“We Can Make It If We Run” from Bruce Springsteen’s “Backstreets.com”
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
Danny Federici’s good friend Jon Kilik will be running the NYC marathon on November 1 to raise money for the Danny Fund. All of the proceeds will go to Danny’s doctor at Memorial Sloan Kettering, Dr. Paul Chapman, to help find a treatment and cure for Melanoma. Below is a letter from Danny’s wife; we encourage you to give if you can.
“Legends of the Marathon”
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
“Grete Waitz, of Norway won the NYC Marathon a record nine times, and she leads a roster of legends and champions honored as the “Marathoners of the Decades” as part of the celebration of the 40gh running of the NYC Marathon. The winners were chosen for their accomplishments in NY and the lasting legacy of their triumphs in the sport of long-distance running. Waitz has set world records in the 3,000 meter, 8 kilometer, 10 kilometer, 15 kilometer, 10 mile and the marathon. She was the first woman to run a marathon in under 2 hours and 30 minutes, and the first female world champion in the marathon. At the 1984 Summer Olympics in LA, she won the silver medal. SHe was honored as the women’s Marathoner of the Decade for the 1980’s. She won seven of her nine NYC Marathon crowns during that period, including five consecutive wins from 1982 to 1986. The champion runner broke the world record in her first three appearances in NY (1978-1980), and she last ran in NY in 1992, in an emotional tour of the five boroughs with her friend, the late Fred Lebow, who ran the Marathon in remission from cancer that would take his life two years later.”
“Joan Benoit-Samuelson of Freeport, Maine, broke the female course record for the Boston Marathon in 1979, then went on to set a record for both the historic New England race and the world in 1983 by running 26.2 mile marathon distance in a record 2 hours, 22 minutes, 43 seconds. Samuelson’s other achievements include winning the gold medal as part of the US team in the 1984 Summer Olympics in LA. 25 years to the day after that historic gold medal victory in the first women’s Olympic marathon, Samuelson will run in the ING NYC Marathon on Sunday, Nov 1st, setting her sights on the 50 + divison record of 2:53:53, set by S. Rae Bayiller in 1993. SHe will be competing in her fifth NYC Marathon, having finished the 2001 event in 2: 42: 56, the second fastest time in the 40+division that year. Samuelson also competed in 1988 (third, 2:32:40), 1991 (sixth, 2:33:48), and 1998 (first master at age 41, 2:41: 06). A two time Boston Marathon winner and former marathon world-record holder, Samuelson continues to compete. Grete Waitz finished a minute and a half behind Samuelson to take the silver medal.”
Deena Kastor: was born in Waltham, MA, and grew up in California. In high school, she won two California state titles in track and three in cross country. She attended the Univ of Arkansas where she won seven Southeastern Conference titles. She was inducted into the Univ of ARkansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2001. Ms. Kastor’s post-college career has included numerous successes in marathons and road races. She won a bronze medal in the 2004 Olympic marathon and won the Chicago Marathon in 2005 and the London Marathon in 2006, where she set the American record and became the fourth fastest woman ever in the marathon. In addition to holding the American record in the marathon, Ms. Kastor set new American records in the half-marathon, the 20km, 15km, the 12 km, the 10 mile, the 8km and the 10,000 meters. She is also a two time World Cross Country silver medalist, a five time USA 10,000m champion, the 2001 US marathon champion, a 5 time USA 15km champion, a seven time US 8km cross country champion and an eight time NCAA All American. She was awarded the 2003 Jesse Owens Award as the nation’s top track and field athlete and was named USATF’s Visa Humanitarian Athlete of the year in 2002. Ms Kastor married Andrew Kastor in 2003. She trains more than 100 miles per week.”
Lance Armstrong, won the Tour de France seven years in a row. He has survived testicular cancer that had spread to his brain and lungs. Lance retired from racing in 2005, but returned to competitive cycling in 2009, finishing in the 2009 Tour de France.
“NYC!!!” “Everyone is equal on race day!!!” Fred Lebow founded the NYC Marathon in 1970, with only 127 runners and 55 finishers, now nearly 40,000 will run this Sunday, November 1st. The marathon has never been about the numbers, but the heart and soul of New York City, to overcome the odds.”
Q: TO GRETE: You have won the NYC Marathon nine times! You have actually walked it once? Was it difficult walking it?
A: “It’s hard to walk fast for 7 hours. Hard to be on your toes for 5 hours.”
Q: TO JOAN: What was the greatest Marathon ever?
A: “People often ask me what I think the greatest marathon ever was, and I tell them, Greta’s run with Fred Lebow”.
Q: TO JOAN: You have finished ever road race you have started. Why have you never stopped a race?
A: “It’s important to finish what you start. When I thought I was going to have to stop a Marathon I started in Chicago a couple of years ago, I felt like a victim of a drive by shooting,I stopped by the medical booths, but I kept going after stopping, and I did finish. I put a lot of pressure on myself.” 2: 49.
Q: TO DEENA: You recently broke your foot in Bejing. You are the first woman to go under 2:20.
A: ” I completely shattered my 3rd metatarsal, and after a long and slow recovery, I was able to run the Chicago marathon a few weeks ago. I had the goals and the intentions of winning the race, and getting into a routine. I felt an urge to go to the bathroom at 5K, and at 6K, I had to veer off the course to use the facilities, I lost my pace and remained 6th place. I would never miss the New York City Marathon”
Q: TO GRETE: You had a mishap on the course/the urge to use the bathroom. Tell us about that.
A: “I’ve been through it all in NY but in 1984, I got stomach problems, and lost my focus, I thought either I have to drop out or I have to do something. I had to urinate, and I just let it go. It was embarassing, but, I won the race. I couldn’t let my stomach problems destroy my goals.
Don’t get distracted, whatever is bothering you. ”
Q: TO LANCE: “What are you doing here?
A: “I was going to be here this weekend anyway. I love these women, special women to me. I’ve had interesting experiences with the. I saw the pictures of them in a “New York Times Article”, and the pictures were huge, it was like they were there with me having coffee with me. I’m not a woman, and I’m not a marathoner, but I sort of weaseled my way in.”
Q: TO LANCE: Didn’t you and Joan run together in the NYC Marathon?”
A: “Yes, that year I had some pacers. I started out with Alberto Salazar, from mile 0 to 10, and Joan was going to run to 10 to 20 with me, but she ran the last 10 to 26.2. She realized I was in such trouble. I also ran part of the race with Moroccan runner Hicham El Gerrouj. It was very difficult.”
Q: TO LANCE: You have never iced after a Marathon?
A: The first one I ran, I didn’t train very much, and I had shin splints, I forced myself to get through it. I couldn’t walk. I had to go to Scotsdale, Arizona the next week for a speech, and I couldn’t walk. I was in the airport, and they had to get a baggage car for me. ”
Q: TO GRETE: On her experiences.
A: I had stress fractures up and down my shins, and mile 20, I had my doubts, I was angry and mad and wanted to divorce my husband who talked me in to running the marathon. My second half was faster than my first half. My best mile is 4:25.”
Q: TO JOAN: Tell us about the Marathon in 1979 in Bermuda.
A: I had gotten to the 1/2 way mark and stopped, I was asked if I wanted a ride back, but after thinking it through for about 10 minutes, I decided to make it to the finish line. My achilles were really bad, but the Boston Marathon was only a few months away. In Boston I ran by a fan and someone asked me if I wanted a Red Sox cap or a beer, I took the cap, had I taken the beer, I probably wouldn’t have finished. It was a tough Marathon, they had dropped us off 2 miles from the starting line. I ate a lot the night before, I could barely get into bed.”
Q: TO DEENA: How did Joan and Grete inspire you?
A: “I started running at eleven years old, and I remember watching the first women’s Olympic Marathon on tv, and remember being inspired by them, and a year later, I became a runner. Joan and Grete inspire me and continue to, and to hear Lance talk about the Marathon. What makes the Marathon so beautiful is that you have 45,000 people on the starting line, so culturally diverse, no socioeconomic boundaries, great cross section of people from every ethnic background.”
Q: TO LANCE: Why did you run the marathon?
A: “I was actually a swimmer first, a runner second, and a cyclist, third. Running is more efficient, easier when I was travelling, no equipment. If you are going to run a marathon, this is the one to do. I’ve run 2 NY’s and 1 Boston. The first one I ran I wanted to break 3 hours, and I think I did 2:59: 36, the next year I did 2:46, and Boston, 2:49. I still run during the off time. ”
Q: TO LANCE: Any interest in a triathalon?
A: “I look at them on tv. I’ll race another year on the road, and then maybe in next 2011, I’ll do a couple of Iron Mans. I got back on the bike. It’s tough, but worth it.”
Q: TO GRETE: How did you meet Lance?
A: “In spring 2005, after surgery, chemo, Doctors told me to take it easy, I was a couch potato for 2 months, I got an email from Lance, I decided to get off the couch, started walking and then running and gradually get my life back.
Q: TO LANCE:
A: “Mary Wittenberg had sent me a note, and I sent Grete a note. I believe that cancer is something that disrupts your life.”
A: GRETE: “I was given support to pursue my passion, to inspire other people to get off the couch. I had written a book, “Run Your First Marathon”. Running a marathon is not that hard, if you have done the homework. Hurry Slowly. You can’t get back lost training time and be patient. It’s okay if you need to be patient. It’s okay to do the run walk method. Walk like you are late for a meeting. Walk one minute every mile. A fast walk is not that much slower than a run.
Q: TO JOAN: How do you feel about the walk run racers?
A: Everyone can win a marathon to some degree. It’s important to run your own race. You can’t win anyone else’s race. If you are running a 5-6 hour Marathon, try to achieve your goals that you set for yourself. Running is very affordable and very satisfying.”
Q: TO DEENA: How do you feel about slow runners?
A: “We are all Marathoners out there, no one can wake up on Sunday afternoon and prepare for. We all woke up early, we all worked hard. There is a mutual respect on the starting line. I get nervous during training, but the race is the celebration. During the race you get to enjoy hammering it out one last time. Congratulations for even getting to the race. Enjoy the homecoming. 26.2 miles, enjoy the celebration of going through the boroughs!.
Q: TO LANCE: Thoughts on slow runners?
A: “Same with cycling, there are 5 to 10,000 riders, the slower are the majority, and in the Marathon of 40,000 people, not everyone is not running 2:30, the majority of people are slow, and the majority rules.”
Q: TO LANCE: What do you think about when you are running?
A: “I don’t get a lot of thinking done when I run. It’s a lot shorter than cycling. If I only run for an hour or so. When I am cycling, I ride for 8 hours. That is a lot of therapy. I don’t talk to anyone, I don’t read anything. It’s very very different, I never found that place while I was running.”
Q: TO DEENA: What do you think about while you are running?
A: “Training and racing are different. In training, I’ll think about my to do list for the first couple of miles, and then I’ll focus on what I am actually doing. In Chicago I was pretty narrow minded. Once the race comes around, I think about how hard I have worked for this, and what I have done in the previous months. Keep pushing through. It doesn’t matter if you are running 6 hours or 2:30, you are out there and are pushing the limits. Do what your body can do. My coach in Chicago told me, today is the day you can define yourself.”
Q: TO JOAN: What do you think about while running?
A: “I just really wanted to get to the starting line. I believed there wasn’t anybody out there. I new once I crossed that distance of 17 miles, and at 20 miles I was running out of gas. I thought my efforts in the trials would send a message to my competitors. My mantra was, ‘last will come first, and first will come last.’ The trials were the biggest race of my life. ”
Q: TO DEENA: Who do you train with?
A: Terrance Mahon, running coach, Chris LeDoux, from the Iron Man/Kona, Ryan Hall, American long distance runner, Anna Willard, American middle distance runner, Josh Cox, fastest marathon on a treadmill. Running has benefit feeling solitude or being very social. In California, the elevation is at 8,000 ft.
Q: TO LANCE: Do you get nervous?
A: I was in Leadville, CO, for the 100 mile off road mountain biking and was so excited. I liked the fact that I was there, I was uncertain of how I was going to do it, but it was a new experience.”
Other comments:
“Butterflies are there for everyone. I get nervous about being trampled. This is the time to show what I have been working for, it is tough mentally, have a good support team. Keep working on it. In life there are pumps and drains, expose yourself to as many pumps that you can. Don’t forget that 20 miles is 1/2 way. And the extra .2 is a long way. There are other finish lines to get to. Never stop dreaming, and pursuing those finish lines. When you wake up follow normal habits as closely as possible. There are no secrets, no shortcuts, training is hard work. Pace yourself. Miracles don’t happen overnight. Drink heavily after the race :), Let body recover, Let your muscles repair afterwards. Don’t train hard until 2 weeks afterwards. You will need time to get the lactic acid out. It will take your body one day per mile of the marathon to recover. Consider the first 20 miles as transport, and then start running.”
Bogle on Kazan
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
Donald Bogle: Most notable Black Historian, NYU and University of Pennsylvania film professor, and author, speaks about world reknown film and theatre director Elia Kazan. During Kazan’s career, he won three Academy Awards, four Golden Globes, and five Tony awards. His most notable films: “Gentleman’s Agreement”, “On the Waterfront”, “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn”, “East of Eden”, and “A Streetcar Named Desire”.
Donald Bogle: Author: “”Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies and Bucks: An Interpretative History of Blacks in Films”, “Brown Sugar: Eighty Years of America’s Black Female Superstars”, “Blacks in American Film and Television”, “Biography of actress Dorothy Dandridge”, “Primetime Blues”, “Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood”.
Bogle on Kazan: Kazan’s “Pinky”, starred Ethel Waters, Ethel Barrymore, Jeanne Crain, and was a 1949 landmark in the history of images. In 1949 many motion pictures dealt with race, dilemma, and African Americans, ie. Mark Robson’s, “Home of the Brave”, addressed racism in Military, while Kazan’s “Pinky” looked at racism in the deep South.
“Pinky” is about a young woman who struggles to come to grips with her race. Most African Americans during the 30’s and 40’s mostly had supporting roles, rigidly stereotyped roles. They performed funny lines, comic antics, or supported the stars. They came on as entertainers, dancers, would do one spectacular number. The film, “The Imitation of Life”, told the struggle of a light skinned black woman, however, much changed after World War 2 filmmakers tackled more adult themes.”
“Kazan was not the original director of “Pinky”. Darryl Zanuck actually hired John Ford to direct the film, however, Ethel Waters, Pinky’s granny in the film, and famous blues singer, known for singing, “Stormy Weather”, and “Am I Blue”, clashed with Ford. Kazan was then asked to travel out to the West Coast to direct the film. He went not knowing what he was getting himself into. Kazan looked at Ford’s footage, and said he wouldn’t use any of it. Kazan felt that Ethel Waters wasn’t the problem, it was just that she had to be treated as though she were intelligent and as though she had talent.”
“Kazan did have a difficult time working with Jeanne Craine, however.” She was a Caucasian actress playing a black woman, involved in an interracial love story, where she was involved with a Caucasian male.”
“When ‘Pinky’ was released it did well, but it didn’t get the Oscars like “Gentleman’s Agreement”, although, Jeanne Crain, Ethel Barrymore, and Ethel Waters were all nominated.”
Interview with French Film Director, Phillipe Seclier/ “An American Journey”/ Photographer Robert Frank
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
“An American Journey: Revisiting Robert Frank’s ‘The Americans'”: Opens at “The Film Forum” on Wednesday, September 30.
“Coco avant Chanel”
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
Michael Barker, co-president and co-founder of “Sony Pictures Classic” thanked Tom Bernard for 18 years of existence. Michael stated, “I don’t think we’ve had such a well dressed crowd. I would like to mention a few people behind the scene, an individual who is important to French film. Producer, Philippe Carcassonne. We worked together 20 years ago and it is great to be back together with him, Anne Fontaine, and Audrey Tautou. There is a strong support system within French Film where with every film, the director gets better and better. Anne Fontaine is one of those directors.”
“Cold Souls” Interview with Paul Giamatti and Director, Sophie Barthes
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
“Cold Souls”, a dark comedy with a philosophical and metaphysical twist, is written and directed by Filmmaker Magazine’s “25 New Faces of Independent Film”, Sophie Barthes, and stars well-trained and comedic actor, Paul Giamatti and David Strathairn.
“It Might Get Loud” Up Close with Jimmy Page, “U2’s” “The Edge”, and Jack White, “White Stripes”/”The Raconteurs”
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
What happens when three diverse, yet influential electric guitar virtuosos, from ages spanning across three generations, meet for the first time at length to discuss and tour their hometowns, upbringings, how their bands formed, political instability and social setbacks, their methods to their musical madness, and living room like jam sessions?
On Jan 23, 2008, self taught guitarist, producer, composer, and founder of Led Zeppelin, Jimmy Page, known for his bow, slide guitar, eastern scales, acoustic guitar, double neck in addition to inventive recording techniques, David Howell Evans, /U2’s “The Edge”, originally from Barking, London 8/8/61, moved to Dublin, Ireland when he was one, went to school at Mount Temple, where he met Bono, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, when he answered an ad on the school’s bulletin board, later formed U2 in 1978, and is known for his crystalline minimalist guitar playing, making use of repeat echo/original and distinctive guitar styles in Rock and Roll History, and Jack White from the “White Stripes”/with his sister Meg, display their love of Delta blues, and punk with influences from Buzzcocks, Sid Vicious, Ramones, Son House, and Spinal Tap in their albums “Elephant”, “Get Behind Me Satan”, “Icky Thump”, and who later went on to form “The Raconteurs” talk and play in an intimate living room like movie set/recording studio, the result, new rockumentary by Director, Davis Guggenheim, “It Might Get Loud”.
The film begins with Jack White in a country farmhouse making a homemade guitar while stating, “Who needs to buy a guitar?”
Q: Jack White: “What do you think will happen when the three of you, Jimmy Page, The Edge and you meet?
A: Jack White: “Probably a fist fight.”
Jimmy Page admitted the guitar is like a woman, that he caresses it like a woman, while The Edge discusses how he drives everyone crazy, even driving himself , to get the right sound.”
Director: Davis Guggenheim
Director and exec producer “An Inconvenient Truth”, “Gracie”, “Deadwood”, “The Unit”, “The Shield”, “Alias”, “24”, “NYPD Blue”, “ER, and “Party of Five”. His latest, “It Might Get Loud”, premiered at The Toronto Film Festival 2008.
Q: How did you choose, Jimmy Page, Edge and Jack White?
A: “We sat down and picked guitarists. They were our first choices. We never thought we would get Jimmy Page. I met with Burnstein in New York, who said, “these guys never say yes”. I flew to London, met with Jimmy Page, who said, “Yes, sure.”
I’m a big believer in timing, and I think this was the right timing, right point in his life.”
Q: Did you want any other guitarists?
A: “We didn’t want any one else, those were the three. We wanted 3 guitarists who not only can play guitar, but who can talk about it also.”
Q: Would you get the same movie if you used Eric Clapton, Eddie Van Halen, and Slash?
A: “No, but it’s intuitive, I go by instinct. Jimmy Page has a spirit about him, he is still searching, trying to find his voice.”
“The Edge is a scientist, a madman behind the electronics, an artist. When I see him in concert, I am amazed at the scientist turned artist.”
Comment: Bob/Atlantic Records/worked with Led Zeppelin: “Jimmy Page rarely articulates in the way he did in the film. He wanted to talk about what all those records meant to him.”
Director: Davis
Q: How did you go about recording?
A: “I didn’t set the stage, I didn’t know what I wanted. No rock historians, no exgirlfriends in the film. I have hours of recordings of the three of them playing together. I have them playing “Kashmir” and “Bullet the Blue Sky” (not used in the film).
Q: What made you end with “The Wait”.
A: ” I wanted to hear acoustic, and “The Last Waltz” was one of my favorite movies.”
Q: Was there an intimate chemistry between them? Did you need an icebreaker?
A: “I called it a summit”. A musical summit. It took them so long to get them together to get the dates right. I didn’t want them to see each other. They were uneasy for the first two hours, until Edge asked Jimmy to play “Whole Lotta Love.”, and I told the cameraman to start filming. Their styles couldn’t be more different. U2 plays to click track, Jimmy Page plays 20 minute solo’s whatever he wants.”
Q: Favorite moments from the film?
A: “There are so many. We were filming in Jimmy Page’s home outside London, which he has never allowed before, and he starts pulling out his favorite albums and playing them for us. These are the records that he listened to and learned from as a young musician. Just watching him listen to the records was incredible and then he started playing air guitar.
We were filming Jack in Austin, TX and he’s playing this out of control guitar solo. Through the lens, I start realizing that he’s so focused and playing so aggressively that his hand is bleeding without him even knowing it.
Or Edge taking us to the classroom where he and U2 first met and rehearsed when they were 16 and 17 years old. This was just a regular high school classroom, they would meet for practice and spend the first ten minutes clearing all the desks to the sides before they could actually play.
In Tennessee, I asked Jack to write an original song on camera and he did it, right in front of us, I don’t think I have ever seen that before.
Another time, Jimmy played us previews of two new tracks he was writing, both of which actually ended up in the movie.
Q: What was the most challenging part of shooting the film?
A: “The most challenging part of the project was weaving these three stories together. Each guitarist comes from a different generation, has different roots, different theories, sometimes in direct conflict of one another. I had a hunch that inter cutting their stories would be really interesting, but was panicked at times, worried that it would never work.”
Q: “What do you hope audiences will experience while watching the film?”
A: “I hope the audience will fall in love with these guys as much as I did. Not just as rock stars, that part is easy, but as individuals and artists who turned their individual life experiences into music, beautiful, raw, in your face, visceral, and transcedent. And I hope that audiences feel a touch of that child like excitement that Thomas sparked in me, that first day we sat down.”
“The Limits of Control” Interview with Director Jim Jarmusch
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
“Limits of Control” reminded me slightly of “Coffee and Cigarettes”, only with two espressos (separate cups), matchbooks, and wooden string instruments, set in Spain. The film opens with the quote, “as I descend down impassable rivers, I no longer feel guided by the ferryman”, and very little dialogue thereafter. “Usted habla espanol?”, and “whenever someone thinks he is bigger than the rest of us, he must go to the cemetary”, are repeatedly stated throughout the journey of a mild mannered mysterious man in a well tailored gray suit.
Red Carpet and Interview with Spike Lee, for “Kobe Doing Work”
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
ANTONIO PIERCE: Linebacker for the New York Giants:
“Burning Down The House: The Story of CBGB” 4/24/09
August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment
The happy and proud director, Mandy Stein, dedicated “Burning Down The House: The Story of CBGB” to her mother, and manager of “The Ramones”, Linda Stein, as she stated, “it would have been her birthday today”. (Linda was murdered October 30, 2007 in her home)