Sarafyan
Transcription
Sarafyan
March 24, 2011 Production Update inside ANGELA Sarafyan Don’t know wh ere to go for a fabulous dinne Too many cho r? ices and not e nough knowle dge? Try Tour de Foodie s 504-324-2457 New Orleans’ one and only progressive din ing tour. www.tourdefoodies.com S SCENE WEEKLY | March 24, 2011 | www.scenelouisiana.com EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Micah Haley CREATIVE DIRECTOR Erin Theriot EDITOR’S LETTER E very day, just by speaking with friends in the entertainment world, I’m reminded of why we started Scene: to tell the world about the great change that Louisiana is undergoing. It’s a shift, from an economy that has been chasing major metropolitan cities since the Civil War, to a new economy: the entertainment economy. Over the last few years, it has been disheartening to hear of pain caused by financial hardship as the American economy has contracted. But meanwhile in Louisiana, I’ve watched more new companies than I can remember hang shingles and open for business with the film industry. That includes this company. This week, talk of the biggest business developments in the history of Louisiana film has been on the lips of insiders. That’s all I can say about that for now. A music label executive celebrating the birth of his child mentioned this in an email to me today: “I am excited my daughter can grow up in a state where, if she chose a career in entertainment, she could do it right here!” That’s an exciting prospect for many, parents and their children alike. And this week, fashion takes a huge step forward with NOLA Fashion Week. For more information on the workshops, events and runway shows, go to nola-fashionweek.com. And join the Scene Team this Saturday night for the NOLA Fashion Week wrap party at Eiffel Society. Presented by Scene Magazine and Vintage Shoe Company, it will be well worth the cover. You never know who you’ll see. MICAH HALEY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF editor@scenelouisiana.com NOLA FASHION WEEK WRAP PARTY N OLA Fashion Week kicked off this week with The Art of Style presented by Paris Parker, a showcase of the Anna Wintour collection by Sarah Ashley Longshore. Over the course of the week, attendees with a thirst for style have the opportunity to enjoy runway shows, production and styling workshops, and a panel with national fashion bloggers. To close out the festivities, Scene Magazine and Vintage Shoe Company are hosting the NOLAFW Wrap Party at Eiffel Society from 9:00pm to 1:00am. Tickets are $20 and will be available at the door. But with the party already close to selling out, you may want to RSVP early by visiting nolafwwrapparty.eventbrite.com. S STAFF WRITER Brittney Franklin DIRECTOR OF SALES & MARKETING Marcie Dickson EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT Danielle Tabary SALES David Draper COVER PHOTO BY Teddy Smith CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Ben Adams GRAPHIC ARTIST Burton Chatelain, Jr. FASHION STYLIST Tessa Rowe CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jacie Scott Scene Magazine At Raleigh Studios Baton Rouge 10000 Celtic Drive Suite 201 Baton Rouge, LA 70809 225-361-0701 At Second Line Stages 800 Richard St. Suite 222 New Orleans, LA 70130 504-224-2221 info@scenelouisiana.com www.scenelouisiana.com Published By Louisiana Entertainment Publishers, LLC CEO, Andre Champagne COO, Marcie Dickson Vice President, AJ Buckley Controller, Jessica Dufrene Display Advertising: Call Louisiana Entertainment Publishers for a current rate card or visit www.scenelouisiana.com All submitted materials become the property of Louisiana Entertainment Publishers LLC. For subscriptions or more information visit our website www.scenelouisiana.com Copyright @ 2011 Louisiana Entertainment Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used for solicitation or copied by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording by any information storage or retrieval system, without the express written permission of the publisher. Drew AIR EFFECTS/ SKY-TRACKER® REALTOR Langhart GULF SOUTH L.L.C. ® Cell: 225.933.4141 Office: 225.664.1911 Fax: 225.664.1758 drewlanghart@gmail.com lights airstar ti bubble search 1234 Del Este, Suite 101 Denham Springs, LA s confet www.realtorgbr.com BUY. SELL. WIN. Michael J. Francioni, C.O.O. thelightguymike@yahoo.com Baton Rouge: 225•810•8152 New Orleans: 504•282•5SKY (759) LIVINGSTON PARTNERS May 7–July 31 The exhibition tour is organized by Exhibits Development Group, USA in cooperation with Cosprop Ltd., London England. 1 0 0 R I V E R R O A D S O U T H • D O W N TO W N B ATO N R O U G E 225.344.5272 www.lasm.org << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> << SCENE WEEKLY >> Photographer: Teddy Smith Stylist: Tessa Rowe Make-up: Jackie Dixon Tuttle Hair: Allison Bell for Lyon’s Den Hair Studio ANGELA Sarafyan << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> << SCENE WEEKLY >> ANGELA Sarafyan by Micah Haley J ust before leaving Louisiana for Canada, Twilight’s most beautiful new vampire, Angela Sarafyan, spoke at length with Scene, discussing her experiences on Breaking Dawn, her love for New Orleans, and her new film American Animal, which just debuted last week at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin. Q: What was it like working on American Animal? Can you tell me a little bit about your character? A: Matt D’Elia is the director, who wrote the film as well. He was casting the movie and happened to see a film that I’d done before, a movie called Kabluey, and wanted to have a meeting. He first sent the script to my manager and I really enjoyed it because somehow it reminded me of Waiting for Godot. So I told her I would like to meet with him and when we met, we really hit it off! After that first meeting, he offered the part. We shot the film in downtown Los Angeles, and it all takes place in an apartment. [Two characters] in the film are named Angela, so I played the Not Blonde Angela and I thought the character’s name revealed a lot about her. Just the fact that she’s not blonde. That became the leading point delving into what her world must be. Q: It seems like the director had a very specific movie in mind. What was the process that went into developing the character? A: It did stem from his own life, but I don’t think it’s autobiographical. I think the things that were occurring in his life, gave him the opportunity to create this script, this story. And when I was developing working on the character, he really let me do what I wanted to do. I did understand his intentions as a writer and I thought, I’m well aware of that and I [still] have room to create what I’d like to create with Not Blonde Angela, and he was happy with it. Ultimately, it was in working every day [that my character was created]. Q: And you also have A Good Old Fashioned Orgy coming up. Can you tell me a little about it? A: The movie is about a group of friends who get together every summer break and they throw these crazy bashes at one of their friends house and this particular year their friend’s father is deciding to sell the house so it’s gonna be the last bash. And you see how important this event is because they’re such close friends and they’re not gonna have that place to go to. You kind of see how they create this party, this “good old fashioned orgy” as being the last party of the year. The last one to happen. So that’s what the movie is about. Q: It kind of sounds like the end-of-high-school party, but for thirty-year-olds. A: It was great! We were filming it in Wilmington and it was a cool experience. I had a lot of fun on that job. Every day was a lot of fun. So I think it’ll be a fun time for the audience. Q: Talk about your impressions of Louisiana during your first stay here a few years ago. A: I got a taste of New Orleans and Louisiana and it was a delicious taste. It was really cool because I had no idea a place like that existed in the world. It was really cool to see a world of incredible musicians and great photographers and great artists. I find New Orleans to be immensely creative and to be in the spot where Tennessee William wrote Vieux Carré and lived for a long time, I mean, how incredible! It’s a dream, ultimately. Q: Now that you’ve come back and you’ve been here for three months, was there anything that you were looking forward to coming back to? A: I was looking forward to going to New Orleans again! I couldn’t wait to go back to have some beignets. Eat some gumbo and walk down the French Quarter and see more of New Orleans. I think that what the French Quarter reveals is...you know a lot of people say New Orleans is so dirty and all those [bad] things? I think it’s beautiful. I << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> << SCENE WEEKLY >> ANGELA SARAFYAN think that element of dirt and and danger...it’s the most beautiful part of it because you see these incredible musicians on the street, you hear people just living fully almost every night and they’re real people. They’re people full of their own worlds and their own lives and they’re not waiting for anything. They’re not looking at somebody else’s life, they’re not in front of a computer typing away. They’re out experiencing the world. I loved that. Q: How have you enjoyed working on Breaking Dawn? A: To be quite honest, I have no full grasp of the enormity of this film. I know it in theory but I haven’t experienced it. Q: Many of Twilight’s cast members are now very closely identified with their characters and it may be difficult to be perceived differently in the future. Are you at all concerned about that? A: I don’t ever go into work thinking that I’ll be defined by a certain character for the rest of my life. I don’t know if Kristen and Rob will be forever recognized for that. I’m sure they may be for a lot of kids and a lot of people. I don’t know honestly what the future holds because I really live in the moment and kind of deal with everything on a daily basis. And so, in terms of the outside world and how they see things, I guess I just have no idea about that. Q: One thing it will hopefully do is open up opportunities for you. Is there an actor who’s career you respect or aspire to? A: Whenever I read a script or I read a part, I like to be inspired by the person on the page and the character. I like to see if I’m inspired by them and what I can give them. It usually happens instantaneously so I don’t really know if I’m gonna follow this person’s career or that person’s career. It reveals itself with each experience. It’s kind of unpredictable. There are plenty of incredible actors that I love. Anna Magnani is a favorite of mine. She’s an Italian actress. I completely love Meryl Streep as well. And there are so many. I look at Dustin Hoffman and Robert De Niro and I look at Al Pacino and the list goes on and on...Marlon Brando or even Klaus Kinski. Q: Those guys definitely are fully dedicated to the job they do. A: Yes, and I strive for that. I love to tell stories and, ultimately, at the end of the day, these characters become gears for me because I learn a lot about myself through them. I get to see the world in a different the way, because I think each character lives in a different world. A person that works at a Rite-Aid in Los Angeles versus a musician sitting on one of the steps in New Orleans. Two very different worlds. So these characters written on a page reveal these worlds to me and they let me enter into their life and challenge my own. That’s a real gift. Q: It sounds like you have a very clear methodology of how to approach your characters. Can you tell me where that comes from? How did you get interested in acting and where did you develop these very carefully considered methodologies? A: I loved acting. I loved stories. Ever since I was a kid. I love going into stories and living in these fantasies. Just living. Sitting in my bedroom and watching TV and walking outside, I just imagine all these things. So I wanted to discover more and more about life and I found that at a very early age - and I’m talking around, like, four, five, six. ‘Cause I had some questions for my parents that they couldn’t answer and so I had to look for these answers in different places. And so acting became this possibility for me, this opportunity to find these answers. It became endless what I could experience through acting, through characters, because they give you permission. They give me permission to do all the things that would usually get you in trouble. You have the freedom through a character to have some of the most intimate and great experiences. In terms of my approach, a lot of it is instinctual. I wasn’t aware of it when I was fourteen or fifteen. A lot of it came naturally. But I started studying with a teacher that introduced method acting from the Actor’s Studio. I started reading all these books about the history from the Group Theater to all the people that came from the Group Theater like Stella Adler, Lee Strasberg, Elia Kazan...I watched all these movies and started to see how they were approaching these scripts. With each part, with each job, there is different challenge—I feel like I start over with each character because I don’t know what that character is going to demand from me so it becomes discovery more than anything. I’m discovering how I’m going to go about doing this. So, I started to really learn and become conscious of where I am [in the] now. And I don’t think there’s a right way to act or a wrong way to act. Right or wrong doesn’t make sense in acting. And I think it’s in the discovery of things. Q: What has it been like to join a pre-existing family like Twilight and work with some returning people and then a director like Bill Condon, who’s working on the series for the first time? A: It’s been welcoming. They’ve been very, very nice. Everybody from the cast past. And the new members that are coming in, it’s been truly like a family and so I’ve had a lovely time with them. I’m very grateful for it and humbled by the fact that I can be here doing this. Bill Condon is very nice. A very nice director and very patient. It’s been a lovely experience. Q: What are you going to miss when you leave Louisiana? What you hope to find at Twilight’s next location? A: I think I’ll miss the people in Louisiana. I’m reading A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. I love this book! It is unbelievable! A friend of mine gave me this book, he said, ‘You have to read this while you’re out there’ and I am just amazed at the magic that exists in the way he writes and how he views that the Mississippi is a dirty and disgusting river and all that. And he, in a way, shows a different side of New Orleans and Baton Rouge. Then there’s Tennessee Williams and then there’s the French Quarter and I will miss the musicians on the street and this girl with orange hair playing the violin and the beignets. I’m going to miss a lot over here. I’m having a hard time leaving. Photographer: Teddy Smith. Stylist: Tessa Rowe. Make-up: Jackie Dixon Tuttle. Hair: Allison Bell, Lyon’s Den Hair Salon. << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> << SCENE WEEKLY >> Don’t know wh ere to go for a fabulous dinner? Too many cho ices and not enough kn owledge? Try Tour de Foodie s 504-324-2457 www.tourdefoodies.com New Orleans’ one and only progressive din ing tour. << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> S << PRODUCTION UPDATES >> BATON ROUGE DARK CIRCLES NEW ORLEANS 21 JUMP STREET Feature Film – Independent Location: Baton Rouge Feature Film – Columbia Pictures Starring Channing Tatum, Jonah Hill, Ice Cube Director: Phil Lord & Chris Miller Phone: 504.524.8820 Fax: 504.524.8821 Resumes: 21jumpstreetresumes@gmail.com Status: Starts shooting April 1 Location: New Orleans UPM: Todd Lewis Based on the 1980s television series of the same name. MISSISSIPPI WILD Feature Film – Independent Location: Baton Rouge Status: March 1 THE PHILLY KID Feature Film – Independent Status: March 7 Location: Baton Rouge ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER STASH HOUSE Feature Film – Independent Location: Baton Rouge Status: April 3 TAP THE HEAT Feature Film – Independent Director: Joey Travolta Resumes: taptheheat@gmail.com Status: Looking for an October start Location: Baton Rouge UNIVERSAL SOLDIER 4 Feature Film – Independent (Unlimited Production Services) Starring Jean-Claude Van Damme & Dolph Lundgren Director: John Hyams Status: February 2011 Location: Baton Rouge Feature Film – 20th Century Fox Starring Benjamin Walker Director: Timur Bekmambetov Phone: 504.355.1787 Fax: 504.304.8517 Resumes: alvh2011@gmail.com, abrahamfilm@gmail.com Casting: Batherson Casting (www.bathersoncasting.com) Status: Starts shooting March 14 for 75 days Location: New Orleans PM: John Kelly POC: Kathy Chambless Oliver COGAN’S TRADE Feature Film Starring Brad Pitt, Sam Rockwell, Bella Heathcote Director: Andrew Dominik Phone: 504.224.2272 Fax: 504.224.2272 Resumes: coganstrade@gmail.com Casting: Batherson Casting (www.bathersoncasting.com) Status: Now shooting Location: New Orleans UPM: Anthony Katagas Prod. Supervisor: John Fedynich CONTRABAND Feature Film - NBC Universal / Relativity Media Starring Mark Wahlberg, Kate Beckinsale, Ben Foster, Giovanni Ribisi, Caleb Landry Jones, Lukas Haas, Diego Luna Director: Baltasar K. Baltasarsson Phone: 504.708.2400 Resumes: contrabandresumes@gmail.com Status: Now shooting until March Location: New Orleans PM: Bill Johnson Prod. Supervisor: Peter Novak << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> S << PRODUCTION UPDATES >> NEW ORLEANS FREELANCERS Feature Film – Independent Status: Shoots April 4 for 4 weeks Location: New Orleans JUSTICE FOR NATALEE MOW - Sony Television Director: Stephen T. Kay Phone: 504.558.9191 Fax: 504.588.9181 Resumes: jfncrew@gmail.com Status: Shoots January 31 for three weeks Location: New Orleans Line Producer: Kati Johnston THE LOFT Feature Film – Independent Resumes: loftmovie@gmail.com Location: New Orleans Status: Shoots in May/June for 6 weeks LP: Patty Long LOOPER Feature Film - Independent (Endgame Entertainment) Starring Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Emily Blunt, Paul Dano Director: Rian Johnson Phone: 504. 335.2515 Fax: 504.525.1857 Resumes: looperllc@gmail.com Status: Now shooting through April 1 Location: New Orleans UPM: Dave Pomier Prod Supervisor: Tony Rossi MEDALLION Feature Film – Nu Image/Millenium Films Starring Nicholas Cage & Malin Akerman Director: Simon West Phone: 504.309.3763 Fax: 504.309.3765 Resumes: medallionresumes@gmail.com Status: April 11 to June 10 Location: New Orleans UPM: Rob Ortiz Asst UPM: Matt Hirsch MEAN CUISINE Feature Film – Independent Starring Billy Crystal, Dana Carvey, Alec Mapa, Martin Short Status: Starts shooting March 28 for 2 weeks in NOLA, then moves to Shreveport Location: New Orleans & Shreveport UPM: Danelle Hand MEMPHIS BEAT - Season 2 TV Series - TNT Starring Jason Lee Phone: 504.454.6889 Fax: 504.455.2145 Resumes: memphisbeatresumes@gmail.com Status: Starts filming March 10 Location: New Orleans & LaPlace UPM: Chris Morgan NUMBA ONE Feature Film – Independent Location: New Orleans Status: March 1 THE SHADOW RUNNER Feature Film – Independent Location: New Orleans Status: April 4 TAP THE HEAT Feature Film – Independent Director: Joey Travolta Resumes: taptheheat@gmail.com Status: Shoots March 1 for 8 weeks Location: New Orleans TREME - SEASON 2 TV Series – HBO Starring Wendell Pierce, Melissa Leo, Khandi Alexander, Steve Zahn Resumes: blowndeadlineprod@gmail.com Casting: RPM Casting (www.rpmcasting.com), tremeextras@gmail. com Status: Now shooting until May 2011. Location: New Orleans Line Producer/UPM: Joe Incaprera << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> S << PRODUCTION UPDATES >> SHREVEPORT CHANGING OF THE GUARD Feature Film – Independent Casting: Glorioso Casting (www.gloriosocasting.com) Status: Starts shooting April 1 Location: Shreveport JUST WEST OF HELL Feature Film – Independent Status: Shoots April 18 for 4 weeks Location: Shreveport KANE & LYNCH Feature Film – Nu Image/Millenium Films Starring Bruce Willis & Jamie Foxx Phone: 318.841.3599 Resumes: ecallais@millenniumstudios.net Status: Slated for late February Location: Shreveport UPM: Ed Cathell Based on the popular video game of the same name. LAFAYETTE ALIEN TORNADO Feature Film – Independent (Bullet Films) Phone: 337.706.8957 Fax: 337.706.8971 Resumes: jobs@bulletfilms.net Status: Shoots March 7-30 Location: Lafayette DIRT ROAD TO LAFAYETTE Feature Film – Independent (Bullet Films) Phone: 337.706.8957 Fax: 337.706.8971 Resumes: jobs@bulletfilms.net Location: Lafayette ALEXANDRIA TORRENT (aka SEVEN BELOW ZERO) Feature Film - Independent (Efish Entertainment) Status: Shoots February 28 to March 19 Location: Alexandria MEAN CUISINE Feature Film – Independent Starring Billy Crystal, Dana Carvey, Alec Mapa, Martin Short Status: Starts shooting March 28 for 2 weeks in NOLA, then moves to Shreveport Location: New Orleans & Shreveport UPM: Danelle Hand PLAYING THE FIELD Feature Film – Independent Starring Gerard Butler Director: Gabriele Muccino Phone: 318.841.3599 Fax: 318.841.3591 Resumes: ptfproduction@gmail.com Status: Starts shooting March 28 Location: Shreveport Line Producer: Ed Cathell PM: Sarah Donohue << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >> S << PRODUCTION UPDATES >> LOUISIANA DOWNERS GROVE Feature Film – Independent Starring Hayden Panettiere, Nikki Reed & Rebecca De Mornay Status: May or June 2011 Location: Louisiana HEADSHOT Feature Film – Independent Starring Sylvester Stallone Director: Wayne Kramer Status: May Location: New Orleans Stallone plays a New Orleans hitman who teams up with a young New York City cop in a high stakes investigation. RUMORED BEAUTIFUL CREATURES A SOUTHERN MELODY DARK CIRCLES G.I. JOE 2 NOTHING TO FEAR ARABIAN NIGHTS I-59 SOUTH BAD LUCK (2011 DAVID R. ELLIS PROJECT) THE BIG VALLEY UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT (DUKE LACROSS RAPE INCIDENT PROJECT) NAGASAKI DEADLINE Feature Film – Independent Director: Spike Lee Status: Slated to start shooting in April Location: Louisiana PURE LIFE Feature Film – Independent Starring Elle Fanning and Omari Hardwick Director: Van Fischer Status: April 30 Location: Louisiana PIRANHA 3DD Feature Film - Dimension Films Director: John Gulager Phone: 323.549.4350 Status: Now slated for March 2011 Location: Louisiana Line Producer: Louis Friedman Sequel to last summer’s remake of the killer fish-focused classic. If you are in the film industry and have information or corrections for Production Updates, we welcome your emails at info@scenelouisiana.com << SCENE WEEKLY | MARCH 24, 2011 | WWW.SCENELOUISIANA.COM >>