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Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Articles Fri Feb 08, 2008 1:35 am | |
| From DigitalSpy
Mortensen slams greedy blockbuster stars
Thursday, February 7 2008, 17:39 GMT
By Alex Fletcher, Entertainment Reporter
Lord of the Rings star Viggo Mortensen has attacked actors who choose blockbuster movies roles purely for the cash.
Mortensen, who played Aragorn in Peter Jackson's fantasy trilogy, claims he has enough money to have a pleasant life with his family and prefers taking challenging roles rather than opting for the movies with the biggest budgets.
When asked why had not taken more blockbuster roles, he told Empire: "Certainly I could have made some more money if I'd done what you're talking about, but I mean, how much money does a person need?
"I can help my family; I can give money to certain organisations, I can travel on my own. I don't need more than I have. I've been really fortunate." | |
| | | Guest Guest
| Subject: Re: Articles Fri Feb 08, 2008 2:41 am | |
| Unless I missed something in the translation I don't see Viggo 'slamming' anyone. Stating his own opinion about his preferences. Funny how the headline is misleading. |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:04 pm | |
| TheStar.com
How we would save the Genies February 08, 2008 Peter Howell
My rant last week about how the Genie Awards discriminate against Canadians brought beaucoup email.
Most agreed with me, some didn't and several hurled a challenge: "How would you fix the Genies, homeskillet, if you know so darned much?" (Actually, nobody called me "homeskillet." That's just my nod to Juno, a very Canadian film.)
To recap for those Canucks who were away tobogganing last week:
I was complaining how Juno, a hit comedy directed by a Canadian (Jason Reitman), starring two Canadians (Ellen Page and Michael Cera) and filmed in and around Vancouver isn't considered Canadian enough to qualify for Genies at the March 3 ceremony. Yet American star Viggo Mortensen, British star Julie Christie and the filmed-in-London Eastern Promises all get dunked in maple syrup.
The reason for this, as many officials and bureaucrats reminded me, essentially comes down to money: Juno was funded by an American studio and not Canadians (read: taxpayers). Here's how I would save the Genies:
Recognize Canadian talent everywhere: It's ludicrous that we are celebrating the Canadian status of Best Actress nominee Page at the Feb. 24 Academy Awards, but her breakthrough Juno performance will go unrecognized at the Genies eight days later in Toronto. (The Halifax actress does have a Genie nod for The Tracey Fragments.) It's possible an American and a Briton will win the top Genie acting awards this year, simply because Mortensen and Christie appeared in movies that met Canadian funding rules.
Change the rules so Canadian actors can get nominated for whatever films they appear in, Canadian or otherwise. Allow Scarborough's Mike Myers to be nominated for an Austin Powers movie, say, or Vancouver's Carrie-Anne Moss to get some love for her key role in The Matrix franchise. And work on getting famous Canadians to show for the Genies ceremony.
Stop following the money: The old argument Canadian films need protection from big, bad Hollywood is the main reason why the Genie people slavishly insist on having at least a portion of Canadian funding for their film nominees. But we live in a global economy now where many films are funded by multiple countries and are also shot in various nations. Eastern Promises is a very fine film, but its Russian mobster story is as Canadian as the Kremlin, even if it was directed by Toronto's David Cronenberg. Eastern Promises is eligible for Genie consideration mainly because it had Canadian production money, and that's too narrow a definition for this day and age.
Untangle the red tape: Why is it harder to apply for a Genie than an Oscar? Potential Genie film nominees have to jump through more hoops than a circus seal, meeting an absurdly early Aug. 31 submission deadline and submitting dozens of copies of their films to Genies HQ. Potential Oscar nominees have until early December and they don't have to file a single print. The Genies also "recommend" English-language films be subtitled in French, and vice-versa. All this adds a lot of trouble and expense, which hurts the smaller Canadian productions that the Genies are supposedly trying to help. Make the process simpler.
Make it a party, not a show: Few people watch the Genies because even fewer have seen the films or recognize the actors. Why not skip the telecast and turn the Genies into a dinner party in an elegant space with loads of free booze, the way the Oscars were when they began? People and the media will show up and everyone will really have fun, instead of just pretending to for the camera.phowell@thestar.ca | |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:06 pm | |
| Thurs., Feb. 7, 2008, 9:00pm PT
Oscar nominees learn to accentuate Actors rely on dialect coaches for tough roles By Variety Staff
From Marion Cotillard's finely tuned Edith Piaf impersonation to Javier Bardem's demonic monotone, actors tend to get all the credit for the way their characters sound. But when it comes time for the winning thesps to give thanks on Oscar night, you just might hear -- uttered somewhere between their agents, parents and God -- the names of an elite group of unsung heroes who helped them find their voice: the dialect coaches.
When the Coen brothers first approached Bardem about inhabiting the villainous role in "No Country for Old Men," the actor worried that his Spanish accent might get in the way. "There are Mexicans and (then there's) Chigurh, and you cannot mix one with the other," the actor recalls, "so we had to get rid of the Spanish accent as much as we could."
For that, Bardem turned to Howard Samuelsohn, scheduling an intensive two-week prep with the dialect coach.
"The goal is to find the things your North American audience would pick out right away as things that sound particularly Spanish," explains Samuelsohn. "We worked every day. Javier was very conscientious. Our first lesson took six hours. We filled up four CDs, and he would listen to the stuff when I wasn't there."
The resulting sound, still vaguely foreign, suggests that Chigurh has been beamed in from another dimension, making the ghostlike killing force all the more terrifying.
"The way we speak is such an amalgam for how we feel emotionally, psychologically, socially, environmentally," explains Neil Swain, dialect coach on both "Atonement" and "Sweeney Todd." "We have this blueprint of sounds, but they will be very different in the mouth of Cecilia than they would (coming from her mother or sister). I find that endlessly fascinating, how a character then inhabits those sounds, or how those sounds inhabit a character."
From traditional to esoteric, coaching strategies vary wildly depending on the actor, role and time constraints.
"One has to be prepared to modify their technique," explains Andrew Jack, who worked with Viggo Mortensen to develop the right accent for Russian mobster Nikolai in "Eastern Promises." Of Mortensen, Jack says, "He can hear subtleties that other actors don't hear at all," adding that the star went to Russia and "all sorts of devious places where he was able to meet ex-convicts."
Expanding upon the system he developed working with Mortensen for "The Lord of the Rings," Jack typically steered clear of the scripted text, coaching Mortensen in Russian sounds, then ad libbing conversation in the dialect.
"In the end, if the actor is able to speak from spontaneous thought, it doesn't matter what's in the script," he says.
But beyond the accent, "Eastern Promises" also required Mortensen to sound convincing when delivering lines in Russian. For that, the Oscar nominee worked with a second dialect coach, Olegar Fedoro, who brings his own acting instincts to bear on the process.
"Usually, I live through the character myself, in parallel with an actor as if I was his brother," says Fedoro. At times, his approach proved a bit too intense for director David Cronenberg. "Being on the set, I constantly watch (Viggo) doing his version of the character and compare it with my own version. ... I became very possessive towards the character."
Because the nuances of foreign-language performances can easily be lost on American audiences, the training spent mastering specific accents must not detract from that most important of acting tools: body language. In assisting Marion Cotillard with her transformation into French singing legend Edith Piaf, "La Vie en rose" acting coach Pascal Luneau focused on embodying Piaf completely, not just mastering her Parisian street accent. Finding Piaf's voice was a unique two-month process, beginning in Luneau's living room.
"For me, there is no role; there are two souls," he says. "If you accept this way of work, it is important to leave a little place for the other soul. I wanted to create a zone where Marion and Edith were able to fight together, work together, live together in the same person." Swain favored a much stricter approach with "Atonement" and "Sweeney Todd," making historical accuracy the priority when molding the appropriate dialects.
"Johnny (Depp) tends to do his own thing -- wonderfully," says Swain, who coached the other actors. "He showed up on the set with a history of working with the cockney accent. He likes to take a voice or a person that is like the character and follow this example." With "Atonement's" aristocratic Tallis family, "The vowels are very short, very clipped, the consonants very sharp and very articulated and muscular," he explains. "There was no sense at that time of people (in England's upper class) having to come out and meet others with their speech. They felt very comfortable in themselves, and they weren't used to being contradicted."
Before building the appropriate sounds, Swain had to disguise the actors' original accents: James McAvoy hails from Scotland and sports the distinctive brogue to prove it, while Oscar nominee Saiorse Ronan speaks with a thick Irish accent. The technique, termed "accent reduction" among dialect coaches, is similar to Samuelsohn's work with Bardem.
Swain was particularly impressed with 13-year-old Ronan's maturity. "I could sit down and work with her as if she was an actress in her 20s or 30s. We worked on placement, mouth shapes, specific sounds, and we talked about the history and the feel behind the accent," he says.
The coaches may help with the mechanics, but the actors ultimately bring the characters to life -- for that reason, the modest pros who do the coaching insist, it's fitting that their names remain unspoken.
"That's part of the deal," Samuelsohn says. "When you go into a job like this, if you do your job right, no one will notice." Read the full article at:
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117980479.html | |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:09 pm | |
| From Digital Spy
Clooney tips Day-Lewis for Oscar
Friday, February 8 2008, 16:46 GMT By Beth Hilton Entertainment Reporter
George Clooney has tipped Daniel Day-Lewis to walk away with the Best Actor Oscar later this month.
The pair face Viggo Mortensen, Tommy Lee Jones and Johnny Depp in the category, but Clooney is convinced that the result is a foregone conclusion.
The actor said: "If you want my honest opinion, I think it's going to be Daniel Day-Lewis."
He then joked: "He sort of irritates all of us because he's so good... I'll tell you right now, I don't like him!"
Clooney is nominated for his role in Michael Clayton, while Day-Lewis impressed the Academy with his portrayal of a Texan oil prospector in There Will Be Blood.
Oscars president Sid Ganis has pleaded with the Writers Guild of America to say whether it will back the full ceremony to go ahead on February 24.
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| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Sat Feb 09, 2008 8:19 pm | |
| People News
Naomi Watts' fear thrill
Naomi Watts loves "playing scared".
The 39-year-old beauty - who crosses paths with Russian gangsters in her latest movie 'Eastern Promises' - enjoys portraying characters who are placed in terrifying situations.
She said: "I love playing scared. It's fun, and besides, no-one is that perfect. I love seeing a character put under pressure until they crack open to reveal the contradictions we all have in ourselves."
Watts' 'Eastern Promises' co-star Viggo Mortensen - who has been nominated for a Best Actor Oscar for his role in the film - believes she deserved more recognition for her performance.
He told Esquire magazine: "Naomi did some very subtle, finely layered work in 'Eastern Promises'. Unfortunately it is not surprising that such well-grounded, generous and true-to-life acting has thus far hardly been recognised by the year-end taste makers in the movie business.
"She is simply too deft to be noticed in the rush towards bigger, brassier, bug-eyed performances. It was a personal pleasure and a creative privilege to work with her."
Naomi can be seen later this month in the brutally violent 'Funny Games U.S.', in which she is held hostage in her own home by two ruthless young men. (C) BANG Media International | |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Sun Feb 10, 2008 9:32 pm | |
| 10 February 2008 WELCOME TO THE BAFTAS Celebrities abound in Covent Garden
With Covent Garden awash with celebrities it was almost as if every premiere had come at once this evening. Once again at London’s Royal Opera House, the BAFTAs kicked off amid much fanfare and shimmering designer frocks as all of this year’s nominees and associated hangers on glided down a red carpet bordered by droves of highly enthusiastic and quite possibly dangerous fans.
First to arrive was Ricky Gervais, who was greeted by so many bellows of “Riiiiiiicky!” it felt like Mike Reid might have returned from the dead. The barrage of wailed adoration continued as the likes of Eddie Izzard and Andy Serkis joined Gervais in running the autograph gauntlet, although this reporter died a little inside when fans began screaming “show me the money!” to a bewildered Cuba Gooding Jr – come on people, Jerry Maguire was nearly 12 years ago.
The always awesome Amanda Peet arrived next (we loved you in Studio 60!) alongside with and one of the night’s nominees, her fiancée and The Kite Runner screenwriter David Benioff. “We’re completely freaking out,” she told a line-up of uncharacteristically dapper press, whose threadbare jeans and donkey jackets had been the first casualty of this year’s new journalist dress code. “We’re in the same hotel as Julie Christie and Daniel Day Lewis, we’re going to sneak around the halls later and see if we can find them – that sounded really creepy didn’t it?”
“You know, I used to be a street performer round the back there so it’s a bit weird to be here for the BAFTAs,” revealed a nostalgic Izzard. I’m presenting the animation award tonight so I’ll be giving that away… as long as people are nice to me. All creative people have egos as big as planets so it’s nice to come out on nights like this and pat each other on the back.”
Jeff Goldblum and Kevin Spacey arrived together – the pair are currently co-starring in David Mamet’s Speed The Plough at the Old Vic (tickets on sale now, in case you’re interested). “I’m the most excited that I can be - possibly the most excited I’ve ever been,” said Goldblum, holding his hand to head-height to indicate the sheer level of his enthusiasm. “How excited are you?” All said while wearing sunglasses. At night. This is a man so cool he could single-handedly reverse global warming.
Director Joe Wright arrived sporting similarly tinted eyewear but we’re sorry to say he couldn’t pull it off nearly as well as Goldblum. His stars, on the other hand were entirely spec-free. “Atonement’s got 14 nominations, which is great. Plus we’re in Britain and it’s a British film so it’s a very exciting night,” said Keira Knightley, up for Best actress for her part in the film. “I didn’t think I’d ever get nominated for a BAFTA - it’s so exciting. There’s some really amazing talent coming out of Britain at the moment and it’s important to have nights like this that recognise that.”
“What has been heartening this year is that films like Control and No Country For Old Men and Atonement have been viewed in great numbers by the public,” commented Knightley’s co-star James McAvoy. People haven’t just gone to see Transformers. It’s been a good year for intelligent films on both sides of the Atlantic.”.
The uber-glamorous BAFTA makeover wasn’t lost on Daniel Day Lewis, returning this year to make a bid for Best Actor for his part in There Will Be Blood “This whole event has been genetically modified since I was here last,” he marvelled. “It’s been pumped full of something, I don’t know if it’s legal.”
If the sheer number of famous faces was anything to go by, we’re saying it’s almost certainly not. Eva Green, Sienna Miller, Kate Hudson, Natascha McElhone, Thandie Newton and a blonde and beautiful Jessica Biel were just a few of the lovely ladies on display. Representing the Y Chromosome contingent, Orlando Bloom, Javier Bardem, Hugh Laurie, Jason Isaacs, Daniel Radcliffe and Viggo Mortensen were all in attendance.
As the hour drew near, the last of this year’s hopefuls disappeared into the auditorium, with spirits high. Some will end this night drinking from the cup of glory and basking in the adoration of their peers. Others, though, will spiral into a trough of rejection and degradation, their evening scarred by the cruel sting of televised humiliation. Be sure to check back at 9pm on the dot to find out who ended up with a dose of which.
James Dyer | |
| | | Vigs Thy girl Admin
Number of posts : 1069 Age : 63 Location : On top of the King Dune in Nature/National park Thy Job/hobbies : reading, writing, needlework, music, lots of colours, animals Humor : I\'m a funny girl Registration date : 2007-10-08
| Subject: Re: Articles Thu Feb 28, 2008 3:14 am | |
| From the Danish magazine "Kig Ind" autumn 2007.Sorry I've first finished translating it now!Big interviews!!Viggo Mortensen enjoys the success and the single life. - Quote :
- Translation:
Exclusive interview. Film topical Viggo Mortensen. I am fine being single. Two days in Denmark. This was what it could be this time for the star Viggo Mortensen. Because the 48 years old Danish-American is a man in demand - in fact so in demand that there this moment is not time for a girl friend. But Viggo returns as soon as he has the chance. Because he miss’ his family - and Danish food. The first thing he did when he last Saturday landed in Copenhagen Airport of course was to go directly home to his Aunt Tulle in Snekkerup close to Ringsted. He was going to eat “biksemad” (nearly the same as hash in English).
The family means everything. - My Danish family has always meant a lot to me. You know that the elder you become the larger is the risk that someone dies or gets ill. I guess I think a little more about it now. But I’ve always been happy to visit them and be together with them. It means incredibly much to me. And we stick very much together in the family, Viggo tells to Kig Ind in the only weekly magazine-interview he has given for years. The actor was in Denmark to throw a little Hollywood dust over the gala premiere of his new film “Eastern Promises”. A tough job which it was hard for Viggo to review because the family was with him in the cinema. - It was a little strange to watch the film in the cinema together with my family. It was especially unpleasant for me to watch the scene where I’m together with a girl while they were sitting there right next to me. I think the rape-scene was the hardest in the whole film. It’s really violent and disturbing. When you suddenly sit there with boy and girl cousins and Aunt Tulle then it suddenly becomes a quite different thing. Then I get shy. Henry visits me. Viggo Mortensens son, 19-year-old Henry, was not with him in Denmark this time but the two of them have a very close relationship. - I was in Denmark in July together with Henry. I had made a film in Hungary and then my son came and was with me the last week. And then we rented a car in Hungary and drove to Denmark. It was a real road trip. I had made a film about the 30’s Germany “Good”, so we visited many places which had relations to the film on our trip. We saw very much from the dark period - Nürnberg/Nurnberg, München/Munich and the concentration camps Auswitzch and Dachau. It was scary. But just like I Henry has always been interested in history, tells Viggo who enjoys travelling with the son. - Henry has always visited me when I have made a movie and then we have travelled much and experienced things together. He is also loves Denmark very much and we have visited many museums here together. It’s nice to be able to share the experiences and learn something new together.
Has some difficulty in getting up. Next year Viggo will pass the 50 years but it isn’t something he has thought of to make a great fuss about. - I don’t think so much about being 50 soon. I have a little difficulty in getting up some times. I can feel that I am very tired when I work hard with movies. When you say that I will soon be 50 then I think about it. But it’s only a number for me. 50 are hopefully just halfway for me and not almost finished. I want to go on as long as possible. Learn new languages and get to know new people. As an actor you are forced to see the life from other people’s point of view and that is very enriching. The pressure of work and the eternal journeys to movie shootings and PR-events all over the world are also the reasons that Viggo Mortensen doesn’t have a girlfriend/fiancée. _ No, I am so busy that it’s difficult to have a relationship for the moment being. So there is nothing to do about it. I’m not sad being single. Perhaps you should wish for a girlfriend/fiancée as your 50 years birthday present? - Ha-ha - yes, I guess it might be a good idea, laughs Viggo.
Text to pics: “Nikolai”: I am no rowdy: There has been much focus on a four minutes long scene in “Eastern Promises” where Viggo, playing “hard-boiled” mafia man, is beaten to a half jelly. Private he has also been into some fights through the time. _ It has never been as bad as it is in “Eastern Promises”. I have been relative lucky in my life. But there have been some few times where I haven’t been able to avoid defending myself. I’m not the type who starts a fight. And unfortunately I’m not so good to fight in reality as I am in movies, Viggo confess’.
Under pic with Henry: Loves to travel with Henry: Viggo Mortensen and his son, Henry 19, which he has from his marriage with the singer Exene Cervenka, are both interested in history and enjoy travelling together.
Under the large pic of Viggo: A much-coveted man: Viggo Mortensens career works as it should - in return it’s a little poor on the love front even if Viggo has many female fans. Ó [/size]LQB.
Last edited by Vigs Thy girl on Mon Mar 03, 2008 11:58 pm; edited 2 times in total | |
| | | Guest Guest
| Subject: Re: Articles Thu Feb 28, 2008 2:24 pm | |
| Thanks Vigs for posting this and the translation. Much appreciated. I like the part of the interview where he talks about the raping of the girl and how he says was most disturbing part of the movie. It must have made him shy to watch that with his family. But what about the rest of the world? I am still trying to understand the need for that scene? Unless it has more to do with Kirill. |
| | | Vigs Thy girl Admin
Number of posts : 1069 Age : 63 Location : On top of the King Dune in Nature/National park Thy Job/hobbies : reading, writing, needlework, music, lots of colours, animals Humor : I\'m a funny girl Registration date : 2007-10-08
| Subject: Re: Articles Thu Feb 28, 2008 9:38 pm | |
| You are welome, Kal! I'm thinking about if my translated text is too small (the letters I mean). Do you want me to make it larger? | |
| | | Aithne Lives in Viggo's home
Number of posts : 237 Age : 54 Registration date : 2008-01-06
| Subject: Re: Articles Sat Mar 01, 2008 3:47 am | |
| I can read it. I have good eyes. Thank you Vigs that you share this with us. You did a good translation. | |
| | | Vigs Thy girl Admin
Number of posts : 1069 Age : 63 Location : On top of the King Dune in Nature/National park Thy Job/hobbies : reading, writing, needlework, music, lots of colours, animals Humor : I\'m a funny girl Registration date : 2007-10-08
| Subject: Re: Articles Mon Mar 03, 2008 11:55 pm | |
| I have now made my translated text a little larger. I admit that to me, a narrow-sighted person using glass', the text was too small. Therefore I made it larger so everybody can read it. | |
| | | LiL Star V.I.P
Number of posts : 76 Age : 65 Location : East Coast Job/hobbies : Builder Humor : Wonderful Registration date : 2008-01-28
| Subject: Re: Articles Thu Mar 06, 2008 9:06 am | |
| That is a great artical. Thanks for the translation Vigs. Sooo, you say Viggo is single again! You always see him with younger women. I wonder if he likes women his own age? I hadn't realized that Henry was with him and traveled around with him to Denmark. That is really great. The best vacations I remember was with my parents and brothers and sisters.(and the family dog.) He's a great dad! | |
| | | Vigs Thy girl Admin
Number of posts : 1069 Age : 63 Location : On top of the King Dune in Nature/National park Thy Job/hobbies : reading, writing, needlework, music, lots of colours, animals Humor : I\'m a funny girl Registration date : 2007-10-08
| Subject: Re: Articles Thu Mar 06, 2008 2:48 pm | |
| Lil Star! I don't say Viggo is a single. He says it himself. I have just translated his words from Danish to English. It can sometimes be difficult to translate because many times there are a lot of small "filling words" which are difficult to translate. Most of them mean nothing to the text so I "jump over" them where I can. And some sentences I can't translate directly. Then I have to write something which means the same (make a paraphrase).
That poor man can't say "hello" to a woman before everybody thinks she is his special girlfriend/fiancée. That must be very annoying for him.
Yes, it's nice to drive with your father and see some special things. I sometimes went with my father from our house in Zealand to our house in Northjutland in the summer holiday. My father was an accountant and he first started his summer holiday at the same time as the industry holiday. Then my mother and sister went first to our house in Northjutland 1 or 2 weeks ahead and then my father and I came later. My father sometimes asked me: "Would you like to visit .....?". And I said: "Yes, it could be very interesting". Among other things my father took me to to a chalk mine in Jutland. It was very exciting to walk around in the corridors there with a guide of course - else we would loose our way. I remember it was a warm summer day in the start of July but in the chalk mine it was a little cold. I brought a windjacket or something like that. The chalk mine could have been a location in a movie.
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| | | Guest Guest
| Subject: Viggo's a Habs Fan! Thu May 01, 2008 3:26 am | |
| Here's a neat article from a Montreal newspaper about Viggo's celebrating the Montreal Canadians hockey team eliminating the Boston team in the hockey play-offs. This must be on his trailer. Love the accent egu on the 'e'. I'd love to see whats just above it though. I will try to translate it a bit later and get back to everyone. From Cyberpresse.ca Sur le plateau du film The Road, qu'il tourne présentement en Pensylvanie, Viggo Mortensen n'a pas manqué l'occasion de célébrer la victoire du Canadiensur les Bruins de Boston en première ronde des séries éliminatoires.(Translation of photo caption: On the set of the movie 'The Road' currently filmingin Pennyslvania, Viggo Mortensen has not missed the opportunity to celebrate the victory of the Canadiens over the Boston Bruins in the first round of the elimination series.)PHOTO: Rocky FaulknerLe mercredi 30 avril 2008 Viggo Mortensen a le CH tatoué sur le coeur La Presse L'acteur Viggo Mortensen (The Lord of the Rings, A History of Violence) était en nomination pour l'Oscar du meilleur acteur, en février dernier, pour son rôle dans Eastern Promises, de David Cronenberg. Ça, tout le monde le sait. Ce que vous ignorez sans doute, c'est que dans la composition de son personnage, le troublant Nikolai, Mortensen s'est librement inspiré... d'Alex Kovalev!Viggo Mortensen est un fan fini du Canadien. Du genre à s'informer du résultat d'un match lorsqu'il est en tournage à l'autre bout de la planète.«Kovalev a été une inspiration pour moi, nous a-t-il confié en entrevue téléphonique. Comme lui, Nikolai n'est pas nécessairement le plus jeune de son entourage, mais il fait son boulot en silence et il déjoue ses opposants avec son expérience, en se montrant plus futé que les autres.»«Voilà le genre de personne que j'aime, le genre d'acteur aussi: ceux qui comblent leurs lacunes grâce à leur intelligence.»L'image que se fait Morgensen de Kovalev est peut-être idyllique, mais elle est construite autour de plusieurs valeurs communes.Le soin jaloux qu'il porte à sa condition physique levez la main ceux et celles qui lui donneraient 49 ans est l'une d'elles.«Kovalev est plus en forme dans sa trentaine que la majorité des joueurs plus jeunes que lui, explique-t-il. Malgré son âge, donc, malgré les déceptions qu'il a connues dont certaines à Montréal tu vois qu'il ne rate jamais une occasion de laisser tout ce qu'il a sur la patinoire.«Pour ma part, je ne sais pas combien de films il me reste à faire. Mais comme un athlète qui joue chaque match comme si c'était son dernier, j'approche chaque film comme si c'était mon dernier.»
Inspiré et énergisé par le CH
Viggo Mortensen parle sept langues, il a fondé une maison d'édition consacrée à la poésie, son enfance l'a conduit du Venezuela au Danemark en passant par l'Argentine... Il fallait bien qu'une passion pour le Canadien s'ajoute au portrait!C'est à l'école secondaire, en Californie, que Mortensen a découvert le hockey. C'était les années 70, l'époque glorieuse du Canadien.En voyant le Tricolore à l'oeuvre à la télé, il a tout de suite été captivé.«Je me suis même mis à écouter des matchs à la radio française de Radio-Canada!»Rapidement inspiré par la mystique tricolore, fasciné par le bagout de Guy Lafleur, Mortensen est devenu un partisan. Un vrai.Au terme du tournage de A History of Violence, qui a eu lieu à Toronto, Mortensen a même refusé de revêtir le chandail des Maple Leafs que voulaient lui faire porter les travailleurs de la production sur la photo de groupe. «Je n'allais le faire qu'à la condition de porter une casquette du Canadien», a-t-il précisé.Sa passion pour le Canadien est d'autant plus sérieuse qu'elle joue vraiment sur son humeur.«J'étais au travail aujourd'hui et ça a exigé beaucoup de concentration», nous a raconté Mortensen, qui tourne en ce moment une adaptation du roman The Road. «Sauf qu'après le match du Canadien (la première victoire contre les Flyers), je me suis senti inspiré et énergisé. J'étais prêt à reprendre le boulot immédiatement.»
L'adulateur et non l'adulé
Même si son horaire chargé l'a empêché de venir à Montréal aussi souvent qu'il l'aurait voulu, Mortensen suit les activités du Tricolore avec assiduité. Et son diagnostic est précis.«Les choses auraient pu être décourageantes après la saison décevante qu'on a connue la saison dernière, explique-t-il. Mais cette saison, cette équipe me semble si constante. Elle ne perd jamais sa contenance, elle reste calme.»Ce n'est pas un hasard si l'équipe plaît autant à Mortensen cette année. Car, à ses yeux, le sport et les arts ont davantage d'affinités qu'on pourrait le croire.«Le Canadien n'est pas l'affaire d'un seul joueur. Tout le monde contribue. On les sent fiers d'appartenir à une véritable équipe. Or, au cinéma, tu as beau avoir les plus grandes stars ou le meilleur directeur photo, le film ne sera réussi que si tout le monde fait les compromis nécessaires pour pousser dans la même direction.»Mortensen n'a pas la réputation d'avoir la grosse tête. Même que la star aime bien, par le truchement du sport, se retrouver de l'autre côté de la clôture. Être l'adulateur et non l'adulé.«Souhaitez bonne chance à Kovalev, conclut Mortensen. Dites-lui que je le regarde et que je lui suis reconnaissant. Saluez l'Artiste de ma part!» |
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| Subject: Re: Articles Thu May 01, 2008 4:01 am | |
| Well the Habs blew it tonight losing 4-2 against the Flyers. They've got one last chance. |
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| Subject: Re: Articles Thu May 01, 2008 6:42 am | |
| - Kaladhar wrote:
- Here's a neat article from a Montreal newspaper about Viggo's celebrating the Montreal Canadians hockey team eliminating the Boston team in the hockey play-offs. This must be on his trailer. Love the accent egu on the 'e'. I'd love to see whats just above it though.
I will try to translate it a bit later and get back to everyone.
From Cyberpresse.ca
Sur le plateau du film The Road, qu'il tourne présentement en Pensylvanie, Viggo Mortensen n'a pas manqué l'occasion de célébrer la victoire du Canadien sur les Bruins de Boston en première ronde des séries éliminatoires.
(Translation of photo caption: On the set of the movie 'The Road' currently filming in Pennyslvania, Viggo Mortensen has not missed the opportunity to celebrate the victory of the Canadiens over the Boston Bruins in the first round of the elimination series.)
PHOTO: Rocky Faulkner
Le mercredi 30 avril 2008
Viggo Mortensen a le CH tatoué sur le coeur
La Presse
L'acteur Viggo Mortensen (The Lord of the Rings, A History of Violence) était en nomination pour l'Oscar du meilleur acteur, en février dernier, pour son rôle dans Eastern Promises, de David Cronenberg. Ça, tout le monde le sait. Ce que vous ignorez sans doute, c'est que dans la composition de son personnage, le troublant Nikolai, Mortensen s'est librement inspiré... d'Alex Kovalev!
Viggo Mortensen est un fan fini du Canadien. Du genre à s'informer du résultat d'un match lorsqu'il est en tournage à l'autre bout de la planète.
«Kovalev a été une inspiration pour moi, nous a-t-il confié en entrevue téléphonique. Comme lui, Nikolai n'est pas nécessairement le plus jeune de son entourage, mais il fait son boulot en silence et il déjoue ses opposants avec son expérience, en se montrant plus futé que les autres.» «Voilà le genre de personne que j'aime, le genre d'acteur aussi: ceux qui comblent leurs lacunes grâce à leur intelligence.»
L'image que se fait Morgensen de Kovalev est peut-être idyllique, mais elle est construite autour de plusieurs valeurs communes.
Le soin jaloux qu'il porte à sa condition physique levez la main ceux et celles qui lui donneraient 49 ans est l'une d'elles. «Kovalev est plus en forme dans sa trentaine que la majorité des joueurs plus jeunes que lui, explique-t-il. Malgré son âge, donc, malgré les déceptions qu'il a connues dont certaines à Montréal tu vois qu'il ne rate jamais une occasion de laisser tout ce qu'il a sur la patinoire.
«Pour ma part, je ne sais pas combien de films il me reste à faire. Mais comme un athlète qui joue chaque match comme si c'était son dernier, j'approche chaque film comme si c'était mon dernier.»
Inspiré et énergisé par le CH
Viggo Mortensen parle sept langues, il a fondé une maison d'édition consacrée à la poésie, son enfance l'a conduit du Venezuela au Danemark en passant par l'Argentine... Il fallait bien qu'une passion pour le Canadien s'ajoute au portrait! C'est à l'école secondaire, en Californie, que Mortensen a découvert le hockey. C'était les années 70, l'époque glorieuse du Canadien.
En voyant le Tricolore à l'oeuvre à la télé, il a tout de suite été captivé. «Je me suis même mis à écouter des matchs à la radio française de Radio-Canada!» Rapidement inspiré par la mystique tricolore, fasciné par le bagout de Guy Lafleur, Mortensen est devenu un partisan. Un vrai.
Au terme du tournage de A History of Violence, qui a eu lieu à Toronto, Mortensen a même refusé de revêtir le chandail des Maple Leafs que voulaient lui faire porter les travailleurs de la production sur la photo de groupe. «Je n'allais le faire qu'à la condition de porter une casquette du Canadien», a-t-il précisé.
Sa passion pour le Canadien est d'autant plus sérieuse qu'elle joue vraiment sur son humeur.
«J'étais au travail aujourd'hui et ça a exigé beaucoup de concentration», nous a raconté Mortensen, qui tourne en ce moment une adaptation du roman The Road. «Sauf qu'après le match du Canadien (la première victoire contre les Flyers), je me suis senti inspiré et énergisé. J'étais prêt à reprendre le boulot immédiatement.»
L'adulateur et non l'adulé
Même si son horaire chargé l'a empêché de venir à Montréal aussi souvent qu'il l'aurait voulu, Mortensen suit les activités du Tricolore avec assiduité. Et son diagnostic est précis.
«Les choses auraient pu être décourageantes après la saison décevante qu'on a connue la saison dernière, explique-t-il. Mais cette saison, cette équipe me semble si constante. Elle ne perd jamais sa contenance, elle reste calme.» Ce n'est pas un hasard si l'équipe plaît autant à Mortensen cette année. Car, à ses yeux, le sport et les arts ont davantage d'affinités qu'on pourrait le croire.
«Le Canadien n'est pas l'affaire d'un seul joueur. Tout le monde contribue. On les sent fiers d'appartenir à une véritable équipe. Or, au cinéma, tu as beau avoir les plus grandes stars ou le meilleur directeur photo, le film ne sera réussi que si tout le monde fait les compromis nécessaires pour pousser dans la même direction.»
Mortensen n'a pas la réputation d'avoir la grosse tête. Même que la star aime bien, par le truchement du sport, se retrouver de l'autre côté de la clôture. Être l'adulateur et non l'adulé.
«Souhaitez bonne chance à Kovalev, conclut Mortensen. Dites-lui que je le regarde et que je lui suis reconnaissant. Saluez l'Artiste de ma part!» Here is the same article translated into Engish by me: Viggo Mortensen has the CH tattooed on his heart
Actor Viggo Mortensen (The Lord of the Rings, A History of Violence) was nominated for an Oscar for best actor last February for his role in David Cronenberg’s Eastern Promises. That everyone knows. What you may not know, is that the makeup of his character, the troubled Nikolai, was inspired by Alex Kovalev!
Viggo Mortensen is a die hard fan of the Canadiens. The kind who informs himself of game results even when he is on the other side of the world.
“Kovalev was an inspiration for me,” he confided in a telephone interview. “Like him, Nikolai wasn’t necessarily the youngest in his field, but he does his thing in silence and puts off his opponents with experience demonstrating his prowess over the others.”
“That’s the kind of person I like, that kind of actor also: those who overcome their weaknesses through use of their intelligence.”
The image Mortensen has of Kovalev is perhaps idyllic, but is constructed around several shared values.
The care with which he gives to his physical condition if anyone among you who would give him 49 years old -- raise your hands.
“Kovalev in is better shape in his 30s than the majority of players younger than he,” he explains. “Despite his age, even, despite the drawbacks he saw certainly in Montreal, you see that he never misses the chance to give all that he has when on the ice.”
“I have no idea how many more films I have left in me. But like an athlete who plays each game as though it were his last, I approach each film as if it were my last.”
Inspired and energized by the Canadiens
Viggo Mortensen speaks seven languages, founded his publishing house dedicated to poetry, his childhood took him from Venezuela to Denmark by way of Argentina… surely a passion for the Canadiens could be added to the picture!It was in high school, in California (should be NY) that Mortensen discovered hockey. It was during the 70s the glorious era of the Canadiens.
Seeing the Tri-colour at play on the television, he was immediately captivated. “I would even bring myself to listen to the games on the French CBC Radio!” Quickly inspired by the magic of the Tri-colour, fascinated by the legendary Guy Lafleur, Mortensen became a follower (disciple). A true one.
At the time of the filming of A History of Violence, which took place in Toronto, Mortensen even refused to put on the Maple Leafs sweater the production crew wanted him to wear for a group photo. “I’ll only do it on the condition that I wear a Canadiens cap,” he insisted.His passion for the Canadiens is significant enough that it really affects his mood.“I was at work today and it required a lot of concentration,” Mortensen explained, who is currently filming the adaptation of the novel The Road. “But after the Canadiens game (the first win against the Flyers), I felt inspired and energized. I was eager to get back to the task.”
The Admirer Not the AdmiredEven though his hectic schedule keeps him from coming to Montreal less often than he would like, Mortensen steadfastly follows the activities of the Tri-colour (the Canadiens). And his analyses are accurate.“Things could have been discouraging after the disappointing season we experienced last season, he explains. But this season, this team seems so stable. They are not losing their momentum, they’re keeping their cool.”
It is no coincidence if the team is just as pleasing to Mortensen this year. To him sports and the arts have a lot more in common than one might believe.
“The Canadiens (team) is not only about the player. Everyone contributes. One feels proud to belong to a real team. Like in a movie, even if you have the biggest stars or the best film director, the film will be successful only because everyone makes the necessary compromises to ensure they’re all moving in the same direction.”
Mortensen does not have a reputation for having a large ego (big head). However taken by the love of the sport he prefers to be on the other side of the fence – the admirer and not the admired.
“Wish good luck to Kovalev, concludes Mortensen. Tell him that I watch him and that I am grateful. Salute the Artist for me. |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Wed May 14, 2008 5:55 pm | |
| From http://www.thefrisky.com/post/246-the-daily-hotness-viggo-mortensenThe Daily Hotness: Viggo MortensenPosted by: Amelia | Filed in: Guys 3:30PM, Tuesday May 13th 2008 Some people may say that Viggo Mortensen, who’s known for his roles in those boring Lord Of The Rings movies and for being director David Cronenberg’s male muse, gets a lot of crap for his facial hair choices. Even though I picked a photo of him where he is clean shaven, I admire his ability to rock the Fu Manchu and General Custer-inspired facial fuzz. (edited at posting for inappropriate content) | |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Sat May 17, 2008 7:06 am | |
| From www.ecorazzi.comDamon, Penn, Vedder Team Up For ‘The People Speak’Filed under: green and famous — michael @ 11:11 amFor some reason, various media reports around the world are labeling the new film The People Speak as some kind of documentary about celebrity activism. In reality, the new film — which includes Matt Damon on the producing side — is an adaptation of historian Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States. Shot in various theatres, the film will feature “dramatic readings and live musical performances from the likes of Josh Brolin, Viggo Mortensen, David Strathairn, Marisa Tomei Jasmine Guy, John Legend, Q’Orianka Kilcher, Michael Ealy and Kerry Washington.” Most recently, Eddie Vedder and Sean Penn performed as part of a show at a concert in California. edder performed the classic folk song Here’s to the state of Mississippi by Phil Ochs, changing lyrics to take aim at US president George Bush. | |
| | | Aithne Lives in Viggo's home
Number of posts : 237 Age : 54 Registration date : 2008-01-06
| Subject: Re: Articles Sun May 18, 2008 7:36 pm | |
| I like the part about celebrity activism. Thanks for this Phoenix. | |
| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Mon May 19, 2008 1:22 am | |
| The Moods of Viggo Mortensen in At All
By: Editor | May 18, 2008 | Musique
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The following is just one woman’s feelings about Perceval Press’ recent CD release, “At All” by Viggo Mortensen. The work is intellectually challenging and may draw entirely different emotions from another listener. This release is a near solo work, with only one track containing work from Buckethead and Travis Dickerson, a combination we have become accustom to hearing from Perceval. This writer-artist would disagree with categorizing the works on this CD as experimental music, as that term would be a shallow take completely overlooking the deeper elements of “At All.” While recognizing, in the words of the great Jazz artist Elliott Sharp, “no improvisation is ever truly free,” the works on “At All” are that of a Free Jazz Style. Or in classical terms, Impressionism. At risk of offending an artist who loathes to fit into a category – or to reference self – Mortensen uses suggestion and mood to create atmosphere in this impressionistic work.
A famous example of an impressionist composer who utilized the power of musical suggestion to create atmosphere was the Italian composer Ottorino Respighi in his symphonic poem “The Pines of Rome,” also known as the “Roman Trilogy” – “Fontane di Roma” (Fountains of Rome 1915-1916); “Pini di Roma” (Pines of Rome 1923-1924); “Feste Romane” (Roman Festivals 1928). The “Pines of Rome,” specifically in the movement “The Pines of Villa Borghese,” uses a blaring forte trumpet to recreate the sound of children crying, and the harp, flutes and strings to create childish taunting sounds plus a chorus of instrumentation in question and answer format that creates sounds of a group of children making fun of one another. These were sounds Respighi heard while at this Villa. Much like Monet who painted outdoors, Respighi painted his musical brushstrokes outdoors and composed what he saw. Both Mortensen and Respighi draw from a similar pallet where instrumentation personifies human emotion. The two artists rely heavily on musical symbolism. French composer Claude Debussy, who authored the groundbreaking works that started the musical genre of Impressionism, and Respighi have very feminine approaches to the style and chord structure. Mortensen tends towards a masculine and slightly more dissonant form of Impressionistic techniques. All create very deep emotional sensations. The opening legato note of “At All’s” track two is reminiscent of the opening legato note of Debussy’s “Piano Works No.1” track titled “Nocturne” - except Mortensen’s dissonant chord structure is masculine instead of Debussy’s soft feminine mood. This is aptly so since Mortensen’s track is titled “Bomb This” and has an eerie feeling of the aftermath of nuclear bomb explosion.
All of these artists use the Symphonic Poem to open the mind to subliminal emotion sometimes not readily accessible. The genre is a dream mood and its harmonies may catch the listener off-guard because they do not fit into cookie cutter symphonic forms but do tend to draw on portions of those elements for structure. The feeling of being thrown off-guard also can come in a transition from one movement to the next, as in the transition from Mortensen’s “Tokyo Doesn’t Love Us Anymore” (track to the title track “At all (track 9). That one the reader will have to listen to for the full effect. Mortensen’s style might even feel like a fresh deck of cards just out of the box thrown into the air and scattered on the ground such as in “Shoreditch Nocturne.” His musical brushstrokes are purposefully visible and at times blurred by the piano’s pedal to create a psychedelic mood. His voice sounds as though he is in deep despair - vocal tears.
Mortensen’s cover photo also uses the power of suggestion. Some might find threads of the character Mother from the 1998 release and remake of Hitchcock’s masterful work “Psycho,” a film in which Mortensen played the role of Sam Loomis. Others might find the cover photo uses Monet’s use of light and it’s ever changing qualities. The inside photos also create moods of isolation and deep reflection on the past.
“At All” is available from Perceval Press for $10
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Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Mon May 19, 2008 1:27 am | |
| From www.malibuartsjournal, as is the article above.
Viggo Mortensen’s Time Waits For Everyone
By: Editor | May 18, 2008 | Musique
| |
A solo venture by local underground Jazz artist Viggo Mortensen, this new Perceval Press CD Time Waits For Everyone fits into the ranks of the turn of the Century composers. The works as a whole are originally crafted products of human sensibility interpreted through jazz improvisation. Consonant motifs resolve into dissonant chords where pedals and keys linger on an idea of solitude in the minimalism of a single repeated note. The slow transformation of chords is merely one facet of these minimalist poetic Lieder without words, or art songs, sequenced into Liederkreis, or a song cycle. Time Waits For Everyone can be linked to the prior works Intelligence Failure and Please Tomorrow. The group of CD's is a seeming three-part modern Liederkreis. Please Tomorrow felt like it was about getting to dawn. Intelligence Failure, which plays out dark motifs, instrumentation and chord structures, felt like the tense fight between dark and dawn. Time Waits feels like it is about being dawn. Similar ideas were heard in the prior two works but are more fully resolved in Time Waits. None of the motif continuation critique is to berate the works as mere repeats. Rather, the most current of the three is more complete, much like Mortensen's work in I Forget You Forever. In that book, a similar idea was visually executed with images often presented with little to no text and no need to do so. The repeated theme in those photos could be seen as always looking into something or being looked at – or voyeurism. Open windows, open and empty shelves, photos with a vignette creating a sense of telescope or womb – each photo carried a sense of being watched or watching with the ultimate end dark with empty and bloody carcasses. Here too the Lied does not need the spoken word to convey its strong emotion. Music's history holds the Lied was interwoven with the German language but influences were found also from French composers Claude Debussy and Louis Berlioz, among others. The work uses phrasing styles from nocturnes and preludes, and the idea of a Sonata, or to sound, versus a Cantata, or to sing. Time Waits For Everyone reveals a more mature pianist than what the musician let show in prior releases.
This sudden surge of confidence is perhaps most evident on the track Danube Poem. Here Mortensen's masterful use of the pedals is combined with strong feelings and motifs from Debussy's Claire de Lune, a similar idea also found on Please Tomorrow's track Moonset. Both tracks created deep meditation euphoria, another facet of the modern Lied in the New Age genre. All three also have a brief encounter with children’s song motifs, such as Three Blind Mice. The revisited feeling of such minimalism in this work conjured feelings of a political statement on the emotionally blank age of war. If one musically translated Mortensen's beautiful poem Back to Babylon, Danube Poem would be it. Traversing back and forth in gentle contrapuntal woven segments, deeply emotional progressions are juxtaposed against the passionless and sexually dry. Therein lies the brunt of tension found in Time Waits For Everyone.
Heavy Russian elements also found in the Lied style, at times, strained the delicacy of Mortensen's half-pedal craftsmanship, specifically on the track Treblinka Poem. The touch of the hand on the keyboard is so soft. Yet, the dominating demand of the blurred bass line begged for a more dissonant chord structure never fully realized. The choices create an unresolved tension. The track leaves the listener with an insecure and restless sense of surrounding – a Lament. The harmonic dissonance created an exploration into very dark emotions. Perhaps Treblinka Poem is about dark and light conflict – or the way Yin and Yang are in constant battle to catch one another. Beethoven created an entire work out of a theme without dampers in the very famous song Moonlight Sonata, or Piano Sonata No. 14 in C-sharp minor Quasi una fantasi, translated to Like a Fantasy. Here too a minimalist feeling was created in several of Beethoven’s repeated single notes also enhanced by the lamenting blurred bass line. In slight contrast, Treblinka Poem uses a quasi-bass ostinato to create the lamentation. The term would put the work in that of a classical style, but the idea can cross genres into jazz, if labeled a riff. Such words roughen the semi-modal delicacy of Mortensen’s work here though. This is the other conflicting theme for Time Waits: the work combines genres with well-executed jazz improvisation crossed with strong classical influences.
The music was not the only minimalist work on this new CD release. On the cover, the way the tree is backlit by the sun gives a feeling of a slow build like dawn, which matches the music very well. The sparse use of image also gives a similar feel to that of the music. Using a natural image reflects the asymmetric and organic feel of the improvised music. The cover image leaves the viewer with the feeling they have seen that tree - down on Red Rock trail or maybe along another trail here in Topanga, or in other parts of the world. The feeling was not just about having seen the tree someplace. The image manifested into feelings the viewer has stood underneath that tree in the same sort of place, such as when lying in trees as a kid - just like the fence in the photo Grandview in the book I Forget You Forever. Most have seen that fence somewhere in their mind’s eye.
The way the names are written on the inside cover are the same - minimalist. The only name spelled out is Uncle Henry's. The only use of color on the inside is the red for Time Waits. The title is not even finished – it is just a mere Time Waits For. The sparse use of words, images and notes left a lot to discover in the mind's eye, or heart, or wherever art comes from - that dreamy place. Maybe that is the best part of Mortensen's minimalism. The listener can choose which way to respond.
The 18-track CD is available for purchase at Perceval Press for $10
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| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Mon May 19, 2008 1:32 am | |
| Also from Malibu Arts JournalViggo Mortensen Exhibition Skovbo
By: Editor | May 18, 2008 | d'Art
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| Most know him as Aragorn from the Lord of The Rings (LOTR) films. Yet if you have followed the art world and photography, it is clear Mortensen is an established photographer and artist. In addition to his publishing business, Perceval Press, Mortensen also exhibits here in the Los Angeles area and internationally. This year, Mortensen will be exhibit works very related to his role in LOTR. The exhibition is titled "Skovbo" or "Forest People." While the photographs are not from the LOTR films, the influence of working out in the forest is in the content of the exhibit.
The photographs are of nature in Iceland and other parts of the world. The works are priced low, according to the museum, so the profits can go to the Iceland Nature Conservation Association. The exhibition of his photographs will be at the Iceland Reykjavík Museum of Photography and opens May 31 and remains through August.
The accompabyig exhibit book, Skovbo, can be ordered from Perceval Press for $45 www.percevalpress.com
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| | | Phoenix Moderator
Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Mon May 26, 2008 7:01 pm | |
| From www.monstersandcritics.comPeople NewsViggo Mortensen's Icelandic showing Viggo Mortensen arrives on the Red Carpet during the 14th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at the Shrine Exposition Center in Los Angeles, California, USA, 27 January 2008. Awards will be given for outstanding performances in 2007 in five film and eight prime-time television categories. Bardem won for A Male Actor In A Supporting Role in 'No Country For Old Men'. EPA/PAUL BUCKBy M&C People May 26, 2008, 16:04 GMT Viggo Mortensen is one of the hottest actors in film today. The star of director David Cronenberg's "Eastern Promises" is also a photographer, poet, artist and singer who is fluent in four languages. His latest photo gallery exhibit will be shown at the Reykjavík Museum of Photography.
as Nikolai in "Eastern Promises"The Danish-American actor will show his photographs, entitled “Skovbo” at the Reykjavík Museum of Photography between May 31 and August 31.
Perceval Press: "Skovbo"Skovbo translates to “the one who lives in the forest” in Danish. The exhibition celebrates trees, and is wrapped around the concept of nature.
as Aragon, LOTRMortensen broke out big after winning the role as Aragon in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy by Peter Jackson.
His subsequent roles in Canadian director David Cronenberg's films, "A History of Violence," and last year's Academy "Best Picture" oversight, "Eastern Promises" - a gripping film described as a Russian "Godfather" which earned Viggo an Oscar nomination for Best Actor - have made him one of the most sought after actors in Hollywood.
book cover, courtesy Perceval PressMortensen’s publication company Perceval Press recently published a collection of his photos, poets and paintings about trees and nature. According to IMDB, Mortensen is filming a post-apocalyptic family journey through America in, "The Road" directed by John Hillcoat, co-starring Charlize Theron. | |
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Number of posts : 564 Age : 68 Location : British Columbia Job/hobbies : Humanitarian work, writing Humor : Hopefully sometimes Registration date : 2008-01-13
| Subject: Re: Articles Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:14 am | |
| From thescotsman.com:
Lord of the rings star Billy Boyd happy to be promoting glens of his homeland
PERHAPS not quite as awful as being kidnapped by Orcs, but rolling down a hillside in a giant hamster ball does sound rather like the kind of mishap that might befall an unwary Hobbit in Lord of the Rings. Billy Boyd, the slight-framed Glaswegian actor who played Pippin in the blockbuster film trilogy of Tolkien's epic, goes wide-eyed at the prospect, as if newly confronted by an Ent: "They tell me they put water in the ball as well; I don't know how that's supposed to enhance th(please note ~ this is missing on the online article, it is not my error ~ Phoenix)
We're discussing "sphering", or "zorbing", as it's known in the trade – the increasingly popular pastime of rolling down a hillside harnessed into a 12ft diameter cushioned plastic ball, apparently one of the most popular activities for Cumbrians holidaying in Scotland, as if you didn't know that.
This odd demographic concerning an even odder pastime emerges from an online survey of holidaymakers' favourite activities in Scotland, published last week by the tourist board, VisitScotland, who enlisted Boyd to help showcase the results.
Boyd is nothing if not game for anything: when we last spoke, in April, he had been all but thrown into touch by some hefty rugby players as part of his charity role as an ambassador for the Princess Royal Trust for Carers , he has practiced martial arts and remains a keen surfer. Zorbing, however, does not as yet figure in his, er, sphere of activities. "But I might have a go. It does sound like something that might have come from New Zealand," he grins, referring to the country where he spent some 18 months making Lord of the Rings and helping to boost that country's tourism industry in the process.
Now Boyd is happy to lend his name to promoting the glens, bens and sometimes eccentric leisure activities of his homeland. The top activity, according to VisitScotland, is viewing dolphins in the Moray Firth, with seaplane flights from Loch Lomond a close second. Sphering didn't actually make the top ten, but a regional breakdown of visitors suggested Cumbrians nurse a strange proclivity for it, just as Mancunians apparently like Loch Ness Monster-hunting while Liverpudlians seek out locations from The Da Vinci Code.
Boyd cheerfully admits to not having chalked up any of the top ten activities, but he does love surfing – be it in Mexico or Machrihanish. "I get out as much as I can," he tells me. "Probably not so much since we had the baby (two-year– old Jack who he has with his partner Ali McKinnon]. But I still love to get into the water and I always feel better once I've had a little surf. Machrihanish on the west coast, Pease Bay or Coldingham if I go east. If you get the right direction of swell it can be just beautiful there, as good as I've had anywhere, and with nobody else in the water."
On the domestic front, so far as Scottish holidays are concerned, he says he and MacKinnon, a dancer, like to visit St Andrews, while he also has a soft spot for the Ardanaiseig Hotel on Loch Awe, where he proposed to her.
Chatting to me in an Edinburgh hotel, comfortably casual in jeans and a striped collarless shirt, he looks nothing like a man fast approaching 40. Boyishly affable as ever, he appears delighted to be promoting home tourism: "I don't really do much promotional stuff but I felt that with this one I could be honest. I love to travel, and I've been lucky in that my job lets me do that, but I'm very proud of where I come from, and I get very excited if a friend comes over and I can show them round."
When we met, he was relishing the prospect of a little excursion of his own – to the Wickerman Festival near Kirkcudbright with his band Beecake. While he stresses that acting is not taking a back seat he concedes that the group, in which he sings and plays guitar alongside long-standing childhood friends, is his current preoccupation. After Wickerman, they were returning to Chem19 studios in Blantyre where they have been cutting their first album.
Managing the music as well as the acting can pose a certain balancing act, he agrees, which is one reason why he's anxious to make "the very best record we can. It's hard to be thought of just as an actor who plays music, because you're seldom taken seriously. One newspaper said it was just a vanity project ..." he grins: "That's almost what we called the album."
He's not the only former LOTR star to venture into the music studio. Viggo Mortensen, who played Aragorn in the trilogy, is also a musician. Boyd, who describes him as " the ultimate renaissance man", played drums on one of his recordings, so is thinking of recruiting him for his band's video by way of quid pro quo.
Like most of the core cast of the trilogy, Boyd bears a tattoo of the "Elvish" symbol for nine – a reference to the nine members of the fellowship of the ring. But having made his name in what became some of the highest-grossing films of all time, his film work since has been lower key – On A Clear Day, with Peter Mullan, and The Flying Scotsman biopic about cyclist Graeme Obree – but he counters any perceptions that he's been sitting on his laurels.
"There is a bit of that in the press: 'Why don't you jump on the things you should be doing?' and all that. It doesn't really worry me, you know?" – he sounds only mildly piqued. "The most worrying thing for me would be if I was lying in bed thinking, 'Oh, God, I've made a load of shit,' you know? And I don't feel that."
He currently stars alongside Charlie Cox, Robert Carlyle and Kate Mara in Stone of Destiny, Canadian-based director Charles Martin Smith's film about the four Scottish nationalist students who repatriated the Stone of Scone from Westminster Abbey in 1950. Due for release in the autumn, it received something of a panning when it was premiered at the Edinburgh Film Festival last month.
Boyd is defiantly upbeat about it, however, attributing criticism to "that strange Scottish thing that it had to be given a hard time simply because it was made by a Canadian director and starred a guy from London and a girl from LA, which I find weird. I think Charlie Martin Smith is brilliant, and the film only got made through his passion for it." It remains to be seen whether or not box office takings will back up the critics.
He has another film due out by the end of the year, Glenn, a psychological drama involving two pianists, a robot and an obsession with the Canadian maestro Glenn Gould.
Meantime, he periodically visits his friend and former fellow-Hobbit, Dominic Monaghan, in Los Angeles, where the pair have been working on the script of a comedy film which he describes as being about two Britons at large in the United States, and with something of the old Hope-Crosby Road To ... movies about it. "We'd like to get a good producer we really believe in , and we feel it will happen."
Brought up by his grandparents after he was orphaned in his early teens (hence his interest in the Princess Royal Trust for Carers), Boyd trained and worked as a bookbinder before entering the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama at the relatively late age of 24, which, he reckons, predisposed him to savour every minute of his time as a drama student. "I don't think I missed a day while I was there." Which was why, in May, he added his signature to those of other RSAMD alumni such as James McAvoy, David Tennant and Robert Carlyle to a strongly worded open letter to the First Minister, demanding action over the college's critical financial situation that was threatening staff redundancies and other cutbacks.
Conscious of his 40th birthday looming next month, the conversation turns to as yet unfilled ambitions. He'd like to try his hand at directing, he says: "I love making films in Scotland, and I wish there were more Scottish stories being told – they don't have to be Braveheart. I like watching little films ... sometimes French ... just slices of life. I loved what Bill Forsyth did with Gregory' Girl, or Local Hero, and I'd love to direct that sort of little bit quirky thing, real life but cranked up just a couple of notches."
Anything else? "Before it gets too late, you mean," he chortles. "Maybe roll down a hill in one of these balls, before my hip gives way." | |
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