Connect with us

Articles

Meg Ryan, Olivia Wilde, and ‘Game of Thrones’ Star Alfie Allen Honorees at 2015 Savannah Film Festival

Published

on

Meg Ryan, Olivia Wilde, and Alfie Allen to be honored at 2015 Savannah Film Festival

SAVANNAH, GA. (FNN News) – The Savannah Film Festival announced the film lineup for its 2015 series, as well as the honorees for their Spotlight, Lifetime Achievement, and Rising Star Awards.

Olivia Wilde will be presented with the Spotlight Award on opening night (October 24) for her contributions in films like “Meadowland,” which has been added as a gala screening at the festival, “Her,” and “Drinking Buddies.” Alfie Allen will be awarded the Rising Star Award on October 27 for his appearances in HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and “Atonement.” Lastly, Meg Ryan, whose directorial debut “Ithaca” screens at the festival, will receive the Lifetime Achievement Award on October 29 for her work on films like “When Harry Met Sally” and “Sleepless in Seattle.”

The festival has also announced “An Evening With Saoirse Ronan” (October 25), gala screenings including “Meadowland” and “Spotlight,” and Docs to Watch, Conversation Series, and Competition screenings. Read the lineup below.

Conversation Series
Saoirse Ronan, following “Brooklyn” – October 25
Sarah Gavron and Alison Owen, following “Suffragette” – October 24
Olivia Wilde and Reed Morano, following “Meadowland” – October 24
Riley Keogh, following “Dixieland” – October 25
Tab Hunter, following “Tab Hunter Confidential” – October 26
David Lang following “Youth” – October 26
Catherine Hardwicke, following “Miss You Already” – October 27
James Sadwith, following “Coming Through the Rye” – October 29
Marc Abraham and Elizabeth Olsen, following “I Saw the Light”

Gala Screenings
“Dixieland,” directed by Hank Bedford
“Ithaca,” directed by Meg Ryan
“Legend,” directed by Brian Helgeland
“Meadowland,” directed by Reed Morano
“Spotlight,” directed by Tom McCarthy

Cartel Land1

“Cartel Land”

Docs to Watch
“Amy,” directed by Asif Kapadia
“Best of Enemies,” directed by Morgan Neville and Robert Gordon
“Call Me Lucky,” directed by Bobcat Goldthwait
“Cartel Land,” directed by Matthew Heineman
“The Hunting Ground,” directed by Kirby Dick
“Meet the Patels,” directed by Geeta Patel and Ravi Patel
“What Happened, Miss Simone,” directed by Liz Garbus
“Winter on Fire,” directed by Evgeny Afineevsky
“The Wolfpack,” directed by Crystal Moselle

Signature Series
“Coming Through the Rye,” directed by James Sadwith
“Dead of Winter: The Donner Party,” directed by Doug Glover
“Ek Harzachi Note,” directed by Shrihari Sathe
“He Named Me Malala,” directed by Davis Guggenheim
“Jasmine,” directed by Dax Phelan
“Krisha,” directed by Trey Edward Shults
“Mia Madre,” directed by Nanni Moretti
“One Day in Auschwitz,” directed by Steve Purcell
“Return to Nuke ‘Em High: Volume 2,” Lloyd Kaufman
“Son of Saul,” directed by László Nemes
“Tab Hunter Confidential,” directed by Jeffrey Schwartz
“The Prophet,” directed by Roger Allers
“Touched with Fire,” directed by Paul Dalio

The complete lineup is available is available online. The festival runs from October 24 – October 31.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Articles

Mister Rogers’ Week of Kindness Coming March 2023

Published

on

WINTER PARK, Fla. (Florida National News) – Mister Rogers’ Week of Kindness, inspired by the children’s TV host and icon, comes to Orlando in March 2023. This week-long series of events was announced today at the Edyth Bush Charitable Foundation in Winter Park.

“Fred McFeely Rogers devoted his entire life to reminding us of some of the most important ideas of what it means to be human among humans: love, respect and kindness,” explained Buena Vista Events & Management President & CEO Rich Bradley. “Many of us find that nearly 20 years after Fred’s passing, it is important to focus on his teachings once again, perhaps now more than ever. This is a week to re-engage with his massive body of work with some folks, and to introduce his teachings to others.”

Mister Rogers’ Week of Kindness begins March 20, 2023, the date which would have been Fred’s 95th birthday, and concludes on Saturday, March 26 with the Red Sweater Soiree, a community dinner to recognize ten ordinary members of the community who inspire and exemplify the affinity that Fred Rogers had for showing kindness to our “Neighbors”.

Mister Rogers Week of Kindness coming March 20-26, 2023. Photo Credit: Mike Brodsky (Florida National News)

Activities planned for the week will include early childhood education activities and faculty training, as well as events open to the public.

“The events will be offered free or at low cost,” continued Bradley. “This week-long celebration is not a series of fundraisers, but rather about once again remembering and sharing some of the great work that Fred Rogers created, not only in early childhood education, but in reminding us that we are all part of one big ‘neighborhood’. Fred taught us the importance of accepting our Neighbors just the way they are and engaging in kindness with our interactions. I can’t think of another period in my lifetime where we needed to reflect on those messages again more than today.”

“There are three ways to ultimate success,” Fred Rogers was once quoted as saying. “The first way is to be kind. The second way is to be kind. The third way is to be kind. Imagine what our neighborhoods would be like if each of us offered, as a matter of course, just one kind word to another person.”

Many of the activities of Mister Rogers’ Week of Kindness will be attended by members of the cast and crew of Mister Rogers Neighborhood, which ran from 1968 – 1975, and again from 1979 – 2001. David Newell, known as “Mr. McFeely,” the “Speedy Delivery” man, appeared at today’s media conference via video, and looks forward to visiting Central Florida next March.

David Newell, “Mr. McFeely.” Photo Credit: Mike Brodsky (Florida National News)

Mister Rogers’ Week of Kindness is supported by the McFeely-Rogers Foundation, the Fred Rogers Institute, and Fred Rogers Productions. Details regarding the specific activities and venues will be released over the next few weeks.

For more information on the events, visit https://www.BuenaVistaEvents.com or https://www.MisterRogersWeekofKindness.com.

Continue Reading

Articles

A Quick Primer on the Team Solving Orange County’s Affordable Housing Crisis

Published

on

Orange County’s Housing for All Task Force held its introductory meeting on April 12, 2019 at the Board of County Commissioner Chambers. Photo: Orange County Government.

ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN NEWS) – Orange County faces a growing affordable housing crisis, and Mayor Jerry Demings has taken notice–and action. Shortly after his inauguration, he formed Housing For All, an affordable housing task force to face the challenge head-on.

The Housing For All task force doesn’t meet monthly like the County Commission–in fact, their next meeting won’t be until October 4, 2019–but they do work when they’re not meeting. The task force is made up of three subcommittees, Design and Infrastructure Subcommittee, Accessibility and Opportunity Subcommittee and Innovation and Sustainability Subcommittee. These three subcommittees meet twice a month to come up with ideas and plans to fix the affordable housing problem.

Each subcommittee has a specific focus on ways to help solve the problem of affordable housing. The Design and Infrastructure Subcommittee is focused on the design of new affordable housing projects, the renovation of current affordable housing that might need fixing and land development for affordable housing units. The Accessibility and Opportunity Subcommittee is focused on making sure affordable housing is accessible to the major economic zones of the city, develop partnerships with groups and focus on outreach in the county. The Innovation and Sustainability Subcommittee is focused on finding ways to increase the supply of affordable housing and how to preserve affordable housing.

At their next meeting in October these subcommittees will update the county on what they have accomplished and what they plan to do in the future. For information from previous Housing for All Task Force meetings or the meeting schedule, visit the Orange County Government website.

________________________________________________________

Leyton Blackwell is a photojournalist and Florida National News contributor. | info@floridanationalnews.com

Continue Reading

Articles

Opening Biopic ‘Te Ata’ Sets High Bar for 2016 Orlando Film Festival

Published

on

ORLANDO: Chickasaw Nation Biopic 'Te Ata' Sets Stage for Orlando Film Festival.

ORLANDO (FNN NEWS) – Orlando Film Festival kicked off at Cobb Theaters in Downtown Orlando Wednesday night. The red carpet came alive with excited filmmakers and actors ready to showcase their projects to the Orlando community and, in some cases, to the world at large, including Nathan Frankowski, director of this year’s opening feature Te Ata.

About Te Ata

Frankowski’s biopic feature chronicles the true story of Chickasaw actress and storyteller Mary Frances Thompson, whose love of stories and the Chickasaw Nation fueled her to share the Chickasaw culture with new audiences in the early 1900s, a time when the United States was still growing as a nation and clashed with Native American peoples in the process.

Viewers are immediately swept into the saga from the film’s opening scene with a voice-over folk tale told by Mary Thompson’s father, T.B. Thompson (played by Gil Birmingham). Ironically, though his storytelling places the seed of inspiration in her, it slowly becomes a source of friction between them as she ages.

What makes the film engrossing is the sprawling backdrop upon which Thompson’s journey takes place. While young Te Ata (which means “The Morning”) flourishes with each solo performance and eventually sets her sights on Broadway, the Chickasaw Nation is fighting to secure the funding due them from the U.S. government in the face of ethnocentrism and religious bigotry–to the point that the government passed a law forbidding the sale of traditional Native American textiles and creations, which caused further financial struggle for the Chickasaw Nation. Viewers even experience the Thompsons’ fish-out-of-water feeling as the Chickasaw people’s territory, Tishomingo, shrinks significantly to become part of the newborn state of Oklahoma.

The political tensions are counterbalanced with Te Ata’s experience. Te Ata does her first performances among family, but chooses to leave home for the first time in her life to attend the Oklahoma College for Women (known today as University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma), despite her father’s wishes for her to find a job at home. Viewers immediately empathize with Te Ata’s awkward experience upon her arrival at the predominantly Caucasian-attended College, but cheer her on when that one connection is made, because all it ever takes is one.

Te Ata’s jumping off point occurs when she meets drama teacher Frances Dinsmore Davis, who encourages her to join her class and to share the Chickasaw stories for her senior presentation instead of the usual Shakespeare recitation. From there, Te Ata’s career blossoms from one serendipitous connection to another, taking her performances across the country. She eventually makes it to New York City, hustling to find her place on Broadway, and finds love in the process while performing privately for Eleanor Roosevelt, whose husband was then Governor of New York. The heroine’s journey continues with well-placed highs and lows, keeping the viewer visually and emotionally engaged.

Te Ata is touchingly channeled through lead actress Q’orianka Kilcher who, like Te Ata, has stage experience, and brought it to bear in the role. Kilcher’s magnetic singing, with the help of the film’s sweeping score and indigenous songs, imprints the true Te Ata’s passion for her people onto the viewer’s heart.

Frankowski, who worked closely with the Chickasaw Nation in creating the film, honors Te Ata’s memory and legacy in a cohesive, sweeping tale that will edify audiences everywhere.

 

 

Florida National News Editor Mellissa Thomas is an author and journalist, as well as a decorated U.S. Navy veteran with degrees in Entertainment Business and Film. She also helps business owners, CEOs, executives, and speakers double their income and clinch the credibility they deserve by walking them step by step through the process of developing, completing, marketing, and publishing their first book.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Advertisement Ticket Time Machine ad
Advertisement Orlando Regional REALTOR Association logo
Advertisement Parts Pass App
Advertisement Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Metro Orlando
Advertisement
Advertisement African American Chamber of Commerce of Central Florida
Advertisement FNN News en Español
Advertisement Indian American Chamber of Commerce logo
Advertisement Florida Sports Channel

FNN Newsletter

Trending