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Author Topic: DRAWING THE LINE  (Read 46630 times)

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TCB

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #120 on: April 14, 2007, 11:56:42 AM »

Saturday morning greetings!  It's cold and rainy here today.  DH Richard slept fitfully last night in the recliner.  He's complaining this morning about pain - not in his shoulder, but in his throat from the intubation.


Really, I don't think DH Richard is in any shape to be intubating!
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bk

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #121 on: April 14, 2007, 12:12:16 PM »

I was just sent a review of Deceit from some Internet review site.  I think it's the best review the show has gotten, not because it's good, which it is, but because he so clearly "got" the point of what the show's author was doing.  And I completely agree with just about everything he says:

DECEIT is a stage to video adaptation of a comedy-mystery
      written and directed by Bruce Kimmel who cineastes may recall as
      the writer-director of the cult film THE FIRST NUDIE MUSICAL
        (1976) and for contributing to the story of the 1998 horror comedy
      THE FACULTY. Theater enthusiasts will know him for his terrific
      series of recordings called "Unsung Musicals" (recordings of songs
      from Broadway musicals that have been overlooked or never
      commercially recorded) and "Lost in Boston" (songs cut from
      musicals on the road). It's a pretty open secret that Kimmel also      
      appears on the recordings under the alter ego of Guy Haines.
      While the aforementioned CDs aren't available on his current
      website Kritzerland it does have the catalog of available recordings
      and DVDs for purchase. And that brings us to DECEIT, which
      was filmed over two performances of the play at the El Portal Forum
      Theatre in North Hollywood.

              The play is an old-fashioned throwback to the sort of show
      that was popular on Broadway before it became a commercialized
      wasteland. This is not a slam at the writing -- I mean it in a good
      way. Kimmel knows his antecedents and he utilizes some of the
      clichés of the genre as well as subverting them. The action unfolds
      on one set, the Upper West Side home of the late Jeffrey Hartman.
      Oh yeah, it's also a dark and stormy night. Jeffrey's younger widow
      Kate (Tammy Minoff) is awaiting a visit from one of her husband's
      oldest friends, Michael (Matthew Ashford, whom viewers of daytime
      television will know as Jack Devereux of Days of Our Lives,
      although I recall him in his previous incarnation as Cagney McCleary
      on Search for Tomorrow).
     
              Michael arrives and he and Kate exchange banter and it soon
      becomes clear to the audience that there's more going on than meets
      the eye. The action leads up to an event that is trumped by a twist
      that viewers and audience members may have expected, but it does
      provide some surprise. To reveal any more of the plot and its various
      permutations would spoil it for anyone interested in watching.

              Ashford does a terrific job of anchoring the play and negotiating
      the various shifts in his character. In fact, he does most of the heavy
      lifting in the show. Tammy Minoff looks great in the part but she is
      not as accomplished a dramatic actress as called for by the role. She's
      adequate but no more. Occasionally there are flashes when she rises
      to the challenge, but most of the time, she seems to be struggling.
      Kimmel appears as the deceased in a videotape. As he explains on
      the commentary, he stepped into the role after the actor originally
      cast appeared to be having trouble.

              The stage effects work well and are captured on video without
      losing anything but without giving away the details either. Since this
      was a filmed stage performance, the possibility of things not going
      correctly was always there. (In fact, there were a few glitches, but
      one would only know of them if they listened to the commentary.)

              Kimmel clearly knows and respects the genre and his plot
      more or less passes scrutiny. Except for the mentions of video
      and CDs, the production easily could have unfolded in the
      Golden Age of Broadway when the well-made thriller passed muster.
      (I'm thinking of shows like SORRY, WRONG NUMBER.) Yet, the
      writer also manages to keep the audience on edge with various
      surprises, not unlike, say Ira Levin's long-running DEATHTRAP.
     
              The stage to video transfer is very accomplished so kudos
      to Kimmel who directed. Matt Scarpino's set design is functional and
      Mark Merthe's editing creates tension for the home viewer.

              This is a nice, pleasant production that in earlier years might
      have found an outlet on public television's Theater in America
       and later American Playhouse (like those filmed plays available
      under the banner of the Broadway Theatre Archive).
     
              All in all DECEIT is an enjoyable viewing experience,
      especially for fans of Matthew Ashford.
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TCB

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #122 on: April 14, 2007, 12:12:49 PM »

Well, I think I have everything set for tonight.  I brought a suit jacket along with me to put over my pit blacks for the post-show reception/party.  Alas, since everyone has to get loaded back onto the vans back to the city, the party will not really have a chance to turn into a "par-tay".  -But I think we're planning something back in NYC for tomorrow night.  :)



After the performance, you all get loaded in the back of the vans???  Those musician stories are really true?
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TCB

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #123 on: April 14, 2007, 12:17:20 PM »

[move=left,scroll,6,transparent,100%]
LIFE IS A CABARET ACT VIBES
[/move]


FOR


[move=right,scroll,6,transparent,100%]MERISSA AND BK[/move]
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TCB

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #124 on: April 14, 2007, 12:25:49 PM »

Quote
It's a pretty open secret that Kimmel also      
appears on the recordings under the alter ego of Guy Haines.



[size=8]WHAT????????[/size]
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DakotaCelt

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #125 on: April 14, 2007, 12:34:05 PM »

I was just sent a review of Deceit from some Internet review site.  I think it's the best review the show has gotten, not because it's good, which it is, but because he so clearly "got" the point of what the show's author was doing.  And I completely agree with just about everything he says:

DECEIT is a stage to video adaptation of a comedy-mystery
      written and directed by Bruce Kimmel who cineastes may recall as
      the writer-director of the cult film THE FIRST NUDIE MUSICAL
        (1976) and for contributing to the story of the 1998 horror comedy
      THE FACULTY. Theater enthusiasts will know him for his terrific
      series of recordings called "Unsung Musicals" (recordings of songs
      from Broadway musicals that have been overlooked or never
      commercially recorded) and "Lost in Boston" (songs cut from
      musicals on the road). It's a pretty open secret that Kimmel also      
      appears on the recordings under the alter ego of Guy Haines.
      While the aforementioned CDs aren't available on his current
      website Kritzerland it does have the catalog of available recordings
      and DVDs for purchase. And that brings us to DECEIT, which
      was filmed over two performances of the play at the El Portal Forum
      Theatre in North Hollywood.

              The play is an old-fashioned throwback to the sort of show
      that was popular on Broadway before it became a commercialized
      wasteland. This is not a slam at the writing -- I mean it in a good
      way. Kimmel knows his antecedents and he utilizes some of the
      clichés of the genre as well as subverting them. The action unfolds
      on one set, the Upper West Side home of the late Jeffrey Hartman.
      Oh yeah, it's also a dark and stormy night. Jeffrey's younger widow
      Kate (Tammy Minoff) is awaiting a visit from one of her husband's
      oldest friends, Michael (Matthew Ashford, whom viewers of daytime
      television will know as Jack Devereux of Days of Our Lives,
      although I recall him in his previous incarnation as Cagney McCleary
      on Search for Tomorrow).
     
              Michael arrives and he and Kate exchange banter and it soon
      becomes clear to the audience that there's more going on than meets
      the eye. The action leads up to an event that is trumped by a twist
      that viewers and audience members may have expected, but it does
      provide some surprise. To reveal any more of the plot and its various
      permutations would spoil it for anyone interested in watching.

              Ashford does a terrific job of anchoring the play and negotiating
      the various shifts in his character. In fact, he does most of the heavy
      lifting in the show. Tammy Minoff looks great in the part but she is
      not as accomplished a dramatic actress as called for by the role. She's
      adequate but no more. Occasionally there are flashes when she rises
      to the challenge, but most of the time, she seems to be struggling.
      Kimmel appears as the deceased in a videotape. As he explains on
      the commentary, he stepped into the role after the actor originally
      cast appeared to be having trouble.

              The stage effects work well and are captured on video without
      losing anything but without giving away the details either. Since this
      was a filmed stage performance, the possibility of things not going
      correctly was always there. (In fact, there were a few glitches, but
      one would only know of them if they listened to the commentary.)

              Kimmel clearly knows and respects the genre and his plot
      more or less passes scrutiny. Except for the mentions of video
      and CDs, the production easily could have unfolded in the
      Golden Age of Broadway when the well-made thriller passed muster.
      (I'm thinking of shows like SORRY, WRONG NUMBER.) Yet, the
      writer also manages to keep the audience on edge with various
      surprises, not unlike, say Ira Levin's long-running DEATHTRAP.
     
              The stage to video transfer is very accomplished so kudos
      to Kimmel who directed. Matt Scarpino's set design is functional and
      Mark Merthe's editing creates tension for the home viewer.

              This is a nice, pleasant production that in earlier years might
      have found an outlet on public television's Theater in America
       and later American Playhouse (like those filmed plays available
      under the banner of the Broadway Theatre Archive).
     
              All in all DECEIT is an enjoyable viewing experience,
      especially for fans of Matthew Ashford.


Smart person... STill a wonderful play and I have viewed it several times since I got it last year bk.
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Noodles Grow... Meat Shrinks... Oh the beauty of cooking!
"Humility is probably the most difficult virtue to realize." --Thomas Yellowtail, CROW
Continue to contaminate your bed, and you will one night suffocate in your own waste. ~~ Chief Seattle, 1854

DakotaCelt

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #126 on: April 14, 2007, 12:34:59 PM »

I would love to see Deceit get distributed on public telly as a theatre treat. It truly is.
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Mischief is where you are old enough to know better but young enough to try!~~ DakotaCelt, 2004
If a man loses something and he goes back and looks carefully, he will find it ~~ Sitting Bull
Noodles Grow... Meat Shrinks... Oh the beauty of cooking!
"Humility is probably the most difficult virtue to realize." --Thomas Yellowtail, CROW
Continue to contaminate your bed, and you will one night suffocate in your own waste. ~~ Chief Seattle, 1854

singdaw

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #127 on: April 14, 2007, 12:42:53 PM »

But once again, Anthony Cooper gets short shrift... ;)
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Ginny

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #128 on: April 14, 2007, 12:53:10 PM »

Really, I don't think DH Richard is in any shape to be intubating!

Not intubatING, DR TCB, indubatED

 ;)
« Last Edit: April 14, 2007, 01:01:11 PM by Ginny »
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Ginny

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #129 on: April 14, 2007, 01:02:30 PM »

DH Richard is also discovering how extremely boring it is to be sick.
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DakotaCelt

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #130 on: April 14, 2007, 01:05:40 PM »

it is no picnic!
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Mischief is where you are old enough to know better but young enough to try!~~ DakotaCelt, 2004
If a man loses something and he goes back and looks carefully, he will find it ~~ Sitting Bull
Noodles Grow... Meat Shrinks... Oh the beauty of cooking!
"Humility is probably the most difficult virtue to realize." --Thomas Yellowtail, CROW
Continue to contaminate your bed, and you will one night suffocate in your own waste. ~~ Chief Seattle, 1854

DakotaCelt

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #131 on: April 14, 2007, 01:08:48 PM »

Get well vibes for DH Richard!
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Mischief is where you are old enough to know better but young enough to try!~~ DakotaCelt, 2004
If a man loses something and he goes back and looks carefully, he will find it ~~ Sitting Bull
Noodles Grow... Meat Shrinks... Oh the beauty of cooking!
"Humility is probably the most difficult virtue to realize." --Thomas Yellowtail, CROW
Continue to contaminate your bed, and you will one night suffocate in your own waste. ~~ Chief Seattle, 1854

MBarnum

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #132 on: April 14, 2007, 01:11:46 PM »

TOD:

Well, I have seen many unusual and strange movies in my life...but one of the strangest has to be a Mexican film I picked up on DVD last year...titled LA EDAD DE LA VIOLENCIA (THE AGE OF VIOLENCE)...It is from 1964 and seems to be trying to be a Bollywood movie! The only problem is that India knows how to do that sort of thing, blending musical numbers into the plot of any genre of film, but this Mexican film...very stark, very realistic, very violent, very dramatic...the cast just suddenly and without warning will  break into song and dance numbers that just don't fit the feeling of the film.

I only got through about 3/4 of the film and have never returned to it. I have often thought of sending the DVD to DR JRand56...but he has always been so nice to me that I decided against it.

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Edisaurus

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #133 on: April 14, 2007, 01:19:59 PM »

TOD: Movies: CRY ONION, THE APPLE, MANOS, HANDS OF FATE
Musicals: The recent Bob Dylan musical and most of the others based on pop song.
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DearReaderLaura

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #134 on: April 14, 2007, 02:00:35 PM »

It's a pretty open secret that Kimmel also      
      appears on the recordings under the alter ego of Guy Haines.

 ??? ??? ??? ???
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DearReaderLaura

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #135 on: April 14, 2007, 02:02:02 PM »

I just dropped by the motel for a few minutes to print something. The church were we are meeting doesn't have any three-prong outlets. Can you believe it?

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #136 on: April 14, 2007, 02:02:15 PM »

Many motions have been made today and many motions have been passed. And that sums up my day.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #137 on: April 14, 2007, 02:03:00 PM »

The host church is providing snacks. And they are vegetable trays and fruit trays. So it is easy to be good. Food-wise.
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Matt H.

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #138 on: April 14, 2007, 02:03:19 PM »

Will we never get to page five.

Certainly.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #139 on: April 14, 2007, 02:03:41 PM »

We're STILL on page four?

Not for long.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #140 on: April 14, 2007, 02:03:59 PM »

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For Farmer DakotaCelt


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For DH of DR Ginny
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DearReaderLaura

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #141 on: April 14, 2007, 02:04:18 PM »

That is all.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #142 on: April 14, 2007, 02:09:18 PM »

I began my afternoon with ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS, Doris Day's first feature film. Grand fun and always has been, and easy to see why Day caught on so quickly: she's an ingratiating presence, and that voice: ballads or swing numbers, she's tops!

The transfer I'd place squarely between THE THREE MUSKETEERS and THE ADVENTURES OF DON JUAN. More vibrant than MUSKETEERS but not quite as eye-popping as DON JUAN. But it's a very solid transfer. There are lots of places where a poorly encoded DVD would have moire patterns on clothes and horizontal blinds, but this transfer is steady as a rock.

What's more, this is the first time I've ever been able to see Doris' freckles through the thick pancake make-up that Warners used on her. That's how clear and sharp this transfer is!
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #143 on: April 14, 2007, 02:10:50 PM »

Oh --

One of the men didn't get his hotel reservation changed. He says the place is as disgusting as I told him the reviews are.

The Big Cheese is glad I sent the link to the reviews. Everyone would have refused to stay there, I'm sure.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #144 on: April 14, 2007, 02:11:05 PM »

And THAT is all.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #145 on: April 14, 2007, 02:11:49 PM »

I continued watching the special features on the DEJA VU DVD. I still have the deleted scenes to go. I'm still watching the film a second time through with the seamless branching feature turned on getting documentaries on various aspects of the picture making process. These featurettes add about thirty minutes to the two hour movie so it's just taking time to see it all again.
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bk

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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #146 on: April 14, 2007, 02:12:12 PM »

Will we never get to page six?
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #147 on: April 14, 2007, 02:13:00 PM »

There are way too many errant and truant people and there will be a bitch-slapping to be reckoned with, oh, yes, there will be a bitch-slapping to be reckoned with.  
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #148 on: April 14, 2007, 02:13:29 PM »

We had a nice sound check - I think I'm one of the few people who could actually tell the sound man what I wanted to hear.
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Re:DRAWING THE LINE
« Reply #149 on: April 14, 2007, 02:18:24 PM »

Good Afternoon!

Greetings from Westport!

I had a nice train ride up, and I've gone through the keyboard.  And all that is left is to just do it.  At tomorrow's matinee.  The associate conductor and I are going to meet early tomorrow to play through the show, and then at 3:00... *At since the show has no intermission, I can't be fired halfway through.  ;)
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