Quantcast
Channel: Culture & Arts
Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live

Pussy Riot Release 'Witches of Pussy Riot Clean Manezhka' Video

$
0
0
Pussy Riot has released a new video ahead of the Russian court's verdict against opposition leader Alexei Navalny. The video, "Witches of Pussy Riot Clean Manezhka," calls for people to demonstrate outside the Kremlin on Tuesday. The clip features group members Masha Alekhina and Nadya Tolokonnikova cleaning Moscow's Manezh Square in preparation for the protests. “This is above all a propaganda video,” Tolokonnikova told BuzzFeed News.

Maria Baronova, an opposition activist, and Elena Kostyuchenko, a journalist and LGBT activist, join the band for the song, which repeats the same four words over in Russian: "Clean. Honest. Word. Deed."


Baby Stars In Classic Story Scenes, With A Little Help From Grandma

$
0
0
After Susan Pierce Grossman retired from her job as an art teacher in 2013, she focused her creative energy on a new project: photographing her granddaughter Meredith.

Channeling classic stories, movies, and fairy tales, Grossman's photos of her now 6-month-old granddaughter are absolutely whimsical. "I want Meredith to remember that her grandma thought she was special and precious," she told The Huffington Post.

whimsical

Grossman used her experience as a set designer for high school plays to create mini photography sets for her granddaughter. The themes commemorated occasions like the 75th anniversary of "Madeline" and "The Wizard of Oz," the 45th anniversary of "Sesame Street," and the 60th anniversary of the New York City Ballet's performance of "The Nutcracker."

While the grandmother enjoys having fun with baby Meredith, she also has bigger hopes for her time with her granddaughter. "I may not be around to see her dreams come true -- but I am here now to inspire her dreams, she said, before quoting Walt Disney: "If you can dream it you can do it!'"





Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter |
Contact HuffPost Parents

These New Year's Resolution Ideas Will Get You Thinking Outside The Weight-Loss Box

$
0
0
As 2015 creeps up on us, we're all scrambling to make resolutions we'll actually keep.

This video from The School Of Life -- a London-based organization that aims to develop emotional intelligence through videos, classes and more -- suggests some thought-provoking New Years resolutions that aren't all about losing weight.

Think through anxieties, the video suggests. Spend time looking at clouds and rivers. Worry less and forgive a little more.

Thinking about making a few changes to that that New Years Resolution list yet?

Daryl Dixon Was In The Music Video For 'Fake Plastic Trees'

$
0
0
Today, two things you hold near and dear to your heart collide: "Walking Dead" actor Norman Reedus was once in the music video for Radiohead's "Fake Plastic Trees."

Reedus plays Daryl Dixon on the hit zombie show, a fan-favorite character whose sexuality had been the subject of much speculation until last month, when show creator Robert Kirkman confirmed Daryl was straight.

"Fake Plastic Trees" is one of the most iconic rock songs of the '90s band, and the music video will really take you back. (As further evidence of the song's omnipresence, it's the one Josh is listening to in "Clueless" when Cher disses his college "cry-baby music" taste.)

As Uproxx notes, the best times to snag a peak at the actor are 2:43, 3:05, and 4:19. Who could have predicted that future stardom would await?

H/T Uproxx.

Watch Michael Mann & Chris Hemsworth Explain 'Blackhat'

$
0
0
For movie lovers, a new Michael Mann film is considered an event. Which is why the forthcoming release of "Blackhat" is so enticing and anticipated. Out Jan. 16, it marks Mann's first feature release in six years. Co-written by Mann, the thriller focuses on a hacker (Chris Hemsworth) who, after being released from jail, helps American and Chinese law enforcement officials search for a cyber criminal. In a new feature, debuting exclusively here at HuffPost Entertainment, Mann and Hemsworth explain the timeliness of the film with the help from a few hacking experts (Christopher McKinlay, Michael Panico) and reveal the kind of training Hemsworth had to do in preparation to play a computer wizard. (And you thought lifting Mjolnir was hard!)

Watch the video above. "Blackhat" is out on Jan. 16.

This Was TV's Most Diverse Year, But There's Still Progress To Be Made

$
0
0
diversity

When television historians (and future listicle makers) look back on 2014, one thing will seem crystal clear: this past year was one of the most diverse in the history of the small screen, a transformative revolution that showcased a wide array of identities, bodies and sexualities. For the first time ever, more audiences could look at their favorite shows and see characters, actors and lifestyles that more closely reflected themselves.

Just look at the new shows. ABC’s “Black-ish” is not only the first all-black comedy on a major network in five years -- the last was Fox’s “Brothers,” which ran for one season in 2009 -- but also a smart and funny sitcom that addresses race in modern suburban America. Willa Paskin of Slate called it the "best new sitcom of the fall," while our TV critic Maureen Ryan reminded us why a show like "Black-ish" is necessary now more than ever.

Mexican-American stand-up comedian Cristela Alonzo also made history this year, becoming the first Latina to create, produce, write and star in her own sitcom. The CW's “Jane the Virgin," an hour-long comedy that pays humorous tribute to telenovelas, introduced audiences to star Gina Rodriguez.

"The fact we got recognized and that I'm the first person to get recognized from The CW and I'm a Latina, I would be empowered by that ... I am empowered by that,” Rodriguez told BuzzFeed after her recent Golden Globe nomination. "Because if I can do it, that means there are so many other people who are going to be able to do it. It's that idea that when you make your dreams come true you allow other people to dream and try to make their dreams come true. That's all I did, I opened the floodgates. Now everybody can see that if I can do it, what makes you any different? This little lady from Chicago in the little-engine-that-could show on the smaller network? It’s not where you’re from, it’s where you’re going, and we’re trying to go where everybody else is at and it feels like we just arrived there.”

Old shows sparkled too. Netflix's "Orange Is the New Black" continued to lead a progressive movement on television and even found time to celebrate women of different body types.

And a conversation about the growing diversification of the television industry wouldn't be complete without praise of Shonda Rhimes, queen of Thursday night. Rhimes is not only a powerhouse figure on her own, being one of the few women, and women of color, behind the camera, but she's also brought us two hit shows led by black actresses. With “Scandal,” Kerry Washington became the second African-American female to lead a network drama since Diahann Carroll starred in 1968's "Julia," and “How To Get Away With Murder” not only stars Viola Davis, but also features a racially diverse cast of young actors.

Said Rhimes during a speech earlier this month: "This moment right here, me standing up here all brown with my boobs and my Thursday night of network television full of women of color, competitive women, strong women, women who own their bodies and whose lives revolve around their work instead of their men, women who are big dogs, that could only be happening right now."

oitnb

But adding people of color to television was just one layer exhibited, explored and celebrated this year. Both new and returning shows have featured main characters and actors of a variety of sexual orientations, gender identities and bodies. Amazon’s “Transparent” gave us a show about a transgender matriarch of a Jewish family, which included two daughters confronting with issues of gender identity and sexuality. The series also features a handful of transgender actors and crew members, and writer-creator Jill Soloway recently hired the show's first trans writer. MTV’s “Faking It” proved groundbreaking when it introduced an Intersex character to television along with an illuminating video about what it means to be born Intersex, while the network also aired Laverne Cox’s “The T Word” documentary about trans youth. Both HBO’s “Looking” and Ryan Murphy’s “The Normal Heart” told stories about relationships and real-life hardships within the gay community. “Modern Family” ended its latest season with a gay wedding while real-life same-sex marriages were officiated live during the Grammy Awards. Cox, who first became a household name thanks to "OITNB,” was the first openly transgender person to appear on the cover of Time magazine and to be nominated for an Emmy. And Murphy pushed things even further with his “American Horror Story: Freak Show," which features a cast of actors with disabilities, or as FX has called their “extra-ordinary artists,” in a way no show has done before.

And yet while a quick scan across television networks (and on Internet streaming platforms) proves that American television has made profound progress over the past 12 months, it's also important to recognize that no peak has been reached. One important conversation about the representation of marginalized communities on television is not just about what types of diverse stories are being told, but who is being cast in those roles. Two specific communities that are on the cusp of this change are the transgender and queer communities and actors with disabilities. People who identify with these groups have been a part of a giant cultural shift this year thanks to “Transparent” and “AHS: Freak Show,” but we’re still only in the preliminary stages of allowing television to mirror the audiences who watch it.

"I wish we didn’t have to think it was radical to cast disabled actors in a drama. Casting directors should stop being so scared and bite the bullet."

Alexandra Billings, who plays Maura’s transgender friend Davina on “Transparent,” spoke to HuffPost Entertainment about the increased visibility of her transgender community on television this year and how the show has helped initiate it. “The fact that a transgender [woman] is the center of a family comedy-drama is groundbreaking,” Billings told us. She agreed that Jill Soloway’s series was a part of a major movement away from negative and superficial portrayals of trans characters that have previously been seen on television. When reflecting on her career, Billings said how tired she was of playing the same trans character, which for some reason always revolved around hospitals. Considering the history of transgender characters on TV, Billings said that one significant step forward that's been made is having more authentic portrayals of trans people. “You can’t put a man in a dress and call them transgender in television anymore,” Billings said. “I remember a time when you had to do that and we were the butt of the joke.”

maura davina

Another transgender actress further diversifying TV this year is Erika Ervin of "AHS: Freak Show." Ervin is one of the first trans actresses to play a cisgender character on a show (she stars as Amazon Eve, a seven-foot-tall woman who is part of Elsa Mars' "freak show").

"It feels validating," Ervin told HuffPost Entertainment about Amazon Eve, a character that she developed years before and brought to "AHS" once cast. "Not only from a political standpoint. Transgender people are out there, we’re making our way." Yet while Murphy's anthology series and “Transparent” are helping move TV forward in terms of LGBT characters, there is still a long way to go. Ervin noted that while things are definitely changing, we still must ask, "Is it really progress?"

"You can’t put a man in a dress and call them transgender in TV anymore. I remember a time when you had to do that and we were the butt of the joke."

One heavily debated topic about LGBT representation is the casting of cisgender actors, or people who identify with the gender they were assigned at birth, in transgender roles. While an on-going argument, it became most relevant this year when Jared Leto won the Oscar for portraying a trans woman in "Dallas Buyers Club." "Transparent" also received criticism for casting Tambor as Maura, with some even calling the show "transphobic" for the decision. Trans writer Kat Hache recently wrote about the controversy surrounding Arcade Fire's "We Exist" music video, which stars Andrew Garfield as a character who appeared to be trans -- though it should be noted that Our Lady J, who worked with Garfield on the video, has said he was playing a "young man exploring his gender." Hache wrote, "There seems to be a prevalent idea in Hollywood that viable transgender actors and actresses simply do not exist." Besides a prolonged invisibility of real-life trans people on screen, another major issue this highlights is the growing unemployment for trans actors, which Laverne Cox has said is "twice the national average" and "four times" for trans actors of color.

Yet Billings had a bit of a different perspective on the contentious debate. “The only reason the argument is futile right now is because we need help in order to get through the door," she told us. Billings urges cis actors to be "mindful" and "aware" of their portrayals of trans people's journeys, while also grateful for them. Ideally though, she believes that the only way to fully represent the stories and lives of her community is through casting those who identify with it. "This word authenticity is thrown around a lot. We need to really understand what this thing means. I think instead of having authentic representations what we need to have are true representations. And really, the only way to do that is to hire us."

While this year has given way to an increased visibility of people with disabilities on TV as well, it's only the first waves of change. HuffPost caught up with Mat Fraser, who plays Paul the Illustrated Seal on “AHS: Freak Show” on his last day filming the series. The British actor has been performing on the stage and screen for 20 years and acknowledges that small advancements have been made in regard to casting actors with disabilities. Fraser cited the BBC’s recent initiatives to cast more actors with disabilities in TV series. But even though Fraser recognizes how groundbreaking “AHS” is this season in casting him, along with Rose Siggins, Jyoti Amge and Ben Woolf, among others, he knows it’s only the beginning.

“I wish we didn’t have to think it was radical to cast disabled actors in a drama,” Fraser said after mentioning how progressive Murphy’s casting decisions have been. “The irony’s not lost on me that the first time I’ve given an opportunity to show my universal humanity as an actor is by playing a freak in a freak show. I wonder if casting directors and producers will be able to see that I’m, and as are all competent disabled actors, capable of showing that universal humanity that is the stuff of drama.”

mat fraser

While Fraser didn’t hesitate to share how much he appreciates and loves playing Paul in “AHS,” he also hopes for a future where he won’t just be playing a disabled character. “The actors should be allowed to just act,” Fraser said. “Casting directors should stop being so scared and bite the bullet and cast us. I just want to do normal, well-written drama like everybody else.”

Fraser brought up that the huge fan attention he’s received from the show -- besides an increase in Twitter followers, Fraser says he has also gotten “romantic texts” from teenage "emo girls" -- evinces just how much viewers are ready to embrace him as a talented actor outside of his physical condition. "I got portrayed as a lover by Ryan, so people now relate to my character as a lover character and imprint that romance interest on to [him],” Fraser said. "All you have to do is tell people this is the guy [who's] the romantic one and four thousand people relate to you in that way. That’s the power of television and drama. That should be proof that you can cast us anywhere.”

While 2014 has been a monumental year for more accurate representation of diversity, it has also been a year for igniting significant discussions. But television networks and producers are just barely scratching the surface off our beautifully diverse world. And with the very first leaps of change will come the deepening cracks of true progression.

Billings said that from her experience in the trans community, once someone begins their transition or a “transition into any kind of newness, the circle of people around you are forced to go with you.” Now that the beginning molds of diverse storytelling and casting have been broken on television, we can hope that a larger movement will follow, with the rippling effects of 2014 finally becoming actualized in years to come.

One Box Office Record Will Probably Crumble In 2015 Thanks To Disney

$
0
0
As noted in a press release from Disney, the studio enjoyed its second highest year ever at the box office, with $4.35 billion in total ticket sales. The flush 12 months come on the heels of the studio's record-breaking 2013, which saw $4.73 billion in global grosses. And yet the past two years might amount to chump change by this time next year.

Only two studios have ever topped $5 billion in global ticket sales: Warner Bros. in 2013 and Paramount in 2011. Disney could join those companies in 2015 ... with just four of its films taken into account: "Cinderella," "Avengers: Age of Ultron," Pixar's "Inside Out" and "Star Wars: The Force Awakens." Toss in an updated version of "The Jungle Book," another Pixar movie ("The Good Dinosaur") and what could be a franchise starter in Brad Bird's "Tomorrowland" with George Clooney, and the lineup looks near unstoppable. This is how deep things are: Steven Spielberg's new movie, an untitled drama with Tom Hanks at the center, would count as one of Disney's underdogs.

Here's the complete list of movies Disney will release in 2015. The record for a single-year global gross for a studio is $5.17 billion.

Jan. 23 - "Strange Magic"
Feb. 20 - "McFarland, USA"
March 13 - "Cinderella"
April 17 - "Monkey Kingdom"
May 1 - "Avengers: Age of Ultron"
May 22 - "Tomorrowland"
June 19 - "Inside Out"
July 17 - "Ant–Man"
Oct. 9 - "The Jungle Book"
Oct. 16 - The Untitled Steven Spielberg Cold War Spy Thriller
Nov. 25 - "The Good Dinosaur"
Dec. 18 - "Star Wars: The Force Awakens"

The Most Influential Acts Of Street Art Around The World This Year

$
0
0
Banksy may have cornered the street art chatter in 2013, but this year was all about the many other artists claiming their spot in the limelight. From Los Angeles to Afghanistan, guerrilla artists across the world proved there's no public canvas quite like a wall. Below, 21 of our favorite tags from 2014.

1. Blu: This is the year the Italian street artist Blu wrapped up his massive transformation of a building in Rome, turning 48 windows into Sphynx-like faces.

street art
Italian street artist 'Blu' climbs the facade of a former military barrack as he works on a graffiti piece in Rome on April 24, 2014. (ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)






2. ROA: ROA headed back to Europe this spring after a stint in New Zealand, to make this Italian building a little wilder.

roa street art
ROA in Rome in 2014 (Photo courtesy of ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)




3. Tellas: This Italian street artist took several days to carry off a hypnotic minimalist mural in the city of Undine as part of the Homepage Street Art Festival.

tellas
Tellas in Italy in 2014 (Photo courtesy of Facebook)




4. Miss Van: Born in France and based in Barcelona, Miss Van specializes in portraits that seem conjured from a different era. Her baroque "poupées" (French for dolls) are often hidden behind masks, an affectation she believes gives them an androgynous appeal.





5. FAITH 47: We love this galloping unicorn by South African artist FAITH 47, which turns an otherwise ordinary wall in the village of Erriadh, on the Tunisian island of Djerba, into a dreamscape.

faith 47 street art
(JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images)




6. Djerbahood: The unicorn made up a larger project, Djerbahood, which brought together dozens of female artists from around the world to transform Erriadh.

djerbahood
Swoon (Galerie Itinerrance / Aline Deschamps)


djerbahood
Nilko (Galerie Itinerrance / Aline Deschamps)


djerbahood
LILIWENN (JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images)




7. Graffiti in Athens: The Greek city became a new graffiti capital, as artists confronted the changing economics that make for an abundance of abandoned buildings, and provocative art.

athens graffiti

athens graffiti

athens graffiti



8. Kelburn Castle: Based in Scotland, the castle makes our list for the sad fact that its wild makeover is set to revert to plain old thirteenth century stonework next year.

cas



9. Inti: This April, the Chilean graffiti artist Inti gave us all the gift we didn't know we badly needed: a giant Don Quixote mural in Quintanar de la Orden, Spain.

santiago chile street art
People look at a giant Don Quixote graffiti mural painted today by Chilean graffiti artist Inti on the wall of a building on April 5, 2014 in Quintanar de la Orden, Spain. Santiago Gonzalez runs the project "Construir un lugar mejor sin destruir lo que tenemos" or "Building a better place without destroying that we have" to regenerate urban landscapes with street art and to give a boost to his region's cultural attractions. Organizers claim it is the largest Don Quixote painting in the world. (Photo by Pablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images)




10. Shamsia Hassani: This female artist emerged as one of the unlikeliest street art stars of the year. A fine arts lecturer of Afghani descent, Hassani tags the streets of Kabul with her signature depictions of creative women.

shamsia hassani



11. Skidrobot: The artist known as Skidrobot turned out some of the simplest and most profound work we've seen all year. Working anonymously, he paints poignant backdrops behind the homeless people who make their home on the streets of Los Angeles.





12. Small Business Saturday Street Art: To promote the "shop small" message of Small Business Saturday, Chicago-based street artist Hebru Brantley enlisted artists across the country to design appropriate graffiti. Our favorites turned up in Washington D.C. and Miami, murals featuring a girl and a boy respectively, both exuberant in their own ways.

rsolindale

small
LA - Hueman




13. Women Are Heroes: Since 2007, French street artist JR has turned the concept of the male gaze on its head with his global public project "Women are Heroes," pasting images of real women's faces and eyes on train cars and abandoned buildings around the world.

jr women are heroes



14. Strook: This spring, the Belgium-based artist Stefaan De Croock, aka Strook, highlighted the beauty of basic materials with his short film "Wood & Paint," chronicling a romance between recycled wood and spray paint.

Wood & Paint from Stefaan De Croock on Vimeo.





15. Boa Mistura: The Madrid-based artist collective proved the power of a bright coat of paint when the team tackled more than 30 buildings off a highway in the working class town of Querétaro, México. This was technically a 2013 moment, but their work lived on into 2014.

Las Americas from boamistura on Vimeo.





16. Street Stories: One of the year's most compelling campaigns, "Street Stories" tasked U.K.-based artists with telling the actual stories of homeless British teens.

main
Mural by Best Ever




17. Leon Keer: Keer spoke directly to our inner 10-year-old with "Space Invaders," a 3D take on the classic Atari video game.





18. Splash: A collaboration between Fin DAC and Angelina Christina, "Splash" aptly added a splash of female badassery to the streets of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

splash



19. Maya Hayuk: The legendary Bowery Wall got a fresh coat of paint this year when Maya Hayuk, a Brooklyn-based artist known for her Ukrainian craft-inspired prints, was tapped to put her mark on a site that's hosted the work of a notably male crew for years now, including Keith Haring, Os Gemeos, Kenny Scharf and Shepard Fairey.

maya
Photo courtesy Luna Park




20. Fort Tilden: This winter, the experts at Brooklyn Street Art tipped us off to a series of startling anonymous works covering New York's abandoned WWI military base, Fort Tilden.

2014-10-19-1brooklynstreetartartistunknownjaimerojoforttilden1014web12.jpg

Artist Unknown. Also, Mika loves Mea. (photo © Jaime Rojo)


2014-10-19-1brooklynstreetartcakejaimerojoforttilden1014web4a.jpg




21. Pejac: Another BSA find was this update on an Impressionist classic, by the Spanish artist Pejac, who painted a corroded ship hull off northern Spain to resemble the Monet painting, 'Impression, Sunrise."

2014-10-05-brooklynstreetartpejacmaximilianoruizsantanderspain1014web9.jpg
Pejac. "Impression (Sunset)" Santander, Spain. Summer 2014. (photo © Maximiliano Ruiz)


2014-10-05-brooklynstreetartpejacmaximilianoruizsantanderspain101411web.jpg

Pejac. "Impression (Sunset)" Santander, Spain. Summer 2014. (photo © Maximiliano Ruiz)




BONUS: The street artist Swoon hosting a major show at the Brooklyn Museum.

2014-04-09-brooklynstreetartswoonjaimerojobrooklynmuseum040914web201.jpg

"Swoon: Submerged Motherlands" Detail of the top of the tree. (photo © Jaime Rojo)




For more on Brooklyn Street Art's favorite street art of 2014, check out their picks here. #RIP 5Pointz.

The 10 Best Night Sky Photos From The Department Of The Interior's Instagram Account

$
0
0
We already know the Department of the Interior's Instagram game is on point, but these gorgeous shots of the night sky are something else.

The agency manages more than 500 million acres of public lands across the country -- more than enough space to find a perfect starscape. It may be winter, but there's still plenty to explore during the season at one of America's 59 national parks.

Take a look at the top 10 night sky photos from the Interior Department's account that were posted over the past year, and follow along throughout 2015 @usinterior.



Photo courtesy of David Lane.


America’s public lands, like #Yosemite #NationalPark in California (pictured here), are some of the best places for stargazing. Joseph Taylor (@joe__taylor) captured this stunner of the endless #MilkyWay galaxy floating above the granite monoliths -- Washington Column and #HalfDome -- in @YosemiteNPS’s Stoneman Meadow. "To be a part of a beautiful moment on Earth like this one is always breathtaking, but to capture it with my camera was incredible,” says Joseph. Want to be featured on @USInterior’s Instagram account and our other social media channels? Tag us in your amazing images of national parks, wildlife refuges (@usfws) or @mypubliclands, and we could end up sharing your photo of America’s public lands!

A photo posted by U.S. Department of the Interior (@usinterior) on



Photo courtesy of Joseph Taylor (@joe__taylor).




Photo courtesy of Toby Harriman (www.tobyharriman.com).


The Milky Way over Arches National Park in #Utah.

A photo posted by U.S. Department of the Interior (@usinterior) on



Photo courtesy of Jacob Frank (@jwfrankphotography).




Photo by Neal Herbert, National Park Service.




Photo by Beau Johnson (www.sharetheexperience.org).


The view from Eielson Visitor Center as the full moon rises over Denali National Park. NPS Photo/Lian Law

A photo posted by U.S. Department of the Interior (@usinterior) on



Photo by Lian Law, National Park Service.




Photo courtesy of Matt Newman.




Photo courtesy of David Shield.




Photo courtesy of Nina McIntosh (@alohaninalove).

2014's Hit Songs Sound Even Hotter With Pillows, Beer Bottles And Balloons

$
0
0
The best way to commemorate the top songs of 2014 is by banging a pair of shoes together -- just ask Andrew Huang.

The musician, also known for his "Jingle Bells" remix with office equipment and "99 Red Balloons" with actual red balloons, remixed some hit songs of 2014, including "Rather Be," "Happy," and "Shake It Off," with household items like pillows, shoes, beer bottles, rubber bands and balloons.

"I was invited to perform on German television last month where they wanted me to put together a similar year-end hits medley with found sounds, which included some German songs as well as their suggestions of 'Timber,' 'Happy,' and 'Prayer in C,'" Huang told The Huffington Post. "For the version for my channel, I wanted to replace the German songs with ones that were more internationally recognizable ... so I added 'Rather Be,' 'Shake It Off' and 'Bang Bang.'"

As for where he got his instruments, they're just about as random as they seem.

"I was staying at a friend's house in the Netherlands when I made this video ... so other than the balloon which I had with me because of this video, it's all his stuff," he continued. "I just looked around to see what I could use to recreate enough of the parts of each song so they would sound passable. Imitating drums is easy, you just need to hit stuff."

H/T Tastefully Offensive




Christine Cavanaugh, Voice of Chuckie On 'Rugrats,' Dies At 51

$
0
0
Christine Cavanaugh, a notable voice actor and performer, died on Dec. 22 at the age of 51.

Cavanaugh voiced a host of iconic animated characters, including Chuckie on "Rugrats" and Dexter on "Dexter's Laboratory." The voice of Babe in the movie "Babe," Cavanaugh also guest-starred on a variety of live-action television shows including "The X-Files," "ER," and "Everybody Loves Raymond."

According to the L.A. Times, Cavanaugh retired from her voice career in 2001 in order to move closer to her family. Also from the obituary:

Many know of her from the roles she played, but in each role there was a part of her showing through that the ones who truly knew her could see. The childlike awe of the world, humor to deal with the unpleasantness of reality, strength to deal with the challenges we all face, and intelligence to know when to act or accept what fate had allowed. Christine lived her life the way she wanted. Accolades, notoriety, and recognition were not the reason for her interest in entertainment, it was for the love of entertainment, to make people smile.


A Memorial Stone ceremony took place on Antelope Island in Cavanaugh's honor.

For more, head to the L.A. Times.

28 Of Our Favorite Feminist Songs Of 2014

$
0
0
It's been an empowering year for women in music. Beyoncé stood proudly in front of a FEMINIST backdrop at the VMAs, Jenny Lewis explained the complexities of being "just another lady without a baby" and Lily Allen declared, "There's a glass ceilin' to break, uh-huh, there's money to make, and now it's time to speed it up 'cause I can't move at this pace."

Besides the chart-topping female artists who transformed their views on gender equality into catchy hits in 2014, there were also fantastic parodies of popular music that drove girl power messaging to viral heights, like the career-focused feminist take on "All About That Bass" and "Baby, It's Consent Outside."

In celebration of a year of great music, here's a playlist of 27 songs that made us feel all warm and liberated this year:



*We would have included Taylor Swift's "Blank Space," because of how effectively she mocks the "boy crazy" image that's been thrust upon her by the media. But alas, her music isn't on Spotify. Enjoy the music video instead!



Here's to another year of feminist jams!

When You Look At The 'Serial' Facts, New Interview With Key Witness Is Totally Frustrating

$
0
0
Fans of "Serial" were given a bit of an epilogue on Monday: Jay Wilds, the state's key witness in its case against Adnan Syed, agreed to an on-the-record interview. He spoke with The Intercept's Natasha Vargas-Cooper about his version of events on the day Baltimore-area teenager Hae Min Lee was killed in 1999. ("Serial" host Sarah Koenig attempted, but failed, to convince Wilds to open up on the podcast.) Many agree Wilds might be the only one alive who knows what really happened that day -- so has he finally set the record straight?

Well, not really. Wilds does give some important insights about the case. He explained his changing accounts of what happened as attempts to spare friends and family -- namely, the grandmother he lived with -- from any involvement in the case. Wilds told Vargas-Cooper that he didn't trust the police at the time. Drug law enforcement was harsh, he explained, and he "had a lot more on the line than just a few bags of weed."

The fact that Wilds' story shifted so much has many "Serial" fans saying he wasn't ever a credible witness. Now he's given us a whole new timeline of the supposed events of that day. Here's that new story compared to the facts we know.


Jay says: He went to the mall alone.
In Wilds' newest version of events, Adnan was in his car with Jay instead of being at his last period of school. Jay suggested going to the mall to find a present for Stephanie, but Adnan said he has to "go do something," and told Jay to drop him at school, letting Jay borrow his car and phone.

We know: At trial, Jay said he went shopping with Adnan.
Jay testified at the second trial that he and Adnan actually went to the mall together, and that he dropped Adnan off at school afterward, around 1 p.m. Adnan's last period Psychology teacher made a note that Adnan arrived to class late, at 1:27 p.m. Adnan always claimed he never went to the mall with Jay.

people map serial


Jay says: He went to Jenn's house.
Jay told The Intercept he remembered going over to his friend Jenn's to hang out after leaving the mall.

We know: At trial, Jay and Jenn both say he went to her house that afternoon.
Adnan's phone log also documents a couple of calls to Jenn's house, at 12:07 p.m. and 12:41 p.m., which make sense if Jay had the phone and wanted to see who was home. There are also a few incoming calls at this point, but unfortunately, the records don't show us who they came from.

serial podcast map


Jay says: Adnan probably wasn't with Hae's car at Best Buy.
Wilds told Vargas-Cooper that Adnan called him, said he killed Hae, and requested pick-up from Best Buy. Wilds then remembered driving a short way to Best Buy in Adnan's car, where he found Adnan, who wasn't with any car. Adnan apparently told Jay he killed Hae in her car, which was somewhere around, but Jay was doubtful -- he thought the car was somewhere else. At this point, it's between 3 and 4 p.m.

We know: At trial, the "trunk pop" moment allegedly happened at Best Buy.
The state alleged that Adnan's "pick-up" call occurred at 2:36 p.m. and, according to the log, lasted just five seconds. While Jay had claimed to first lay eyes on Hae's body in a few different spots in the weeks and months after Hae's disappearance, he testified that the real "trunk pop" moment happened there in the Best Buy parking lot. So, Jay is now saying that what he alleged at the second trial -- Adnan was with Hae's car and he showed Jay her body at Best Buy -- didn't happen.

The call log, though, could maybe support part of Jay's new timeline. Between 3 and 4 p.m., there are outgoing calls made to Jay's friend Jenn, Adnan's friend Nisha, and two other friends we don't know a lot about, Phil and Patrick. All of these ping towers are near Best Buy, Koenig states in Episode 5.

call log serial


Jay says: He and Adnan hung out at Cathy's.
At this point, Jay drove himself and Adnan over to Cathy's to smoke. Adnan received a call from the police regarding Hae's disappearance and "gets all panicky," so Jay suggested they separate. Adnan took his own car, and Jay got home another way.

We know: At trial, lot more happened before Cathy's.
Before going over to Cathy's, Jay said that he and Adnan dropped Hae's car at the I-70 Park and Ride. Now, he doesn't mention this at all, because he said he wasn't sure where Hae's car was at the time. He also doesn't mention looking to buy weed in Forest Park, which he testified to doing after ditching the car. Or dropping Adnan at track practice, which Adnan claimed to have attended, although his coach wasn't able to confirm. However, at 5:38 p.m., when Adnan is supposed to be at track practice, a call placed to Adnan's friend Krista pings a tower "sort of where" Hae's car ends up, Koenig says in Episode 5.

The part about Cathy's apartment is pretty undisputed, though -- Jay, Cathy and Adnan all acknowledge being there that evening. Officer Adcock also testified that he was probably the 6:24 p.m. incoming call on Adnan's cellphone log, which would have been during that time.

haes note serial


Jay says: The "trunk pop" happened outside his grandmother's house.
Back at his grandmother's house trying to collect himself, Jay told The Intercept he received a call from Adnan, who was either outside right then or on his way over. Adnan apparently opened the trunk of Hae's car and showed Jay her body. "She looked kinda purple," he said. Adnan then threatened to expose Jay's drug dealing operation if he didn't help bury Hae.

We know: At trial, it allegedly happened at Best Buy. (Again.)
Jay testified that moment happened hours earlier at a completely different location, which we could now assume was intended to protect his grandmother. (If it was, indeed, false.) There is no call to Jay on Adnan's phone log in the evening. (Although he could have used a different phone.)

serial podcast


Jay says: Adnan buried the body at midnight.
Several hours later -- or "closer to midnight" -- Jay said Adnan reappeared in his own car, and drove the two of them to Leakin Park with some "gardening tools" from Jay's grandmother's house.

We know: Phone records suggest it happened hours earlier.
Adnan's cell phone did ping towers near Leakin Park -- but not around midnight. Two incoming calls (we can't be sure who they were from) originated from the park at 7:09 p.m. and 7:16 p.m., suggesting whoever had Adnan's cell phone was, in fact, there around that time.

leakin park serial


Jay says: He didn't help bury the body.
Jay helped dig the hole for about 40 minutes, he told Vargas-Cooper, but refused to actually move the body. He was then asked to wait while Adnan drove Hae's car, which was parked in a nearby neighborhood, to the burial site. It took about 45 minutes for Adnan to finish burying Hae, according to Jay. Afterward, Adnan dumped Hae's car where it was later found behind some row houses and finally left in his own car, dropping Jay back home.

We know: At trial, Jay says they both buried Hae.
Jay testifies that he both helped dig the hole in Leakin Park and helped bury the body. He also stated that Adnan drove Hae's car from the I-70 Park and Ride to a nearby McDonald's, where Jay was waiting in Adnan's car. There is no mention of McDonald's or, again, the Park and Ride, in Jay's new timeline.

In addition to conflicting his previous stories, Jay's new timeline leaves a lot of lingering questions.

Why were Jay and Adnan driving around so desperately looking to buy weed, as Jay testified at trial, if Jay himself was supposedly a dealer with a big stash at his grandmother's house? Who paged Jay's friend Jenn twice around 8 p.m. that night? How did Jay know the position of Hae's body if he didn't help bury her?

Maybe some of the answers will appear in part two of Vargas-Cooper's interview, which is scheduled to publish on Tuesday. For now, read part one of the interview here.

How One Artist Paid Homage To Seven Generations Of Women In Her Family

$
0
0
Artist Christine H McConnell has managed to revive 200 years of family history, paying tribute to the women who came before her with just a touch of photoshop magic. And it all started with a red dress.

red
Left: McConnell's mother, Kathryn (born 1957). Right: McConnell, wearing the same red dress two and a half decades later.


The story goes: McConnell's mother, Kathryn, waited 25 years to gift her daughter the red dress pictured above. McConnell's father had purchased the piece of clothing as a small gesture following the death of Kathryn's own mother. Kathryn was photographed wearing the "extravagant" outfit when she was just 32 years old. When McConnell finally inherited the bit of family memorabilia, an idea was born. Why not recreate the photo she had loved since childhood by slipping into the garment and posing just like her mother?

Recreate it she did, and the homage didn't end there. The artist decided to go back in time a few more generations, all the way back to her great-great-great-grandmother, Martha, born in 1821. Like she did for her mother, McConnell dons clothing and hairstyles similar to her relatives up to five generations ago, mimicking the postures and expressions they flashed before the camera centuries before her.

martha
Martha, great-great-great-grandmother (born 1821).


"Many of these images had been hanging in the house as long as I've been around and I only had a vague understanding of who there were," McConnell recalled in an email to The Huffington Post. "After sifting through old scrap books and documents my mother had, I began to get a better sense of who they were. The oldest image is of my great-great-great grandmother Martha who was born in Allen, Kentucky in 1821. It's very possible her parents were among the first settlers in that area."

After recreating the portraits of her great-great-grandmother, great-grandmother and grandmother too, McConnell added a photograph of herself and a cheeky image of her future daughter. For the latter, she used a stock photo of a horse. Why? "It's a joke on the fact that I have a horse-like face. Which I should mention I don't take as an insult... horses are very pretty."

jane
Jane, great-great-grandmother (born 1858).


The results are gorgeously photoshopped portraits that mine one woman's family tree.

"I would say my biggest takeaway from this project is how I can see different features of my face in each of the women shown, eyebrows here, a smile there," she concluded. "It's shown me how strange genetics are and how lucky I am to be here at all. So many people and so many choices had to come about and even the slightest change would have meant me never existing. I find that fascinating."

You can see more of McConnell's work on Instagram and check out the rest of the series below.

attie
Attie Mae, great-grandmother (born 1898)


mildred
Mildred, grandmother (born 1928)


christine
Christine, artist (born 1981)


trigger
Trigger, daughter (born TBD)



HuffPost Style's Associate Editor Jamie Feldman provided interview questions for this article.

H/T Imgur

New Year's Eve: World Rings In 2015 With Parties, Fireworks And Odd Drops

$
0
0
Revelers converged on the beaches of Brazil, the skyscrapers of Dubai and New York's Times Square to say good riddance to a turbulent 2014 marred by terror woes, Ebola outbreaks and a horrific series of airline disasters.

But tragedy struck in Shanghai, Baghdad was on edge and protesters in the United States planned a sobering reminder of one of the year's biggest stories. A look around the world:

STAMPEDE IN SHANGHAI

Thirty-five people were killed in a stampede during New Year's celebrations in downtown Shanghai, city officials said.

The deaths — the worst disaster to hit one of China's showcase cities in years — occurred a half-hour before midnight at Shanghai's popular riverfront Bund area, which can be jammed with spectators for major events. A Shanghai government statement said Thursday that another 46 people were receiving hospital treatment, including 14 who were seriously injured.

The official Xinhua News Agency quoted an unnamed witness as saying people had scrambled for coupons that looked like dollar bills that were being thrown out of a third-floor window. It said the cause of the stampede was under investigation.

___

NEW YORK, NEW YORK

A million people crammed into New York's Times Square saw the new year in with kisses, hugs and cheers after the giant, glittering New Year's Eve ball descended and a ton of confetti rained down.

Mayor Bill de Blasio, flanked by his wife and two children, pushed the ceremonial button that set the 11,875-pound Waterford crystal ball in motion. Revelers from around the world waving pink balloons and wearing pink foam hats exchanged good wishes and danced as Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York" blared on loudspeakers.

Agustina Bernacchia, a tourist from Argentina, had arrived early to secure her spot. She said she wanted to experience the New Year's Eve party she'd always seen on TV.

"It was a dream for us," Bernacchia said.

___

SHIVERING IN THE NEW YEAR

New Year's Eve revelers in bunny costumes — the corsets and fishnets kind — and designer suits walking down the Vegas strip Wednesday night had scarves wrapped around their necks against temperatures expected to drop into the 20s. Occasional flurries fell, but none stuck around long enough to be snow.

Laura Mayo of Las Vegas was wearing a plush fur coat, but not shivering bunny Rechelle Sheridan. "It takes away from the costume," the 25-year-old city resident said.

Las Vegas tourism promoters and casinos offer a year-end party on the Strip and downtown Fremont Street that culminates with a seven-minute, 11-second fireworks show from seven casino-hotel rooftops.

___

BREAKING A RECORD IN DUBAI

The Gulf Arab emirate of Dubai was aiming to break the world record for the largest LED-illuminated facade with its spectacular display centered on the world's tallest building.

Some 70,000 LED panels around the 2,722-foot Burj Khalifa flashed colored lights and projected images of the country's leaders when clocks there struck midnight as a massive fireworks display erupted. The celebration draws throngs of thousands of spectators every New Year's Eve.

Emaar Properties said a team from Guinness World Records monitored the preparations. Last year, Dubai won the title for the world's largest firework display, according to Guinness.

___

WATCHING THE BALL — OR WHATEVER — DROP

The ball drop is a tradition that's being increasingly copied across the United States with twists celebrating local icons.

Among the items being dropped: a big chili in Las Cruces, New Mexico; a replica peach in Atlanta; a musical note in Nashville, Tennessee; a large pine cone in Flagstaff, Arizona; an oversized spurred cowboy boot in Prescott, Arizona; a 600-pound (270-kilogram) walleye made of wood and fiberglass in Port Clinton, Ohio; an 80-pound (36-kilogram) wedge of cheese in Plymouth, Wisconsin; and in Escanaba, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a replica of a pasty (pronounced PAS'-tee) — a baked pastry filled with meat and potatoes.

___

TRYING TO CELEBRATE IN BAGHDAD

In Iraq's war-scarred capital, Baghdad authorities ordered a one-off lifting of the overnight curfew in force for more than a decade to allow the city's revelers to stay out late on the streets.

Traffic was unusually heavy starting shortly after sunset and authorities closed commercial streets to vehicles in the city's center as a precaution against possible suicide bombings by militants of the Islamic State terror group.

___

WASTING AWAY IN BVI

Thousands of partiers arrived on speedboats, yachts and ferries to dance the night away on the tiny Caribbean island of Jost Van Dyke that has long hosted one of the region's biggest, most uninhibited New Year's Eve bashes.

In the British Virgin Islands, Jost Van Dyke balloons from about 300 full-time residents to roughly 5,000 people each New Year's Eve as throngs of barefoot, tipsy people groove to reggae bands on white sands and hop from bar to bar. The annual tradition started in the 1960s on the idyllic island — so small it didn't get electricity until 1992.

"Every year it just gets bigger and bigger. People from all over travel here to get drunk, fall down and just have as much fun as they can," said Tessa Callwood, who runs a world-famous beach bar with her husband, Foxy's Tamarind Bar & Restaurant.

___

AT THE COPA ... COPACABANA

More than 1 million people are expected to flock to the golden sands of Rio de Janeiro's Copacabana beach, where two dozen artists and DJs will perform on three stages. Tourists and locals routinely party until dawn on the beach, staying awake to watch the tropical sun rise for the first time in 2015.

A massive fireworks display that's blasted from boats on the Atlantic Ocean will light the sky over the crowd, which traditionally dresses in all white, a Brazilian tradition to bring purification and a peaceful year. Another tradition calls for partygoers to enter the sea up to their knees and jump over seven waves shortly after the New Year begins, for luck.

___

POLICE PROTESTS IN U.S.

Amid the celebration, some U.S. cities are on alert for New Year's Eve protests related to recent police killings of unarmed black men.

Activists in Boston staged a peaceful "die-in" during First Night, Boston's popular New Year's Eve celebration. Dozens of people participated in the brief protest in front of the Boston Public Library Wednesday evening while others held signs saying "black lives matter" and "a young black man is two times more likely to be shot dead by police than a white young man."

Police reported no arrests or disruptions to nearby festivities.

In New York, where the police department is still mourning two officers shot to death in a patrol car, protesters marched late Wednesday night. They came as close to Times Square as possible but did not interrupt the New Year's celebration.

'Glee' Cast Performs Ed Sheeran's 'Sing' In Final Season

$
0
0
"Glee" begins its sixth and final season on Jan. 9, and in preparation for its farewell, the show released the first full performance featuring Darren Criss, Lea Michele and the Warblers. The group tackles Ed Sheeran's "Sing," the lead single from the British star's "X," which came out in June.

In the clip, Blane (Criss) is the Warblers' new coach, and the group performs a pretty impressive dance routine for him and Rachel (Michele). Enjoy, Gleeks.

Cheers To Ernest Hemingway's Black Currant Liqueur

$
0
0
Although he didn't actually say, "Write drunk. Edit sober," serious academic research suggests that Hemingway might've been a proponent of alcohol. (The Sun Also Rises isn't exactly a 200-page drunk-fest, but close enough.) When asked about downing martinis before writing, Hemingway responded:

"Jeezus Christ! Have you ever heard of anyone who drank while he worked? You’re thinking of Faulkner. He does sometimes -- and I can tell right in the middle of a page when he’s had his first one. Besides, who in hell would mix more than one martini at a time, anyway?"


When he wasn't working, he got tipsy in Havana, the birthplace of the mojito, but actually preferred dry martinis, just like Frederic in A Farewell to Arms, who said, "I had never tasted anything so cool and clean. They made me feel civilized."

With so many beverages attached to his name (including the absinthe and Brut combo, "Death in the Afternoon"), how does one properly celebrate à la Hemingway? A page from The Hemingway Cookbook -- a collection of recipes collected and inspired by the author -- might come in handy.

When he was a young and ambitious expat in Paris, Hemingway visited Gertrude Stein and her lover, Alice B. Toklas, to discuss writing, eat and drink. In A Moveable Feast he wrote, "It was warm and comfortable and they gave you good things to eat and tea and natural distilled liqueurs ..." One such liqueur, made from black currants, was turned into a recipe that appears in The Hemingway Cookbook and the Alice B. Toklas Cookbook. The full recipe, which can be found here, calls for:

1/2 pound raspberries
3 pounds black currants
1 cup black currant leaves
1 quart vodka, or solution up to 90% alcohol
3 pounds sugar
3 cups water


It can be served alone, or as part of a white wine cocktail such as Kir, which is typically served as an aperitif. Bottoms up!


15 Inspiring Literary Quotes That Will Start Your New Year Off Right

$
0
0
Great writers don't always offer the words of undiluted inspiration we'd like; their keen insight and penchant for honesty about the human condition produces observations about our weakness, our sins or about how painful history can shadow our futures ("The past is never dead. It's not even past," as William Faulkner wrote).

The New Year, however, is no time for such dire reflections. No matter that, as Mark Twain likes to point out, "Now is the accepted time to make your regular annual good resolutions. Next week you can begin paving hell with them as usual." Perhaps this year you will actually use your gym membership, read one nonfiction book a week, and bring a healthy lunch to work daily. A new year means you get to, nominally at least, wipe the slate clean. Forget your past failures and your life of disappointments: 2015 is going to be your year.

Fortunately, a few more optimistic, or at least more sentimental, authors have the words of encouragement you need to hear as the new year begins. Here are 15 galvanizing passages from your favorite authors, from Dickens to Dillard, on the joy of a new year and a new beginning:


“A new heart for a New Year, always!”
Charles Dickens



“Ring out the old, ring in the new,
Ring, happy bells, across the snow:
The year is going, let him go;
Ring out the false, ring in the true.”
Alfred, Lord Tennyson



new years party


“[T]omorrow is a new day. You shall begin it well & serenely, & with too high a spirit to be cumbered with your old nonsense. This day ... is too dear with its hopes & invitations to waste a moment on the rotten yesterdays.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson



“Not knowing when the dawn will come
I open every door.”
Emily Dickinson



sunrise snow


“The object of a New Year is not that we should have a new year. It is that we should have a new soul and a new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes. Unless a particular man made New Year resolutions, he would make no resolutions. Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective. Unless a man starts on the strange assumption that he has never existed before, it is quite certain that he will never exist afterwards.”
G.K. Chesterton



“For last year's words belong to last year's language
And next year's words await another voice.”
T.S. Eliot



winter dawn


“Isn't it nice to think that tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it yet?”
L.M. Montgomery



“Each age has deemed the new-born year
The fittest time for festal cheer.”
Sir Walter Scott



new years eve


“I made no resolutions for the New Year. The habit of making plans, of criticizing, sanctioning and molding my life, is too much of a daily event for me.”
Anaïs Nin



“[I]f this life of ours
Be a good glad thing, why should we make us merry
Because a year of it is gone? but Hope
Smiles from the threshold of the year to come,
Whispering 'it will be happier'...”
Alfred, Lord Tennyson



new years party


“The artist is always beginning. Any work of art which is not a beginning, an invention, a discovery is of little worth.”
Ezra Pound



“The horizon leans forward,
Offering you space to place new steps of change.”
Maya Angelou



winter walk


“The beginning is the most important part of any work.”
Plato



“If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is -- infinite.”
William Blake



"I wake expectant, hoping to see a new thing."
Annie Dillard


How Amy Adams Became The Oscars' Golden Child

$
0
0
amy adams





"I don't dream this big. This is Technicolor, folks. This is crazy."

That's what Amy Adams told "Entertainment Tonight" during her debut trip down the Oscar red carpet back in 2006. She was nominated for her breakthrough role as an earnest, pregnant small-town 20-something in "Junebug." It marked the first time Adams showcased her reliable awards candor -- she hadn't yet belted out a Disney original, become a staple of best-dressed lists or shimmied with Pharrell Williams.

From the moment her Hollywood star began ascending to its zenith, Adams became one of today's most barefaced red-carpet dignitaries. When the Orlando Sentinel asked whether she'd tuned in as the nominations were announced, Adams didn't pivot by saying her agent had woken her with the news. She didn't act like she needed to tend to family before discovering her awards fate. "The good news was this: It was, like, the first name called out, first nomination announced. I didn't have to wait and suffer," she said. "I am not one of those people who's too cool to not care. I woke up and sat myself down on the couch to watch the nominations. Wouldn't you? [...] I was up at 5 o'clock in the morning, so you know I was hoping."

Adams seems to have spent every year since hoping, too. Before "Junebug" made her an awards contender, she garnered praise for roles that never managed to give her name so much as a twinkle. Fans of "Drop Dead Gorgeous" adore Adams as Midwestern beauty-pageant sexpot Leslie Miller, but that film went nowhere critically or commercially upon its release. During the stint between that and "Junebug," Adams appeared in duds like the direct-to-video "Cruel Intentions 2" and the Matthew Perry-Elizabeth Hurley comedy "Serving Sara." She smooched Leonardo DiCaprio in "Catch Me If You Can," but she also played Debra Messing's betrothed sister in the critically reviled "The Wedding Date." Adams was making the rounds, but no one knew it yet. Even Allison Janney needed to be reminded that Adams had starred alongside her in "Drop Dead Gorgeous" when the two reunited on "The West Wing" in 2002.

But eight years after her first invitation to the Kodak Theater, Adams boasts five nominations. That puts her on par with the likes of Tom Hanks, Audrey Hepburn, Susan Sarandon, Elizabeth Taylor and Sean Penn. If this year's "Big Eyes," in which she portrays painter Margaret Keane, lends Adams her sixth, she'll join the ranks of Cate Blanchett, Vanessa Redgrave, Ellen Burstyn and Jeff Bridges.

That's a long journey for someone who, when HuffPost Entertainment sat down with Adams to discuss "Big Eyes" earlier this month, recounted crying on the street while holding a Slurpee after first moving to Los Angeles in her early 20s. "I crossed the street and I had the walk sign and somebody yelled out their window, 'Watch where you’re going, you dumb effing blonde,'" she said. "And I started crying, and I was like, 'Why is everybody so mean?' I felt like Giselle when the old man steals the crown, like, 'You are not a very nice old man!' That was me. I was literally crying holding a Slurpee and I literally could not think of anything more awful. I was definitely naive."

The Giselle she's referring to is, of course, her character in "Enchanted," Adams' first starring role and her second source of Oscar buzz. That nomination didn't come to fruition, but she did land a Golden Globe nod. (She also performed "Happy Working Song," one of three "Enchanted" ditties up for Best Original Song, at the 2008 Oscars.) Adams' sudden leading-lady status seemed to atone for the years we let her drift into the background of undistinguished movies. After roles in Mike Nichols' "Charlie Wilson's War" and the charming "Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day" -- New York Times critic Stephen Holden called her performance in the rom-com "screen magic" -- America had a sense of what Adams could offer: well-intentioned characters whose confidence is belied by their impossible kindness. ("I enjoy playing upbeat characters, I really do, because you take your characters home with you whether you intend to or not," she said when asked about potential typecasting in 2008.)

Ditto with "Doubt," Adams' first role opposite Meryl Streep and her second with Philip Seymour Hoffman (after "Charlie Wilson's War"). "Sunshine Cleaning" co-star Emily Blunt had read the script and brought it to her attention, saying she should go after the role of Sister James, the meek nun who comes between vicious Sister Aloysius (Streep) as she accuses Father Flynn (Hoffman) of inappropriate behavior with a student at a Catholic school. (Blunt reportedly said she wasn't right for the part.)






amy adams
[Clockwise from top left] Adams with "Sunshing Cleaning" co-star Emily Blunt; "Doubt" co-stars Viola Davis, Meryl Streep and Philip Seymour Hoffman; "Trouble with the Curve" co-star Clint Eastwood; "Enchanted" co-star Patrick Dempsey; "The Fighter" co-star Christian Bale.





"Doubt" secured Adams' second Oscar nomination, three years after her first. She was never the front-runner opposite Penelope Cruz ("Vicky Cristina Barcelona") and Marisa Tomei ("The Wrestler"), who between them collected the bulk of the critics' and smaller voting bodies' prizes. But it's "Doubt" that proved precursor awards weren't a prerequisite for Adams to attract the Academy's attention.

She then dotted her résumé with more girl-next-door parts: the second "Night at the Museum" movie, "Julie & Julia" (her second film with Streep), the weak rom-com "Leap Year." That is, until "The Fighter" rolled around, and Adams proved that her sweetheart image was secondary to her craft. She traded her ball gown and religious habit for a bartender's uniform, portraying a brassy Boston gal who isn't afraid to slap her boxer boyfriend's sister. In fact, director David O. Russell said he cast her because she is actually "so not a princess type."

“I didn’t even think I’d ever have a national commercial, let alone three Oscar nominations,” a 36-year-old Adams told Entertainment Weekly on the morning her "Fighter" nomination was announced. “It is insane. I don’t know exactly how I got here, but I feel really fortunate to be here. And it’s a historic day because Christian Bale got nominated, finally.”

But Adams' sweetheart status didn't dwindle, not even after her fourth nomination came for Paul Thomas Anderson's 2012 Scientology meditation "The Master." Playing the strong-willed wife of cult leader Lancaster Dodd in her third role opposite Hoffman, Adams used that movie and the 2013 caper "American Hustle" to verify her wide range. In the former, she gives Hoffman a hand job in their bathroom while coaxing him to do her will; in the latter, she smooches Jennifer Lawrence during a quarrel in a hotel bathroom. (The kiss, not in the original script, was Adams' suggestion.) Suddenly, despite a still relatively new spot on the Academy's pedestal, Adams was placed in the proverbial "overdue" camp.

"The Fighter," "The Master" and "American Hustle" prompted the moviegoing public to assign to Adams the tenuous idea of playing against type, a notion that led to Oscar nominations for Deborah Kerr ("From Here to Eternity"), Mary Tyler Moore ("Ordinary People"), Tom Hanks ("Philadelphia") and Jonah Hill ("Moneyball"), among others. Those three roles alone precluded Adams from a résumé that could have devolved into middling rom-coms and half-baked awards bait.

"There was something about ['The Master'] that warped my brain."

"There are different things," Adams said when we asked which Oscar-nominated performance she's proudest of. "I was really proud of 'Junebug' in that it’s a performance I gave in a bubble. But in a way that’s why it was one of my favorites, because there was no expectation for that performance. Other than that, I would say 'The Master.' I really, really loved making that movie with those actors. There was something about it that warped my brain."

This second phase of Adams' career has triggered a smattering of articles about the "new" Amy Adams. In 2013, The Seattle Times noted that her image had evolved to include "ever-increasing doses of, if not complete darkness, something like it." The success also seemed to pit Adams against Julianne Moore as the two contemporary actresses most overdue to win an Academy Award, if the chorus is to be believed. IndieWire posed that question earlier this year, and it's a constant source of debate on popular awards-handicapping site GoldDerby.

"Julianne Moore," she said of who's been snubbed, before we could even ask for an opinion. "I’m just gonna lay it out there. Come on now!"

But what of the idea that two stars are juxtaposed according to their awards fate?

"No no no, let’s just say two women," she said. "They always like to peg us. I can’t think of anyone -- I mean, I can think of a couple people -- who I’d love to see hold a statuette as much as Julianne. What, I’m going to be upset that she’s getting the attention that she has long deserved and done the work for? No, I want to see more of her work. Let’s keep it coming, Julianne. She’s so fearless. Just to be mentioned in the same sentence as her. I remember watching 'The Big Lebowski' and 'Boogie Nights' and thinking, 'Oh, my goodness, she’s just so brave and so present and she makes these brave performances seem effortless.'"

Of course, Adams has changed some since her first trip to the Oscars. She was 32 then; now she's 40 and has a daughter. Remember how forthcoming she was about the anxiety over her first nomination in 2006? By her fifth nod, in 2014, Adams' reaction was that of someone who's much more acquainted with her Hollywood status: "It's a very good thing to wake up to; we were all asleep! [...] As for celebrating today, maybe we should go out for a family hike? Then again, everyone looks pretty tired around here right now!"

Parenthood softens many people, but Adams' roles have only grown more daring. She's back to portraying an ostensibly mousy character with "Big Eyes," but the Tim Burton-directed biopic is sandwiched between three stints as Lois Lane (2013's "Man of Steel," 2016's "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice" and 2017's "The Justice League Part One") and a role as Janis Joplin in a forthcoming biopic.

Maybe that's why the Oscars love her -- because she has both evolved and remained the same charming lady who, as she told us, jokingly punched Kirsten Dunst on the set of "Drop Dead Gorgeous." She didn't need a comeback narrative like Marlon Brando or Matthew McConaughey in order to ripen, and she likely never will. It's also because Adams says she's seen her fair share of Walter Keane types -- he being the husband who stole credit for Margaret's kitschy paintings -- and has remained resilient. (Just days ago, for example, she was reportedly booted from a "Today" show interview because she said she'd rather discuss her film than the Sony cyber-attack.)

"I met them long before any awards. They exist or they don’t exist," Adams said of Hollywood's Walter Keane replicas. "I don’t think awards season brings it out in them. Or I don’t think it creates it in them; I think it brings it out. I try really hard not to get caught up in that stuff. I never feel like I’ve lost because I haven’t been nominated or I didn’t win something. I feel so lucky to be even talked about. Even if it’s being trashed as undeserving, it’s like, well, at least I’m in the conversation, which I wasn’t for a long time."





oscar gowns
Designers: Carolina Herrera (2006), Carolina Herrera (2009), L'Wren Scott (2011), Oscar de la Renta (2013), Gucci (2014)





That carries over to the threads Adams wears to the Oscars each year. She says it's not in her "nature" to try to stand out, so she prefers to wear gowns that don't cause much of a fuss. Yet her favorite is the most elaborate of them, again emphasizing the dichotomy that people appreciate about her.

"The Oscar de la Renta I really liked -- the big one," she said, referring to the dress she wore in 2013 (the fourth image in the collage above). "I literally told myself, 'You don’t have to disappear on the red carpet.' I wish I could be like this big on the red carpet. [Adams gestures to indicate "this" means "small."] It’s just not my nature to try to take up space. What I liked about that is, I said, 'Okay, if I was a 12-year-old and I was told I was going to the Oscars, what would I want me to wear? Let’s give in to the fantasy of the Oscars for a second. So I decided I’d wear a big dress."

Adams submitted to the fantasy of the Oscars, and the Oscars have submitted to her talents. After a focused conversation about "Big Eyes" and other industry chatter (it should be noted that Adams loves Amy Poehler's new book), we rose to part ways, but not before squeezing in a question about "Drop Dead Gorgeous," her first movie.

"I always say that, leading up to the Oscars, 'I ran three miles a day, all on about 300 calories,'" she said, morphing into her character's Midwestern lilt. "I know I’m misquoting it. 'I was ready.' That’s what I feel leading up to the Oscars."

"Big Eyes" is in theaters now. The Oscar nominations will be announced Jan. 15.



Two Of This Year's Best Film Scores Won't Win Oscars

$
0
0
With this year's abundance of fantastic films also came a surplus of mesmerizing and poignant film scores. From Hans Zimmer’s epic “Interstellar” score to Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’ unnerving musical stylings for “Gone Girl” -- not to mention the five films scored by composer Alexandre Deplat this year -- there was undoubtedly a wealth of great music displayed on the big screen.

But two scores that stood out as the most innovative, sonically arresting and necessary to the films in which each are featured are ineligible for Oscar consideration. Such was the fate of "Whiplash" and Birdman," two films about the unraveling stability of performing artists that used jazz percussion-inspired scores to sharpen and amplify the internal mayhem. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences deemed each film too reliant on outside music to qualify.

That left many -- including "Birdman" composer Antonio Sanchez -- angered and saddened. After all, rather than just accompanying the imagery shown onscreen or adding melodic color to scenes, these scores aurally interpret, react to and explore the characters’ journeys in ways that few films have done before.

whiplash

First take “Whiplash,” a film based on big band jazz standards that writer-director Damien Chazelle struggled to learn as a young drummer. Hank Levy’s 1972 “Whiplash” and Juan Tizol’s “Caravan,” first performed by Duke Ellington in 1936, are at the center of the film as young drummer Andrew (Miles Teller) practices relentlessly to master the time signatures of each tune. But instead of mirroring the music we see Andrew and other musicians play onscreen in the movie, “Whiplash” composer -- and Chazelle’s former roommate -- Justin Hurwitz wanted the score to react to the character’s mental and emotional state.



“It was tough because there’s so much jazz onscreen and elsewhere on the radio and TVs that we knew it couldn’t really be a jazz score or big band score, per se,” Hurwitz told HuffPost Entertainment over the phone. To create a score that took the viewer into Andrew’s head as he fought to impress the tormenting Terence Fletcher (J.K. Simmons), a teacher at the music conservatory that Andrew attends, Hurwitz used “100 percent real instruments” and isolated every note while recording so he could manipulate their sound. “Damien and I joked that the thesis behind the score is that Andrew is being tortured by the instruments he makes music every day,” Hurwitz said, laughing. “Almost every note you’re hearing in the score has been slowed down a lot so it sounds more like a hellish version of the instrument that made it.”

Since “Whiplash” follows a drummer, the score also plays with percussion to conjure the frantic angst Andrew feels, much like what Chazelle experienced. The filmmaker told us over the phone that everything in the score had to reflect the anxiety he personally felt as a musician, and thus the various instrument speeds Hurwitz used lended to a “distorted, eerie version of a big band sound” he had once played.

birdman

Just as Hurwitz detuned instruments and slowed down notes to bring the tension witnessed onscreen to the audiences’ ears, Sanchez also experimented with different drum sounds on the score of Alejandro González Iñárritu's film. “Birdman” marks the first-ever film score for Mexican drummer Sanchez, who plays and tours with the Pat Metheny Group.

Unlike most film composers, Sanchez didn’t begin writing the score while watching the completed scenes, but instead improvised without any visual reference. To help create the “very spontaneous, improvised, and spur-of-the-moment” sound Iñárritu wanted, Sanchez suggested to the writer-director, “How about you sit right in front of me and you imagine the scene with me, and whenever you see in your mind Riggan [Michael Keaton's character, an actor] doing the next thing, raise your hand.” So they did: “I was also hitting the drums with all different things,” Sanchez said, “with my hands, the sticks, brushes, with bamboo rods, to get all different textures and sounds.”



But there was one issue when Sanchez finished recording the majority of the score in New York: it sounded too clean. “Alejandro wanted something dirtier and kind of nastier, something that sounded like a drum kit that hasn’t been played in years,” Sanchez said. In a studio in L.A., Sanchez re-recorded much of the score with detuned drums and added things onto the cymbals to give them a drier and more broken sound.

whiplash miles

To further enhance the constant bedlam bouncing through Riggan’s mind, Sanchez literally multiplied the power of the drums. “For the scenes where Riggan’s mind is going nuts,” Sanchez said, “we overdubbed a bunch of drum tracks on top of each other.” The drummer quadrupled the usual four limbs, layering four drums tracks on top of each other to create “total chaos and randomness.” Hurwitz also used a similar technique of doubling drum parts to add to the maddening incoherence Andrew felt in the film. Chazelle said that the use of percussion in “Whiplash,” which featured much of the score’s spontaneous flourishes, helped “to build anxiety and keep you in the main character’s head.”

Although Sanchez’ original drumming takes up 50 percent of the score, it was deemed ineligible by the Academy after a lengthy appeals process for its use of pre-existing classical music cues. After the decision was announced, Sanchez told HuffPost that he “strongly disagrees” with the disqualification.

Yet the drummer said he was still humbled by the praise and other awards attention the score has received, including a Golden Globe nomination. “The music that people remember after watching the movie is the sound, originality, character, and strength of my score."

“Birdman” and “Whiplash” are now playing in theaters.
Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images