sâmbătă, 6 martie 2010

Gifts, parties and celebs: L.A. readies for Oscars

************************************************** ************************************************** Gifts, parties and celebs: L.A. readies for Oscars ************************************************** LOS ANGELES – Hollywood is in full-on Oscar mode. The red carpet has been laid out in front of the Kodak Theatre, topped with a plastic sheet in case of rain. Traffic is snarled. Tourists are flocking to Hollywood & Highland to see a bit of the Academy Awards preparations and snap photos of themselves with giant Oscar statues. The theater itself buzzes with activity, as rehearsals continue from morning until night, with the occasional celebrity quietly stepping in to practice presenting the coveted golden guy. It's Oscar week, and Tinseltown is all aflutter. Here's the latest: ************************************************** GETTING CREATIVE: Dana Delany, Kathy Najimy, Ty Burrell and Rachael Leigh Cook were among the celebrities who recorded public service announcements for the Creative Coalition Friday at Haven 360, an Oscar-week suite comprising gifting, parties and support for the arts. Creative Coalition co-president Tim Daly is directing the public service announcements, which show stars singing the ABC's, as part of the organization's lobbying efforts to increase funding for arts education in public schools. The videos will be presented at the Creative Coalition's Arts Advocacy Day in Washington, D.C. next month, along with a companion book, "Art & Soul", that features portraits of actors and their handwritten messages about what art means to them, Daly said. "This is about keeping the arts in education", he said. "Kids learn their letters by singing. The arts make learning interesting and fun". Haven 360 guests were also treated to hand massages from Olay, gifted with 'Elle' jewelry and invited to peruse Backstage Creation's "celebrity retreat", where they could pick up a free $5,000 trip to Moorea, Botox and Juvederm treatments worth $900 from celebrity surgeon Dr. Frank Ryan, and luxury luggage from Dooney & Bourke. ************************************************** NOT YET READY FOR THEIR CLOSE-UP: Oscar hosts Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin ****** seemed relaxed as they stepped out together on the Kodak Theatre stage Thursday to run through their lines for the show. The two looked out into a sea of placards showing where the stars will sit on Sunday. They laughed with each other and goofed around with show workers. At one point, Baldwin appeared to give a piggyback ride to Oscar producer Adam Shankman. The two hosts chatted with the stand-ins and dancers and enthusiastically approached their rehearsal when suddenly Baldwin looked troubled after seeing himself on a big-screen monitor at the back of the room. "We look so pale", he said to Martin. "We're not in makeup", Martin said. "This is the way we actually look". "Well who wants to see that ?" Baldwin quipped. ************************************************** WOMEN IN FILM: From actresses and producers to sound engineers and film editors, female Oscar nominees celebrated their achievements Thursday at Women In Film's third annual pre-Oscar party. Held at a home in tony Bel Air, the intimate cocktail party honored women's contribution to the film industry and urged women on both sides of the camera to inspire the next generation of female filmmakers. Oscar-winning producer and host Cathy Schulman toasted the year's nominated women, but said "the fight remains a big fight for women in film". Only seven percent of the year's 250 top films were directed by women, she said. Still, the mood Thursday was festive, as on-camera nominees mingled with their behind-the-camera counterparts. Sound-editing nominee Gwendolyn Yates Whittle smiled as she talked about attending a flurry of Oscar events this weekend. Nominated "Precious" star Gabourey Sidibe chatted with Tracee Ellis Ross. Also celebrating were Nia Vardalos, nominated costume designer Monique Prudhomme, Angie Harmon, Viola Davis and Michelle Rodriguez. ************************************************** FANCY FOODS: The Academy Awards Governors Ball will be set in an art-deco nightclub drenched in bronze and purple, from the tablecloths and napkins to the custom-made outfits on the wait staff and orchestra. "It will be a very, very grand, elegant evening", says Cheryl Cecchetto, producer of the official Oscars after-party, held at Hollywood & Highland's grand ballroom. Chef Wolfgang Puck is preparing dinner for the ball's 4,600 guests, and he gave the press a preview Thursday of what's on the menu. There are bite-size Kobe beef burgers, topped with tomatoes and pickles so tiny that a chef used tweezers to artfully assemble each appetizer. Guests can also nibble on ahi tuna cones and Oscar-shaped smoked salmon finished with caviar before the main course: "A twist on the old classic chicken pot pie", Puck says. For dessert there will be chocolate Oscars of all sizes, along with various cakes and fancy pastries. It will take more than 300 chefs and 600 waiters to serve the post-show meal. "Preparations are going fantastic", Puck says. "We are ready". The custom-made outfits for the Governors Ball wait staff and all-female orchestra are new this year, designed by Jeffrey Kurland, governor of the academy's art directors' branch and an Oscar-nominated costume designer. Also new this year: A special engraving area where Oscar winners can have their names affixed to their just-won statuettes, which are marked only by a serial number when they're presented on stage. ************************************************** AN OSCAR EDUCATION: Oscar nominee Carey Mulligan ****** already knows what it's like to stand on the Kodak Theatre stage. The 25-year-old star of "An Education" came to the theater Thursday to practice presenting on the big show. Wearing a blond pixie haircut, a black blazer and slacks, Mulligan was surrounded by stand-ins posing as presenters and winners. She ran through her lines, passed out prop Oscars, then disappeared through one of the theater's back doors.

duminică, 28 februarie 2010

'Lockergate' ?: Producer apologizes for e-mails

************************************************** Lockergate ?: Producer apologizes for e-mails ************************************************** LOS ANGELES – The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is considering action against a producer of "The Hurt Locker" who sent multiple e-mails urging academy members to vote for his movie in the Oscar best-picture race and "not a $500 million film" — an obvious reference to close-competitor "Avatar". The e-mails by Nicolas Chartier, one of four nominated producers for "The Hurt Locker" and who put up the financing to make the front-running film, violated the academy's rule against sending mailings that "attempt to promote any film or achievement by casting a negative light on a competing film or achievement", according to academy spokeswoman Leslie Unger. The initial e-mail was sent Feb. 19 and obtained by The 'Associated Press'. Subsequent e-mails, posted by the 'Los Angeles Times', showed Chartier giving more specific instructions, asking Oscar voters to rank "The Hurt Locker" at No. 1 and "Avatar" at No. 10 on this year's preferential ballot for the newly expanded best-picture category. "Hurt Locker" distributor 'Summit Pictures' said in a statement it was "completely unaware of any e-mails that were sent until we were alerted by the academy earlier this week". Chartier, after being confronted by 'Summit' executives, worked with the studio and the academy to craft an apology for his actions, said 'Summit' spokesman Paul Pflug. "My naivete, ignorance of the rules and plain stupidity as a first-time nominee is not an excuse for this behavior and I strongly regret it", Chartier wrote in an e-mail obtained by The 'Associated Press'. "Being nominated for an academy Award is the ultimate honor and I should have taken the time to read the rules". "Avatar's" distributor, '20th Century Fox', declined comment on the e-mails, as did director James Cameron or anyone connected with the 3-D sci-fi sensation — Hollywood's biggest modern blockbuster but so far second to "The Hurt Locker" in this season's movie award derby. The motion picture academy itself will hold off on announcing how exactly it plans to discipline Chartier until Oscar voting closes at 5 p.m. PST on Tuesday. The academy's Unger refused to speculate on what action might be taken. Possible measures include public censure, taking away Chartier's Oscar tickets, and the unlikely option of removing "The Hurt Locker" — about a bomb-disposal unit in Iraq — from best-picture consideration, according to several academy members familiar with the situation. The members spoke on the condition of anonymity because they aren't authorized to comment about the matter. It's also possible that if "The Hurt Locker" wins, the academy won't extend membership to Chartier, like it does to most newly minted Oscar winners, the members said. With Oscar ballots due Tuesday, the controversy surrounding Chartier's actions may have little effect on the March 7 Academy Awards because most voters have already mailed in their ballots, said one of the academy members. But that hasn't stopped Hollywood insiders from bandying about heated opinions referring to Chartier's e-mails as everything from harmless enthusiasm to egregious politicking that should result in the film's disqualification. As one academy voter put it, requesting anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject: "If The Hurt Locker doesn't win best picture, I wouldn't want to be that guy. They'll be pointing at him". In addition to Chartier's e-mails, "The Hurt Locker" is also facing complaints — just now surfacing, though the movie was released last June — from veterans and active soldiers over the accuracy of its combat scenes. Late-in-the-game controversies surrounding Oscar front-runners are nothing new. When Roman Polanski's "The Pianist" was up for several Oscars in 2003, a transcript from the grand jury testimony of Polanski's 1977 sexual assault case was published on a Web site. Polanski still won the Oscar for best director. A year earlier, rumors circulated that schizophrenic mathematician John Nash, the subject of Ron Howard's "A Beautiful Mind", harbored anti-Semitic beliefs. The movie ended up winning four Oscars, including awards for picture, director and adapted screenplay. And, similar to this year's e-mail controversy, 'DreamWorks' ran ads in 2004 quoting critics touting Shohreh Aghdashloo's supporting actress performance in "House of Sand and Fog" over that of Renee Zellweger in "Cold Mountain". That campaign backfired, too, with Zellweger winning the Oscar. "I suppose I'm just naive, but I've always chosen to believe that academy members vote solely on the basis of merit", says film historian Leonard Maltin. "I do know some academy members, and they are very conscientious about their vote. They distance themselves from any jockeying of position and name-calling". ************************************************** ***Kathryn Bigelow, director of The Hurt Locker has recently won BAFTA 2010 for best director. ************************************************** http://news.yahoo.com/video/entertainment-15749636/getting-to-know-kathryn-bigelow-18310975 ************************************************** Getting to Know Kathryn Bigelow - "The Hurt Locker" director could be the first female director to win an Oscar.