Showing posts with label Ted Danson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ted Danson. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

OCEANA MAKES A SPLASH


OCEANA, an organization devoted to protecting, well... the Ocean,

is having a posh splash party in the Hamptons this Saturday. Tickets are pricey, but the guest list (and cause) is priceless (see below).

Certainly, the ocean is a fragile thing, and the danger to its (and our!) survival is now at a critical watchpoint with (among other things!) toxic chemicals still burbling up from the hole in the bottom of the sea. Mobilizing support for protection of the ocean and its denizens is a supremely valuable cause.

For more about the work they are doing, see
http://na.oceana.org/en/about-us/what-we-do

For information about the benefit party see...
http://oceanasplashparty.org/


OCEANA'S HAMPTONS 'SPLASH' PARTY


WHAT:
Oceana’s debut into the Hamptons community for an annual celebration of ocean conservation. The event, which will overlook Scott Cameron Beach on Mecox Bay, will feature a cocktail reception and buffet dinner. The night will also include a live auction with the proceeds going to Oceana, as well as a presentation on Oceana and its mission. Special guest Jackson Browne will be putting on an exclusive solo acoustic performance


WHO:
Hosts: Lois Robbins & Sue Cohn Rockefeller,
Ted Danson, Sam Waterston, Jackson Browne,
Artists and Co- Founder of Plastic Pollution Coalition Dianna Cohen,
an exclusive group of prominent figures in the Hamptons,
including Vera Wang and Arthur Becker, Ellen and Dan Crown,
Sandi and Andrew Farkas Tom and Lori Florio,
Senator Frank Lautenberg and Bonnie Lautenberg, Tami and Fred Mack,
Julie and William Macklowe, and Lizzie and John Tisch.

WHEN:
SATURDAY, JULY 10TH, 2010

Saturday, December 19, 2009

THE OPEN ROAD



Kate Mara
At the HIFF 2008 Breakthrough Performers' Panel
Photo by Eric Roffman


The Open Road [TOR] is (surprise, surpise) a road movie, but also a sweet and bittersweet love story, with a complex father-son relationship at its center. It's a comedy and a drama. You've probably never heard of this film, because it hardly had any theatrical distribution; but it's well worth checking out.

The writer/director is a relative newcomer,
Michael Meredith, [MM] who worked before with Wim Wenders (who acted as executive producer).

It has a stellar cast... with an exuberant performance by Jeff Bridges, an affecting performance by Justin Timberlake, and an adorable performance by Kate Mara.

(Note, by the way, that Jeff Bridges is currently being mentioned as an Oscar contender for his work in another film this year, Crazy Heart.)

The director and female lead both have a strong sports heritage: Kate Mara, a Breakthrough Performer at The Hamptons Film Festival [HIFF] in 2008, comes from a family of football owners (great granddaughter of Art Rooney, founder of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Timothy Mara, founder of the NY Giants). Michael Meredith is the son of football legend Don Meredith (Dallas Cowboys). Appropriately, the main character, Kyle Garrett, played by Bridges, is a sports legend (baseball in this case). But it's not a movie about sports -- familiarity with the milieu of sports stars enriches the ambiance, but is not the subject of the movie. The movie is about a difficult family relationship and a difficult romance.

Justin Timberlake, of course, is well known as a singer, but he is also a fine actor, delivering sensitive performances in numerous films, and he hits just the right notes here.

One mark of a special film is the depth of portrayals of the minor characters. Here, Lyle Lovett, Harry Dean Stanton, Mary Steenburgen, Ted Danson, and others all make important contributions in supporting roles.

In spinning this tale, though Bridges plays his character with full-out style, MM maintains a level of reality, both in the complications and the resolutions, that makes it much more grounded -- and therefore much more interesting -- than most family stories or romantic films.

Anyone searching for a love story different from the standard Hollywood formula romance should check out this film.

Meredith (I've had some brief opportunities to chat with him) is an earnest and nice guy. This is his second film; earlier, he made
Three Days Of Rain [TDOR], which just happened to be on TV last night. (See it next on Showtime: Tue Dec 22 8:45 AM).

In Cleveland, during a Jazz festival and rainstorm, the bluesy score and lousy weather set the tone for a morose and downbeat, interesting and atmospheric film. In TDOR, as in The Open Road, MM investigates father-son relationships. One father, played by Peter Falk is, like Bridges in TOR, an idiosyncratic and difficult dad. (Michael's own dad, Don Meredith, is in the film and does a fine turn as a father who's recently lost a son.)

Michael Meredith is a writer/director to watch as he navigates his next film projects. He has an interesting sensibility, a talent for pulling in great actors who deliver stylish performances, a sense of sadness as well as a sense of humor, and an original way of telling stories.