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Showing posts with label Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Davis. Show all posts

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Montreux fetes Miles Davis with "soundtrack" to his life (Reuters)

MONTREUX, Switzerland (Reuters) – Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter and Marcus Miller paid tribute to their friend and mentor Miles Davis, performing a "songtrack to the life" of the late American trumpet player whose music electrified the world of jazz.

The two-hour concert, which stretched into the early hours of Thursday, was a highlight of the annual Montreux Jazz Festival, where Davis is still remembered for driving along Lake Geneva in a red Ferrari.

The jazz great, whose statue stands proudly in a park next to Miles Davis Hall, performed 10 times at Montreux, the last time just two months before his death at age 65 in 1991.

"It doesn't feel like 20 years, it feels like 4 or 5. Miles's music is everywhere. This is dedicated to the spirit of Miles Davis, the most beautiful thing he gave us," said Marcus Miller, the gifted bassist who directed the homage at a sold-out Stravinski Auditorium.

Miller said it was very difficult to hold a retrospective concert for an artist who never looked back, but that when he had the idea for a tribute to Davis this year he immediately decided to call Hancock and Shorter.

At the first rehearsal the three ended up not playing a single note, instead talking about Davis and what they might do to honor him properly.

"Wayne said 'what we don't want to do is play in the style in which it was originally done because we figured Miles would hate that. Let's make it like a soundtrack to Miles's life'," said Miller, wearing his trademark black hat.

"If there were a movie of Miles's life, perhaps this would be the score to that movie."

Hancock, Shorter and Miller all played with Davis, who had a keen eye for new African American talent. Sean Jones on trumpet and Sean Rickman on drums rounded out the quintet.

They opened with "Walkin," the title track of Davis's 1954 album, with Hancock alternating on piano and keyboards, and Shorter and Jones playing mournfully on their instruments.

"Someday My Prince Will Come," from the 1961 album recorded with John Coltrane, and "Tutu" were other crowd favorites, but some were disappointed not to hear the classic "Round Midnight."

After a standing ovation, Hancock strapped on a synthesizer keyboard for an encore of "Time After Time" and "So What."

"Marcus produced a great concert," said Claude Nobs, founder of the Swiss festival now in its 45th year.

YOUNG TALENT

Quincy Jones, the producer and former co-director of Montreux, hosted a second show billed as "A Night of Global Gumbo," bringing young talent to the famed Montreux stage.

Cuban jazz pianist Alfredo Fernandez, a 24-year-old who defected several years ago, played "El Guije" with his trio.

"He practices 14 hours a day, he's as serious as they come. His future is so bright it scorches my eyes," said Jones, who produced Michael Jackson's "Thriller," the best-selling album of all time.

Emily Bear, a 9-year-old piano prodigy from Illinois, joined Fernandez for "Four Hands," stretching across the keyboard to hit the notes. She also played her own "Bumble Boogie" medley.

"Do you believe that?" quipped Jones as the crowd cheered.

South Korea's M Plex Band and strong male vocalist Seung-Won Jeong teamed up with Patti Austin for her hit "Baby Come To Me."

Esperanza Spalding, the American bass player who won the Grammy for Best New Artist this year, Jordan's Diana Karazon and Canada's Nikki Yanofsky also performed solos.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Yahoo! News

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Geena Davis lobbies for bill that will help women (Reuters)

By Cassie M. Chew Cassie M. Chew – 11 mins ago

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap) – Oscar-winning actress Geena Davis joined Senator Kay Hagan and Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to introduce a bill that would support efforts to improve the image of girls and women in the media.

"I am proud to join with Sen. Hagan and Rep. Baldwin to promote gender equality and positive portrayals of women and girls in the media," Davis said in a statement. "What children see affects their attitudes toward male and female roles and impacts the value they place on girls and women in society. The Healthy Media for Youth Act will help ensure we are creating a positive media environment for all our children."

The legislation would provide grants to encourage and support media literacy programs and youth empowerment groups, facilitate research on how depictions of women and girls in the media affect youth.

It also would establish a National Taskforce on Women and Girls in the Media, intended to develop voluntary standards that promote healthy, balanced, and positive images of girls and women in the media.

The bill's introduction coincides with the first meeting of the Healthy Media Commission for Positive Images of Women and Girls, co-chaired by Davis and former FCC Chairman Deborah Taylor Tate. With representatives from more than 30 media and women's organizations, the commission's goals include developing best practices for improving the images of women in the film industry.

Davis founded an institute on gender equality in media and has been collecting research on women in film for the past six years. According to its research, negative and stereotypical images of women have persisted Hollywood for decades.

"When there is a woman working as a writer or producer in a film, there is a greater chance that the film will include more positive images of women and girls," Davis said.


Yahoo! News

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

After 30 years with film academy, Davis retires (AP)

By SANDY COHEN, AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen, Ap Entertainment Writer – Wed Jun 29, 7:00 am ET

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. – It was 1981: MTV was born, Diana Spencer married Prince Charles, "Ordinary People" won the Oscar for best picture and Bruce Davis joined the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Since then, the academy has built the Margaret Herrick Library, launched its burgeoning film archive, and bought a block of land that will one day become Hollywood's first serious movie museum.

Davis' 30 years with the organization also included 30 Academy Awards ceremonies — three of which almost didn't happen, an expanded best-picture category, 30 new best-picture winners, a handful of academy presidents and hundreds of new academy members.

But, for Davis, it all ends Thursday. The 68-year-old, who has served as the academy's executive director for the past two decades, is retiring.

"It's been stimulating, it's been fun ... but it's time to let somebody else do it for a while," Davis said from his office at AMPAS headquarters, which will soon be taken over by successor Dawn Hudson. "I feel like I've left it in good hands, but I'm leaving with no regrets."

During his tenure at the top of one of the movie industry's most elite organizations, Davis has worked closely with scores of filmmakers, from Michael Moore and Kathryn Bigelow to Annette Bening and Tom Hanks. He helped create academy programs, shepherd the awards shows and solve emergencies — like the year when all the Oscar trophies were stolen.

"We were going around the offices here kind of counting which ones were on display, because honestly we were sure we didn't have enough on hand to do it," Davis recalled, his lips curling into a smile. "That was the same year that the post office lost all the ballots, so we just kind of started giggling at some point, because what are you going to do?"

The academy now keeps a two year's supply of statuettes on hand, just in case, and efforts began last month to bypass the post office and move to online voting for the awards.

Then there were the years when the show almost didn't go on.

In 1981, the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan prompted a delay of the Oscar ceremony from Monday night, when it used to be held, to the following Tuesday night.

In 2003, the Gulf War started days before the Oscars were to be presented, "and there was a feeling that something as frivolous as the Academy Awards was maybe not appropriate," Davis said. He and the academy brass wrestled with the idea of canceling the show, but ended up airing a more subdued version that was interrupted twice with war updates from ABC News.

"It was quite dramatic, but it was actually a pretty good show," Davis said. "I think the general consensus afterward was it had been right for us to go ahead and hold the ceremonies."

In 2008, the Writers Guild strike threatened to shutter the show. The Golden Globes ceremony was canceled, but the strike was settled 12 days before the Academy Awards.

But Davis didn't just deal with the shows.

"He's the engine that keeps the academy machine moving along," said former academy President Sid Ganis.

Davis oversaw all academy employees and voting for the Academy Awards. Ganis called him "a physically imposing, powerful man, in his heart and soul a scholar and intellectual." He had strong views about how the academy should be run, Ganis said, and the board of governors often took his advice.

Though Davis met and worked with many celebrities during his 30 years on the job, he was reluctant to share any superstar anecdotes: "I treasure the interactions, but they're kind of private and personal and whatnot," he said.

But, when pressed, a gleam came into Davis' eye as he talked about working with director Sidney Lumet on a committee focused on foreign-language films.

"I was thinking, `I'm sitting here with a ballot, and there's Sidney Lumet with his ballot, and we're talking about the movies,'" Davis said. "I just thought this is a rare, rare privilege."

Working for the academy was actually Davis' second career. First he was a professor at a small college in Pennsylvania, where he ran the theater department. He started dabbling in screenwriting, then came to Los Angeles to look for success. He was at a party when he had "this very flukey experience" of meeting someone whose wife worked for the academy. A month or so later, Davis was hired to arrange seminars and lectures for the academy, and in a decade, he ascended to the top spot.

"I don't think I've been bored for a minute in 30 years here," he said. "I feel like such a rube sometimes. To this day, when I get out of the car on Oscar night and step up there onto that carpet, you get that rush of energy. The lights are popping — not that anybody's aiming at me — but still I think it's one of the great rushes, emotionally speaking, that a person can have. I have never gotten tired of that."


Yahoo! News

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Rihanna vs. Kristin Davis – who wore it best?

Flame haired Rihanna was the first lady to get her showbiz mitts on this playful printed Prada dress. Rih-Rih wore hers last October with shiny red Dorothy-style heels, blue ankle socks, big hoops and a white fur stole.

 

SATC star Kristin wore the same frock at the beginning of April to a film premiere choosing to add platform strappy sandals and little else. Though Kristin’s make up is very pretty, we have to say, she makes this frock look a little frumpy.

 

Which printed gal wins this style battle for you heatworld?

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Kristin is a print-cess in this frock

Where to go nextBack to Star StylePrevious story

The Minogue sisters’ off-duty London style

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Kate Middleton vs. Rose McGowan - who wore it best?

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