanders and swann, in fact i've posted that very song a time or two it's such a fave of mine
0 Replies
 
hamburger
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Nov, 2005 08:17 pm
just thought that it might be a fitting song for shewolfmn and her trying to buy the 100 year old house; but i think it would be cruel to make fun of her at this time. hbg
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Nov, 2005 09:19 pm
bobsmythhawk wrote:
Diana Krall

Date of birth (location)
16 November 1964
Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada

Thanks, Bob, for your biography on Diana. I had no idea she was a local girl from Nanaimo.

It just goes to show you, you learn something new every day! :wink:
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Nov, 2005 09:20 pm
Letty wrote:
Bob, I had no idea that Diana Krall was born in British Colombia. Does our Reyn know that?

Laughing Just found out myself now, Letty!
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Nov, 2005 11:25 pm
Good old Flanders and Swann...I wouldn't call them lowbrow, no not at all.

The Slow Train
Mud, Glorious Mud

classics all.

I do like humour in music, and I like musical parody.

Has anyone heard "This Gun's For Hire/ Dancing In The Dark" (Bruce Springsteen' hit) sung in the style of Pat Boone's "Love Letters In The Sand"?

It's hilarious.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 04:34 am
Good morning WA2K radio listeners and contributioners.

hamburger, thanks for the reminder of that humorous song. Love it! Yes, folks, music that's fun brings the warmth of the sun.

McTag, we'll have to check out those parodies, Brit.

Speaking of fun songs, check this out:

http://www.msn.americangreetings.com/view.pd?i=382219626&m=1652&rr=y&sou

Be certain you have your speakers on. Laughing
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 06:03 am
Good Morning.

Letty - "I Will Survive" is hilarious. Love it. Ain't sellin' me to Butterball. I have to hear it again. (lol)

Today's birthdays:

1494 - Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Italian humanist (b. 1463)
1503 - Agnolo Bronzino, Italian painter (d. 1572)
1576 - Roque Gonzales, Paraguayan missionary (d. 1628)
1587 - Joost van den Vondel, Dutch poet (d. 1679)
1612 - Dorgon, Manchu prince (d. 1650)
1681 - Pierre François le Courayer, French theologian (d. 1776)
1685 - Pierre Gaultier de Varennes et de la Vérendrye, French-Canadian trader and explorer (d. 1749)
1717 - Jean le Rond d'Alembert, French mathematician (d. 1783)
1755 - King Louis XVIII of France (d. 1824)
1765 - Étienne-Jacques-Joseph-Alexandre MacDonald, French marshal (d. 1840)
1790 - August Ferdinand Möbius, German mathematician (d. 1868)
1793 - Sir Charles Lock Eastlake, English painter (d. 1865)
1799 - Titian Peale, American artist (d. 1885)
1816 - August Wilhelm Ambros, Austrian composer (d. 1876)
1835 - Andrew L. Harris, American Civil War hero and Governor of Ohio (d. 1915)
1857 - Joseph Babiński, Polish-French neurologist (d. 1932)
1866 - Voltairine de Cleyre, American anarchist (d. 1912)
1868 - Korbinian Brodmann, German neurologist (d. 1918)
1878 - Grace Abbott, American social worker and activist (d. 1939)
1878 - Lise Meitner, Austrian physicist (d. 1968)
1887 - Bernard Montgomery, British World War II commander (d. 1976)
1895 - Mikhail Bakhtin, Russian philosopher (d. 1975)
1895 - Gregorio López y Fuentes, Mexican author (d. 1966)
1896 - Lev Vygotsky, Russian psychologist (d. 1934)
1899 - Douglas Shearer, Canadian film sound engineer (d. 1971)
1901 - Walter Hallstein, German politician (d. 1982)
1901 - Lee Strasberg, Austrian director (d. 1982)
1902 - Eugene Wigner, Hungarian physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1995)
1904 - Isamu Noguchi, American sculptor (d. 1988)
1905 - Queen Astrid of Belgium (d. 1935)
1905 - Mischa Auer, American actor (d. 1967)
1906 - Soichiro Honda, Japanese automobile pioneer (d. 1992)
1911 - Christian Fouchet, French diplomat (d. 1974)
1916 - Shelby Foote, American historian (d. 2005)
1925 - Rock Hudson, American actor (d. 1985)
1925 - Sir Charles Mackerras, American-born conductor
1928 - Rance Howard, American actor
1929 - Norm Zauchin, baseball player (d. 1999)
1936 - Dalia Rabikovich, Israeli poet (d. 2005)
1937 - Peter Cook, English comedian, satirist, and writer (d. 1995)
1938 - Gordon Lightfoot, Canadian singer
1939 - Auberon Waugh, British author (d. 2001)
1942 - Martin Scorsese, American film director
1943 - Lauren Hutton, American actress
1944 - Danny DeVito, American actor
1944 - Rem Koolhaas, Dutch architect
1944 - Lorne Michaels, Canadian producer
1944 - Tom Seaver, baseball player
1945 - Elvin Hayes, American basketball player
1948 - Howard Dean, American politician
1952 - Ties Kruize, Dutch field hockey player
1958 - Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, American actress
1960 - Jonathan Ross, British television presenter
1960 - RuPaul, American actor
1966 - Jeff Buckley, American musician (d. 1997)
1966 - Daisy Fuentes, Cuban model and actress
1966 - Sophie Marceau, French actress
1966 - Kate Ceberano, Australian singer
1968 - Amber Michaels, German porn actress
1969 - Jean-Michel Saive, Belgian table tennis player
1970 - Paul Allender, English singer (Cradle of Filth)
1973 - Alexei Urmanov, Russian figure skater
1975 - Diane Neal, American actress
1977 - Ryk Neethling, South African swimmer
1978 - Reggie Wayne, American football player
1982 - Katie Feenstra, American basketball player
http://www.movie-gazette.com/directory/img/danny%2Bdevito.jpghttp://www.firsttvdrama.com/illinois/rock2.jpg
http://www.gregsgrooves.com/imagesf-l/lightfoot.jpg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 06:48 am
There's our Raggedy, listeners, with the usual celeb updates. Thanks, PA, and I'm certain that many of our fans will be interested in detail when Bio Bob brings us his background.

Equal time parody, folks:

"Wabash Cannonball" Based on the performance by Traditional
"Presidential Debate Song" Parody by Susanna Viljanen
Oh the elephant's a might beast
just good for GOP
their candidate's the Sonny Bush
in Washington DC
He's led the country four years
he wants four more to stay
Republicans he's candidate
for Pres of USA

So listen to the jingo, and the ramble and the rant
the fighting of the beasties, of the ass and elephant
Hear the mighty Rush a-foaming, hear the rave of Michael Moore
as the candidates' are fighting who'll get name on White House door

Democrat's the donkey
and John Kerry is their man
he has quite clean a record
he has fought in Viet Nam
But if something sounds just too good
it all too likely is,
he's kinda joker in the deck
of US politics

So listen to the jingo, and the ramble and the rant
the fighting of the beasties, of the ass and elephant
Hear the mighty Rush a-foaming, hear the rave of Michael Moore
as the candidates' are fighting who'll get name on White House door

Bush strikes on emotions,
and his war on terrorism
On facts argues John Kerry
and on intellect'alism
But nerds ain't politicians
and a leader must be strong -
a wise and benign President
can easily be led wrong

So listen to the jingo, and the ramble and the rant
the fighting of the beasties, of the ass and elephant
Hear the mighty Rush a-foaming, hear the rave of Michael Moore
as the candidates' are fighting who'll get name on White House door

In the European viewpoint
it is just about the same
who'll be the next as President
no matter what's his name
The choice of lesser evil
is the choice of many man
it would be so much easier
to vote Dempublican!

So listen to the jingo, and the ramble and the rant
the fighting of the beasties, of the ass and elephant
Hear the mighty Rush a-foaming, hear the rave of Michael Moore
as the candidates' are fighting who'll get name on White House door

Laughing
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 07:50 am
Lee Strasberg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Lee Strasberg. (November 17, 1901 - February 17, 1982) Born Israel Lee Strassberg in Budzanów, Austria-Hungary (now Budanov, Ukraine) to Ida and Baruch Meyer, was a Jewish-American actor, director, producer and acting teacher.

In 1931, he became one of the co-founders of the Group Theatre, a company which numbered such legends as Elia Kazan, John Garfield, Stella Adler, Sanford Meisner, Franchot Tone, and Robert Lewis. In 1936, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States. In 1949, he began a lengthy career at the Actors Studio in New York City. Within two years, he was artistic director and the now-renowned institution's reputation flourished. Actors under his tutelage there included Geraldine Page, Paul Newman, Al Pacino, Kim Stanley, Marilyn Monroe, Jane Fonda, James Dean, Dustin Hoffman, Eli Wallach, Eva Marie Saint, Robert DeNiro, Jill Clayburgh, Jack Nicholson, and Steve McQueen. In 1966, he took the Actors Studio west and founded a Los Angeles branch. In 1969, he began the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute in the same city.

While rarely stepping in front of the camera himself (he appeared in only seven different films, or eight counting The Godfather Trilogy compilation), his most famous role was surely that of Hyman Roth in The Godfather: Part II. Playing an elderly Jewish organized crime figure retired to Miami and overlord of criminal enterprise in Cuba, he encounters the wrath of Michael Corleone - played by Strasberg's former student Al Pacino. For this performance, Strasberg received an Academy Award nomination. His legacy remains strong today, as he was one of the patriarchs of "method acting."

He was married to his second wife, the actress and drama coach Paula Strasberg from 1934 until her death from cancer in 1966, and they were the parents of the now-deceased actress Susan Strasberg, and John Strasberg. Lee Strasberg eventually remarried, this time to his third wife, the former Anna Mizrahi, a Sephardic Jew who was born in Venezuela, and the mother of his 2 youngest children. She remained his wife until his death on February 17, 1982 in New York from a heart attack at the age of 80. She had strained relationships with her adult stepchildren, Susan and John Strasberg.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Strasberg
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:04 am
Rock Hudson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Rock Hudson (November 17, 1925 - October 2, 1985) was an American actor, famous for his rugged good looks. He was the first major American celebrity known to have died from AIDS (specifically, AIDS-related cancer of the lymph glands), and the announcement of his death from the disease at the age of 59 brought it wider public attention in the United States.

Hudson was born Roy Harold Scherer Jr. in Winnetka, Illinois. He served in the United States Navy during World War II as an airplane mechanic. His good looks and strapping size got him a Hollywood audition; capped teeth and a name change got him a small part in the 1948 film Fighter Squadron. In 1956 he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in Giant, and two years later, Look Magazine named him Star of the Year.

During the 1950s and 1960s, Hudson was known for three 'bedroom farces' co-starring Doris Day. The two made Pillow Talk, Lover Come Back and Send Me No Flowers together. After his death, fans would note the irony in the fact that in both Pillow Talk and Lover Come Back Hudson played a straight man that would pretend to be girl-shy or even gay in order to get a woman into bed; and in Send Me No Flowers, he played a middle-aged husband who believed he had a medical condition with only a few months to live.

Many consider the finest performance of his career to be that as the young Malibu painter Tony Wilson into whom the elderly New York City banker Arthur Hamilton is transformed in John Frankenheimer's 1966 science fiction film Seconds. From 1971 to 1978, Hudson starred opposite Susan Saint James, with whom he did not get along, in the popular American television series McMillan and Wife that aired on NBC.

Hudson married studio employee Phyllis Gates in 1955, and the news was made known by all the major gossip magazines. The couple divorced in 1958. It is thought the studio used this sham marriage in order to cover Hudson's homosexuality, which at the time would have been a liability at the box office if it were made known. Hudson remained in the closet until his sexual orientation became known in the early 1980s, just shortly before his death. Gates insists that for her the marriage was real.

Following Hudson's death, his live-in lover Marc Christian filed a palimony lawsuit against his estate and won.

Hudson has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6104 Hollywood Boulevard.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_Hudson

Pillow Talk

Pillow talk, pillow talk
Another night of hearin' myself talk, talk, talk, talk
Wonder how it would be to have someone to pillow talk with me
I wonder how
I wonder who

Pillow talk, pillow talk
Another night of bein' alone with pillow talk
When it's all said and done, two heads together can be better than one
That's what they say
They always say

All I do is talk to my pillow
Talk to my pillow, talk to my pillow
All I do is talk to my pillow
Talk about the boy I'm gonna marry someday
Somehow, some way, sometime

Pillow talk, pillow talk
Another night of gettin' my fill of pillow talk
You and I both agree there must be a boy, must be a pillow
Must be a pillow-talkin' boy for me
I hope I'm right
I'd better be right

Oh, there must be a pillow-talkin' boy for me
(We hope she's right, she'd better be right,
there must be a boy)
There must be a boy
There must be a boy
There must be a boy
There MUST be a boy!!
There MUST!!
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:15 am
Gordon Lightfoot
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Gordon Meredith Lightfoot, CC, O.Ont (born November 17, 1938) is a Canadian folk singer, composer, lyricist and poet.

Life

Lightfoot was born November 17, 1938 to Gordon Meredith Lightfoot Sr. and Jessica Lightfoot in Orillia, Ontario, Canada. He moved to Los Angeles, California during the 1950s where he studied at Hollywood's Westlake College of Music. He returned to Canada by the 1960s and performed in coffee houses on the Toronto folk scene. In 1966, his debut album Lightfoot! was released. In the mid-1960s he was more known as a songwriter than for his own work, as his songs were recorded by artists such as Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley.

In 1971, on a bus bound for Calgary, Gordon met a lonely teenage girl named Grace on her way home from Toronto, and in 1972, the song "Alberta Bound" found its debut on the Don Quixote album.

He is one of the first Canadian popular singers who achieved real stardom in his own country instead of moving to the United States. In 1972 his song "If You Could Read My Mind" became a top ten hit. The song was originally featured on his 1970 album "Sit Down Young Stranger" which had not been selling that well. After the success of the song, the album on which it was originally featured was re-released under the new title "If You Could Read My Mind" to capitalize on the success of the song. In 1974, his classic single, "Sundown", went to No.1 on the American charts. Nearly two years later, Lightfoot had an unexpected hit with a song with the unlikeliest of subject matter. In late November, 1975, Lightfoot read a Newsweek magazine article about the Great Lakes ore carrier SS Edmund Fitzgerald sinking during a severe storm. Tragically, all of her 29 crew members were killed. His song, "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald", most of the lyrics of which were taken from the article, reached #2 on the U.S. Billboard charts. Both songs continue to receive heavy airplay on many classic rock stations.

In the fall of 2002, Lightfoot suffered a near-fatal abdominal hemorrhage, which caused him to go into a comatose state for a short period of time. He later returned to the music business with the album Harmony and an appearance on Canadian Idol.

Lightfoot has received 15 Juno Awards and been nominated for 5 Grammy Awards. He was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 1986, the Canadian Country Music Hall Of Fame in 2001, and in May 2003 was made a Companion of the Order of Canada, the country's highest honor. Lightfoot is also a member of the Order of Ontario, the highest honor in the province of Ontario.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Lightfoot

If You Could Read My Mind Lyrics

If You Could Read My Mind
Gordon Lightfoot

If you could read my mind love,
what a tale my thoughts could tell.
Just like an old time movie
about a ghost from a wishing well.
In a castle dark or a fortress strong
with chains upon my feet.
You know that ghost is me
and I will never be set free
as long as I'm a ghost that you can see.


If I could read your mind love,
what a tale your thoughts could tell.
Just like a paperback novel,
the kind the drugstore sells.
When you reach the part where the heartaches
come the hero would be me.
Heroes often fail.
And you won't read that book again
because the endings just to hard to take.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:19 am
Martin Scorsese
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Martin Scorsese (pronounced as Scor-SEH-see) (born November 17, 1942 in Queens, New York, USA) is a multi-Oscar nominated Italian American film director, of Sicilian descent.

A highly admired if at times controversial director amongst film scholars, Scorsese often approaches difficult subject matters in realms of inner city turmoils, violence and sex. Although he has received much critical acclaim and is one of the most recognizable names in the film industry, he has never won an Academy Award.

Scorsese originally planned to become a priest, and many of his movies bear the stamp of a Roman Catholic upbringing. He was bitten by the movie bug at a young age, and has admitted to being "obsessed" with movies, an obsession apparent in the 1995 documentary film A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies. A sickly child, he spent a lot of time recovering at home, watching the goings-on in the streets from his upstairs bedroom window. A great deal of his childhood was spent in movie theaters, and he resolved to become a filmmaker when he grew older.


Career


1960s and 1970s

Martin Scorsese came from a working class family; his father Luciano Charles Scorsese (1912-1993) was a pants presser in New York's garment district. He struggled to earn enough money to attend university, but has shown enormous gratitude to his parents for helping him realize his dreams. His parents were the subject of Scorsese's documentary Italianamerican and made numerous cameo appearances in his films before their deaths. For years, his mother worked as the official caterer for all of Scorsese's films and his father helped in the wardrobe department. Scorsese said of his father's work in Goodfellas that no one was able to press a collar as well as he could. Scorsese is often seen wearing impeccably tailored Armani suits, a taste probably stemming from his father's intricate knowledge of the elements of fine men's clothing.

Scorsese attended New York University's film school (B.A., English, 1964; M.A., film, 1966) making short films including a famous short entitled The Big Shave. He made his first feature-length film, Who's That Knocking At My Door? with fellow student Harvey Keitel, and from there he became a friend and acquaintance of the so-called "movie brats" of the 1970s: Francis Ford Coppola, Brian De Palma, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg. It was De Palma who introduced Robert De Niro to Scorsese, and the two figures have become close friends, working together in many projects. Scorsese during this period also worked as one of the editors of the movie Woodstock.

In 1972 Scorsese directed Boxcar Bertha for famed B-movie producer Roger Corman, who had also helped directors like Francis Ford Coppola, James Cameron and John Sayles to launch their careers. Bertha taught Scorsese how to make films cheaply and quickly, preparing him for his first film with De Niro, Mean Streets. Championed by influential movie critic Pauline Kael, Mean Streets was a breakthrough for Scorsese and De Niro. Actress Ellen Burstyn chose Scorsese to direct her in the 1974 movie Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, for which she won an Oscar for Best Actress.

Returning to Little Italy in New York City to explore his ethnic roots, Scorsese came up with a rich documentary featuring his parents Charles and Catherine Scorsese, both of whom made cameo appearances in most of his movies, but are now deceased. The documentary was entitled Italianamerican.


Two years later, in 1976, Scorsese stunned the cinema world with Taxi Driver. The film featured brilliant performances from Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster, in one of the most violent and grim depictions of life in New York City committed to film. It also marked the start of a series of collaborations with Paul Schrader. Five years after the film was released, in 1981, President Ronald Reagan was nearly assassinated by a young man who blamed his obsession with Foster's character for his act. Taxi Driver won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival and also received four Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, although it earned none. One of the things that made the film unique is Scorsese's use of point of view shots, which have become a trademark of many Scorsese films.

The critical success of Taxi Driver encouraged Scorsese to move ahead with his first big-budget project: New York, New York. This musical tribute to Scorsese's home town was a box-office failure (it was released at the same time as Star Wars), and the disappointing reception drove Scorsese into depression. By this stage Scorsese had also developed a serious heroin addiction. However, Scorsese did find the creative drive to make what is arguably the finest film about rock and roll, The Last Waltz (1978), a beautifully photographed documentary of the final concert by The Band. Another Scorsese-directed documentary entitled American Boy also appeared in 1978. A period of wild partying followed, damaging Scorsese's fragile health.

1980s

Convinced that he would never make another movie, he poured his energies into the making of Raging Bull, which he thought would be his final project. Raging Bull (released in 1980) is widely viewed as a masterpiece and was voted the greatest film of the 1980s by Britain's prestigious Sight and Sound magazine. The film received eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actor for Robert De Niro, and Scorsese's first for Best Director. De Niro won but Scorsese lost to first-time director Robert Redford. It kept Scorsese in the world of the movies, though without a box office smash he had to struggle to continue to make films.

The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) is based on the 1951 book written by Nikos Kazantzakis, a book that Barbara Hershey gave to Scorsese when they were both attending New York University in the late 1960s. Originally, it was slated to shoot under the Paramount Studios banner in 1983 (after Scorsese had finished The King of Comedy). Mere days before principal photography was to commence, Paramount pulled the plug on the project, citing pressure from religious groups. Scorsese would quietly, reluctantly, retire the project. (It's worth noting that, in this aborted 1983 version, Aidan Quinn was cast as Jesus, Sting was cast as Pontius Pilate.)

After the collapse of this project Scorsese again saw his career at a critical point, as he described in the recent documentary Filming for Your Life: Making 'After Hours' (2004). He saw that in the increasigly commercial world of 1980s Hollywood the highly stylized and personal 1970s films he and others had built their careers on would not continue to enjoy the same status, and decided on an almost totally new approach to his work. With After Hours (1985) he made an aesthetic shift back to to a pared-down, almost "underground" filmmaking style-- his way of staying viable. Filmed on an extremely low budget on location and at night in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan, the film is a black comedy about one increasingly misfortunate night for a mild New York word processor (Griffin Dunne) and featured cameos by such disparate actors as Terri Garr and Cheech and Chong. A bit of a stylistic anomaly for Scorsese, After Hours fits in well with popular low-budget "cult" films of the 1980s, by lesser-known directors, e.g. Something Wild or Repo Man.

Along with the iconic 1987 Michael Jackson music video Bad, Scorsese made three "minor" movies during the early-to-mid 1980s: The King of Comedy (1983), After Hours (1985), and The Color of Money (1986). The latter of the three starred Paul Newman and Tom Cruise, and it won Newman an Oscar, as well as giving Scorsese the clout to secure backing for a project that had been a longtime goal for him: The Last Temptation of Christ.

Scorsese filmed The Last Temptation of Christ on a low budget in 1987, knowing that the film would be controversial and would not take in record box-office revenues. However, he did not (or simply could not) anticipate the furor and controversy his movie would spark when it was released a year later. Nationwide protests against the film made it a textbook case (none of them had actually seen the film) for the modern method of religious outrage and influence. The movie did have a number of staunch supporters, particularly among film critics, including Scorsese's friend Roger Ebert. Scorsese also received his second nomination for Best Director, although the award would go to Barry Levinson. The backing of the movie by important political figures kept Scorsese from becoming an outcast in Hollywood, and it gave him the impetus to film Goodfellas.

1990 to present

With Goodfellas, Scorsese returned to his native New York and reunited with Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci (whom he had previously directed in Raging Bull). This motion picture of life as a gangster has been called the greatest "Mob movie" since The Godfather, and it secured Scorsese a place among the greatest motion picture directors of all time. He earned his third (and, some would argue, most deserving) Best Director nomination but again lost to a first-time director, Kevin Costner.

Scorsese went on to direct a remake of the 1962 thriller Cape Fear, which proved to Hollywood that he could make a box-office hit. However, Scorsese's projects have continued to cast him as a figure who can make critically acclaimed pictures (The Age of Innocence, Kundun) that only turn in modest box-office revenues. He continued to be intimately involved in filmmaking through the 1990s, making cameo appearances in movies like Quiz Show and Search and Destroy and working to help up-and-coming filmmakers (Mad Dog and Glory, Clockers). He re-visited the world of Taxi Driver in 1999 with Bringing Out The Dead, while critics said that his 1995 movie Casino looked and felt like a re-hash of Goodfellas.

In 1990, Martin Scorsese acted in a cameo role as Vincent Van Gogh in the film Dreams by legendary Japanese director Akira Kurosawa. In 1999 he produced a documentary on Italian filmakers entitled Il Mio Viaggio in Italia (my trip into Italy). The documentary was produced by Giuliana Del Punta and Bruno Restuccia. Editing and printing has been made in Cinecitta Studios (Rome), color timer was Paolo Verrucci.

Scorsese's 2002 production of Gangs of New York was seen as his biggest and most risk-taking venture to date. Originally filmed for a release in the winter of 2001 (to qualify for Academy Award nominations), Scorsese delayed the final production of the film until after the beginning of 2002; the studio consequently delayed the film for nearly a year until its release in the Oscar season of late 2002. With a production budget said to be in excess of $100 million, this was Scorsese's most expensive work. Critical reaction to the film was moderately positive (movie critics familiar with Scorsese's work felt it was flawed), and while the movie wasn't a smashing box-office blockbuster, it wasn't a dismal failure in theatrical revenue. In February of 2003, Gangs of New York received ten Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis. This being his fourth Best Director nomination, many thought it was finally his year to win, but the award went instead to the "overseas-based" Roman Polanski.

Scorsese's latest film The Aviator, is a biopic of director, producer, legendary eccentric, multi-millionaire and aviation pioneer Howard Hughes. It was released in December 2004 and met mostly with critical acclaim. The film was nominated for six Golden Globe awards, including Best Picture - Drama, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Actor - Drama for Leonardo DiCaprio. It won three, including Best Picture - Drama. In January of 2005, The Aviator became the most-nominated film of the 77th Academy Award nominations, nominated in 11 categories including Best Picture. The film has also garnered nominations in nearly all of the other major categories, including Best Picture, a fifth Best Director nomination for Scorsese, Best Actor (Leonardo DiCaprio), Best Supporting Actress (Cate Blanchett), and a surprise nod for Alan Alda for Best Supporting Actor. Despite having a leading tally, the film ended up with only five Oscars: Best Supporting Actress, Art Direction, Costume Design, Film Editing and Cinematography. Scorsese lost out (again), this time to director Clint Eastwood for Million Dollar Baby (which also won Best Picture).

Scorsese is currently in pre-production of an action thriller set in Boston, Massachusetts, based upon Infernal Affairs, a trio of Hong Kong action pictures centered upon battles between the Asian police and the gangs in the area. The film is tentatively entitled The Departed. The film will once again unite Scorsese with Leonardo DiCaprio, an actor he has now been working with for three consecutive films. 'The Departed' will also bring Scorsese together with Jack Nicholson, with whom he has never worked before.

Scorsese is president of the Film Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to film preservation and decaying motion picture film stock.

At a ceremony in Paris, France on January 5, 2005, Martin Scorsese was awarded the French Legion of Honor in recognition of his contribution to cinema.


Oscar-less Director

Scorsese, widely recognized as one of the greatest motion picture directors of all time, and by many as the greatest living American director, has never won an Oscar for his direction despite being nominated five times. Some regard his failure to receive the award as a compliment since it places him in the company of such fellow Oscar-less directors as Alfred Hitchcock (5 nominations), Robert Altman (5), Stanley Kubrick (4), Federico Fellini (4), and Ingmar Bergman (3), all of whom are also considered masters of cinema. Hitchcock and Bergman were both awarded the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, Fellini received an honorary award from The Academy in 1993, and Kubrick won the Oscar for best visual effects in 1969 for 2001: A Space Odyssey, though none of the four ever garnered the award for best director. Scorsese himself has said that he thinks he will never win an Oscar for best director in his lifetime. In 2005, The Aviator, his biopic about the early life of Howard Hughes, was nominated for several Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director, and was an early favorite to win. He ended up losing to Clint Eastwood and his film Million Dollar Baby.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Scorsese
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:24 am
Danny DeVito
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Danny DeVito (born November 17, 1944) is an American actor, director and producer known for being very short (he is 4' 10").

Born Daniel Michael DeVito in Neptune, New Jersey to Italian American Catholic parents, DeVito became famous in the United States for his portrayal of "Louie De Palma" on the popular ABC and NBC TV series, Taxi (1978-1983). Because this sitcom was not widely distributed abroad, he is known primarily for his movie work in most other countries.

He married actress Rhea Perlman on January 28, 1982. The couple met while both were working on Taxi. They have three children, Lucy Chet DeVito (born March 1983), Grace Fan DeVito (born March 1985) and Jake Daniel DeVito (born October 1987). He is reportedly 5' tall.

He co-starred with Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner in the highly successful 1984 action adventure film, Romancing the Stone and reprised his role with them in the 1985 sequel, The Jewel of the Nile. In 1987, DeVito directed and starred with Billy Crystal in Throw Momma from the Train, then two years later reunited with Douglas and Turner to direct and star with them in the dark comedy, The War of the Roses. In 1992, he portrayed the villain The Penguin in Tim Burton's sequel to the highly successful Batman in Batman Returns.

DeVito has voiced the animated character Herb Powell on two episodes of The Simpsons.

Although he came to be thought of as a predictable light-comedy actor, DeVito fought against this, bringing highly respected performances in such movies as Hoffa (1992) which he directed and co-starred in alongside old neighborhood friend Jack Nicholson as the title character, L.A. Confidential as a nosy reporter (1997), The Big Kahuna as a compassionate salesman (1999) and Heist (2001), a gangster nemesis to Gene Hackman, who undergoes one of the crime genre's best death scenes.

In 1999, Devito produced and co-starred in Man On The Moon, a movie about the unusual life of his former Taxi co-star, Andy Kaufman.

In addition to acting, DeVito has become a major film and television producer. Through his production company, Jersey Films, he has produced many movies, including Gattaca, Get Shorty, Erin Brockovich, and Garden State.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_DeVito
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:27 am
The Ukraine girls really knock me out
They leave the West behind
And Moscow girls make me scream and shout
And Georgia's always on my
Mamamamama mind.....
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:32 am
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio

(born November 17, 1958 in Lombard, Illinois) is an American actress of Italian descent.

Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio made her screen debut in Martin Scorsese's The King of Comedy and followed that with the role of Al Pacino's sister in Scarface. Scorsese later cast her to star opposite Tom Cruise and Paul Newman in The Color of Money, which earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress in 1986.

Mastrantonio starred in Martha Coolidge's Three Wishes, with Al Pacino in the biographical drama Two Bits, as well as in the upcoming The World of Moss.

She previously starred as Maid Marion opposite Kevin Costner in the hit Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, in Alan J. Pakula's Consenting Adults and with Gene Hackman in the courtroom drama Class Action. She also starred in the suspense drama White Sands, in James Cameron's thriller The Abyss and both Fools of Fortune and The January Man, directed by husband Pat O'Connor.

On stage, Mastrantonio appeared at Lincoln Center in Northeast Local with Anthony LaPaglia. She has also starred in the Broadway productions The Human Comedy and The Marriage of Figaro, as well as in off-Broadway stagings of Sunday in the Park with George and David Hare's The Knife at the Public Theatre. She has also performed in Shakespeare in the Park productions of Henry V, Measure for Measure and Twelfth Night.

Mastrantonio made her Broadway debut as an understudy in the revival of West Side Story and went on to appear with Frank Langella in the Broadway production of Amadeus. She began her performing career as a singer at Nashville's Opryland theme park after studying voice at the University of Illinois.

She and O'Connor currently live in London with their two children.

http://www.filmbug.com/db/4394
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 08:52 am
Well, my goodness, folks. Here's our Bob and his bios and in between a Brit. Razz

Several folks that are interesting there in that background information. After the breaking of the fast, I shall be back.

Overcast day here, listeners.

UhOh, Walter:


Robert Hoyzer, 26, and another referee, Dominik Marks, 30, were found guilty of having rigged games in return for payment from Ante Sapina, the Croatian ringleader of a two million euro ($2.34 million) betting fraud.
In the biggest match-fixing scandal to hit Germany in more than 30 years, Marks received a suspended sentence of one year and six months.
"It wasn't a youthful misdemeanour but a serious crime...He violated his important duty of neutrality," presiding judge Gerti Kramer said. Prosecutors had asked for a two-year suspended sentence for Hoyzer who admitted his guilt in court.
Sapina, 29, an obsessive gambler who placed huge sums on the referees' matches, was jailed for two years and 11 months.
His older brothers Filip, 38, and bar-owner Milan, 40, were given suspended sentences for aiding Ante's criminal operation. Filip was given one year, and Milan one year and four months.
Dressed in a suit, Hoyzer appeared stunned by the verdict and left court without speaking to reporters. Ante Sapina repeatedly shook his head during the 45-minute court session.
Lawyers for both men said they would appeal. They remain at liberty until the appeals are decided.
The scandal, uncovered at the start of this year, has tarnished the reputation of German soccer as the country prepares to host the 2006 World Cup, the game's showcase event.
0 Replies
 
yitwail
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 10:54 am
another nice song from celeb Gordon Lightfoot:

In the early mornin' rain
With a dollar in my hand
And an aching in my heart
And my -pockets full of sand
I'm a long ways from home
And I missed my loved one so
In the early mornin' rain
With no place to go

Out on runway number nine
Big 707 set to go
Well I'm out here on the grass
Where the pavement never grows
Where the liquor tasted good
And the women all were fast
There she goes my friend
She's rolling out at last

Hear the mighty engines roar
See the silver wing on high
She's away and westward bound
For above the clouds she flies
Where the mornin' rain don't fall
And the sun always shines
She'll be flying over my home
In about three hours time

This ol' airport's got me down
It's no earthly good to me
'Cause I'm stuck here on the ground
Cold and drunk as I might be
Can't jump a jet plane
Like you can a freight train
So I best be on my way
In the early mornin' rain
So I best be on my way
In the early mornin' rain
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 10:55 am
McTag, I don't geddit, Manchester, but I'm certain there are folks out there who do.

Well, listeners, if we're going to be silly, I'm all for it.

For Bob's Danny DeVito bio:








Song Parodies -> Little Danny DeVito
"In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" Based on the performance by Iron Butterfly

"Little Danny DeVito" Parody by Claude Prez
Little Danny DeVito baby
Don't you know I'm above you
Little Danny Devito puny
Don't you know that a hobbit is too

Oh won't you sign this please
I am a big fan
I just loved "Get Shorty"
But not "Ren. Man"
Please not "Ren. Man"

Little Danny DeVito baby
You're so cute I could hug you
Little Danny DeVito poopsie
Think Papa Smurf and some makeup blue

Oh won't you sign this please
It is a contract
You'll play a short bald sleaze
You won't have to act
Please call me back

Actually, listeners. I really think Danny is a great actor. The last thing that I saw him in was LA Confidential.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 11:02 am
Hey, Mr. Turtle. I know that most of our listeners have heard Gordon Lightfoot, and the lyrics to that song are haunting, but I can't recall the melody.

Back to the archives?

I guess so folks.

Incidentally, I hope I don't get into trouble with the short people out there. Razz
0 Replies
 
yitwail
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Nov, 2005 11:05 am
Flew in from Miami Beach BOAC
Didn't get to bed last night
On the way the paper bag was on my knee
Man I had a dreadful flight

I'm back in the USSR
You don't know how lucky you are boy
Back in the USSR


Smile
0 Replies
 
 

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