Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Whoopi Goldberg coping after mother's death (AP)

NEW YORK � Whoopi Goldberg says she channels her grief from her mother's death last month by staying busy.

The co-host of "The View" attended the New York launch party Wednesday for purewow.com, a website with daily tips for women 35 and over. She is an investor.

Asked how she's handling her mother's death, Goldberg said, "I'm here, but it's not easy."

Her mother, Emma Johnson, died from complications following a stroke.

Goldberg had been doing a limited stint as Mother Superior in the London version of "Sister Act" and immediately returned to the U.S.

"Sister Act" moves to Broadway this season with an opening planned for Spring 2011. Goldberg is also one of the show's producers but says she has no plans to reprise her role.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Arthur Penn, director of `Bonnie and Clyde,' dies (AP)

NEW YORK � "Bonnie and Clyde" wasn't a movie that director Arthur Penn wanted to make, but when he finally agreed to it, he made sure that the violence provoked by the lawbreaking couple from the 1930s � and that led to the protagonists' bullet-riddled demise � wasn't disguised.

"I thought that if were going to show this, we should SHOW it," Penn recalled. "We should show what it looks like when somebody gets shot."

His cinematic art, he noted, only reflected the times: TV coverage of Vietnam "was every bit, perhaps even more, bloody than what we were showing on film."

The director died Tuesday night, a day after his 88th birthday, leaving behind films � most notably "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Little Big Man" � that refashioned movie and American history, made and broke myths and sealed a generation's affinity for outsiders.

Daughter Molly Penn said her father died at his home in Manhattan of congestive heart failure. A memorial service will be held by year's end, longtime friend and business manager Evan Bell said Wednesday.

Penn � younger brother of the photographer Irving Penn � first made his name on Broadway as director of the Tony Award-winning plays "The Miracle Worker" and "All the Way Home," then rose as a film director in the 1960s, his work inspired by the decade's political and social upheaval.

"Bonnie and Clyde," with its mix of humor and mayhem, encouraged moviegoers to sympathize with the marauding robbers, while "Little Big Man" told the tale of the conquest of the West with the Indians as the good guys.

"A society would be wise to pay attention to the people who do not belong if it wants to find out ... where it's failing," Penn said.

Penn's other films included his adaptation of "The Miracle Worker," featuring an Oscar-winning performance by Anne Bancroft; "The Missouri Breaks," an outlaw tale starring Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson; "Night Moves," a Los Angeles thriller featuring Gene Hackman; and "Alice's Restaurant," based on the wry Arlo Guthrie song about his being turned down for the draft because he had once been fined for littering.

"I loved working with Arthur," said Hackman, who also worked with Penn on "Bonnie and Clyde" and the 1985 thriller "Target."

"He had his own clear vision, but he was really excited to see what you could bring to a scene, every take," Hackman said in a statement. "You could feel him over there, just by the camera, pulling for you. However rough and tough his films are, you can always sense his humanity in them."

Penn was most identified with "Bonnie and Clyde," although it wasn't a project he initiated or, at first, wanted to do. Warren Beatty, who earlier starred in Penn's "Mickey One" and produced "Bonnie and Clyde," had to persuade him to take on the film, inspired by the movies of the French New Wave. (Francois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard each turned down offers to direct the film.)

Penn, in his 40s when he made "Bonnie and Clyde," took full advantage of his gorgeous lead actors � Beatty and Faye Dunaway � and of the story, as liberal in its politics as it was with the facts � a celebration of individual freedom and an expose of the banks that had ruined farmers' lives.

Released in 1967, when opposition to the Vietnam War was spreading and movie censorship crumbling, "Bonnie and Clyde" was shaped by the frenzy of old silent comedies, the jarring rhythms of the French New Wave and the surge of youth and rebellion. The robbers' horrifying deaths, a shooting gallery that took four days to film and ran nearly a minute, only intensified the characters' appeal.

With the glibbest of promotional tag lines, "They're young ... they're in love ... and they kill people," it was a film that challenged and changed minds. Beatty worked for a reduced fee because the studio, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, was convinced that "Bonnie and Clyde" would flop.

On Wednesday, Beatty fondly recalled working with Penn.

"I will always treasure the singularly honest, joyful, adventurous intelligence of Arthur Penn both as a collaborator and as a loving friend," Beatty said in an e-mailed statement.

"Bonnie and Clyde," released in August 1967 and then rereleased early in 1968 in response to unflagging interest, appalled the old and fascinated the young, widening a generational divide not only between audiences, but critics.

The New York Times' Bosley Crowther, then at the end of his career � an end hastened by "Bonnie and Clyde" � snorted that the film was "a cheap piece of bald-faced slapstick comedy that treats the hideous depredations of that sleazy, moronic pair as though they were as full of fun and frolic as the jazz-age cutups in 'Thoroughly Modern Millie.'"

But Pauline Kael, just starting her long reign at The New Yorker, welcomed "Bonnie and Clyde" as a new and vital kind of movie � an opinion now widely shared � and asked, "How do you make a good movie in this country without being jumped on?"

"The accusation that the beauty of movie stars makes the anti-social acts of their characters dangerously attractive is the kind of contrived argument we get from people who are bothered by something and clutching at straws," Kael wrote. "'Bonnie and Clyde' brings into the almost frighteningly public world of movies things people have been feeling and saying and writing about."

The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, with Estelle Parsons winning for best supporting actress, and is regarded by many as the dawn of a golden age in Hollywood, when the old studio system crumbled and performers and directors such as Penn, Beatty, Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese enjoyed creative control.

Penn, who had fought � and lost to � the studios over the editing of such early films as "The Left Handed Gun" and "The Chase," now was able to realize a long-desired project � an adaptation of "Little Big Man," based on the Thomas Berger novel.

"Originality is filtered out like tar is filtered out of cigarettes," Penn once complained. "I have not had a lot of success with the suits � or the dresses. Executives are executives. They're going to interfere as much as they can.

"('Little Big Man') didn't happen until I had so much clout I sort of made it happen."

None of Penn's other films had the impact of "Bonnie and Clyde," but the director regarded "Little Big Man," released in 1970, as his greatest success, with Dustin Hoffman playing the 121-year-old lone survivor of Custer's last stand. It was, again, a violent and romantic re-imagining of the past and an angry finger pointed at the war and racism of the present.

Penn earned Academy Award nominations for both films and for his first movie, "The Miracle Worker," based on the Broadway show about Helen Keller, played by Patty Duke in an Oscar-winning turn, and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, played by Bancroft. Among Penn's other stage credits: "All the Way Home," which won both the Tony and Pulitzer Prize in 1961 as best play; "Two for the Seesaw"; the musical version of "Golden Boy"; and "Wait Until Dark."

Penn traced his affinity for alienated heroes and heroines to the trauma of his childhood. Truffaut's film "The 400 Blows," he once said, "was so much like my own childhood it really stunned me."

When he was 3, Penn moved from Philadelphia to New York with his mother after his parents divorced. He and his mother, a nurse who had run a health food store, lived in a succession of apartments in New Jersey and New York City, and the boy attended at least a dozen elementary schools.

At age 14, Penn returned to Philadelphia to live with his ailing father and help him run his watch repairman's shop.

"He was an excellent mechanic. ... His hands were magical," Penn said. "But he was an evasive man for someone to try to make contact with. I think I'm like him in some ways. I'm not the most available of men, emotionally or personally."

He was no filmgoer as a child; books and baseball mattered more. Penn was frightened by a horror picture when he was 5 and said he did not see another movie until his teens, when Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" "staggered" him.

Along with Welles and Charlie Chaplin, Penn greatly admired Akira Kurosawa and the French New Wave directors, especially Truffaut and Godard.

He was known for allowing actors to improvise � and getting a wide range of expression from them in return. He believed words are to the theater as action is to film: "A look, a simple look, will do it."

Penn's 1960s success was bracketed by frustration. Early in his career, he was so angered by how Warner Bros. changed "The Left Handed Gun," a Western released in 1958, that he stopped making movies and turned to Broadway. He was fired from "The Train," a 1964 film, over disagreements with the lead actor, Burt Lancaster. And none of his later works found favor at the box office, though several � "Night Moves" (1975), "The Missouri Breaks" (1976) and "Four Friends" (1981) � won critics' praise.

Penn decided to live in New York, rather than Los Angeles, as Hollywood soured on his social vision. Broadway, too, seemed increasingly drawn to blockbuster musicals rather than serious drama, further marginalizing Penn.

"It was frustrating and more than a little humiliating," Penn once told The New York Times.

"It's not that I've drifted away from film," he said in another interview. "I'm very drawn to film, but I'm not sure that film is drawn to me."

Arthur Hiller Penn was born in Philadelphia on Sept. 27, 1922, the son of Harry and Sonia Penn and brother of Irving Penn.

Although both sons were involved in the visual arts, Arthur Penn later said that he saw little in common in their work and rarely discussed the ties between them. (Beatty would claim the director was influenced profoundly by his brother, who was known for a spare but dramatic photographic style. The older brother died in October 2009.)

Penn joined the Army during World War II, formed a dramatic troupe at Fort Jackson, S.C., was often in trouble for behaving disrespectfully to his superiors and was in an infantry unit that fought in the Battle of the Bulge. After the war, he studied literature in Italy for two years, then returned to New York, where he found work as a floor manager on NBC-TV's "Colgate Comedy Hour."

By the early 1950s, Penn was writing and directing TV dramas. In 1956, he debuted as a Broadway director, but "The Lovers" closed after just four days.

As a boy, Penn had little success learning the watchmaker's trade from his father, who died without having seen any of his son's films.

"He went to his grave despairing I would never find my way in the world," the director said, "and the movies rescued me."

___

AP Television Writer Frazier Moore and National Writer Hillel Italie contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Jimmy Johnson voted off 'Survivor' (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Jimmy Johnson won't be adding the title of sole "Survivor" to his winning resume.

The silver-haired 67-year-old former coach of the Dallas Cowboys and Miami Dolphins was the third person voted off the Nicaragua-set 21st edition of the CBS reality TV competition Wednesday. Johnson, the oldest member of the Espada tribe, declared himself the weakest castaway at Tribal Council and was unanimously booted by his fellow mature tribemates.

"I had fun, but I was miserable the whole time," he said. "I still love the game, and it's been a great adventure. This is the most stressful time I've ever gone through in my life, and I'm including Super Bowls and collegiate national championships. I initially said, 'Keep your strongest members.' I obviously wasn't one of the strongest members."

Johnson, always more affable than athletic, wasn't able to lead his tribe to victory in an immunity challenge that involved rolling barrels along the beach then landing sand bags on top of them. Marty Piombo, the scheming 48-year-old technology executive, led the campaign to oust Johnson, saying he needed "to remove him so people will lose their daddy."

"Oh, man," Piombo earlier groaned. "Why do we get stuck with a celebrity on our team?"

This season, the tribes have been divided by age. While they weren't forced to dismiss a team member, the younger La Flor tribe experienced their own drama after winning groceries. NaOnka Mixon, the sassy 27-year-old teacher, tussled with 26-year-old medical student and amputee Kelly Bruno over a clue to the Hidden Immunity Idol found in a basket of fruit.

Mixon warned: "Don't think that I'm gonna be nice to you because you have one leg."

___

CBS is a unit of CBS Corp.

___

Online:

http://www.cbs.com/primetime/survivor/



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Judge dismisses some charges in Anna Nicole case (AP)

LOS ANGELES � The judge in the Anna Nicole Smith drug conspiracy case acquitted her boyfriend-lawyer Howard Stern on Wednesday of two charges of obtaining drugs for her by fraud and deceit, including use of false names.

Superior Court Judge Robert Perry also dismissed part of a conspiracy count against Stern and Dr. Sandeep Kapoor, ruling there was insufficient proof that the two men conspired to obtain controlled drugs through fraud and deceit.

Perry allowed the balance of that conspiracy charge to stand and ruled the bulk of the 11-count complaint would go to the jury for verdicts. Attorneys were scheduled for closing arguments on Monday.

Stern, Kapoor and Dr. Khristine Eroshevich have pleaded not guilty to conspiring to prescribe, administer and dispense a controlled substance to an addict. They are not charged in Smith's 2007 overdose death.

Perry accepted arguments by the defense that because Stern is not a doctor, he would not have known if there were problems with the legality of prescriptions written by Kapoor.

"I don't think there's evidence that a layperson knows it's illegal to write a prescription in another name for a celebrity," the judge said.

Defense lawyers had hoped for more dismissals based on the judge's critical comments regarding the prosecution's case through the trial. Perry previously indicated some charges would likely be dismissed.

"I think there are weaknesses in the prosecution's case, " Perry said Wednesday. "But my inclination is to let it go to the jury."

But the judge also raised the unusual prospect that if he does not agree with jury convictions, he has the option to change the verdicts or order a new trial. He said he has done this in other cases.

Stern's lawyer, Steve Sadow, expressed alarm at that prospect, saying, "Once it's post-verdict, the whole scenario changes. My client would lose his license. The doctors would lose their licenses."

The judge said he had to be "mindful that certain issues are left for the jury, unless there is a total absence of evidence to support it."

The judge also grilled prosecutors intently, explaining repeatedly that to get a conviction, "you need a specific intent to violate the law." Lawyers for Stern, Kapoor and Eroshevich argued that no such intent had been shown because their clients were trying to help a woman suffering from intense pain.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

NY mayor talks to Letterman about job, money, bugs (AP)

NEW YORK � Mayor Michael Bloomberg revealed during his first sit-down interview on David Letterman's "Late Show" that he thinks being governor is a "terrible job" and said he's not embarrassed to be ranked 10th richest in the nation.

The billionaire mayor said he prefers being mayor because mayors can interact more with their constituents and "the state is so spread out."

Bloomberg, a Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-independent, last week endorsed Democrat Andrew Cuomo in New York's gubernatorial race.

During the 15-minute "Late Show" appearance, Letterman also teased Bloomberg about how his city has recently closed parts of Broadway in midtown Manhattan to create pedestrian plazas. Letterman called them "petting zoos."

Before Bloomberg went onstage at the start of the segment, a tree was partially blocking the camera and people were sipping coffee at small tables on the set, mocking the patio furniture that the Bloomberg administration installed in the Broadway pedestrian plazas in Times Square and Herald Square.

From behind the camera, Letterman was informed that "during the commercial break, Mayor Bloomberg installed a pedestrian plaza."

During Bloomberg's nearly nine years in office, he has appeared several times on Letterman's CBS show to read the Top 10 list or to participate in jokes, like when he gave Letterman's beard a key to the city.

On Wednesday, Letterman asked him about a wide range of topics, including World Trade Center rebuilding, the mosque planned in lower Manhattan near ground zero, the tea party movement and even rats and bedbugs, which have been discovered in theaters, clothing stores, office buildings, housing projects and posh apartments throughout the city.

"The bedbugs are probably tougher," Bloomberg said.

Letterman mentioned where Bloomberg, who founded the financial information company Bloomberg LP, was ranked on a list of richest Americans. Forbes magazine estimates his fortune at $18 billion.

"I saw a thing today where, and it's probably embarrassing, you're like the 10th wealthiest person in the world or something?" Letterman asked.

"That's not embarrassing," Bloomberg said. "Try it sometime. You'll like it."

The show was taped Wednesday afternoon to air that night.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Letterman teases NYC mayor about pedestrian plazas (AP)

NEW YORK � David Letterman is teasing New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg about the pedestrian plazas his administration has built in the heart of Manhattan.

The billionaire mayor on Wednesday taped his first interview on Letterman's "Late Show." Letterman asked the mayor why he has turned Broadway into a "petting zoo."

Parts of Broadway in Times Square and in Herald Square have been closed to vehicles to open more space for people.

The pedestrian plazas are aimed at making the nation's largest city greener, safer and less congested. They feature landscaping, cafe tables and benches.

Letterman and Bloomberg talked about politics, the mosque planned near ground zero, the economy and even rats and bedbugs.

The CBS program airs at 11:35 p.m. EDT.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

"Snooki" takes romance from hot tub to book world

NEW YORK | Wed Sep 29, 2010 4:57pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - "Jersey Shore" star Nicole Polizzi is looking to expand from the world of reality television to best-selling romance author.

The 22-year-old, better known by her nickname "Snooki," will publish a novel, aptly titled "A Shore Thing," in January 2011, Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, said on Wednesday.

The book will tell the tale of a "girl looking for love on the boardwalk (one full of big hair, dark tans, and fights galore)," Gallery said in a news release.

Polizzi has been in the media spotlight since MTV's "Jersey Shore" -- about the lives and leisure of young Italian-Americans in New Jersey -- became a U.S. pop culture sensation in the past year.

In August, Polizzi was sentenced to community service after she was arrested in Seaside Heights, New Jersey while filming for the popular MTV series.

Celebrity website TMZ.com said she had been partying with a beer bong along the town's boardwalk and fallen off her bicycle.

"Jersey Shore,"'s second season premiere, set in Miami, scored 5.3 million viewers, growing to 6.5 million in early September, delivering MTV's highest rated series telecast in more than eight years, MTV said.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

'Mad Men"s Sally Draper not allowed to watch show (AP)

NEW YORK � The 10-year-old actress who plays Don and Betty Draper's daughter Sally on "Mad Men" is getting a lot of airtime this season, but she's not allowed to see much more than her own scenes.

"I'm not allowed to watch the show," Kiernan Shipka says. "My mom will tape it and then show me the scenes she feels are appropriate."

The critically acclaimed series stars Jon Hamm, January Jones and Elisabeth Moss and centers about a 1960s-era ad agency. Episodes routinely feature topics that include alcoholism, adultery and sexism in the workplace.

Even if she follows the story lines only on a need-to-know basis, Kiernan says it's not difficult to channel Sally.

"I'm very method when I'm on set," Kiernan says. "It's just kind of thinking the thoughts of Sally, and I pretty much just become her. It's a character that I've known for a really long time, so it's pretty easy."

It's that kind of talent that has upped Kiernan to a full-time cast member on the show, which is on its fourth season. Its writers are giving her a lot to do, too: Sally's parents are now divorced and she's acting out.

Some of Sally's most recent offenses include running away to see her father in New York City, chopping off her hair and fondling herself in front of a friend's mother.

Kiernan says Sally will bring more drama to the show in future episodes.

"Believe it or not, there's a lot more coming," Kiernan teases. "You're just gonna have to wait and see what it is."

Kiernan also defends Sally's recent behavior.

"I don't think she's a bad kid at all. She's going through a rough time. Don is absent and Betty has never once catered to Sally's emotional needs, so I feel that they're not the best parents," Kiernan says.

"Mad Men" airs Sundays at 10 p.m. on AMC.

___

Online: http://www.amctv.com/originals/madmen



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Russian Soprana shines in Met debut (AP)

NEW YORK � Reading the cast list for Offenbach's "Les Contes d'Hoffmann" ("Tales of Hoffmann") at the Metropolitan Opera, audiences might understandably have asked themselves, "Hibla who?"

No more. That's Hibla Gerzmava. As in Russian soprano. As in star in the making.

And her debut as Antonia wasn't the only thing to cheer about Tuesday night as the company revived last season's new production by Bartlett Sher.

In the title role of the unlucky-in-love poet, Italian tenor Giuseppe Filianoti gave a fearless performance, taking most if not all the optional high notes in the long and grueling role and holding onto them tirelessly. The sound of his lyric tenor is warm and appealing, and it seems to have grown in size and stamina since his debut five years ago. He played the role with disarming earnestness and ever-hopeful romantic ardor.

But the surprise of the night was Gerzmava, playing the second of Hoffmann's loves, Antonia, who has inherited her mother's musical talent but also her weak heart and ends up singing herself to death.

As soon as the curtain rose for the second act and she began her plaintive song about a turtledove, Gerzmava showed the audience that she is a major artist with rare vocal abilities. She produced a shining tone that easily filled the house and yet seemed to be holding back reserves of power at the same time. Her soft singing had a tender, lyrical quality to it. And she produced a dazzling trill as she expired. Though she has sung coloratura roles and summoned some impressive high notes, her only missteps came when a couple of them fell slightly flat.

There's a mournful tinge to her voice that calls to mind her more famous compatriot, Anna Netrebko, who sang the same role last season.

Comparing the two does no injustice to either. Like Netrebko, she is also a compelling actress, imbuing the character of Antonio with a desperate and doomed passion.

Until now, Gerzmava has sung mostly in Europe. The Met would do well to quickly engage her for future seasons.

The other women in Hoffmann's life were sung by American coloratura soprano Anna Christy, as the mechanical doll Olympia, and Albanian mezzo-soprano Enkelejda Shkosa, as the courtesan Giulietta. Christy had only middling success in a role that should be a show-stopper, lacking pinpoint precision and secure high notes. Shkosa, also making her debut, sang brightly, but the part is relatively brief and didn't allow her to make much of an impression.

Returning from last season, mezzo Kate Lindsey was again excellent as Hoffmann's devoted but cynical muse, Necklace. Russian bass Ildar Abdrazakov, with hearty voice and a fiendish twinkle in his eye, made a terrific impression in the multiple roles of the villains who undermine Hoffmann at every turn.

Patrick Fournillier, in his Met debut as conductor, led a spirited and persuasive performance once past some initial coordination problems.

Sher's production appears little changed from last season. It's colorful, even eye-popping, but sometimes more busy than inventive.

And the mix of styles remains a puzzlement, with frenetic action in the Olympia scene, a virtual orgy in the Giulietta scene, and sandwiched between them a severely stripped down set for Antonia.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Michael Caine says "might retire" at 80

LONDON | Wed Sep 29, 2010 4:23pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - British actor Michael Caine said on Wednesday he was booked solid with work for the next three years, but after that he may consider calling it quits.

In an interview with BBC radio to publicize his upcoming autobiography "The Elephant to Hollywood," published in Britain by Hodder & Stoughton, Caine also said he planned to try his hand as a novelist.

"I'm completely booked up for three years so I'm okay," the 77-year-old was quoted as saying on the BBC's website. "I'll be 80 when it's finished and I might retire."

The two-time Oscar winner and star of movies including "Alfie," "Get Carter" and "Educating Rita," said he hoped to complete a novel before his 80th birthday.

The book, he said, would be "a thriller about terrorism -- the sort of thing I read all the time. It'll be for guys. It won't be a great literary effort."

Caine revealed how he had abandoned an earlier attempt to write fiction when he unwittingly predicted the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

"I had this plot where terrorists fly a plane into a London skyscraper," he told the BBC. "Then they did it in real life. I was stunned by that, so I stopped writing."

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Arthur Penn, director of 'Bonnie and Clyde,' dies (AP)

NEW YORK � "Bonnie and Clyde" wasn't a movie that director Arthur Penn wanted to make, but when he finally agreed to, he made sure that the violence provoked by the lawbreaking couple from the 1930s � and that led to the protagonists' bullet-riddled demise � wasn't disguised.

"I thought that if were going to show this, we should SHOW it," Penn recalled. "We should show what it looks like when somebody gets shot."

His cinematic art, he noted, only reflected the times: TV coverage of Vietnam "was every bit, perhaps even more, bloody than what we were showing on film."

The director died Tuesday night, a day after his 88th birthday, leaving behind films � most notably "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Little Big Man" � that refashioned movie and American history, made and broke myths, and sealed a generation's affinity for outsiders.

Daughter Molly Penn said her father died at his home in Manhattan of congestive heart failure. A memorial service will be held by year's end, longtime friend and business manager Evan Bell said Wednesday.

Penn � younger brother of the photographer Irving Penn � first made his name on Broadway as director of the Tony Award-winning plays "The Miracle Worker" and "All the Way Home," then rose as a film director in the 1960s, his work inspired by the decade's political and social upheaval.

"Bonnie and Clyde," with its mix of humor and mayhem, encouraged moviegoers to sympathize with the marauding robbers, while "Little Big Man" told the tale of the conquest of the West with the Indians as the good guys.

"A society would be wise to pay attention to the people who do not belong if it wants to find out ... where it's failing," Penn said.

Penn's other films included his adaptation of "The Miracle Worker," featuring an Oscar-winning performance by Anne Bancroft; "The Missouri Breaks," an outlaw tale starring Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson; "Night Moves," a Los Angeles thriller featuring Gene Hackman; and "Alice's Restaurant," based on the wry Arlo Guthrie song about his being turned down for the draft because he had once been fined for littering.

"I loved working with Arthur," said Hackman, who also worked with Penn on "Bonnie and Clyde" and the 1985 thriller "Target."

"He had his own clear vision, but he was really excited to see what you could bring to a scene, every take," Hackman said in a statement. "You could feel him over there, just by the camera, pulling for you. However rough and tough his films are, you can always sense his humanity in them."

Penn was most identified with "Bonnie and Clyde," although it wasn't a project he initiated or, at first, wanted to do. Warren Beatty, who earlier starred in Penn's "Mickey One" and produced "Bonnie and Clyde," had to persuade him to take on the film, inspired by the movies of the French New Wave. (Francois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard each turned down offers to direct the film.)

Penn, in his 40s when he made "Bonnie and Clyde," took full advantage of his gorgeous lead actors � Beatty and Faye Dunaway � and of the story, as liberal in its politics as it was with the facts � a celebration of individual freedom and an expose of the banks that had ruined farmers' lives.

Released in 1967, when opposition to the Vietnam War was spreading and movie censorship crumbling, "Bonnie and Clyde" was shaped by the frenzy of old silent comedies, the jarring rhythms of the French New Wave and the surge of youth and rebellion. The robbers' horrifying deaths, a shooting gallery that took four days to film and ran nearly a minute, only intensified the characters' appeal.

With the glibbest of promotional tag lines, "They're young ... they're in love ... and they kill people," it was a film that challenged and changed minds. Beatty worked for a reduced fee because the studio, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, was convinced that "Bonnie and Clyde" would flop. Released in August 1967, then rereleased early in 1968 in response to unflagging interest, "Bonnie and Clyde" appalled the old and fascinated the young, widening a generational divide not only between audiences, but critics.

The New York Times' Bosley Crowther, then at the end of his career � an end hastened by "Bonnie and Clyde" � snorted that the film was "a cheap piece of bald-faced slapstick comedy that treats the hideous depredations of that sleazy, moronic pair as though they were as full of fun and frolic as the jazz-age cutups in 'Thoroughly Modern Millie.'"

But Pauline Kael, just starting her long reign at The New Yorker, welcomed "Bonnie and Clyde" as a new and vital kind of movie � an opinion now widely shared � and asked, "How do you make a good movie in this country without being jumped on?"

"The accusation that the beauty of movie stars makes the anti-social acts of their characters dangerously attractive is the kind of contrived argument we get from people who are bothered by something and clutching at straws," Kael wrote. "'Bonnie and Clyde' brings into the almost frighteningly public world of movies things people have been feeling and saying and writing about."

The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, with Estelle Parsons winning for best supporting actress, and is regarded by many as the dawn of a golden age in Hollywood, when the old studio system crumbled and performers and directors such as Penn, Beatty, Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese enjoyed creative control.

Penn, who had fought � and lost to � the studios over the editing of such early films as "The Left Handed Gun" and "The Chase," now was able to realize a long-desired project � an adaptation of "Little Big Man," based on the Thomas Berger novel.

"Originality is filtered out like tar is filtered out of cigarettes," Penn once complained. "I have not had a lot of success with the suits � or the dresses. Executives are executives. They're going to interfere as much as they can.

"('Little Big Man') didn't happen until I had so much clout I sort of made it happen."

None of Penn's other films had the impact of "Bonnie and Clyde," but the director regarded "Little Big Man," released in 1970, as his greatest success, with Dustin Hoffman playing the 121-year-old lone survivor of Custer's last stand. It was, again, a violent and romantic re-imagining of the past and an angry finger pointed at the war and racism of the present.

Penn earned Academy Award nominations for both films and for his first movie, "The Miracle Worker," based on the Broadway show about Helen Keller, played by Patty Duke in an Oscar-winning turn, and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, played by Bancroft. Among Penn's other stage credits: "All the Way Home," which won both the Tony and Pulitzer Prize in 1961 as best play; "Two for the Seesaw"; the musical version of "Golden Boy"; and "Wait Until Dark."

Penn traced his affinity for alienated heroes and heroines to the trauma of his childhood. Truffaut's film "The 400 Blows," he once said, "was so much like my own childhood it really stunned me."

When he was 3, Penn moved from Philadelphia to New York with his mother after his parents divorced. He and his mother, a nurse who had run a health food store, lived in a succession of apartments in New Jersey and New York City, and the boy attended at least a dozen elementary schools.

At age 14, Penn returned to Philadelphia to live with his ailing father and help him run his watch repairman's shop.

"He was an excellent mechanic. ... His hands were magical," Penn said. "But he was an evasive man for someone to try to make contact with. I think I'm like him in some ways. I'm not the most available of men, emotionally or personally."

He was no filmgoer as a child; books and baseball mattered more. Penn was frightened by a horror picture when he was 5 and said he did not see another movie until his teens, when Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" "staggered" him.

Along with Welles and Charlie Chaplin, Penn greatly admired Akira Kurosawa and the French New Wave directors, especially Truffaut and Godard.

He was known for allowing actors to improvise � and getting a wide range of expression from them in return. He believed words are to the theater as action is to film: "A look, a simple look, will do it."

Penn's 1960s success was bracketed by frustration. Early in his career, he was so angered by how Warner Bros. changed "The Left Handed Gun," a Western released in 1958, that he stopped making movies and turned to Broadway. He was fired from "The Train," a 1964 film, over disagreements with the lead actor, Burt Lancaster. And none of his later works found favor at the box office, though several � "Night Moves" (1975), "The Missouri Breaks" (1976) and "Four Friends" (1981) � won critics' praise.

Penn decided to live in New York, rather than Los Angeles, as Hollywood soured on his social vision. Broadway, too, seemed increasingly drawn to blockbuster musicals rather than serious drama, further marginalizing Penn.

"It was frustrating and more than a little humiliating," Penn once told The New York Times.

"It's not that I've drifted away from film," he said in another interview. "I'm very drawn to film, but I'm not sure that film is drawn to me."

Arthur Hiller Penn was born in Philadelphia on Sept. 27, 1922, the son of Harry and Sonia Penn and brother of Irving Penn.

Although both sons were involved in the visual arts, Arthur Penn later said that he saw little in common in their work and rarely discussed the ties between them. (Beatty would claim the director was influenced profoundly by his brother, who was known for a spare but dramatic photographic style. The older brother died in October 2009.)

Penn joined the Army during World War II, formed a dramatic troupe at Fort Jackson, S.C., was often in trouble for behaving disrespectfully to his superiors and was in an infantry unit that fought in the Battle of the Bulge. After the war, he studied literature in Italy for two years, then returned to New York, where he found work as a floor manager on NBC-TV's "Colgate Comedy Hour."

By the early 1950s, Penn was writing and directing TV dramas. In 1956, he debuted as a Broadway director, but "The Lovers" closed after just four days.

As a boy, Penn had little success learning the watchmaker's trade from his father, who died without having seen any of his son's films.

"He went to his grave despairing I would never find my way in the world," the director said, "and the movies rescued me."

___

AP Television Writer Frazier Moore and National Writer Hillel Italie contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Fact or fiction? Facebook film the latest "truth" tale

NEW YORK | Wed Sep 29, 2010 2:39pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - They say Hollywood never lets the truth get in the way of a good story and while a new movie about Facebook has left some critics wondering if its story is fact or fiction, audiences are unlikely to care.

"The Social Network," which hits U.S. cinemas on Friday, has been scoring early critical raves and even Oscar buzz, yet its claim on depicting the true story of the birth of the hugely popular social networking website is drawn from a book that was slammed for its reporting methods.

Just like Oliver Stone's "JFK" was criticized as taking liberties with historical facts in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, "Social Network" by director David Fincher follows a long line of Hollywood films that have caused controversy for their creative depictions of real-life characters and for scenes of events that never happened.

But in an age where viewers demand reality TV, knowing it is often missing elements of the truth, audiences may care less about authenticity than ever before, film experts said.

"We blur the line between reality and fiction so much recently on television and in movies that screenwriters and authors taking liberties to dream up something dramatic and interesting is okay," said Deadline Hollywood columnist and film critic Pete Hammond.

"The Social Network" tells how Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg was transformed from a socially awkward, arrogant student at Harvard University with girl troubles to largely creating the social networking website that currently has more than 500 million members and is worth tens of billions.

Besides questions about the book on which it is based -- Ben Mezrich's "The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook, A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal" -- stirring the debate is that Zuckerberg did not cooperate with the film.

"A lot of it is fiction," he told Oprah Winfrey last week on her TV talk show. "This is my life, so I know it is not that dramatic."

But the film's makers argue the movie is basically true, told from three perspectives: that of Zuckerberg, his former good friend and Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin and former classmates at Harvard, brothers Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss.

It shows scenes of depositions taken from lawsuits filed against Zuckerberg by Saverin and the Winklevoss twins. Both lawsuits resulted in large settlements.

Sorkin told Reuters even though it is "is based on the book," he did his own research and said the movie had been "vetted within an inch of its life by a team of lawyers."

"They only care that I am not saying anything that is untrue and defamatory," he said. "When the truth is in dispute, we make that clear as well."

RAVE REVIEWS, OSCAR RACE

Movies that have the cooperation of their subjects -- such as box office hits "The Blind Side" and "Erin Brockovich" -- face little controversy. In fact, both movies won Oscars for stars Sandra Bullock and Julia Roberts, respectively.

And lawsuits against films for falsely claiming they are based on true stories are hard to prove. Two years ago a judge dismissed a $55 million lawsuit filed by former DEA agents against the movie studio that made "American Gangster."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Britney Spears praises "Glee" tribute

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 29, 2010 2:43pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Britney Spears episode of TV musical comedy "Glee" drew 13.1 million viewers and triggered a stream of Twitter congratulations on Wednesday from the former pop princess herself.

Fox television said Tuesday's episode, which featured cover versions of five of Spear's biggest hits and a brief cameo appearance by the singer herself, drew the second biggest audience in "Glee" history.

"I loved it! Thank you guys SO much for making this happen," Spears, 28, said in a series of Tweets to her fans.

"Glee" is the darkly comic tale of a high school show choir that sings cover versions of pop, Broadway and hip-hop tunes. Tuesday's episode was the show's third affectionate tribute to pop icons. The music of Madonna and Lady Gaga was featured earlier this year but neither appeared on the show.

By Wednesday, four of the five "Glee" cover versions of Spears music were among the top 10 songs on the iTunes charts.

But Britney's "Glee" drew only mixed reviews. Entertainment Weekly's Margaret Lyons said on Wednesday that although the episode "rocked some dead-on Britney Spears recreations...it wasn't the slam-dunk I had hoped it would be."

Spears praised the performance of "Glee" actress Heather Morris, who sang, danced and recreated the pop videos for "I'm a Slave 4 U" and "Me Against the Music".

And Britney tweeted that watching actress Lea Michele's cover version of her flirty schoolgirl pop video debut "...Baby One More Time" in 1999 -- "brings back so many memories! Feels like yesterday."

The "Glee" episode focused on the highs of Spears' career and her place as a worldwide pop culture phenomenon who has sold over 100 million records.

Spears suffered a personal and career meltdown in 2007 and 2008 after a short-lived marriage and two children. She made her comeback with the 2008 album "Circus", followed by a successful world tour, but has adopted a lower public profile since then.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

'Star Wars' films to be rereleased in 3-D (AP)

NEW YORK � May the force be in 3-D.

Lucasfilm announced Wednesday that the "Star Wars" films will be converted into 3-D and rereleased theatrically. All six films of the saga, beginning with episode one, "The Phantom Menace," and concluding with episode six, "Return of the Jedi," are expected to be released in theaters in 2012.

Lucasfilm and distributor Twentieth Century Fox have not yet set a release date. Industrial Light & Magic is supervising the conversion process, which it promises will be "cutting edge." Many previous conversions of films shot in 2-D, such as "Clash of the Titans," have drawn criticism for cheapening 3-D.

John Knoll, visual effects supervisor for Industrial Light & Magic said a proper conversion to 3-D "is a matter of taking the time and getting it right."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Director Arthur Penn dies at age 88

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 29, 2010 1:27pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Film, stage and television director Arthur Penn, whose works include the 1967 movie "Bonnie and Clyde", has died at the age of 88, his friend and accountant said on Wednesday.

New York financial manager Evan Bell told Reuters that Penn, who earned three Oscar nominations for "Bonnie and Clyde," "The Miracle Worker" and "Alice's Restaurant," died on Tuesday night at his Manhattan home with his family at his side, the day after his 88th birthday.

Bell said Penn had been sick for about a year. He did not disclose the cause of death.

Penn also directed "Little Big Man", won a Tony award for his Broadway production of "The Miracle Worker", and worked with actors Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway and Gene Hackman throughout his long career.

His 1962 movie version of "The Miracle Worker" earned an Oscar for lead actress Anne Bancroft, and Estelle Parsons and Patty Duke also both won Oscars in movies Penn directed.

Born in Philadelphia, Penn studied at the famed Actor's Studio in New York, and began his career in television in the 1950s directing live dramas.

He later worked on Broadway and then went to Hollywood, turning the tale of two 1930s gangsters into the movie "Bonnie and Clyde" which marked a watershed in the portrayal of sex and violence on screen.

Penn followed up with "Alice's Restaurant", the Native American epic "Little Big Man" starring Dustin Hoffman, and "The Missouri Breaks" with Marlon Brando.

In later life, he returned to television, working as executive producer on "Law & Order" and the TV series "100 Center Street" among other shows.

He was married to actress Peggy Mauer since 1955 and is survived by her, two children and four grand-children.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Testaments of the Heart: music from the Holocaust (AP)

ATLANTA � Some songs are slow, emotional, almost weepy symphonies. Others are driving and angry pub songs. A few are sarcastic jazz numbers.

Others are shockingly upbeat � happy almost � as if the music lifted the composers out of the Nazi prison camps where they lived, saved them for just a moment from their horrific, torturous existence.

A handful of the countless songs written by victims of the Holocaust and other World War II prisoners made their world premiere at Emory University in Atlanta on Tuesday during "Testaments of the Heart," a program to help raise money to collect and preserve more of the music produced by captives of Germany and other countries, including Japan, from 1933 to 1945.

Already thousands of the songs have been collected by Italian pianist and conductor Francesco Lotoro � who was in Atlanta to play in the concert � in a 20-year effort to ensure the music is preserved for generations to come. And he plans to house that collection at Emory once he raises the money to transfer it to the private university's library.

"We as the world are the ones who have all been denied this wealth," Lotoro said through a translator. "There is a gaping hole in the musical history and culture of the world. This work has to continue to fill that hole and be the foundation for current and future musical culture."

With musicians from the Atlanta area, Lotoro presented � sometimes for the first time ever � pieces that were scribbled in diaries, carved into wood and even written on toilet paper. The music ranges from short songs to full operas and symphonies.

The group played the last piece ever written by Austrian musician and conductor Viktor Ullmann, who studied under Arnold Schoenberg and who died at Auschwitz in 1944. The haunting piano melody is set to a poem by Rainer Maria Rilke about a warrior from the 17th century.

Another piece was by British pianist William Hilsley, who was prolific during his time in various German camps for British nationals and wrote sarcastically about his prison life. Before he died in 2003, he published his diary from his time in captivity as a book.

"Numbers, that's what we are now," goes one song by Hilsley. "Not for thieving, nor deceiving, not for cheating nor wife beating are we locked in here."

Another piece called "Banner in the Sky" was written by an American prisoner of war, Gordon Sage, in the Mukden prison camp in Manchuria, a soldier who survived the death march to Bhutan. It featured a full band and chorus and has strains of the National Anthem running through it.

Another song is by Emile Goue, a French composer who died in 1946 from health problems developed while he was in a German POW camp. His dark string quartet piece was accompanied by a slideshow of family photographs of Holocaust victims before they were imprisoned, images found by photographer Ann Weiss at Auschwitz in the 1980s.

Weiss' photos are on exhibit at Emory until Nov. 12 with dozens of the images scattered in buildings across the campus.

The music of the prisoners was preserved in many ways: passed on from person to person in camps until it was smuggled out, given to family members who were safe from the Nazis or simply found after the camps were liberated.

Many of the songs were written in Theresienstadt, a Czech town used as a Nazi propaganda tool where prisoners could stage operas, concerts and cabaret shows. The camp saw many Jewish leaders and prominent artists from all over Europe. But some songs are from prisoners who had never before written music but felt the urge to create something beautiful among their horrific surroundings.

Lotoro has slowly been recording all the music on a set of 24 albums whenever he can cobble together the money and the musicians. Ultimately, he hopes to record all the 4,000 pieces he's found so far and estimates there are likely only another 1,500 in existence � which he says pales in comparison to the music lost during the war.

Lotoro began collecting the music in 1991 during a trip to Prague, where he went with one bag where he could store the music but had to buy a bigger one because he had found hundreds of manuscripts and photocopies.

Alfred Schneider, a Holocaust survivor at Tuesday's concert, said it's "moving" that Lotoro would spend decades collecting these songs to be preserved.

"I find it electrifying," said Schneider, 83, a retired Georgia Tech professor who was spared from the German death camps by the mayor of his Austrian hometown, Czernowitz, which is now part of Ukraine.

Lotoro's ultimate goal has been to present the music the way the composers originally intended, which can be an odd combination of sounds. Many of the writers had few instruments available to them, so some music is written for a guitar, two flutes and a clarinet or a trombone, an alto sax and a clarinet.

"What you really want as a person and as an artist � even when you are gone � is that your dreams, your essence, your purpose, your meaning does live on. A lot of these people, their lives were taken but we have this part of them," said Honora Foah, an Atlanta artist who, along with her husband Dahlan Robert Foah, helped Lotoro put together the concert. "To have the opportunity to connect with what was essential in these people, the most beautiful part of them, and to be able to bring that back out into the world is an extraordinary privilege."

____

Online:

Emory University: http://www.emory.edu



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Nicole Richie is no longer famous for being famous (AP)

NEW YORK � Nicole Richie first became a tabloid regular when she co-starred with childhood pal Paris Hilton in the reality show "The Simple Life."

Several years later, the 29-year-old is still a paparazzi target, but she has broadened her resume.

The daughter of singer Lionel Richie has transformed her image from red carpet regular and party girl to a hip, young mom (she has two children with musician Joel Madden of the band "Good Charlotte") fashion designer, occasional actress and author.

Her new book "Priceless" is now in stores.

It's about a wealthy young woman named Charlotte whose stockbroker father is busted for embezzling millions from his clients. Charlotte ends up escaping the barrage of media attention surrounding the scandal in New York City and relocating to New Orleans where she builds a life for herself.

"I don't think anyone is just a one-dimensional person. There are a few different people inside of every person," Richie said in an interview with The Associated Press to promote the book.

This isn't Richie's first foray into writing. Her first novel, "The Truth About Diamonds," was about a girl who is the adopted daughter of a famous male singer and part of Hollywood's in-crowd. Richie denies reports the book, a New York Times best-seller, was "semi-autobiographical," saying her writing is influenced by personal experience, but the book wasn't about her own life.

For "Priceless," Richie wanted to take a different direction.

"I wanted to write a story about the journey of a girl's life and about the steps that she takes to find her place her in the world and find her own voice."

Richie also has capitalized on her status as a fashion "it girl" with an accessories line, House of Harlow 1960, and a clothing line called Winter Kate. She serves as creative director for both.

Richie calls the acceptance by the fashion industry a blessing.

"It's very exciting. I'm learning a lot, I'm learning as I go."

She will also return to NBC's "Chuck" next month where she has a recurring role as Heather Chandler, a former high school mean girl-turned-spy with a talent for kung fu.

Despite her various hats, Richie wants to add yet another career to her resume: Singing.

"Music is something that I love so much and it's very close to my heart," she said. "I would never want to do something that I can't put all of my time and heart and soul into ... but ... I'm only 29! I have time!"

___

Online:

http://www.nicolerichie.celebuzz.com/

http://www.nbc.com/chuck/



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Tony Danza turns teacher for TV show

NEW YORK | Wed Sep 29, 2010 1:25pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Tony Danza has worn many hats during a career spanning over 30 years, including singer, dancer, talk show host and Broadway star, but his latest role as "teacher" may be his biggest challenge so far.

Danza, 59, best known for creating lovable and enduring characters in the popular TV comedies "Who's The Boss" and "Taxi", documented his year-long stint as a 10th grade English teacher for the reality show, "Teach: Tony Danza," premiering on Friday on cable channel A&E.

"As my 60th birthday approached, I wanted a chance to do something meaningful while benefiting others," said Danza, who had planned to go into teaching in the mid-1970s before his acting career took off.

"I heard President Obama's call to service, and I talked about teaching with a TV producer friend of mine who said, 'That might make a good show.' But I didn't want to do it unless the kids came first. They'd be the priority, and I'd have a chance to live out my dream," Danza told Reuters.

The seven-part series follows Danza as a first year teacher at one of Philadelphia's largest inner city schools. Additional footage was filmed by Danza using a small camera.

Despite a brief career as a professional boxer in the 1970s, Danza described the experience of teaching as "overwhelming" and much harder than he had expected.

"There were some rough times, especially in the beginning that left me in tears," he said.

"I wasn't prepared for how hard it really was. Not just the actual work of lesson planning and grading and test preparation, but the counseling aspect. You have to be a lot of different things to a lot of different people: a father, mother, brother, friend, social worker."

SANITIZING AND SKEPTICISM

Danza's decision to trade his Hollywood life for the classroom brought its fair share of criticism from both teachers and students.

Among the quirkier moments of the series is watching Danza explain the importance of "sanitizing" after installing a hand sanitizer in his classroom.

He was often criticized for talking too much by his students, many of who had never heard of him as an actor in movies like 2005 Oscar-winner "Crash" or as host of his own TV talk show that ended in 2006.

Monty, an outspoken 10th grader, didn't mince words when questioning Danza's credentials. "My education is very important to me and I'm not sure Mr. Danza is qualified to be my teacher."

"I experienced a healthy dose of skepticism upon my arrival to the school, which is not surprising," Danza said. "But I think that I was able to win them over after they saw my dedication and how serious I was about the project."

"Teach: Tony Danza" is being broadcast during a renewed focus on education in the United States.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Arthur Penn, director of 'Bonnie and Clyde,' dies at 88 (AP)

NEW YORK � Director Arthur Penn, a myth-maker and myth-breaker who in such classics as "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Little Big Man," refashioned movie and American history and sealed a generation's affinity for outsiders, died Tuesday night, a day after his 88th birthday.

Daughter Molly Penn said her father died at his home, in Manhattan, of congestive heart failure. Longtime friend and business manager Evan Bell said Wednesday that Penn had been ill for about a year. A memorial service would be held before the end of the year. Penn's older brother was photographer Irving Penn, who died in October 2009.

Penn's older brother was photographer Irving Penn, who died in October 2009.

After first making his name on Broadway as director of the Tony Award-winning plays "The Miracle Worker" and "All the Way Home," Penn rose as a film director in the 1960s, his work inspired by the decade's political and social upheaval, and Americans' interest in their past and present.

"Bonnie and Clyde," with its mix of humor and mayhem, encouraged moviegoers to sympathize with the lawbreaking couple from the 1930s, while "Little Big Man" told the tale of the conquest of the West with the Indians as the good guys.

"A society would be wise to pay attention to the people who do not belong if it wants to find out ... where it's failing," Penn once said.

Penn's other films included his adaptation of "The Miracle Worker," featuring an Oscar-winning performance by Anne Bancroft; "The Missouri Breaks," an outlaw tale starring Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson; "Night Moves," a Los Angeles thriller featuring Gene Hackman; and "Alice's Restaurant," based on the wry Arlo Guthrie song about being turned down for the draft because he had once been fined for littering.

Penn was most identified with "Bonnie and Clyde," although it wasn't a project he initiated or, at first, wanted. Beatty, who earlier starred in Penn's "Mickey One" and produced "Bonnie and Clyde," had to persuade him to take on the film, written by Robert Benton and David Newman and inspired by the movies of the French New Wave. (Francois Truffaut and Jean Luc-Godard each turned down offers to direct the film).

Penn was in his 40s when he made "Bonnie and Clyde," but his heart was very much with the gorgeous stars, played by Beatty and Faye Dunaway, and with the story, as liberal in its politics as it was with the facts � a celebration of individual freedom and an expose of the banks that had ruined farmers' lives.

Released in 1967, when opposition to the Vietnam War was ballooning and movie censorship crumbling, "Bonnie and Clyde" was shaped by the frenzy of silent comedy, the jarring rhythms of the French New Wave and the surge of youth and rebellion. The robbers' horrifying death, a shooting gallery that took four days to film and ran for less than a minute, only intensified their appeal.

"I thought that if were going to show this (violence), we should SHOW it," Penn said in the documentary "A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies."

"We should show what it looks like when somebody gets shot." TV coverage of Vietnam, he added, "was every bit, perhaps even more, bloody than what we were showing on film."

With the glibbest of promotional tag lines, "They're young ... they're in love ... and they kill people," it was a film that challenged and changed minds. Beatty worked for a reduced fee because the studio, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, was convinced that "Bonnie and Clyde" would flop. Released in August 1967, then rereleased early in 1968 in response to undying attention, "Bonnie and Clyde" appalled the old and fascinated the young, widening a generational divide not only between audiences, but critics.

The New York Times' Bosley Crowther, then at the end of his career � an end hastened by "Bonnie and Clyde" � snorted that the film was "a cheap piece of bald-faced slapstick comedy that treats the hideous depredations of that sleazy, moronic pair as though they were as full of fun and frolic as the jazz-age cutups in `Thoroughly Modern Millie.'"

But Pauline Kael, just starting her long reign at The New Yorker, welcomed "Bonnie and Clyde" as a new and vital kind of movie � an opinion now widely shared � and asked, "How do you make a good movie in this country without being jumped on?"

"The accusation that the beauty of movie stars makes the anti-social acts of their characters dangerously attractive is the kind of contrived argument we get from people who are bothered by something and clutching at straws," Kael wrote. "`Bonnie and Clyde' brings into the almost frighteningly public world of movies things people have been feeling and saying and writing about."

The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, with Estelle Parsons winning for best supporting actress, and is regarded by many as the dawn of a golden age in Hollywood, when the old studio system crumbled and performers and directors such as Penn, Beatty, Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese enjoyed creative control.

Penn, who had fought � and lost to � the studios over the editing of such early films as "The Left Handed Gun" and "The Chase," now was able to realize a long-desired project � an adaptation of "Little Big Man," based on the Thomas Berger novel.

"Originality is filtered out like tar is filtered out of cigarettes," Penn once complained. "I have not had a lot of success with the suits � or the dresses. Executives are executives. They're going to interfere as much as they can.

"('Little Big Man') didn't happen until I had so much clout I sort of made it happen."

None of Penn's other films would have the impact of "Bonnie and Clyde," but the director regarded "Little Big Man," released in 1970, as his greatest success, with Dustin Hoffman playing the 121-year-old lone survivor of Custer's last stand. It was, again, a violent and romantic overturning of the past and an angry finger pointed at the war and racism of the present.

Penn earned Academy Award nominations for both films and for his first movie, "The Miracle Worker," based on the Broadway show about Helen Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, played by Bancroft. Among Penn's other stage credits: "All the Way Home," which won both the Tony and Pulitzer Prize in 1961 as best play; "Two for the Seesaw"; the musical version of "Golden Boy"; and "Wait Until Dark."

Penn traced his affinity for alienated heroes and heroines to the trauma of his childhood. Truffaut's film "The 400 Blows," he once said, "was so much like my own childhood it really stunned me."

When he was 3, Penn moved from Philadelphia to New York with his mother after his parents divorced. He and his mother, a nurse who had run a health food store, lived in a succession of apartments in New Jersey and New York City, and the boy attended at least a dozen elementary schools.

At age 14, Penn returned to Philadelphia to live with his ailing father and help him run his watch repairman's shop.

"He was an excellent mechanic. ... His hands were magical," Penn said. "But he was an evasive man for someone to try to make contact with. I think I'm like him in some ways. I'm not the most available of men, emotionally or personally."

He was no filmgoer as a child; books and baseball mattered more. Penn was frightened by a horror picture when he was 5 and said he did not see another movie until his teens, when Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" "staggered" him.

Along with Welles and Charlie Chaplin, Penn greatly admired Akira Kurosawa and the French New Wave directors, especially Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard.

He was known for allowing actors to improvise � and getting a wide range of expression from them in return. He believed words are to the theater as action is to film: "A look, a simple look, will do it."

Penn's 1960s success was bracketed by frustration. Early in his career, he was so angered by how Warner Bros. changed "The Left Handed Gun," a Western released in 1958, that he stopped making movies for years and turned to Broadway. He was fired from "The Train," a 1964 film, over disagreements with the lead actor, Burt Lancaster. And none of his later works found favor at the box office, though several � "Night Moves" (1975), "The Missouri Breaks" (1976) and "Four Friends" (1981) � won critical acclaim.

He decided to live in New York, rather than Los Angeles, as Hollywood soured on his social vision. Broadway, too, seemed increasingly drawn to blockbuster musicals rather than serious drama, further marginalizing Penn.

"It was frustrating and more than a little humiliating," Penn told The New York Times.

"It's not that I've drifted away from film," he said in another interview. "I'm very drawn to film, but I'm not sure that film is drawn to me."

Arthur Hiller Penn was born in Philadelphia Sept. 27, 1922, the son of Harry and Sonia Penn and brother of Irving Penn. Although both sons were involved in the visual arts, Arthur Penn later said that he saw little in common in their work and rarely discussed it. (Beatty would claim the director was influenced profoundly by his brother, known for a spare, but dramatic style.)

He joined the Army during World War II, formed a dramatic troupe at Fort Jackson, S.C., was often in trouble for behaving disrespectfully to his superiors and was in an infantry unit that fought in the Battle of the Bulge. After the war, he studied literature in Italy for two years, then returned to New York, where he found work as a floor manager on NBC-TV's "Colgate Comedy Hour."

By the early 1950s, Penn was writing and directing TV dramas. In 1956, he debuted as a Broadway director, but "The Lovers" closed after just four days.

As a boy, Penn had little success learning the watchmaker's trade from his father, who died without having seen any of his son's films.

"He went to his grave despairing I would never find my way in the world," the director said, "and the movies rescued me."

___

AP Television Writer Frazier Moore and National Writer Hillel Italie contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Arianna Huffington pledges free bus rides to rally (AP)

NEW YORK � Website publisher Arianna Huffington has a ticket to ride, one for everybody who wants to get to Washington from New York for the rally scheduled by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert next month.

Appearing on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" on Tuesday, Huffington told Stewart that anyone who arrives at her office in lower Manhattan on Oct. 30 can hitch a free ride on one of her buses.

She said her "promise" is to have as many buses as people to fill them.

An information sign-up list is on the website for The Huffington Post.

Stewart's "Rally to Restore Sanity" and a competing "March to Keep Fear Alive" led by his fellow TV host, Colbert, will take place on the National Mall.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Poets poised for Nobel glory; Swede is favorite

LONDON | Wed Sep 29, 2010 9:44am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Swedish poet and writer Tomas Transtromer is the bookmakers' favorite to win the Nobel Prize in Literature this year, with odds also suggesting American authors are once again set to be overlooked.

British company Ladbrokes have given Transtromer, 79, odds of 5/1, or one chance in six of winning. He is ahead of three other poets backed at 8/1 -- Poland's Adam Zagajewski, South Korea's Ko Un and Syria's Adonis.

The first non-poet in the bookmakers' ranking is Paraguay's Nestor Amarilla, a playwright who was reported to have been shortlisted for the world's top literary award, although nominees are officially kept a close secret.

"Tomas Transtromer must surely be in pole position," said David Williams of Ladbrokes. "He's long been mentioned for the prize and we feel his work finally deserves this recognition."

The winner of the award, which can thrust relatively obscure authors into the international limelight, is notoriously difficult to guess, with a series of surprises in recent years.

The prize has also been overshadowed by perceptions of anti-American bias on the committee that whittles the nominations sent in from around the world down to a shortlist which is then voted on by the Swedish Academy.

In 2008, committee member Horace Engdahl was quoted as saying U.S. literature was "too insular," prompting an angry response from some leading American writers.

Ladbrokes have put U.S. authors Thomas Pynchon and Philip Roth, both perennial also-rans in the Nobel race, among the 18/1 outsiders for the prize, worth 10 million Swedish crowns ($1.5 million) to the winner last year.

Four female writers -- Joyce Carol Oates, Margaret Atwood, Alice Munro and A.S. Byatt -- are also at 18/1.

COMMITTEE DEFENDS ITS INDEPENDENCE

Per Wastberg, a Swedish author and chairman of the committee on which Engdahl sits, denied there was any anti-American sentiment among its five members.

"We really make a great effort to study and take in all sorts of literatures -- Arab, Chinese, Japanese, Indonesian, and obviously American literature which has such an impact," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"It's a pity (the row erupted)," he added. "These utterances by Engdahl ... were a bit taken out of context.

"We do concentrate on individual writers regardless of their ethnicity or country because it's not a prize for a country.

"When (Portugal's Jose) Saramago got it (in 1998), Portugal was absolutely ecstatic, but Saramago himself thought Portugal was a terrible country and had gone to the Canary Islands."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Lehman Bros sign, artworks auctioned off in UK (AP)

LONDON � Artwork from doomed investment bank Lehman Brothers is being sold at an auction in London.

Christie's is offering the 10 foot-long (3 meter-long) sign that adorned the bank's European headquarters, along with paintings, furniture and other objects from the offices of the financial institution.

They are among millions of dollars' (euros') worth of items being sold to help pay Lehman's creditors.

The bank collapsed in September 2008. It was the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history and helped cause one of the worst financial crises since the Great Depression.

Christie says that Wednesday's sale is expected to raise about 2 million pounds ($3.1 million), a tiny fraction of the $613 billion in debts held by Lehman when it collapsed.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Survey: Children like e-books, parents not so much (AP)

NEW YORK � Children are ready to try e-books, with some thinking that a bigger selection of electronic texts would make reading for fun even more fun, according to a new study. But a solid majority of parents aren't planning to join the digital revolution.

The 2010 Kids and Family Reading Report, released Wednesday and commissioned by Scholastic Inc., offers a mixed portrait of e-books and families. Around six out of 10 of those between ages 9 and 17 say they're interested in reading on an electronic device such as the Kindle or the iPad. Around one out of three from the same age group say they'd read more "for fun" if more books were available on a digital reader.

Among the books that can't be downloaded: the "Harry Potter" series, published in the U.S. by Scholastic. J.K. Rowling has said she prefers her work to be read on paper.

The e-market has grown rapidly since 2007 and the launch of Amazon.com's Kindle device, from less than 1 percent of overall sales to between 5 to 10 percent, publishers say. But the new report is also the latest to show substantial resistance. Just 6 percent of parents surveyed have an electronic reading device, while 76 percent say they have no plans to buy one. Sixteen percent plan to have one within the following year.

In a recent Harris Poll of adults, 80 percent said they were not likely to get an e-reader.

"I'm not surprised to know that. I think we're still at the beginning of e-books," said Scholastic Book Club president Judy Newman, adding that the expense of digital devices was a likely problem for potential e-book fans.

The 2010 report shows, as other studies have, a decline in reading for fun as children grow older. More than half read for fun between ages 6 and 8, but the percentage drops to around 25 percent by ages 15 through 17 and just 20 percent for boys in that age group. Newman sees technology as both a problem and possible solution.

"We know that around age 8 they (children) start to lose interest in reading," Newman says. "Obviously, digital media is competing for kids' attention. It's very important that we as publishers make sure we're engaging kids in reading for fun. There's an opportunity to use technology to engage kids. ... We can have great content presented in a digital way."

The Kids and Family report was compiled by the Harrison Group, a marketing and research consulting firm. The survey was conducted in the spring of 2010, with 1,045 children and 1,045 parents interviewed. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.2 percentage points.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Study: Audio recordings of US history fading fast (AP)

WASHINGTON � New digital recordings of events in U.S. history and early radio shows are at risk of being lost much faster than older ones on tape and many are already gone, according to a study on sound released Wednesday.

Even recent history � such as recordings from 9/11 or the 2008 election � is at risk because digital sound files can be corrupted and widely used CD-R discs last only last three to five years before files start to fade, said study co-author Sam Brylawski.

"I think we're assuming that if it's on the Web it's going to be there forever," he said. "That's one of the biggest challenges."

The first comprehensive study of the preservation of sound recordings in the U.S. being released by the Library of Congress also found many historical recordings already have been lost or can't be accessed by the public. That includes most of radio's first decade from 1925 to 1935.

Shows by singers Duke Ellington and Bing Crosby, as well as the earliest sports broadcasts, are already gone. There was little financial incentive for such broadcasters as CBS to save early sound files, Brylawski said.

Digital files are a blessing and a curse. Sounds can be easily recorded and transferred and the files require less and less space. But the problem, Brylawski said, is they must be constantly maintained and backed up by audio experts as technology changes. That requires active preservation, rather than simply placing files on a shelf, he said.

The study co-authored by Rob Bamberger was mandated by Congress in a 2000 preservation law.

Those old analog formats that remain are more physically stable and can survive about 150 years longer than contemporary digital recordings, the study warns. Still, the rapid change in technology to play back the recordings can make them obsolete.

Recordings saved by historical societies and family oral histories also are at risk, Brylawski said.

"Those audio cassettes are just time bombs," Brylawski said. "They're just not going to be playable."

There are few if any programs to train professional audio archivists, the study found. No universities currently offer degrees in audio preservation, though several offer related courses.

A hodgepodge of 20th century state anti-piracy laws also has kept most sound files out of the public domain before U.S. copyright law was extended to sound recordings in 1972. The study found only 14 percent of commercially released recordings are available from rights holders. That limits how much preservation can be accomplished, Brylawski said.

The study calls for changes in the law to help preservation. As it stands now, Brylawski said, copyright restrictions would make most audio preservation initiatives illegal, the authors wrote.

___

Online:

Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

"Star Wars" movies start 3D rollout in 2012

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Jerry Lee Lewis lost for words as he turns 75

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 29, 2010 4:23am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "The Killer" is running low on ammo as he marks his 75th birthday on Wednesday.

Jerry Lee Lewis can still pound out "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" and "Great Balls of Fire" on his piano, and he just released a new album with help from the likes of Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ringo Starr, Kid Rock and Willie Nelson.

But a Q&A session with the rock 'n' roll legend at the Grammy Museum on Tuesday was an uncomfortable experience as a blank-faced Lewis sat at a piano and mumbled brief answers to a moderator's questions that he had heard a million times before.

How was his Sun Records labelmate Carl Perkins? "A great guy, a very dear friend."

How about Chuck Berry? "Awesome, fantastic."

His reaction to meeting the Beatles? "Those boys are gonna be big."

Does he play piano at home? "A little bit."

Lewis is on the promotional trail for the album, "Mean Old Man," whose Kris Kristofferson-written title track has generated some laughs. Lewis was quite the hellraiser back in the 1950s, and modern-day fans would still like to picture him as a wild child spreading the devil's music.

Is he, in fact, a mean old man? "No," he said to laughs. "I just heard the demo on it and I said, 'That is a hit.'"

Moreover he did not even know that the song, featuring Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood, would become the album title.

At any rate, the CD artwork suggests that a better title might have been "Dirty Old Man." Lewis, seated in an old limo, is greeted by four fresh-faced young women evidently eager to get their hands on him. Lewis is smiling.

One imagines his collaboration with Sheryl Crow on "You Are My Sunshine" was a personal highlight. He described the 48-year-old rocker as "a good looking little girl."

He struggled to remember the names of any of his other guest collaborators, and brushed off a lengthy question about his cover of Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven," saying its inclusion was a management decision.

The brains behind the project were Phoebe Lewis, his daughter and manager, and its producers, session drummer Jim Keltner and property heir Steve Bing.

Just as Lewis does not like to waste words, he also wasted little time in the studio, Keltner said. Most of the songs were done in one take, just like "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" and "Great Balls of Fire," both of which Lewis performed on Tuesday.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds