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To: Uncle Frank who wrote (2004)9/9/2008 2:03:27 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 17983
 
Did they have home video back then?

The rich had 16mm silent film in the 20's and 30's. I remember seeing this Ken Murrey special on TV back in the 60's. I recall that I liked it.

lindybill@oldfart.com



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (2004)9/15/2008 11:47:41 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 17983
 
Women professionals on 'Dancing' make their celebrity partners shine
By Rick Bentley / The Fresno Bee

LOS ANGELES -- It has been said of dancing icon Fred Astaire's partner Ginger Rogers she had to do everything Astaire did while going backward and in high heels. In other words, men may lead in dancing, but it is the women who make the pairs win.

Need proof? Four of the six "Dancing With the Stars" celebrity winners have been men.

The seventh season starts at 8 p.m. next Monday. Female professional dancers Kym Johnson, Edyta Sliwinska and Karina Smirnoff will be under pressure to make their male partners look good. This year they will be paired with gridder Warren Sapp, comedian Jeff Ross and chef Rocco DiSpirito, respectively.

Johnson, 31, was a professional ballroom dancer in Australia. She's also worked as a model. Sliwinska, 27, was born in Poland and is the only professional dancer to be in all seven seasons of "Dancing With the Stars." Five-time U.S. National Champion Karina Smirnoff, 30, was born in the Ukraine.

Just before rehearsals started in July, Sliwinska, Smirnoff and Johnson took time to talk about the show, the celebrities and how the world of dance and the lives of the dancers have been affected by the ABC competition series.

Question: Four of the six winners have been athletes. Is there something about athletes that gives them an advantage?

Kym Johnson: Of course. An athlete is one of the best celebrities you could get. Because you know instantly they have the discipline and focus. They are agile and athletic. You know you have something to work with when you get an athlete.

Edyta Sliwinska: First, athletes are very fit. Then they are coachable. They know how to take directions. And that is extremely important. They also have a great work ethic. They know how to be on a dance floor for five hours. That's natural to them.

Karina Smirnoff: If you are athletic, you are more coordinated.

Q: Is it harder for a female to make a male celebrity look good than it is for your male counterparts?

KJ: You know in ballroom dancing the male is meant to lead. So, in that respect it is easier for the male professionals because they can lead their celebrities around. With the girls we have to try to make it look like the male celebrities are really leading us around.

Q: Do you get a say in who you get to have as a partner?

ES: We only find out the day before. You just hope you are with someone you feel comfortable with.

KJ: No. Not at all. I remember when I first came over here. On the whole flight from Australia I was trying to guess who I would get. I never guessed it would be Jerry Springer. They keep the list of the celebrities who will be on the show a real secret. So we never know.

Q: How much time do you get to spend with the celebrities?

KS: You don't get a lot of time to work with the celebrities. But you can tell as soon as your celebrity walks into the room whether they are going to be finding every step difficult or whether they are going to be on the ball with it.

Then when you start dancing you know how well they will do.

KJ: We meet the celebrity and start rehearsing straight away. It is kind of strange. You are two strangers. You say "Hi. How you doing?" And it is like "your hips have to go here, your hands have to be here." You do get to know each other very quickly.

We have four weeks rehearsal before the show starts to get them used to the forms of ballroom dancing. Once you start, you have no days off.

Q: Have you ever met anyone you could not teach to dance?

KJ: Some people find it a little more difficult than others. That's definitely true. Joey Fatone picked it up quicker than Jerry Springer. Jerry had never done much physical exercise before. So for him to dance was quite a big thing.

But if you can walk you can dance.

ES: I believe that anyone can dance. I think it is in our genes. With a little bit of patience and a lot of work, anyone can dance. With Jason Taylor last year I had to tell him to "just do it." He was blocked. He was not comfortable at all. He said he had never danced before. So I showed him the simplest movement and we would dance and dance and dance.

Q: Is there one dance you should start with if you want to learn ballroom dancing?

KS: It should be American rhythm because it does not have as much technique as international style. It allows you to be on soft knees. With international you have to have straight legs. So you get a little stiffer with international.

Mambo, cha-cha are good dances to start with.

Q: How has "Dancing With the Stars" changed the public's view of dancing and your life?

KJ: All of us have danced pretty much our entire lives. So it is nice to be recognized for what we do. "Dancing With the Stars" has changed ballroom dancing because a lot of people thought it was something your grandparents did. But seeing all these macho men and sexy girls dancing has kind of made it popular for younger people.

ES: People recognize us and that is different. But that is not my motivation. The way I look at it is that I am doing the same thing. I am doing what I love, and I enjoy it as much that I can.

I think nowadays people don't know how to dance with a partner. You go to a club and hop from one leg to another. Ballroom dancing is actually a man and a woman dancing together. I think people forgot how great that is.
*******************************************************



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (2004)9/16/2008 12:09:57 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 17983
 
Best way now for Taylor to make a buck these days.

Taylor continues 'Grease' role in national rollout
IDOL BLOG

Taylor must have enjoyed his Broadway run as Teen Angel in Grease, for he will reprise the role on the musical's national tour, beginning Dec. 2 in Providence. It runs through May 30.

Says Taylor in the press release, "I had such a great experience on Broadway for the last three months," says Hicks. "This is such a great opportunity to visit old fans and new fans across the country while bringing them a great Broadway show!"

blogs.usatoday.com



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (2004)9/17/2008 4:25:06 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17983
 
Getting Dance fever
Deanna Barnert

Julianne Hough and her brother Derek are heading back to Dancing with the Stars, while singing to become stars in their own right and SheKnows has them!

Cody Lindley is Julianne's partner for this year's Dancing With the new season of Dancing with the Stars set to kick off September 22, Julianne and Derek Hough and their pal Mark Ballas are already back on the dance floor, but they're are also tackling their music careers.

"We've always done the music and dancing together, but the dancing came first," Derek Hough tells SheKnows. "Mark, Julianne and I had a little group when we were younger, for a short time, and even then, we wanted to write and play our own music."

These days, he and Mark are making major headway with their band Almost Amy, while little sis Julianne's taking the country world by storm.

Let the competition begin!
While the Hough siblings admit to being competitive, Derek claims he doesn't come close to his little sister. Evidence of that is on Dancing with the Stars. She's hoisted the trophy twice.

"She gets competitive with me and she'll admit that," Derek laughs. "When I was on the TV show and she went with Helio, she said, 'Yeah, I'm with Helio, but I beat my brother, so I'm excited!' I'm three years older and when we competed before, I would always be ahead, with her right there behind. She's just excelled so much ever since the show."

He says this last bit with great pride, so we wonder how he feels about the fact that he hasn't taken home a trophy yet, unlike his sister and bandmate Mark.

"If this was a real competition, I would be upset," Derek admits. "But this show is a different thing. It's based on fan-base, likability and so much more. If someone doesn’t like your celebrity, there's nothing to about it. It is entertainment, so the most important thing for me is that the celebrity has the best time of their lives, even if they get kicked out the second week. That's my goal."

And though Julianne's ready to beat her brother again this year, she would have to agree. She won't even pick a fave from her past dance partners.

"They were all so different and I've had such a good time and experience with every single one of them," she demures. "Apollo was my first, so obviously there's a special– wow, that came out wrong! But you get what I mean, right? Helio was a little handful, but he was great. We were the best of friends. And then Adam was just fun, and there was no pressure. We knew we weren't going to win, so we were like, 'Let's just entertain. Let's get a unicycle.'"

The winning duo on their big night

As many fans knows, the dancers have zero say about who they'll dance with each year. Word is the pairings from above factors in personality, height and look and this season, Derek is paired with hottie mom Brooke Burke, Jullianne with the shows' youngest contestant ever, Disney's Cody Linley, while and Mark will be twirling bootylicious Kim Kardashian.

That's quite a diverse group for these pros to train, so we wondered what makes a good Dance student.

"They have to have the drive," Derek insists. "If they want to work and train hard, then it's a lot easier."

Of course, sometimes, there are physical hurtles and challenges, like being the oldest, the least in shape, deaf… or to be more timely, being a mother of four, the youngest or the most bootylicious!

"I found it hard to teach someone taller than me," Derek recalls. "Shannon (Elizabeth) had a great work ethic, but some things looked better on Jenny (Garth) just because she's shorter. It sounds silly, but you have to be exceptional dancer to pull off that body type."

Above all this, however, Derek's biggest note for new dancers is to leave all reservations and fears at the door.

"Sometimes, they don't think they can do it, but they have to be open-minded," he explains. "A saying I like is: 'The mind is like a parachute: It works better if it's opened.'"

Country crooner
While Julianne is back in the dance studio with young Cody, she's also wowing the country world with her self-titled debut album and touring with the likes of Brad Paisley!

She's a little bit country"I would be skeptical of myself if I wasn't me," Julianne admits with a laugh. "I'm serious: 'What's this dancer chick doing trying to come over to our format?'"

But like her big brother, she's been doing it all since for quite some time. "I started singing, acting, and dancing when I was three years old in Utah," she reveals. "I was in a family band and did little plays. And then I had the opportunity, when I was 10, to move to London to go to a performing arts school and focus on the dance."

That's where she and Derek honed their skills in ballroom and Latin (from Marc's father, Corky, who actually joins the show this year!), but nothing could replace the country beat in Julianne's heart.

"I've always wanted to sing country," she maintains. "In the family band, we did all country songs and I grew up listening to Dolly Parton and Reba. I love Reba (McEntire), Shania (Twain) and Faith Hill, of course. She's such a beautiful woman and she has her career, but she also has a family and her kids. Growing up, what turned me on to country music was just the fact that it's so real and normal. You can have the family and the life."

In fact, Julianne's commitment to country almost forced the struggling artist to turn down her big break when her now-manager, Irving Azoff, first spotted her.

"I was a background company dancer on the 'Dancing with the Stars' live tour and I couldn't pay my rent anymore, so it was a good gig for me," she recalls. "Irving saw me and said, 'I wonder if that girl sings?' I said, 'I do. This is my lucky day!' After I sang for him in one of the rooms at one of the venues, I said, 'Just so you know, I only want to sing country.' He was like, 'Really? You could sing pop, because you dance. It would be great.' I was like, 'Yeah. I don't think so.'"

When her album finally came out this May, it danced straight into the top five on the country charts. Good thing she didn't listen!

Derek's paired with Brooke Burke from Wild On!
Rocker boys
Meanwhile, Derek and Mark aren't naming names yet, but their band Almost Amy has just been signed to a label! With both guys work lead vocals and guitar and Mark noted as the composer, don't expect any country or any hip hop from these guys, who've been jamming together since childhood.

"We're very different," Derek says of his band and his sister. "Julianne is a solo artist, and Mark and I write our own material and play all the instruments. We went through every phase, but now our sound is more rock pop, with some crazy solos."

When Derek says "every phase," he means it! "We did the punk rock thing, the heavy metal thing and the goth thing, with the black hair, makeup and finger nails painted," Derek shares. "We'd show up at the dance competitions and scare everybody! Then we'd go into our dressing room and get on our costumes and our dancing faces."

Their real world style didn't slow down their dance floor wins, but as is often the case, the boys grew up a bit and started to dabble in more mature sounds.

"It's funny to see the evolution from punk rock to heavy metal to death metal...then funnily enough, to jazz!" Derek recounts. "We played a lot of jazz and John Mayer-style stuff with acoustic guitar. Then, just this summer, our music has evolved from that style to a very commercial rock/pop sound. It's going to be a fun album!"

We'll have to wait and see on that one, but get ready to start judging them when "Dancing with the Stars" three-day premier kicks off Monday, September 22 at 8 p.m. on ABC.



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (2004)9/21/2008 11:21:20 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 17983
 
Maurice Greene & Cheryl Burke Talk to Hollywood 411

By Lynn on Hollywood 411

Here's a clip of Olympic champion Maurice Greene and his Dancing With the Stars pro partner, Cheryl Burke talking to Hollywod 411 about how they are preparing for the new season of the show. All I can say is that he should be pretty good at the Quickstep, since he's the fastest man in the world… ;-)
youtube.com



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (2004)9/22/2008 6:18:27 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 17983
 
AUTUMN LEAVES
Steyn\'s Song of the Week
Monday, 22 September 2008

Song of the Week #101
by Joseph Kosma, Jacques Prévert and Johnny Mercer

A truly great song for the season isn't about the calendar, or the weather. It's about the seasons of life and love. In spring a young man's fancy turns to… The things we did last summer I'll remember all winter long… Of course, if you're not a young man in love, spring fever may pass you by, and, if you're in late middle age, the summer may be no more likelier a prompter of romance than mid-November.

But there is one great seasonal signifier that almost everyone responds to. You don't have to be moonstruck or in love at all to feel a certain melancholy when autumn nips the air:

The falling leaves
Drift by the window
The Autumn Leaves
Of red and gold...
It's an image that reminds you of the brute remorselessness of time, even in my part of the world – northern New England – where the foliage blazes brightest, red and gold and orange, just before it falls and dies. Autumn leaves are a reminder of mortality, and decline, and loss:

Les feuilles mortes se ramassent à la pelle
Les souvenirs et les regrets aussi
Et le vent du nord les emporte
Dans la nuit froide de l'oubli...
Which means, more or less:

Dead leaves are collected by the shovelful
Memories and regrets, too
And the north wind carries them
Into the cold night of the forgotten…

Jacques Prévert wrote those words, in French, as a poem. Born in 1900, raised in Paris, he flirted in early life with surrealism, with the rue du Château group and Marcel Duchamp. But he was too talented to be confined to fads and fashions, and his best poetry stands on its own. Somewhere along the way, he ran into Joseph Kosma, a Hungarian émigré who'd washed up in France in 1933 as part of the great tide of European Jews trying to stay one step ahead of the Third Reich. Prévert introduced Kosma to Jean Renoir and the composer wound up scoring, among other pictures, La Grande Illusion and Les Règles du Jeu. Then came the war and the Nazi occupation, and Kosma found himself under house arrest and banned from composition. Nonetheless, Prévert discreetly arranged some movie work for his friend, with suitably non-Semitic composers fronting for the forbidden Jew. With the director Marcel Carné, Prévert and Kosma made the classic Les Enfants du Paradis.

So what next for the trio? Well, Prévert and Kosma had an opera, Le Rendez-vous, and they thought it might make rather a good movie for Carné. So did he, and by the time it went into production in 1945 Les Portes de la Nuit was being ballyhooed as the most expensive film ever made in France. Jean Gabin and Marlene Dietrich were signed to star, which meant they'd have been the ones to introduce "Les feuilles mortes". Alas, they and M Carné soon parted company, and it fell to Yves Montand to introduce Kosma and Prévert's greatest song to the world. The budget-busting film was a flop with French moviegoers in 1945, and so its finest moment took a few years to come to American ears.

Across the Atlantic, a fellow called Michael Goldsen was running Capitol Records' publishing division. He happened to love French songs, and he asked Serge Glickson, Capitol's rep in Paris, to keep him up to speed on what was popular with Gallic music lovers. "He sent me a pile of records this high," said Goldsen. "And I listened to them, and I heard one song, I think Edith Piaf had recorded, called 'Les feuilles mortes'. And I listened a minute, and I said, 'Oh, man, this is the greatest song I've ever heard.'"

Goldsen had his man in Paris track down the publisher, and they made a deal. Capitol would get the US rights to the song for $600. That seems a modest sum, but Goldsen still had to get authorization from the guy running the company, Jim Conkling. "If you think it's good," Conkling told him, "we'll give him the money." Aside from the 600 bucks, the French publisher also required Capitol to come up with an English lyric within four months.

No big deal. Mickey Goldsen took "Les feuilles mortes" to the president of Capitol Records – Johnny Mercer. "Johnny, I've got a killer song for you," said Goldsen. And Mercer agreed: it was a good song and he'd be happy to come up with some words en anglais. And next thing the publishing exec notices the four months are almost up, and there's still no lyric. "Hey, John," he said. "I've only got three weeks to go and I lose the song."

Goldsen couldn't see what the big deal was. "It wasn't a big song," he said. "To me, it sounded like you could write that in 20 minutes, you know?" Mercer might have pointed out to his colleague that it took him a year to put a lyric to Hoagy Carmichael's "Skylark". Instead, he told him he was going to New York on Friday and, if Goldsen would drive him to the station, he'd write the words on the train and mail 'em back to Los Angeles. Come the big morning, Goldsen got delayed en route and was running maybe ten minutes late. "So I drove up to his house, and I see him sitting on the steps of his house, and I walked up, and I said, 'Gee, John, I'm awfully sorry I'm late.'"

And Mercer looked up and replied, "Well, you know, I didn't know if something had happened, so while I was waiting, I wrote the lyric. Here it is." And he handed him an envelope, on the back of which were some scribbled words beginning:

The falling leaves
Drift by the window
The Autumn Leaves
Of red and gold
I see your lips
The summer kisses
The sunburned hands
I used to hold…

"As I'm driving, he read it to me," recalled Goldsen, "and tears came to my eyes. It was such a great lyric… Everything about that lyric was just so, so Mercerish."
True, but it was still very Prévertish. Mercer had softened the brute title of "The Dead Leaves" ("Les feuilles mortes") to more beguilingly autumnal ones, but he'd retained the central image and its attendant memories and regrets. He did, though, make one fairly major adjustment. In Prévert's original, the moldering leaves and the lost sunshine are all in the two verses:

Les feuilles mortes se ramassent à la pelle
Les souvenirs et les regrets aussi
Mais mon amour silencieux et fidèle
Sourit toujours et remercie la vie...
Or in English:

Dead leaves are collected by the shovelful
Memories and regrets, too
But my love, silent and faithful,
And the north wind carries them
Still smiles and is grateful to have lived...
Whereas the chorus – the part the English-speaking world knows today as "Autumn Leaves" – is much more general:

C'est une chanson
Qui nous ressemble
Toi, tu m'aimais
Et je t'aimais…
Which boils down to:

This is a song
That resembles us
You, you loved me
And I loved you…
In effect, Mercer took the idea of Prévert's verse and transferred it to the chorus. He made another change, too. The French chorus is heavily rhymed:

C'est une chanson
Qui nous ressemble…
Et nous vivions
Tous deux ensemble…

Chanson/vivions. Ressemble/ensemble. Mercer, by contrast, uses just two rhymes in the whole lyric: the leaves of "red and gold" are paired with the hands "I used to hold", and then in the song's release:

Since you went away the days grow long
And soon I'll hear old winter's song…

That first line is a nice conceit. The internalization of the landscape (as the literary critics say) is not always perfectly aligned: "The days grow short when you reach September" (as Maxwell Anderson and Kurt Weill observed), and they're shorter still in October. But not if you're lovesick, and they're dragging by.
Mercer knew the imagery was strong enough that it didn't need to be underpinned by a lot of rhymes, and the song concludes on an unrhymed word that underlines the season:

But I miss you most of all, my darling
When Autumn Leaves start to fall.
And that's it. Yet, before we get too autumnal and melancholy, it's worth recalling Ian Fleming's aside in his 1956 James Bond novel, Diamonds Are Forever. 007 is on assignment at a London hotel:

As Bond neared the end of the corridor he could hear a piano swinging a rather sad tune. At the door of 350 he knew the music came from behind it. He recognized the tune. It was 'Feuilles mortes'. He knocked.

That's quite a sharp musicological observation from Fleming. "Feuilles mortes" was still barely known in the English-speaking world in 1956, but already it was clear that instrumentally this "rather sad tune" was going to swing. A decade earlier, when Joseph Kosma set Jacques Prévert's words to music, he matched it to a tune of deceptive simplicity. The chord progression builds on the circle of fifths but in a highly original way. Yet, because it's assumed to be relatively "simple", it's one of the first jazz standards novice instrumentalists are encouraged to take a whack at – and, because it swings so effortlessly, it's very appealing as an up-tempo instrumental for musicians who couldn't care less about moony lovers and falling foliage. Dorothée Berryman, who plays the much put-upon wife in Denys Arcand's Oscar-winning Barbarian Invasions and its predecessor The Decline Of The American Empire, does a terrific crawl-tempo version of "Autumn Leaves" using both Prévert's French lyric and Mercer's English adaptation. It's intense, dramatic, beautifully poised, and so confident that, when she does it live, Miss Berryman comes to a complete halt and the crowd sits completely still waiting for her to resume: You could hear a pin drop, or an autumn leaf. After seeing her at the Montréal jazz festival, I found myself chit-chatting with one of her musicians, who said he enjoyed doing "Autumn Leaves" that way because everyone else did it up-tempo. He was thinking instrumentally.

Most Americans got to know "Autumn Leaves" a year before James Bond went padding down the corridor of the Trafalgar Palace in Diamonds Are Forever – the fall of 1955. That October, Roger Williams' version got to Number One and became one of the biggest-selling instrumental hits of all time, not bad for a fellow who only a couple of years earlier had been a lounge pianist at the Madison Hotel. One afternoon Dave Kapp of Kapp Records walked in, heard the background tinkling, and offered to sign the pianist on condition he change his name from Lou Weertz to "Roger Williams", the founder of Rhode Island, and thus, to Kapp's way of thinking, a name with broad appeal: Take a French surrealist poet, a Hungarian Jew, and a Nebraskan passing himself off as a New England settler, and you've got one coast-to-coast all-American hit. A year later, Autumn Leaves was the title of a Joan Crawford movie, and Nat "King" Cole's peerless ballad treatment over the titles established the template for most singers.

Most of us feel autumnal at some point in our lives, most of us know what it's like to sense in an October dusk a shiver in the breeze, a chill in the bones, and to connect it to something more than just the turn of the seasons. Today, "Les feuilles mortes" evokes among the French not only lost love but a broader loss, a nostalgia for France in the post-liberation years of the mid-Forties, a time when (in hindsight)…

…la vie était plus belle
Et le soleil plus brûlant qu'aujourd'hui.

Life was more beautiful, and the sun more brilliant than today. But, as Jacques Prévert acknowledged, the past is lost to us:

Mais la vie sépare ceux qui s'aiment
Tout doucement, sans faire de bruit
Et la mer efface sur le sable
Les pas des amants désunis.
Which translates to:

But life separates those who love
Very gently, without a sound
And the sea washes away on the sand
The footprints of lovers parted...
And love leaves no trace, except a dull ache on an October morn:

And I miss you most of all, my darling
When Autumn Leaves start to fall.

steynonline.com