Home #Hwoodtimes Patrick Stewart, šŸŽ­ & Sara Bareilles, Todd Haynes, Dave Chisholm, and more.

Patrick Stewart, šŸŽ­ & Sara Bareilles, Todd Haynes, Dave Chisholm, and more.

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Patrick Stewart. Photo by Mark Seliger

Sir Patrick Stewart on Shakespeare, ā€˜Star Trek,ā€™ and new memoir ā€˜Making It Soā€™

ActorĀ Patrick Stewartā€™s wildly successful acting career on stage and screen didnā€™t happen overnight. The Olivier Award-winning actor admittedly didnā€™t hit his stride until his 40s, when he landed the role of Captain Jean-Luc Picard onĀ Star Trek: The Next Generation. Since that turn, he has appeared in many films, perhaps most famously as Professor Charles Xavier in theĀ X-MenĀ franchise. Equally acclaimed are his performances on the stage, memorably in the works of Shakespeare and Samuel Beckett.

Now, Elvis Michell welcomes Stewart, actor and now author, toĀ The TreatmentĀ to detail his robust and winding career from his new memoirĀ Making It So.Ā He discusses his difficult ā€œVictorianā€ upbringing and how it informed his life. He also speaks about learning to relax and not take everything so seriously in his work ā€” and how he breaks down Shakespeare.

Other authors on KCRW

  • Mike RothschildĀ joinsĀ Press PlayĀ to discussĀ his bookĀ Jewish Space Lasers: The Rothschilds and 200 Years of Conspiracy Theories.
  • NovelistĀ Yiyun LiĀ examinesĀ Wednesday’s ChildĀ and the beauty of storytelling onĀ Life Examined.
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View of posters for Broadway musical shows on a street in New York City on February 20, 2022. Photo by EQRoy /Shutterstock

A Broadway special on KCRW: Sara Bareilles brings ā€˜Waitress: The Musicalā€™ to a (movie) theater near you; Plus BroadwayHD creators on expanding fan base

With the holidays just around the corner, it feels like the perfect time to give our regards to Broadway. And we have just the man for the job. NPR contributor Jeff Lunden has produced more than a dozen documentaries centering musical theater, including the three part audio seriesĀ A Place for Us: Fifty Years of West Side Story.

ForĀ The Business, Lunden is examining the many considerations involved with bringing a theatrical performance to the screen (and vice versa).

First, Lunden looks into BroadwayHD, a streaming platform which focuses on capturing the theater on film. Tony-winning producers and its co-foundersĀ Bonnie ComleyĀ andĀ Stewart F. LaneĀ are here to break it down.

Then, singer-songwriter-actressĀ Sara BareillesĀ and producerĀ Jessie NelsonĀ talk about what it took to bringĀ WaitressĀ ā€” an adaptation of Adrienne Shelly’s 2007 feature film ā€” into a filmed theater experience. The limited Fathom events run of theĀ Waitress: The MusicalĀ will play in select movie theaters beginning Dec. 7.

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Todd Haynes. Photo by Brian Bowen Smith

Todd Haynes parses the gray areas of ā€˜May Decemberā€™

DirectorĀ Todd Haynesā€™ films tend to center around female characters in domestic spaces who lack agency in their own lives, and who also might be battling some kind of illness, real or perceived. His latest in that canon isĀ May December, starring Julianne Moore, Natalie Portman, and Charles Melton, now streaming on Netflix. The film unfolds as an actress, played by Portman, visits a married couple who became involved when the wife, played by Moore, worked at a pet store Melton frequented when he was in middle school.

Haynes tellsĀ The TreatmentĀ about why illness has often been central in his films. He talks about how certain characters are often marginalized both in the plot of his films and also within the frames, and discusses the very gray areas ofĀ May December.

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Illustration from ā€œMiles Davis and the Search for the Soundā€ by Dave Chisholm. Credit: Dave Chisholm and Z2 Comics

See ā€˜unnervingly candidā€™ Miles Davis in new graphic novel

The new graphic novel,Ā Miles Davis and the Search for the Sound, documents the many turbulent stories of the singerā€™s life, including his comeback from heroin abuse, when he received a standing ovation for his performance at the 1955 Newport Jazz Festival. Musician and cartoonistĀ Dave ChisholmĀ created the book, adapting it from Davisā€™ autobiography, interviews, and other writings.

Chisholm tellsĀ Press PlayĀ that this project took him 10 months to complete, but in a way, it lasted his whole life. He says the first music he remembered listening to was his dad playing the albumĀ Sketches of Spain, and since then, he became ā€œa lifelong Miles Davis obsessive.ā€

And onĀ Greater LA,Ā rock photographer and AngelenoĀ Henry DiltzĀ talks aboutĀ the upcoming release of his new book,Ā CSN&Y: Love the One Youā€™re With, which contains hundreds of photographs from Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, the ā€™60s, as well as personal notes and contributions from rock stars like Joni Mitchell and Bonnie Raitt.

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Partner Screening:Ā Maestro

KCRW, Vidiots, and NetflixĀ invite you to a special screening ofĀ MaestroĀ at Vidiots, located in Eagle Rock followed by a conversation with costumeĀ designer, Mark Bridges, and rerecording mixers, Dean Zupancic and Tom Ozanich moderated by KCRW’s Dan Wilcox.

MaestroĀ is a towering and fearless love story chronicling the lifelong relationship between Leonard Bernstein and Felicia Montealegre Cohn Bernstein. A love letter to life and art,Ā MaestroĀ at its core is an emotionally epic portrayal of family and love.

FREE RSVPĀ HERE.

A member of ACT UP LA participates in a ā€œdie-inā€ protest in Long Beach. Photo by Chuck Stallard

ACT UP LA chronicles 35 years of its AIDS activism

Greater public awareness and advancements in medicine have largely removed the stigma surrounding AIDS. But a few decades ago, the dangers of AIDS were being ignored or sometimes suppressed by public officials.

The Los Angeles branch of ACT UP was formed 35 years ago in response to this lack of action. Through protests and demonstrations, the organization demanded public officials and the private sector to inform the public about AIDS and invest in treatment options.

ACT UP LA was active for about a decade. In that time span, their work led to the creation of the first public AIDS ward, and Los Angelesā€™ first needle exchange program.

Now, ACT UP LA is focusing onĀ an oral history projectĀ to document the organizationā€™s activism, and chronicle the difficulties of advancing AIDS awareness during the 1980s.

Entertainment news and updates for theā€¦

ā€¦Ā Green Meanie champion:Ā Actors who have played the Grinch, from Boris Karloff to James Austin Johnson inĀ Entertainment Weekly.

ā€¦Ā movie fan:Ā The 5 most anticipated movies of December ā€” ‘Godzilla Minus One’, ‘Wonka’, and more atĀ Rotten Tomatoes.

ā€¦Ā audiobook listener:Ā These were the top audiobooks of 2023 atĀ Kirkus Reviews.

ā€¦Ā binge-watcher:Ā TV 15 most anticipated shows of Winter 2023-2024 atĀ The Wrap.

ā€¦Ā show biz strategist:Ā The biggest streaming power moves of 2023 onĀ The Ringer.

ā€¦Ā gift giver: 10 great books for gift-giving this year inĀ The Washington Post.

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