Showing posts with label Asheville NC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asheville NC. Show all posts

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Guerrilla Radio: Asheville, N.C.

Our screening in Asheville went quite well. It started off with our liaison treating us to Salsa's, one of the many culinary gems of the town -- a Latin fusion spot whose creativity would leave any five star ATL restaurant in the dust.

The film screened at the beautifully restored Fine Arts Theatre in downtown Asheville, which used to be home to another genre of films with titles like "Forest Hump" and "The Wizard of Ahhhh's!" For a rainy Wednesday night, a good-sized group of 50 or so eager film buffs showed up for a behind-the-scenes look at Cuba. Thomas and I sat with the audience, as we usually do, to hear the grasps and surprised reactions during many of the highlights of the film -- the struggles of the musicians, dog fights near the capitol, and the long lines of Cubans waiting to get water from an old rusty fire hydrant in the middle of the night. -- Simon

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Asheville, NC - Keep it Weird


Showed New Year Baby at the Fine Arts Theatre in Asheville, NC last night. Asheville is wonderful little mountain town with lefty tendencies, a lively art scene and eccentric townies.

The turnout was good and the audience seemed really moved and engaged with the film. A recurring theme in these screenings has been the one Cambodian in the audience. None of the stops on my Southern Circuit tour are home to large Cambodian communities. But there's always one.

He was very moved by the film and shared with the audience his family's story. When his mother was three months pregnant, her husband was killed by the Khmer Rouge. Instead of being named the "lucky child," he was repeatedly called a curse by his own mother. At the end of the night, all I could do was give him a hug.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

On the road

I made it to my Disappearances screening at HIGH POINT, NC, by the way, and was pleasantly surprised by the turnout and reception to the film. The program director, Louisa Hart, had prepared me for a small turnout and said that the attendance
in the series so far numbered about 15--this is their first year. But about 35 people showed up. I gave my intro, comparing the picture to a western and adding in the ways in which it being a New Engkand picture made it a different kind of western, steeped in elements like generations of family, settled community, and a rich cultural past that generally didn;'t show up on the edge of the western frontier until later. And I talked up the film's magical realism.

A local NC actor with whom I'd corresponded but never met showed up and we went out for dinner once the show started. I told him I felt that I had said the wrong things in the intro since people didn't seem to keen on any of it. I said I expected a cool repsonse, at best. But we came back for the end of the show and the crowd responded great--better than I'd dreamed possible. And they bought a raft of DVD's--always a good sign. A 92 year-old veteran of the west Virginia coal mines came uo afterwards and talked about his families participation in the illegal booze business back in the 20's and 30's. A 12 year old kid asked most of the questions during the Q & A--and he seemed satisfied with the film--and my answers. His mom bought him a DVD, too.

High Point is best known as a place where thousands of furniture buyers show up twice a year for mammouth showcases in the multi-million square foot showrooms that abut the theater. During the rest of the year, things apparently stay pretty quiet. The outskirts of town are filled with modern malls, however, and what appears to be a thriving retail and restaurant scene.

I told the High Point crowd that my next planned film, They Don't Dance Much, is based on an only novel by a now-deceased newspaperman from Greensboro, just 8 miles down the road. The fact that I have a southern script in my back pocket is allowing me to meet a number of potential supporters and/or participants on the tour.

One of those people materialized unexpectedly at the ASHEVILLE, NC screening. A former Hollywood director took me out to dinner afterwards and offered to involve the college where he now teaches in the production of They Don't Dance Much. He said he mobilize experienced students and faculty along with some equipment and who knows what else? This was a good contact, although, strangely, I'd met the director at his home in LA in 1989, when I was starting to prepare my first feature. I didn't know anybody or anything about the movie business and he kindly allowed me to come by his place and ask questions. It's a small world.

The local Southern Circuit organizer and director of the Media Arts Project, Alison Watson, had her work cut out for her, mobilizing an audience for this Halloween screening. The crowd was small but it was great to hear about all she's doing for area media artists--and we talked about doing something again in the future. The theater was terrific and everybody was good to work with. Back at the hotel pandemonium reigned as hundreds of Haloween costumed young people showed up, beer coolers in tow, for a Widespread Panic concert. The final party cresecendo peaked between 2 and 4am, with lots of revery and good cheer.

The CLEMSON screening went smoothly and I joined organzer and Clemson faculty member Amy Monaghan for dinner before the show. Several current and former students also joined us--and it interesting to hear about the fledgling film studies program there. Amy is well-versed in film and has also worked at places like the Brattle Theater in Cambridge. So she knows the indie scene, too. The audience of about fifty consisted of mostly students and there were a number of good queestions. In retrospect, i wished I'd planned to have Amy join me up front to help solicit and frame questions that suited the classes she's teaching. But the session went fine and one student expressed interest in working on my next picture as an intern. And she said she liked the film.

CHARLESTON was a blast. I spent the afternoon with South Carolina-based producer Peter Wentworth who took me to the College of Charleston's John Rivers Communication Museum where we spent more than an hour talking with Rick Zender an amzing source of information about the film, television, radio, and live music scenes in an around Charleston for the past century. They Don't Dance Much is set at an early 1950's roadhouse--and we got to lay our eyes on an authentic juke box from the period, among other things. I'm hoping that Peter Wentworth will help produce the picture--and that we'll shoot it in the Carolinas or Georgia. This will be a new move for me, outside of New England. I shot my third feature, The Year That Trembled in Ohio but it was for producers there. They Don;t Dance Much will be my first feature which I produce outside of Vermont.

We went to dinner with Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art director, Mark Sloan. Mark does extraordinary visdionary work, curating a ground breaking exhibition program and making opportuntites available to other artists as well. He gave me a book, Wild, Weird, and Wonderful, that he wrote about circuses that rolled through Brockton, Mass. during the early 20th century and were photographed by F.W. Glasier. It's a beautiful and fascinating book--and Mark knew of my involvement as co-founder of the Vermont-based Circus Smirkus during the mid-80's, an ambitious grass-roots circus starring kids who go on the road each summer under a 500 seat tent.

Peter Wentworth's wife, Margery, also joined us for dinner and added a lively dimension, as South Carolina's poet laureate. The whole afternoon and evening, set against the respendent backdrop of old Charleston, were a delight. Oh, right, I almost forgot to mention the screening, which went great. A very responsive and thoughtful audience seemed to "get" the film and they asked a number of stimulating questions. Although no one yet has commented on the fact that the film's French-Canadian villain, Carcajou (played by Lothaire Bluteau) wears both Union and Confderate officer's uniforms in two different scenes. Maybe they simply had it figured out. Thanks to Mark and also to Katie Lee who got me set up at the fine campus guest house and ran the tech part of the program, never an easy task when a director adjusts picture and sound levels to the point of distraction.

LAKE CHARLES, LOUISIANA also produced an enthusiastic modest-sized crowd that stayed around for a lengthy Q & A--and bought a raft of DVD's. The event was sponsored by a new film series group, mostly consisting of local media makers and screenwriters. What they're doing is quite exciting--screening work by each other and other area filmmakers--and building audience for local work. If I'd had a little more time, it would have been interesting to conduct a screenwriting workshop while I was there.

I took my day off in New Orleans, always a treat. The city seems to be gearing up to its former glory, with an energetic music scene along Bourbon Street and a terrific new version of Waiting for Godot, set against the 9th ward's wait for FEMA in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Asheville Rocks!

10/10 - As most folks know, Asheville is an incredible town full of creative, excited and motivated people. I was fortunate to meet two of them who are putting the arts in the forefront and who exemplify the supportive and collaborative nature of the community. Alison Watson is the Executive Director of the Media Arts Project (a non-profit organization that cultivates innovative arts and technology in western North Carolina) and Neal who is the Manager of the Fine Arts Theatre (a very hip venue for independent film makers) which is where we screened my film in the Upstairs Auditorium. Sorry that I can't remember your last name Neal, but thanks for the great turnout at the screening! And thanks for the sneak peek at Moon Europa, a feature length sci-fi flick by another local, independent filmmaker.

I was surprised to see Daniel from the Memphis work-in-progress screening of the film. Daniel is a former activist who brought students to see The Guestworker and hopes to use the film for outreach. It was great to have him there. I've promised to send him the DVD.

Don't laugh, but I forgot my DVD at the theatre and had to wait for it to open today (10/11) which puts me late on the road to Clemson! With that - I'm off.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

My shifting history....

Asheville was surprisingly uneventful. The only apparent publicity was an email blast and a couple of posters. The contact I had couldn't make the screening and sent someone in her place. He was very nice, but also couldn't stay for the whole screening. I only had 8 people in the audience, but they were a nice group. I sold 2 DVDs. The manager of the theatre was very kind, and Michelle and I had a great talk with a few of the local filmmaking crowd.

Later in the evening, I had a blast with my sister. She informed me that my last name (Patrick) isn't Irish, but rather German... It was originally Fitzpatrick. It was a perfect bomb to drop on me during this increasingly personal journey that Southern Circuit has become. All my life I assumed that it was Irish. Now I feel my lifelong affinity with Saint Patrick, James Joyce, and all things Irish draining away.

Goodbye Jonathan Swift, Hello Goethe. Very weird.

I go to Clemson tonight, then home tomorrow.

Eric

Monday, April 23, 2007

Moonshine in the Blue Ridge Mountains

Hanging out on the campus of Warren Wilson College outside Asheville, NC right now. Just met my friend Kelly for lunch. She works here. It's pretty beautiful. Hippyish school. Controversies on campus include nude hiking and bringing pets to work. Last night after the Orangeburg screening, we went back to Ellen's beautiful home and had marshmallows, hamburgers, salmon and salad and meatballs. It was great. I had a fan, an 11-year-old boy named David who had lots of questions about my film and told me the reason not many questions were asked was because everyone was confused. I met a woman artist who just recently decided to start working part-time to be able to devote more time to her art work. Orangeburg is very pretty. The school seems pretty supportive of the students and profs. Apparently it was a big hub in the civil rights days. The music prof works, who i thought was English, but actually is USAmerican. We had a good political discussion. Argued about one of my favorite argument topics: Hugo Chavez. He says it's like Munich in 33 or 38. I guess the Jews in this case are middle-class Venezuelans. A hyperbolic argument which i counter by saying the dude is not only democratically elected but also won in a referendum and re-elected. Then i went on a mini-tirade about OUR president saying that the kind of damage he's doing is going to reverberate for decades. I called him "that asshole" pretty loudly and then apologized because one of the students had her baby with her. She said no need to apologize for that!

This whole tour has been very inspiring. A way to meet so many great people in the South. Ellen offered me a place to sleep but i thought i'd go to Columbia and stay with my cousin instead. Then, when i was driving there i found out that she had gotten the flu and so i decided just to keep on driving to North Carolina. Screening tonight. Up at 5:15am for a 2.5-hr drive to the airport. Back to sunny Troy, New York.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Steven Ross - Day 9

Belatedly, I am writing about the final stop, Asheville, NC.

Frankly, I feel like I have hit the wall. How do touring music acts and stand-up comics do it? Hours on the road, a new town every day, a new motel, restaurant food.

Sadly, I will not have real time to explore Asheville and its environs. Not far away is Black Mountain, former home to the legendary Black Mountain College, one of the most fabled experimental institutions in art education and practice. It was here that Buckminster Fuller created the first geodesic dome, Merce Cunningham started his dance company, and John Cage staged his first happening.

As I walk the streets of Asheville, I am reminded of Haley Joel Osmont's character in the movie, Sixth Sense ("I see dead people.")
For me, it is "I see hippies." I feel like I am in a time warp or a Grateful Dead convention. Looking at the local news weeklies, I decide that this must be the spiritual center of the universe. There are a full two pages of options if you want to seek enlightenment or inner peace. Additionally, a thriving arts community advertises a full plate of options.

Oddly, in scouring the movie pages of three arts weeklies, I see no mention of my films. Passing the movie theater, the marquee advertises Venus and Notes of a Scandal. With very low expectations for a good crowd, I arrive and am elated to see a hardy group in the theater. It is a great crowd and the Q&A sessions are very lively.

Of note, I meet a couple who were Peace Corps volunteers in Liberia in the late 60s. Watching the film and seeing the destruction actually brings them to tears. They speak of going to dances at the 4-star Ducor Hotel - today home to hundreds of squatters seeking basic shelter.

After the show, I choose sushi for my evening's fare. A gent walks up and compliments me on the films. He is one Jack Sholder. Director of feature films (A Nighmare on Elm Street 2, The Hidden) and television (Tales from the Crypt, Mortal Kombat: Conquest), he is a lively conversationalist. Fed up with the Hollywood scene, he describes selling his Malibu home and relocating with his family in the hills outside of Asheville. Currently, he is the Director of the Motion Picture & Television Program, and a Professor in the Department of Communications at Western Carolina University.

I trudge back to the Best Western and pack for a final time. Tomorrow, I will arise early, drive the 120 miles back to the Charlotte Airport, and head home to Ohio.

What a great experience it has been - showing the films, meeting a diversified group of great people, and seeing the South.
I will carry these memories for a long, long time.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Southern Circuit tour day nine - Karl Staven

Southern Circuit tour day nine. Final day of the tour ends in Asheville, North Carolina. The drive up from Orangeburg is relatively painless and when I cross the border from South to North Carolina and stop for lunch I am pleasantly surprised to find the New York Times available at the “quickee-mart.” Arriving at my designated hotel I discover that their wi-fi isn’t functional so I cancel and continue on to a hotel that will allow me to check my school email and begin to address the work issues that I’ve been unable to address this past week.

Screening is at 7pm at the Fine Arts Theater in downtown Asheville so I head over there around 5:30 to check in and see what the facilities are like. Neal R., theater manager/guru, stops his ongoing poker game with the projectionist and says to come back around 6:30 when their showing of The King of Scotland is over. A middle aged couple comes in to purchase tickets to the 7pm screening of The King of Scotland but are informed that it won’t be playing at that time because of a special animation screening. They are disappointed because they are leaving town so Neal points over to me and I introduce myself and invite them to come instead to take advantage of a once in a lifetime chance to see unique and varied animation introduced by the filmmaker. They don’t return.

I wander a bit around downtown Asheville and see a variety of art galleries, restaurants, book/music stores, and young males with hair exploding off of their heads. Returning to the theater I meet with the projectionist and we talk through the evening’s schedule, Neal gives me a curtailed history of the theater (the balcony which is now a second screen was initially set aside for ‘colored’ patrons, the theater as a whole drifted into a porn house in the 70s and 80s, and has now returned as a venue for quality, non-Hollywood fare).

Alison W., head of the local Media Arts Project that is sponsoring the Southern Circuit here, introduces me at 7pm to the audience and away we go. I walk in front of the audience, decline to use the provided microphone (since I can carry my voice when I choose to), and talk about the path I took from undergraduate psychology major to independent animator/teacher. We then work our way through 13 of my films grouped in the categories of drawn, cutout, puppet/object animation, collaborative, and miscellaneous. In between each film I stand up, the house lights come on, and I talk about what they just saw and introduce the next film. When the first film ends the audience applauds (I believe this happened in three of the eight screenings). I ask them to hold their applause and wait until the conclusion (since I feel it will be too much to expect a spontaneous eruption/tepid acknowledgement after each film).

There are a few small glitches in the screening. The projectionist misreads a thumbs-up gesture to the audience when I initially walk out in front as a cue to start the first film even though I have yet to begin my introduction (I stand in front of the rolling film in the dark and gesture towards her and she recovers quickly and stops the film). Being a fast learner I give her a direct and obvious salute when I’m done talking between every other film. When we play “Gabriel Goes for a Walk” the film begins to skip then stops entirely so she has to skip forward eliminating 1/6 of the film (you can’t depend upon DVDs or DV tape in a public arena), and some digital artifacts that appear early on in “Backyard Shadow” make me fear that it will grind to a digital halting death in its position as the final film of the evening. The film recovers, however, and the screening is essentially a technical success.

The audience uses up their saved applause and I answer 10 or 15 questions. No one leaves during the Q & A (always a good sign) and 7 people come up afterwards to purchase a copy of my compilation dvd. Several even request my autograph on the cover and I happily oblige, though I warn them that my signature, although legally valid, is basically unreadable.

All in all a fine end to a worthwhile, interesting, rewarding, and sometimes tiring journey through the south touring with my films. Thanks to the Southern Circuit (SC Arts Commission/Southern Arts Federation) and all of the venues and hosts for their hospitality and efforts. If any future participants wish to contact me for info about the experience (especially your one day off) don’t hesitate to do so. Otherwise I bid you adieu and encourage you to post comments and read earlier blog entries from myself and the other participants.

Now back to real life,

Karl

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

#1 skilled in crusin

Dear All,

This recap begins on day three of the tour. I was in Sweet Briar, VA. It was Halloween. The leaves were just turning and I was tired.


I thought this picture from the plane looked neat, like a vein or something.


Sweet Briar College was perfect and my room was comfortable and I had a small porch to sit on before the screening. On the porch I contemplated the leaves and had coffee and a brown sugar and cinnamon Pop Tart.


Then I went to the show. Thanks everyone for coming! And many thanks to the awesome Sweet Briar students (whose names have sadly escaped me) for making the screening go off without a hitch.


During the show I wandered the Sweet Briar campus alone.


Spooky, eh? There was a murder of crows in this patch of greenery. They cawed at me so I hightailed it back to the screening room on account of the fact I'm a huge chicken.



The next morning this gentleman drove me to the airport. I believe his name was Lou. When I hopped into his cab he was listening to a radio sermon on Halloween and the devil. I remember thinking that if I was in NYC I might have asked the driver to turn down his radio but in Virginia I didn't mind.


Our trip was short but on the way Lou managed to share with me a lot about his youth: he was the oldest of 15 kids born to illiterate parents; his mom used to make thicken gravy out of flour and chicken scraps, which they’d eat over quick breads; they were farmers and grew all their own food. He said he wanted to record his family history and I told him I'd send him a tape recorder and some tapes so he could tell me his stories, then he could send 'em back and I'd transcribe everything. I will do that soon. He was a pretty intense fellow and I was surprised and glad he opened up to me the way that he did. Made me realize there are stories everywhere just waiting to be told.


Day four: Clemson University. I arrived at the Comfort Inn mere moments before I was picked up by a gaggle of way intelligent Clemson profs who took me to the show where I was happy to see people running to get the good seats.



Turns out all the seats were good seats.



I totally admit to stalking this guy on account of his jacket.



I was redonkulously fascinated and after the Q & A...



I got my man.



Turns out this guy's dad played on the Manhattan High School basketball team in 1976 and that this was his warm up jacket. Aww.


Thanks a million to the way intelligent Clemson profs for taking excellent care of me before, during and after the show. And all joking aside, the crowd really seemed to take to the film and the Q & A was a lively one. I never get tired of people telling me they've connected to my work and I don't think I ever will. It's an interesting experience (and a humbling one) that my story sometimes makes people cry.





Day five: I rose early for the drive to Columbia, SC.

An advertisement I saw on the way but did not get a picture of on account of the fact I was driving, probably way too fast: a Confederate flag stuck in a giant BBQ sandwich. Hmm. No words for that, really.

Columbia, SC. The state capital.


The Nickelodeon Theater.



Larry Hembree, Nickelodeon Theater Executive Director. Larry's got an amazing thing going in Columbia with the Nick. He really works hard to bring movies you wouldn't expect to see in the South to the South. I was sad I was going to miss his midnight showing of WAITING FOR GUFFMAN. Larry, keep up the good work and enjoy your new digs (the Columbia Film Society/Nickelodeon Theatre recently bought a circa 1936 Art Deco theater in downtown Columbia and is renovating it).


This here's the old new Nick.


This is how I felt after the screening in Columbia. I felt Wow.


Day six: by 6:30am I'm on the road to Beaufort, SC. I'm meeting Carol Tuynman, President of the Arts Council of Beaufort County, who will be taking me to screen the film for the Bluffton High School Film Institute at 11:30am. Yowza. Should not have stayed out till 1am the night before.

The Army recruiting station at Bluffton High School. This is a normal thing, I guess.

Film crowd at BHS. (Note: the crowd got bigger after I took this shot; for a Friday afternoon at 3pm I think they did an amazing job sticking with the movie.)

The lovely Carol and her large salad before my screening at the most awesomely named school in the world: The Technical College of the Lowcountry (of which I managed not to snag a single picture).

Beaufort was very special for a couple of reasons.
The screening was fantastic and the crowd was one of the warmest I've ever had.

Also, Beaufort was beautiful.

And I was put up in the magnificent guesthouse of Lesley Hendricks, former Arts Council president. (Dear Lesley, though I did not get a chance to meet you, I would like to say thank you very much for allowing me to stay in your lovely guest home. Sincerely, Tara Wray.)

And my boyfriend, Josh Melrod, joined me.

He really took to this giant pig.

Goodbye, Beaufort, my sweet.

Day seven & eight: Rested on the 7th (obviously) and traveled to Orangeburg, SC on the 8th. Along the way, Josh and I stopped for an awesome lunch of cheeseburgers...

and grilled pimento cheese sandwiches.

Continuing on. This was the screening venue on the South Carolina State University campus in Orangeburg.

A building being fixed up on the SCSU campus.

The early crowd. We wound up with I'd say at least forty viewers. Many thanks, Ellen, for putting together the show!

Day eight: Asheville, NC. Sweet.

Innards of the Fine Arts Theater. Special thanks to Alison Watson, Executive Director of The Media Arts Project and Neal Reed, manager of Fine Arts, for putting together the show.
Whew.
Southern Circuit, you were amazing (huge thanks to David Dombrosky and Susan Leonard). To all the wonderful people I met along the way: I hope our paths cross again. And help keep the MANHATTAN, KANSAS ball rolling: post your review of the film on imdb.com; become our friend on MySpace; tell your friends, family, mental health care providers about this film; in other words, please keep in touch.

All best,
Tara Wray

http://lbthunderponyproductions.com/





As seen on the back of a car in SC.