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October 2007

October 31, 2007

Missing London, Counting on Lux

I recently turned down a contract that required me to travel to the UK for three weeks in two weeks' time. As much as I would love to be able to visit family in England and enjoy the sites on weekends and in evenings, I had to take a pass this time.

So, here, to remind me, I've changed my desktop image to this ... a view from the area where my grandmother (who will turn 104-years-old next month) and her family lived in the early 1900s before emigrating to Canada. One of my sisters who is currently living in England took the photo.

The next trip is to Luxembourg. Cool. Count me in on that one.England_10

October 27, 2007

Weekend Movies

I'm catching up on my movie watching. Last weekend I saw "An Unmarried Woman" with Jill Clayburgh.

Two things prompted me to watch: i) I was at home looking after the puppy and had some time to kill and ii) I remember there being much fuss made about this flick and decided to watch to see for myself.

This weekend same scenario. I'm at home and there's much fuss made about Woody Allen's "Annie Hall." Parts were very, very funny.

Now, to put things in perspective, I'm a opening weekend, blockbuster gal. I like those quiet pics like "The Big White," "Moonlight Mile," or "13 Conversations About One Thing" or "Run Lola Run" and anything with Holly Hunter in it.

I saw "Saturday Night Fever" decades after it was released in my hometown in 1978 and I've only seen one Harry Potter movie. I sorta of saw it by accident.

Don't laugh, but I've yet to see any of the "Lord of the Rings" pictures.

October 23, 2007

Flights of Fancy

As I may have mentioend in earlier blogs, I'm between contracts, or on hiatus, and keeping myself busy by watching daytime television, though let's be clear: I only regularly watch host chat on "Live with Regis and Kelly" and the opening segment of "The View."

When Regis is on vacation, I don't usually tune in. Unless, of course my favourite CNN anchor is subbing for him. But, when I learned Jimmy Kimmel was co-hosting for the week, I planned my morning work routine around the 9:00 a.m. start time. I like Jimmy.

But, I must say, I am puzzled by the celebratory way in which "Live ..." has positioned Kimmel's daily return trips from California to New York. This is odd, I think, that they'd discuss the daily flights as if they were some sort of accomplishment because all I can think is: How many tons of carbon are those cross-country flights pumping into our environment?

I'm considering this in part, because I'm looking forward to CNN's hyper-hyped Planet in Peril two-night, four-hour event, with Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Jeff Corwin, and Anderson Cooper.

Surely they can find someone who lives locally to co-host. In all of New York, there's no one else that can replace Reege for five days?

On Day 2, who shows up but Anderson Cooper. But he shows up as a guest to promote the aforementioned "Planet in Peril" that airs tonight and tomorrow.

There's no business like show business.

October 22, 2007

New York City Daily Photo

Check out New York City Daily Photo.

October 20, 2007

Iron Road Promotions

I wanted to share this with you. It's an excerpt from an email I received from writer/producer Barry Pearson ...

"… the show featuring our Canada/China co-production IRON ROAD on NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams is on this Saturday OCT 20 6:30-7 pm, or if you have a good broadband connection, you can watch the NBC piece online the next day - on Sun Oct 21 . 07. online at www.msnbc.com (go to the Nightly News section). To those of you who are not already aware of it, you can check out the IRON ROAD website at www.ironroadthemovie.com. NBC Nightly News is devoting the whole week of their coverage to China. It's Channel 17 [WGRZ] on Rogers in the Toronto area - in other areas, please check your local channel."

October 16, 2007

Thank you Notes ii/ii

... continued

With the advent of email and webistes it's much easier to dash off a note. I tend to send notes to those whose creative work has inspired me in mine. They are predominantly Canadian, and mostly writers, novelists, and poets, but I've written to songwriters, too.

I once received a letter back from Dorothy Law Nolte, the author of Children Learn What They Live. I was touched that she took the time to do so. We even exchanged Christmas cards in subsequent years. What a wonderful woman to have taken time to remember me.0761109196_2

I've has also been lucky to experience the joy of receiving a thank you note, so I know the joy of having touched someone's life in a way that was meaningful to them, and I know onderful to get a reply.

Sometimes, the sentiment I'm trying to convey doesn't come out as gracefully as I'd like it to, and too many times I haven't spend edited the letter nearly as many times as I should have.

Best case scenario: the recipient receives a lengthy letter of gratitude.

Worst case scenario: the recipinet receives a handmade chapbook of my poetry.

Speaking of which, I temporarily put my biggest challenge yet on hold. I was considering writing 42 handwritten notes to participants in Spike Lee's documentary When The Levees Broke. I watched it as it aired consistently on movie channels a few months ago.

Instead, I decided to mention it here and hope that those who need to find it, will. If not, send them a link.

They are as follows:

Shelton “Shakespeare” Alexander

Robert Bea

Harry Belafonte

Wilhelmina Blanchard

Terence Blanchard

Kathleen Blanco

Douglas Brinkley

Joseph Bruno

Cheryl Livaudais

Eddie Compass

Harry Cook

Michael Eric Dyson

Paris Ervin

Sylvester Francis

Herbert Freeman Jr.

Dale Girard

Louella P. Givens

Josephine Butler

Corey Hebert

Damon Hewitt

Freddie Hicks

Fred Johnson

Phyllis Montana LeBlanc

Brendan Loy

Calvin Mackie

Ben Marble

Wynton Marsalis

Betty McHale

Charles McHale

Gina Montanna

Marc H. Morial

Cynthia Hedge-Morrell

Arthur Morrell

Linda Novak

Bennie Pete

Wendell Pierce

Kimberly Polk

Garland Robinette

Junior Rodriguez

October 11, 2007

Thank-you Notes i/ii

I'm the kind of person that enjoys writing letters. I enjoy writing thank-you notes. I adore the creative process of long-winded emails and lengthy blog postings. Conversely, few people enjoy reading online text beyond a few lines, but bear with me, please.

I'll make this as short as I can under the time constraints I've got.

This week, my writing assignment for a writing course I'm taking, I decided on the subject and theme "home." In the the final throes of polishing the 500-word piece, I pulled a copy of "Writing Home" off my book shelf, dusted it off, and re-read "Two Homes" by Paul Quarrington. It is my favourite essay in a PEN Canada anthogy that I bought at Word on the Street, in I think, 1999. I read the story just days after filming my scenes - as an Extra - in Paul's short film "Mann Over Moon."

This past August, thousands of fans visited Graceland to mark the 30th anniversary of Elvis Presley’s death. In watching Priscilla talk about Elvis on Larry King Live, I was reminded of the day I learned Elvis died. I was 13 years-old and heard it on my bedroom radio.

Everyone, it seems has at least a short list of famous people they'd like to meet. Elvis was on mine. (My childhood friend Lisa had a crush on him and introduced me to late-night Elvis movies).

I thought of this as I dusted off the PEN Canada anthology from my bookshelf when a printed email from writer Lisa Moore fell out of the book. She'd written back to let me know she received my online note posted to her publisher's website. I loved her book "Open" and had just purchased "Alligator," which, if you get a chance, you should read. It is lovely.

... continued

October 09, 2007

More Saucy Words

More about HOT-SAUCED WORDS ... Thursday, October 25, 2007 features Durham Region writer Sue Reynolds along with Neil Muscott.

As always, admission is free. Location is It's Not a deli 986 Queen West (near Ossington).

Check out Creative James webiste for details.

October 06, 2007

Keanu Reeves: The Best Gift a Girl Can Get

October's issue of Bread 'n' Molasses is posted. Check it out.

October 04, 2007

An Actor's First Right of Refusal

Working for a talent agency can be a strange and wonderful thing. Actors are funny, goofy, entertaining, and at times insecure, neurotic and almost always, warm human beings. Agents are not. But if the downside of the biz is cranky, acrid agents, the upside is attractive, flirtatious actors.

Once, back in the day of Canadian productions "Counterstrike" and "Katts and Dog"), a client wished me happy birthday, then sealed it with a prolonged French kiss. I was embarrassed, but only because I’d been mooning over his headshot.

This was a talent agency – not your average office environment; this place was leggings and Doc Martens casual – with clients dropping by to pick up script "sides" and drop off demo reels. As I pulled and assembled headshots and resumes – an actor’s job application, for casting directors, I was often treated to performers humming show tunes, reciting Shakespearean lines, or rehearsing monologues.

One of the 8x10 glossy photographs our senior agent submitted frequently was a dark-featured actor in a brooding, bad-boy pose specific for film/tv roles, was also one of my favourites. I was new to the business then, but I’d learned rather quickly that performers seldom look like their photographs; hair, makeup, and lighting can really work wonders. So, when this guy walked in the office for the first time I was surprised how closely he resembled his photo.

As the year moved on, if I wasn’t at the reception area when he swaggered in, I immediately recognized the clomping of his boots, which he usually wore with jeans and a well-worn black leather jacket with buckles. And oh, on that day, he was a living version of his headshot.

This was no peck-on-the-cheek. It was a long, passionate kiss. Then again, he was an actor. He was practised at faking it. I wasn’t. I was breathless, speechless, but busied myself with invented paperwork.

Imagine then my horror, when, weeks later, he stood on my doorstep with a pizza box in hand. I knew that he worked at his parent’s Leaside restaurant not far from my apartment, because long before cell phones and Blackberries, actors needed several contact phone numbers for auditions. It was my then live-in boyfriend’s favourite delivery and take-out pizza joint and we ordered from it often.

I answered the doorbell wearing my best couch potato outfit: sweat pants and bangs pulled into a fountain of greasy hair. I stared at the good-looking Greek staring back at me from the stoop of my rented flat. Despite his profession, clearly, he was unable to mask disbelief.

I pretended not to recognize him when he questioned my identity. He probably said, "Val?" but I heard "yikes!" and in one, swift motion, I grabbed the pizza and stuffed a bunch of bills into his palm, then pushed the door close.

After witnessing the real thing, there were no forthcoming birthday wishes – French, or otherwise.

About Valerie Bean


  • Between corporate and technical writing gigs, Pickering resident Valerie Bean writes magazines features, news, profiles, and general-interest articles. She is a published book author and an internationally published poet.

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