Casting

Jul. 2nd, 2020 02:20 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:

“Important to remember when casting TV, film, stage, etc.: some humans just aren’t white. Like, in real life.”

—Ego Nwodim, Twitter, June 26, 2020



Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Key and Peele, Celine Dion, or Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Musings

Feb. 15th, 2020 03:14 pm
pjthompson: (musings)
Some ignoramus has posted a video on YouTube showing Frank Sinatra with Nat King Cole actually singing the song, “L.O.V.E.” This is the wonderful and classy Nat King Cole:


*

Two hours without WiFi and I was hyperventilating. Fortunately, it was a simple fix, but I may have an addiction problem.
*

Tommy. His eyes were actually a soulful gray, not blue. He was in his forties and had done his soldiering during World War I. He became a special police officer during World War II so the younger men could go and fight.



*

I found an old keepsake box buried amongst a lot of, well, junk. Some genuine keepsakes inside the box, but also some very old story rejection letters from some of the top magazines, stuff I sent out when I was probably barely out of high school. All form letters, of course. I decided my nostalgia did not stretch to holding on to those any longer. I Kondo'd their a*ses.
*

That feeling when something seemingly minor turns dark and deep and symbolic…



*

I WILL NOT JOIN FACEBERG, no matter how many paranormal and Outlander live events they host. I WILL NOT become part of the evil empire! I WILL NOT! (Although I did succumb a little bit and joined Instagram. Mostly as a lurker.)
*

What to do with all these calendars that people gave me because they didn't know what else to give me? I only need one and that's the one with kitties that I bought myself.
*

Sometimes I look at my house and pity the person who, when I die, will have to clean out and dispose of ALL THESE BOOKS. But mostly I pity the books.
*

Zero results from the Iowa Caucus are just about right if you consider Iowa's relative importance to reflecting the diversity of the United States. They give such outsized importance to Iowa and New Hampshire. Nothing against either of those states but they're hardly representative of the rest of the country. Yet because somebody gets defeated in either Iowa or New Hampshire often they're eliminated from the race.
*

I get nonsense phrases stuck in my head sometimes. When I was doing research for the WIP on Nazi occult matters recently, the nonsense phrase in my cranial echo chamber was, "Otto Rahn on the Autobahn." Research earworms. I have a weird brain. Fortunately, "Otto Rahn on the Autobahn" made me laugh.
*

Ray Bradbury famously said about writing, "Jump off a cliff and build your wings on the way down." I'm at that stage of my current WIP where I'm wondering if I've jumped off the wrong goddamned cliff.
*

I’ve been reading Last Mountain Dancer by Chuck Kinder on and off for about a month. It’s both an interesting and irritating book so I'm not sure I'd wholeheartedly recommend it. I keep reading because it's about West Virginia where Kinder was born and raised and when he talks about that place, the book sings. Then he goes off into the woods talking about his extramarital affairs and his bad boy ways and it gets boring. (I am so done with middle-aged male angst.)

But yeah, when he talks about what a remarkable and strange place West Virginia is on so many levels it’s worth the read. He goes into many legends, those arising from the tragedies of Matewan and the coal mine bosses, as well as Mothman and other less well-known oddities. It turns out his mother was born and raised in Point Pleasant, WV, home of Mothman, and that her maiden name was Parsons—which will have some meaning to those who follow Hellier.
*

I was watching a show on Hadrian's Wall and Vindolanda where they've discovered lots of messages to and from soldiers. In one of them the soldier refers to the tribes they were trying to keep north of the wall as "Britunculi": "nasty little Britains.” My people!
*

Hellier has made me way too map conscious. Every time I see something weird about a place I always have to find out where it is in relation to Point Pleasant or Somerset or Hellier or whatever. And it's kind of amazing how much weirdness connects up.

I say this knowing full well how much the human mind longs for linkages and synchronicities.
*

Lewis Black: "Trump is good for comedy the way a stroke is good for a nap."
*

Patrick Stewart was on Colbert the other week talking about when he was younger he and Ben Kingsley were here in LA doing Shakespeare, along with some other actors of the RSC. He said he and Ben went to Hollywood because they were excited to see the hand- and footprints at the Chinese theater (Sir Pat recently joined the famous hand- and footprints there). But the whole time he's talking I was remembering being a young undergraduate at UCLA where Sir Pat and Sir Ben were doing those Shakespeare performances. During the day when they were not rehearsing or going to Hollywood all of the actors from the RSC would come to classrooms where Shakespeare and theater were being taught, talk to the students, and give impromptu performances. I was lucky enough to be in two such classes. One was Shakespeare, the other on Modern Theatre. I snuck into a third class taught in the theater department and held in an auditorium, but the other two were small English department classrooms. I was lucky enough to sit no more than 6-10 feet away from Sir Pat and Sir Ben while they answered questions and did impromptu performances. Utterly thrilling, even though neither of them was famous at that time. They were just masterful actors doing amazing performances up close and personal. Sir Ben still had his hair back then. Sir Pat did not. But his voice was that rich dark chocolate even back then. PRESENCE, both of them, and I never forgot.
*

There's hope, I think, even thought the GOP did not have the guts to do the right thing. During the impeachment trial I called my doctor's office and the answering service picked up. As she took my message I heard the impeachment trial playing in the background. America is listening. We won't forget. I hope they still remember next November.
pjthompson: (lilith)

Rock Hudson seems to be enjoying this “bout” rather a lot. Now I know how he wound up with the name Rock.

Photobucket

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (salome)

Rock Hudson seems to be enjoying this “bout” rather a lot. Now I know how he wound up with the name Rock.

Photobucket

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (dreams)
"I'd ever dreamed before..."

I dreamed about my close personal friend, Johnny Depp.* Although we'd been very close for quite some time, he started holding me at arms' length. Not only that, he implied to anyone who inquired that we'd never been close. He'd only been humoring/being kind to me/I was delusional. This hurt quite a lot because he and I both knew this wasn't so.

My friend, Lisa, told me, "You know what he's like. He's really close with someone for awhile, then he gets restless and moves on." I know it was Lisa because it felt like her, but she only ever appeared in shadow.

"I know, you're right," I said. "Still hurts."

Now, if we look at this in a Jungian light, I myself am everyone who appears in this dream (sorry, Lisa). So, perhaps a part of myself has gotten restless with my old self and has decided to move on. Or I've left behind a part of myself that isn't working. And my shadowy right brain is telling me not to worry, these things happen. I'll get over myself.

Either that, or it means something else entirely and I'll have to think on it some more.

Or not. Moving on is always a good option.



*I do not know Mr. Depp in real life. Why my unconscious chose him for this appearance I have yet to figure out. Unless it's that whole Wino Forever thing.
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:


“Goethe said, “Talent is developed in privacy,” you know?  And it’s really true.  There is a need for aloneness which I don’t think most people realize for an actor.  It’s almost having certain kinds of secrets for yourself that you’ll let the whole world in on only for a moment, when you’re acting.”

—Marilyn Monroe, interview, LIFE Magazine, Aug. 3, 1962
(on the stands the week she died)

 

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (lilith)

1. Can anyone tell me why I wake up in the middle of the night with old TV show themes running through my head? Last night it was Who’s the Boss? I can sort of understand why that might be lurking in my subconscious. Late last week I heard a story on NPR regarding Tony Danza’s new reality show, Teach. At the end of the story they played a snippet of the Who’s the Boss? theme. But why did it wait a week to trigger? Last week, when it would have been more natural to trigger, I woke up with the theme song to The Brady Bunch. I guess I can sort of understand that because Florence Henderson has been on Dancing with the Stars and, well, it never seems to take much to trigger The Brady Bunch theme. But this is not a new pattern. I have woken up in the middle night with other old TV show themes—and even some commercials—playing through the head, though I am never dreaming about these shows or commercials when this happens. Clearly, something quite sinister is going on in my subconscious.

2. This morning as I was driving to work I stopped at a light about a block away from the Canal Club in Venice. Five skinny, tragically hip young men were standing around in front of the club on Pacific. A couple of them had pieces of paper in their hands. I thought, “Are they applying for a job as the club band? And however did the management get five musicians out of bed and on the sidewalk by 8:45?” As the light changed and I drove forward I saw the answer: on the side street beside the club (North Venice Blvd.) sat all the accoutrements of a film shoot with the lights and reflectors, et al., grouped around the actual entrance to the place. The five young bravos on Pacific were waiting for their cue to shoot a scene—probably to walk around the corner and enter. As I passed them, I couldn’t help noticing that besides being skinny and tragically hip, they were all rather short. The tallest of them was barely average height. I concluded he must be the star of the show and the others were probably hired to make him look less short. Oh, and for their talent, I’m sure. Hollywood is big on talent. A short actor acquaintance of mine—who really is talented—has often been hired for his talent of being shorter than the star of the TV show/movie.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


“An actor’s a guy who, if you ain’t talking about him, ain’t listening."

—Marlon Brando, The Observer, 1956











Illustrated version. )


Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)
I'm sure it's not at all a Freudian slip that when I mention the name of Johnny Depp's new movie (opening July 1 in which he's playing John Dillinger), I keep typing "Pubic Enemies."

TODAY'S ONION HOROSCOPE: Although the editors at Penguin have received your letters and are sorry you do not "get" Milton, they will refuse to make any of your 3,264 suggested changes to Paradise Lost.

In other news: God spare me from those who are ideologically pure.
pjthompson: (Default)
I always thought Hugh Laurie was cute, even when he was playing upper class twits and mouse fathers, but since he's been playing House he is the Sex Bomb. Why is that?

Oh, this could be why...

Photobucket

Pretending

Jun. 6th, 2008 10:11 am
pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


"Acting is pretending. How can you be serious when you're pretending?"

—Johnny Depp, interview with Richard Schickel






Illustrated something for the ladies...and the laddies... )
pjthompson: (Default)

What Is Your Battle Cry?

Rampaging through the mini-mall parking lot, clutching a bladed baseball bat, cometh Pjthompson! And she gives a booming scream:

"Brace yourself, oh human speck of dust! I plunder until my glands are satisfied!!!"

Find out!
Enter username:
Are you a girl, or a guy ?

created by beatings : powered by monkeys





Quotes of the day:

"A good actor has to know how to make a good scandal."

—Jack Nicholson


"Every new technology we get, the first thing people do is figure out how to commit a crime with it, and the second is to figure out how to do real damage with it."

—Connie Willis, interview, Locus, January 2003
pjthompson: (Default)
Quote of the day:

"It is always best and safest to count on nothing from the Americans but words."

—Neville Chamberlain


For all you Sean Bean fans out there...The Field. I think you have to be pretty hardcore to put up with this one. I saw it at the height of my Sean Bean obsession, and for some reason it popped into my brain today on the drive into work.

This film was clearly designed to be an Important Film, a dramatic high at the end of Richard Harris's career, and consequently has much High Drama and Serious Acting. It also has one of the most ridiculous endings ever which, despite the seriousness I was supposed to be feeling, made me laugh my socks off. Any Monty Python fan would probably feel the same. There is livestock involved. Unfortunately, no French Taunters.

But Seanie has a nice Irish brogue, is gorgeous (of course), is partly a bad boy, partly a lover. Don't get me wrong, this is a seriously droopy film, and although it got some positive critical blah-blah at the time, I thought it mostly overdone and, ultimately, ridiculous. Fast forward through all the bits without Seanie in. But be sure to watch the end.

Oh, and for Sting fans and trivia collectors, Frances Tomelty, his first wife for whom he wrote his stalker song, "I'll Be Watching You," plays a young widow in this flick.


Writingness of the day: I managed to cut only 500 more words yesterday (and sweated to do that much). This portion of saggy middle wasn't as saggy as I remembered. I may have to take another pass through this monster once I finish this one. *sigh* I'll soldier on tomorrow, but I'm going to spend the lunch hour rereading "Eudora" one last time.
pjthompson: poll ya (riddler)
Which actor portrayal is your favorite interpretation of these comic book characters? For the sake of my sanity, I'm leaving out voice actors.

If you'd like to check up on some of these, here's the Internet Movie Database URL:
http://www.imdb.com/search


[Poll #766053]

Batman

View Answers
Adam West
0(0.0%)
Michael Keaton
4(23.5%)
Val Kilmer
3(17.6%)
George Clooney
1(5.9%)
Christian Bale
4(23.5%)
Tickybat
1(5.9%)
Other
0(0.0%)
Catwoman

View Answers
Julie Newmar
3(18.8%)
Eartha Kitt
1(6.2%)
Lee Meriwether
0(0.0%)
Michelle Pfeiffer
5(31.2%)
Halle Berry
0(0.0%)
Tickywoman
2(12.5%)
Other
0(0.0%)
The Riddler

View Answers
John Astin
1(6.7%)
Frank Gorshin
6(40.0%)
Jim Carrey
4(26.7%)
Tickler
2(13.3%)
Other
0(0.0%)
Wonder Woman

View Answers
Lynda Carter
6(37.5%)
Cathy Lee Crosby
0(0.0%)
Ellie Wood Walker
0(0.0%)
That Actress Josh Whedon Hasn't Cast Yet
3(18.8%)
Wonder Ticky
3(18.8%)
Other
0(0.0%)
Superman/Clark Kent

View Answers
George Reeves
0(0.0%)
Christopher Reeve
10(58.8%)
Dean Cain
3(17.6%)
Tom Welling
0(0.0%)
Brandon Routh
0(0.0%)
John Cleese
0(0.0%)
Graham Chapman
0(0.0%)
Michael Palin
1(5.9%)
Terry Jones
0(0.0%)
Super Tickyman
0(0.0%)
Other
0(0.0%)
pjthompson: poll ya (riddler)
Which actor portrayal is your favorite interpretation of these 19th century literary characters?

I am leaving out any "modernizations" or non-English versions of these classics, others for merest caprice, and anything before 1939 because in some cases the list is very long, but if I've missed your favorite, please feel free to upbraid me in the comments.

If you'd like to check up on some of these, here's the Internet Movie Database URL:
http://www.imdb.com/search


[Poll #756415]


Fitzwilliam Darcy - Pride and Prejudice

View Answers
Laurence Oliver
0(0.0%)
Colin Firth
2(33.3%)
Matthew Macfadyen
1(16.7%)
David Rintoul
1(16.7%)
Lewis Fiander
0(0.0%)
Peter Cushing
0(0.0%)
Hey wait! You forgot...
0(0.0%)
Mr. Ticky
0(0.0%)
Elizabeth Bennet - Pride and Prejudice

View Answers
Greer Garson
2(33.3%)
Jennifer Ehle
1(16.7%)
Keira Knightley
1(16.7%)
Elizabeth Garvie
1(16.7%)
Celia Bannerman
0(0.0%)
Ann Baskett
0(0.0%)
Hey wait! You forgot...
0(0.0%)
Ms. Ticky
0(0.0%)
Mrs. Bennett - Pride and Prejudice

View Answers
Brenda Blethyn
0(0.0%)
Alison Steadman
2(33.3%)
Mary Boland
0(0.0%)
Priscilla Morgan
1(16.7%)
Vivian Pickles
0(0.0%)
Gillian Lind
1(16.7%)
Hey wait! You forgot...
0(0.0%)
Ms. Ticky
1(16.7%)
Heathcliff - Wuthering Heights

View Answers
Laurence Olivier
1(16.7%)
Ralph Fiennes
1(16.7%)
Timothy Dalton
1(16.7%)
Robert Cavanagh
1(16.7%)
Hey wait! You forgot...
0(0.0%)
Mr. Ticky
0(0.0%)
Cathy - Wuthering Heights

View Answers
Merle Oberon
1(16.7%)
Juliette Binoche
3(50.0%)
Anna Calder-Marshall
0(0.0%)
Sarah Smart
0(0.0%)
Hey wait! You forgot...
0(0.0%)
Ms. Ticky
1(16.7%)
Dr. Abraham Van Helsing - So many, many vampire flicks

View Answers
Hugh Jackman
0(0.0%)
Hugh Jackman
0(0.0%)
Hugh Jackman
1(11.1%)
Peter Cushing
0(0.0%)
Anthony Hopkins
1(11.1%)
Mel Brooks
0(0.0%)
Laurence Olivier
0(0.0%)
Nehemiah Persoff
0(0.0%)
Christopher Plummer
2(22.2%)
Casper Van Dien
0(0.0%)
Bruce Campbell (Robert Van Helsing)
0(0.0%)
Hey wait! You forgot...
0(0.0%)
Dr. Ticky
0(0.0%)
pjthompson: (Default)
Quote of the day:

"I pretty much try to stay in a constant state of confusion just because of the expression it leaves on my face."

—Johnny Depp

Pulchritude. )

Reading of the day:

I've been reading Sunshine by Robin McKinley. I'm not that far into it, but man, am I hooked in. It starts off with the strange, slightly off-center voice—sentences that go on and on—but it's funny and real and intriguing enough that I kept reading. By the end of the first section I started to see that something truly odd was going on. This is not the world as we know it. By the end of the second section I was completely hooked. Like I said, I'm not that far into the book. I'll let you know if the rest of it holds up to the early promise.
pjthompson: (Default)
Quote of the day:

" 'Tat twam asi,' say the scriptures—'you are That.' You are the divine light playing with itself, always creating, always molding, always seeking shape and form and expression. Therefore, you see, we must honor desire. Without desire there is no creation. That is why we tell stories about desire and love."

—ancient East Indian creation myth, quoted by Jalaja Bonheim, Aphrodite's Daughters

Things I won't miss about my apartment of the day:

The kid next door (maybe six or seven) who is being pimped to Hollywood and is constantly singing and rehearsing lines. Apparently, he's been told it's important to sing as loud as he can. I can't say he hits sour notes, but there's very little that's musical about them. They are loud and on pitch, but practically atonal.

One day he was out on the balcony with the woman who is either his mother or grandmother (I haven't been able to determine the relationship and am not all that interested). I was working on my computer in my bedroom with the bathroom window open. I heard her ask him a question, but didn't hear what she said. "I have!" he said quite indignantly.

She made another sotto voce comment, and he snapped, "Oh, all right!"

Then his peeved tone turned almost sappy: "Dear God, I'm really sorry about what happened to my brother. I didn't want it to happen, and I didn't mean it to happen, and I'm really, really, sorry. So, please, God, please take care of my family and make things okay."

His peeved tone returned: "How's that?" followed by another sotto voce comment from granny and the opening and closing of their sliding glass door.

Either he was rehearsing some lines or that was one of the oddest conversations I'd ever been forced to eavesdrop on.

Picture of the day:

Adieu )
pjthompson: (Default)
Not much to report. I've got another lousy cold. I think stress may have something to do with this one, but I can't stop coughing, basically. I tried to ignore it all week but yesterday it nailed me good. I spent most of the day semi-comatose, although every once in awhile I'd get a burst of energy and I'd pack another box. Feeling better today, but I've had to cancel my tap dance routine tonight at Chez Minkie.

Hey, wait a minute. I don't tap dance. And I've never been to Chez Minkie. Huh. I didn't realize NyQuil gave you hallucinations.

At least tonight the funniest show on TV will be on: the Travel Channel's Most Haunted. This show is supposed to be spooky--and once in a blue moon they manage something atmospheric--but mostly, it just cracks me the hell up. You see, they go every week to a new haunted location in Britain and "investigate" the hauntings, but they aren't professional likes the guys on SciFi's Ghost Hunters. On Most Haunted. they don't try anything even remotely scientific. Mostly, they just wander around in the dark scaring themselves and screaming like little girls.

There's one guy, Stewart, who panics at least once a show. Once, when he and another guy were going through a haunted forest, the other guy got spooked and started screaming and Stewart actually had the nerve to tell him, "Stop screaming like a girl. You're embarrassing me."

And if things get boring, if there's no "ghostly" activity to make everyone scream like girls, their resident medium, Derek, will suddenly go all "possessed." Which is just about the funniest thing going. Normally soft-spoken and fey, Derek turns quite nasty and violent when possessed. Or sort of mock-violent. About the worst he's done is throw a lamp across the room.

It's a tremendously silly show.

Writing business of the day: I passed 117k words on Wednesday, the last day I did any writing. I think my dream of bringing this in under 120k has pretty much evaporated. I'm going to try for 125 or 130k. And my crystal ball shows me a lot of cutting in my future.

Movie news of the day: Wednesday night while still in denial about being ill, I saw The Corpse Bride with my Deppsomaniac friend. Her husband remarked, "You're going to see a cartoon with Johnny Depp in it? That's just so sad.

The animation was great, the cast was terrific, the visuals and story imaginative in the usual Tim Burton way, but it didn't leave much impact on me. It could have been because I felt lousy, so take that with a grain of...

News item of the day: Okay, the Gulf Coast has the flooding, here in SoCal we've got the fires. Any part of the country volunteering for the plague of locusts or the rain of frogs? Pharoah is not happy.

Notice how I said there wasn't much to report and then managed to blather on quite awhile?

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