#erichorrie and #katiestewart at the #premiersportingchallenge sharing the #queensbaton in #sydneyolympicpark #starstv Haveaball.com.au (at Sydney Olympic Park)
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#erichorrie and #katiestewart at the #premiersportingchallenge sharing the #queensbaton in #sydneyolympicpark #starstv Haveaball.com.au (at Sydney Olympic Park)
Nostalgic visions. This is the view out of a certain window of the house which belongs to the author of "Nostalgia--A Polemic," "Ordinary Affects," and other amazing things #katiestewart #nostalgia #window
Terrific #sneakypicture #katiestewart #photography
For movie buffs, new year means award season
By Katie Stewart
Every new year brings many annual events, from football playoffs to the start of a new semester. For stars of the big screen, the new year means award season.
From the Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild honors to the prestigious Academy Awards, it’s the playoffs for film stars and movie creators.
Actors and directors have their hard work recognized as films from the previous year earn nominations and accolades from different groups around the world.
Movies from the past like “Gone with the Wind,” which earned eight Academy Awards in 1939, and the legendary “Titanic,” which earned 11 Oscars in 1997, continue to set the standard for filmmakers and audiences alike.
Motion pictures will live on, but so too will the many actors, screenwriters, directors, producers and composers who breathe life into these masterpieces.
Actors who’ve won multiple awards throughout the years, such as Jack Nicholson, Daniel Day Lewis, Katherine Hepburn and Meryl Streep, have taken movie making to its truest art form.
The same is true for directors like Steven Spielberg, who won best director for films like “Schindler’s List” and “Saving Private Ryan,” and John Ford, who won four Academy Awards for movies like “The Grapes of Wrath.”
The annual award season can also make or break an actor’s career.
Jennifer Lawrence lost the Best Actress category in 2011 for her role in “Winter’s Bone” but went on to star in the franchise “The Hunger Games” as Katniss Everdeen. She won an Oscar in 2013 for “Silver Linings Playbook” as Tiffany Maxwell for Best Actress in a Leading Role.
Lawrence is now a global sensation, most recently earning a Best Actress in a Supporting Role nomination for the film “American Hustle.”
However, winning an Oscar doesn’t guarantee overnight success or household recognition.
The actor Jean Dujardin starred in the film “The Artist” and won in the Best Actor category in 2012. Dujardin hasn’t really been heard from since.
The award season also alerts audiences to see the films that have been nominated. Unknown writers, directors and actors can utilize the award season buzz and get their name out to the public.
David O. Russell, who is both a director and writer, is finally getting feedback and praise for his character-driven films like “Silver Linings Playbook,” “The Fighter” and “American Hustle.”
His latest film, “American Hustle,” is about survival of the fittest in a sense, with some betrayal. It is filled with raw dialogue that leaves viewers quoting each scene.
Some of those consumers wouldn’t be in theaters if there weren’t awards to promote the films, actors and movie makers every year.
Gitesh Pandya of boxofficeguru.com made that point about “American Hustle,” writing, “With its incredible star power and awards buzz, ‘American Hustle’ led all the newly minted Best Picture Oscar nominees with an estimated $10.6 million for a hearty 28 percent jump.”
Who will win the 2014 Academy Awards?
It’s a tie for Best Actor in a Leading Role, judging by early awards. Leonardo DiCaprio and Matthew McConaughey have each earned Golden Globe and Critics Choice awards.
The Best Actress in a Leading Role will obviously go to Cate Blanchett for her role in “Blue Jasmine,” directed by Woody Allen.
Jared Leto will win the Best Actor in a Supporting Role award for his role in “Dallas Buyers Club.” He has already won his first Golden Globe, Critics Choice award and Screen Actors Guild award.
Lawrence is tied with newcomer Lupita Nyong’o, who gained buzz for her role as Patsey in “12 Years a Slave.” Lawrence won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress and Nyong’o won the Screen Actors Guild award.
I predict Nyong’o will win for her stunning performance.
The magic of award season brings excitement for aspects ranging from screenwriting to acting. Many little things add up to one major artistic creation: the motion picture.
Academy Award nominations for 2014
The live Oscar presentation will take place March 2 on ABC. Nominations include:
Best Picture:
“12 Years a Slave”
“American Hustle”
“Captain Phillips”
“Dallas Buyers Club”
“Gravity”
“Her”
“Nebraska”
“Philomena”
“The Wolf of Wall Street”
Best Director:
Alfonso Cuarón – “Gravity”
Steve McQueen – “12 Years a Slave”
Alexander Payne – “Nebraska”
David O. Russell – “American Hustle”
Martin Scorsese – “The Wolf of Wall Street”
Best Actor in a Leading Role:
Christian Bale – “American Hustle” as Irving Rosenfeld
Bruce Dern – “Nebraska” as Woody Grant
Leonardo DiCaprio – “The Wolf of Wall Street” as Jordan Belfort
Chiwetel Ejiofor – “12 Years a Slave” as Solomon Northup
Matthew McConaughey – “Dallas Buyers Club” as Ron Woodroof
Best Actress in a Leading Role:
Amy Adams – “American Hustle” as Sydney Prosser
Cate Blanchett – “Blue Jasmine” as Jeanette “Jasmine” Francis
Sandra Bullock – “Gravity” as Dr. Ryan Stone
Judi Dench – “Philomena” as Philomena Lee
Meryl Streep – “August: Osage County” as Violet Weston
Best Actor in a Supporting Role:
Barkhad Abdi – “Captain Phillips” as Abduwali Muse
Bradley Cooper – “American Hustle” as Richard “Richie” DiMaso
Michael Fassbender – “12 Years a Slave” as Edwin Epps
Jonah Hill – “The Wolf of Wall Street” as Donnie Azoff
Jared Leto – “Dallas Buyers Club” as Rayon
Best Actress in a Supporting Role:
Sally Hawkins – “Blue Jasmine” as Ginger
Jennifer Lawrence – “American Hustle” as Rosalyn Rosenfeld
Lupita Nyong’o – “12 Years a Slave” as Patsey
Julia Roberts – “August: Osage County” as Barbara Weston-Fordham
June Squibb – “Nebraska” as Kate Grant
Best Writing – Original Screenplay:
“American Hustle” – Eric Warren Singer and David O. Russell
“Blue Jasmine” – Woody Allen
“Dallas Buyers Club” – Craig Borten and Melisa Wallack
“Her” – Spike Jonze
“Nebraska” – Bob Nelson
Best Writing – Adapted Screenplay:
“Before Midnight” – Richard Linklater, Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke
“Captain Phillips” – Billy Ray
“Philomena” – Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope
“12 Years a Slave” – John Ridley
“The Wolf of Wall Street” – Terence Winter
http://aztecpressonline.com/2014/01/for-movie-buffs-new-year-means-award-season/
READ MY ARTICLES!!!!!!! TRYING TO GET MY STUFF OUT THERE!!
http://aztecpressonline.com/?s=KATIE+STEWART&x=43&y=8
Reporter and Editor of the A&E section for the Aztec Press at PIMA COMMUNITY COLLEGE in Tucson, AZ.
Wrote very good articles about Drug Addiction, Beauty in the Media, Online Dating risks, The Working Student and others.
Listen to the band 'Sun Bones' there awesome! I wrote an article on them.
http://aztecpressonline.com/2013/11/sun-bones-seeks-truest-possible-sound/
Sun Bones seeks 'Truest Possible' Sound
By KATIE STEWART
The Tucson-based band Sun Bones calls their upcoming performance at the Rialto Theatre their biggest performance to date.
The group, which plays a variety of genres from folk and hip-hop to rock and classical, continues to evolve from humble beginnings as high school musicians.
Sun Bones consists of:
Evan Casler – guitar, vocals, percussion, bass
Sam Golden – vocals, guitar
Bob Hanshaw – bass, vocals, guitar
Seth Vietti – drums, vocals
Golden and Vietti started in a folk band called Grandpa Moses, and invited Hanshaw to join them in 2007 for a high school battle of the bands. They later formed a rock band called Boreas. Casler joined as a University of Arizona student.
“We all met in high school and college,” Hanshaw said. “I met Evan Casler in the UA choir and he eventually joined the band.”
The close-knit musicians say they work together to form a whole.
“If we were a skeleton, Sam would be the head, Bob would be the spine, I would be the hips and Seth would be the flailing arms and legs,” Casler said.
Casler also described Hanshaw as a kind of a father figure and mad scientist, while Golden is the technician and Vietti is the gleeful heart-throb. Casler sees himself as the hype-man and boogie machine.
Each musician has had classical training, including vocal and music composition.
“I think it’s fair to say that we retain a part of the rigor and language of all classical music instruction,” Vietti said.
It helps them as a group to listen closely and think critically when they’re making new material or adding to old compositions.
The group is hard pressed to explain why they started to perform together.
Hanshaw said any bunch of teenagers that knows how to play music will think it is exciting and cool to be in a band.
Like most teen bands, they began by playing cover songs for friends. By the time they formed Sun Bones, music had become a life-affirming pastime.
“I don’t think any of us would feel whole at this point if we weren’t playing music in some kind of group,” Hanshaw said.
“The kind of music we play always comes back to one thing ‘accessible, but not ordinary,’” he added. “Leonard Bernstein said that about Beethoven’s music, and we try to make it true of ours.”
They love pop, punk, beautiful melodies and aggressive in-your-face energy, but also like to challenge themselves with twists. The goal is to create something unexpected but tasteful.
Their first song, “Kamikaze Dream” from their album “Sentinel Peak,” posed a challenge.
“It was really hard and kind of demoralizing,” Hanshaw said. “But we eventually did get it down how we liked it. Once it was there, it was kind of a relief.”
The “Sentinel Peak” album was transformative because it gave the group direction for genre and type of band. Their producer, Charles Dorman, helped them focus and narrow their range of sound.
“Sentinel Peak was very diverse, but also was clearly unified,” Hanshaw said.
When they gradually worked toward a second album, they had a better sense of where to go.
Their goal for the future is to make as much music as possible to its truest possible sound to make people happy.
Each performance provides a different experience, but band members say that they practice a set of songs so much that it eventually becomes a routine.
Vietti described performing as a strange and addicting confrontation between perfection and chaos.
Reactions from fans have touched them, almost in a spiritual sense, and they’re very honored by the impact they’ve had.
“If that’s something we can do for people, then we want to do that as much as possible,” Hanshaw said.
It amazes them that they’re making even a bit of difference in people’s lives through their music.
“We’re always so focused on making music better and better that we don’t really know how to react when people respond to it,” Casler said.
For more information about Sun Bones, visit http://sunbones.com/epk.
FYI
Sun Bones, with other alt indie bands including Best Dog Award and The Electric Blankets
When: Dec. 7 at 9 p.m.
Where: Rialto Theatre, 318 E Congress St.
Admission: $5
Details: rialtotheatre.com