• Val et ses maris.Val et ses maris.Val et ses maris.Val et ses maris.Val et ses maris.Val et ses maris.


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  • UCLA to honor the integrity and ability of actor Don Murray

    In the days when studios called the shots, he focused on his independence. 'An evening with Don Murray' celebrates the 83-year-old Oscar nominee.

    March 07, 2014|By Susan King, Los Angeles Times
     
     
     

    Don Murray is a man of convictions.

    When he was 19 and working as an usher at CBS in New York City for $17 a week while attending the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, Murray turned down an offer to sign a contract with Universal for a whopping $150 a week.


    FOR THE RECORD:
    Don Murray: An article in the March 7 Calendar section about a UCLA film event honoring actor Don Murray gave the actor's age as 83. He is 84.

    "They could put you in whatever picture they wanted," explained the genial actor, 83, over the phone recently from his home in Santa Barbara. And he nearly walked away again several years later when 20th Century Fox wanted him to sign a long-term contract after he was cast in his film debut as Marilyn Monroe's love interest in the 1956 William Inge comedy "Bus Stop."

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    Though the studio initially told Murray "you can't do the role" if he didn't sign,  the Fox executives ended up negotiating with the young actor, who had been a conscientious objector during the Korean War. He would make two films a year for the studio for six years and would be allowed time off if a Broadway play piqued his interest.

    • Don Murray, 83, will be lauded Friday with screenings by the UCLA Film & Television Archive.
    Don Murray, 83, will be lauded Friday with screenings by the UCLA Film &… (Anne Cusack / Los Angeles…)
     
     

    "I ended up buying out my contract before my six years were up because I wanted to do 'The Hoodlum Priest,' which I wrote, produced and played a leading role," he said of the 1961 film drama.

    Film scholar Foster Hirsch noted that Murray had a truly independent spirit.

    "He didn't play the game in the studio age. ...," Hirsch said. "He never did get typecast and had great versatility."

    Still, Hirsch said, Murray's choices were not always critically or commercially successful, so he didn't become a household name like his peers including Paul Newman and Steve McQueen.

    VIRTUAL TOUR: Don Murray's star on the Walk of Fame

    Shannon Kelley, UCLA Film & Television Archive's head of public programs, said Murray's characters often have a Shakespearean sensibility. "He is often left morally isolated and bereft, but at the same time there is the tragic nobility to his characters."

    On Friday evening, the UCLA archive will pay tribute to the actor, who was Oscar-nominated for "Bus Stop" for his enchanting turned as Bo, a young wild rodeo cowboy who falls head over heels for a chanteuse (Monroe).

    Over the years, Murray has  starred in such films as 1957's "Bachelor Party," 1981's "Endless Love" and 1985's "Peggy Sue Got Married." He also played Sid Fairgate from 1979-81 on CBS' "Knots Landing."

    "An Evening With Don Murray" at the Billy Wilder Theater will feature the actor in conversation with Hirsch as well as screenings of the 1955 "Philco Television Playhouse" production of "A Man is Ten Feet Tall," which also stars a young Sidney Poitier, and director Fred Zinnemann's 1957 "A Hatful of Rain," based on the hit Broadway play by Michael V. Gazzo.

    The play and the film were controversial at the time because the drama explored drug addiction in soldiers returning from the Korean War. Murray plays Johnny, a Korean War vet who returns to his wife in New York City with a dependency on the morphine he had been given for an injury. Eva Marie Saint stars as his wife and Anthony Franciosa plays his brother, Polo.

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    Fox's head of production, Buddy Adler, informed Murray while he was making "Bus Stop" for director Joshua Logan that he had bought "Hatful of Rain"' for him so he could play "the comedy part" of Polo, Murray said.

    But Murray didn't want to be typecast, especially that early his career. He wanted to play the addict.

    So when the actor learned Zinnemann ("From Here to Eternity," "High Noon') was signed to do "Hatful of Rain," he visited the veteran filmmaker and convinced him to give him the part of Johnny.

    He took on an even more complex role — that of a closeted Ohio senator who is being blackmailed — in Otto Preminger's 1962 political drama, "Advise & Consent."

    Murray didn't have any trepidation playing the part. "I went in to meet with Preminger, and he asked me if I would be reluctant, as some stars had turned it down," Murray said. "He said, 'Do you think that playing a homosexual will hurt your career?' "

    The actor reminded Preminger that he played a brutal Nazi commander of a POW camp in 1953's "Stalag 17."

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    "I said, 'Do you think playing a Nazi hurt your career?' And he said, 'Being a Nazi didn't hurt my career.' He was talking about his reputation for being such a dictatorial director on the set."

    But there was clearly a risk involved for Murray.

    "Actors didn't want to be branded in those days," Hirsch said. "Let's be honest, it's still a factor. He wasn't the first choice, but he was the absolute right choice."

    susan.king@latimes.com

    Source:http://articles.latimes.com/2014/mar/07/entertainment/la-et-mn-don-murray-20140307


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  • The ‘Bubble of Love’ tour continues

    On October 3, 2013, in Latest News, by The Somerville Times
     
     
     

    Actor/author Paul Carafotes offers a new labor of love
    *

    Paul and Charlie Carafotes have been helpful, loving and kind, spreading the positive messages embodied in “The Adventures of Charlie Bubbles” and its successor, “Charlie Bubbles 2 Smartsville!”

    Paul and Charlie Carafotes have been helpful, loving and kind, spreading the positive messages embodied in “The Adventures of Charlie Bubbles” and its successor, “Charlie Bubbles 2 Smartsville!”

    By Jim Clark

    Somerville native son Paul Carafotes has been on a mission over the past year. Together with his young son, Charlie, the two have been traversing the land, spreading the word and spirit espoused in the elder Carafotes’ self-penned children’s book The Adventures of Charlie Bubbles.

    The father and son duo have been visiting children’s hospitals, schools, and various other venues spreading their “Bubble of Love” message dealing with the meaning and value of friendship that is the foundation of the book. 

    Carafotes is now launching a follow-up offering, entitled Charlie Bubbles 2 Smartsville!, due for release this week.

    “This new adventure takes Charlie to Smartsville. I’m paralleling the books with my son Charlie. The concept for the original book came when he was very young, very much a baby blowing the bubbles out the window,” Carafotes explains. “Now he’s a little older. He’s now in school. He’s learning stuff from his friends.”

    Carafotes says that a NYU professor has called the new book “epic” and that there is a lot more going on in the new story. “In this story we incorporate music. Charlie is playing his bongos in his room, and a caterpillar is there dancing and grooving, and so full of joy.” Ants from Smartsville grab the caterpillar, however, and Charlie chases after them, hoping to save his friend.

    A new character, Mary the Cat, joins Charlie in his quest, as do other characters that were introduced in the first book. As Charlie and his friends find themselves in Smartsville, they soon discover that it is a joyless place. With the aid of three beetles, who Charlie joins in with in playing his bongos, “ant-emonium” ensues. The Ant Queen is pleased with by the gift that Charlie and his friends have selflessly bestowed on Smartsville, and all turns out well.

    Of course, there is more to the story than is mentioned here, but it is an indication of the wonderful imagery and depth of storytelling that is to be wished for in a good children’s book.

    “It’s a story of metamorphosis. Everyone changes, no matter how great and powerful you are,” says Carafotes. “It takes a lot of humility and you have to have love in your heart. And that’s what Charlie discovers on this trip.”

    Carafotes has dedicated the new book to the young daughter of his late friend, fellow actor James Gandolfini, who has said, “Charlie Bubbles is soon to be a classic. I’ve read it several times and I keep re-reading it. That’s a sign that something’s good and will last.”

    Carafotes & Son, taking their act on the road.

    Carafotes & Son, taking their act on the road.

    Gandolfini, who passed away earlier this year, had just become a father when the first Charlie Bubbles saga hit the shelves. “He was such an instrumental part of the book,” explains Carafotes. “He was just a dad again when I wrote the first book. And he was settling down, and getting a chance to spend more time with his family. He had already achieved everything he wanted to do in his life, certainly professionally. And he got behind the idea. He was Teddy Hiccup in the first book, and he was a loyal friend. It’s a fable about friendship and loyalty, that’s wrapped around the tenets of being helpful, loving and kind.”

    Carafotes says that Gandolfini was a big part of the whole experience, and a big proponent of taking the book to schools and hospitals and giving copies away where they might be needed.

    The author has taken the book to various institutions including Children’s Hospital, City of Hope, Cam Neely’s Cancer Center, Horizons for Homeless Children, as well as many schools across the Country.

    “This all came out of the Boston Marathon bombing tragedy. This is where it started. We were just going to do a few places here the Los Angeles area, but my being from Somerville and Boston we had to do something about that. So that prompted us to come back to Boston several times to donate a lot of books to kids in different hospitals,” Carafotes said.

    The Charlie Bubbles experience has been a uniquely rewarding one for Carafotes, who says, “I’ve been in movies and television for 30 years. I’ve starred in movies, I’ve been on hit television programs. I never got invited to Fenway Park to be on the field. The book came out, and I’m giving copies to David Ortiz and the Red Sox. That was a dream come true. My son Charlie was just beside himself.”

    More importantly, Carafotes feels that the messages delivered to kids through the Charlie Bubbles tales are especially important in these times when the issue of bullying is being tackled by parents and teachers throughout the world. “There is an antagonist in each book, and they overcome this by using the other side of it. Instead of being a bully back they use being helpful, loving and kind.”

    bubbles_2_3_web

    Carafotes considers himself fortunate that he has been able to be a full-time dad to his son. “I am involved quite a bit in his life. I coach his baseball team, I volunteer at the school, I’m very involved in what he’s doing. I’m his dad. That’s my job.”

    When his son Charlie asked him if there is going to be a third book, Carafotes said he told him, “Yes. And you’re going to write it!” A tentative concept is already in development, and is leaning towards a title like Charlie Bubbles Floats to Fenway.

    In that story, Tai the Butterfly – a character inspired by Carafotes’ friend, champion figure skater Tai Babilonia – teaches Charlie to skate, and the adventure moves forward from there.

    For now, Carafotes is enthusiastic about spreading the news about the second edition of the trilogy, Charlie Bubbles 2 Smartsville!. “It’s the ‘Bubble of Love’ tour, baby!” And that’s all that anyone needs to know to understand the value of Carafotes’ brilliant creation.

    Charlie Bubbles 2 Smartsville! will be in bookstores beginning this week, and orders can be made at the author’s website www.charliebubblesbook.com.

    Source:http://www.thesomervilletimes.com/archives/42768


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  • Paul Carafotes et Kevin Dobson.

    Avec Joey Gian

    Paul Paul Carafotes et Paul McCartney

     Avec Steve Zaillian sur le tournage de "Crime" mini série de  HBO.

    Paul(auteur et acteur) et son fils Charlie ,dans le film "The Wolves of Savin Hill".(2015)

    Couverture de script dédicacée par les acteurs de Côte Ouest pour Paul Carafotes .

     


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  • Articles parus dans des magazines français.

    Il est dommage que je n'ai pas trouvé l'intégralité.Quant au journaliste qui a rédigé le 1er article,il aurait dû se renseigner car la série n'est plus diffusée depuis quelques années,et encore moins sur la chaîne Fox Life !!

    La chaîne Fox Life a émis de 2005 à 2007 sur Canalsat, le câble et l'ADSL.

    En 2007,  Canalsat a décidé de ne plus payer suffisamment pour la diffusion de la chaîne, ce qui entraina son arrêt sur la plateforme le 4 décembre 2007.

    La chaîne perdura jusqu'au 31 décembre 2009 sur le câble et le satellite, mais la situation budgétaire de la chaîne depuis son arrêt sur Canalsat étant critique, la chaîne Fox Life a décidé à mettre la clé sous la porte.

    Côte Ouest a ensuite été diffusée sur Vivolta,de septembre 2009 à juillet 2010,à raison de 2 épisodes par jour.

     

     

    35ème anniversaire.35ème anniversaire.35ème anniversaire.


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