TELL-TALE & ME IN BRAZIL (Virtually)

Daily On-line Screenings of “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” at Rio de Janeiro’s Rock Horror Film Festival Sept 17 – 27

Full schedule of daily screening times below

I’ll take part in 6 (count ’em, six!) on-line film panels

Full schedule of the panels I’m part of below

(Click here to go to the Rock Horror Film Festival Homepage)

Up third in the quartet of September Festivals presenting my musical short film of Edgar Allan Poe’s classic “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” on-line, Rock Horror Film Festival will be screening the “bizarre featurette” at a different time each day between September 17 and 27.

Like every other festival this year, Rock Horror Film Festival had to rethink their plans in the face of Covid 19. What was originally going to be a traditional in-person movie theater festival in Rio de Janeiro in August is now an on-line festival in September.

This has allowed them to put together an impressive program of films presented in alternating time blocks every day. So depending on the day, you could see my film afternoon, evening or midnight or dawn … I’ll post Tell-Tale’s complete screening schedule below.

Moreover the festival has put together a dizzying array of panel discussions. There are panels in English, in Portuguese and in Spanish. I am participating in six English language panel discussion, with filmmakers taking part from all over the planet. It should be exciting, fun and informative. I’ll post that schedule below too.

But first…

Rock Horror Film Festival asked the directors of selected films to send them a one-minute video message to share.

This is what I concocted with my cell phone:

You can also find the video on the Rock Horror directors’ intros video wall:

There you can watch my clip with Portuguese subtitles and the Rock Horror outro:

Be sure to stick around til the end…

Tell-Tale Screening Dates and Times:

Above is the program of six films, of which “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” makes the conclusion, that will be shown together at the following dates and times (noting that Rio is one hour ahead of NYC).

9/17 – 3pm EDT (4pm BRT)

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Tell-Tale at the Orlando International Film Festival

Another Chance to Watch “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre”

The Orlando International Film Festival is the second of four film festivals this month to make my short film “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” available to the viewing public through an on-line portal.

To watch the musical adaptation of the classic Edgar Allan Poe gothic horror story, starting today through September 15, click on through to the Orlando International Film Festival homepage:

Then scroll down until you can click on “Virtual Festival” (the green button at bottom right):

Once there, scroll down to Shorts, then hover over the far right film, Ramona, so that the “Shorts – Horror/Suspense/Thriller/Mystery/Fantasy/Comedy” option appears:

Click on “Learn more” to get here, and scroll down the internal menu center right until you find “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” (it was the sixth one down when I tried):

Et voila! You can click to watch the trailer, as shown below, and order a ticket to watch. Or even give it as a gift. 🙂

You can also buy passes at various price and access levels to watch multiple festival films virtually at a discount – click on the “buy tickets” button on bottom of the homepage to explore your options.

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ANNOUNCING THE NEXT POE MUSICABRE!

On my Zoom call with Indiedance’s Craig Bettendorf

While accepting two Tell-Tale awards from Indiedance!

So, no more being coy, enough with dropping hints or announcing I will be making an announcement, as I have now and then for many months, let’s just make it official:

There will be another Poe musicabre, a companion piece to “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre“, another short film musical adaptation of a classic Edgar Allan Poe short story.

And this time it will be…

“The Pit and the Pendulum – a musicabre”!

Indiedance Film Festival recorded a zoom interview with me during which I basically let the cat out of the bag (or out of the bricked up wall, if you prefer Poe inspired metaphors).

They just posted that interview on their vimeo wall, and since we spend almost as much time during the interview talking about my current efforts preparing for “The Pit and the Pendulum – a musicabre” as we do talking about “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre”, I figure the time has come to just go ahead and make the official announcement in conjunction with this blog post sharing the full interview video:

Indiedance utilized these zoom interviews as a way to announce a film’s award wins at their 2020 festival. Which means filmmakers knew going in their film had won something, but not what. Tell-Tale’s awards for Horror Short and Music Score are announced in the video above, but I also posted about it the day I’d originally found out.

So watch the video (or click back to that earlier post) to partake in that news, as well as more on the making of “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre”, on preparing “The Pit and the Pendulum – a musicabre”, plus my thanks to the Tell-Tale gang, including my dearly murdered husband, and the uncertainties of preparing to shoot an indie film in a Covid 19 world. Lots of fun and informative tidbits in a handful of minutes.

And I promise to be back with more news and anecdotes about both Poe musicabres, the one that is and the one to be…

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Diana Rigg and the 3rd Happy Song for Dark Times

I just learned that Diana Rigg passed. Rest in Peace, Diana Rigg.

Diana Rigg was probably my first childhood celebrity crush. I likely first loved Julie Andrews as Mary Poppins the way tots love their nannies, but I had my first boyhood heart flutterings for Diana Rigg in “The Avengers”.

That she and my mom could have been mistaken for sisters in those days probably contributed to my affections. But my mom didn’t wear leather cat suits and execute karate chops. Paging Doctor Freud.

I loved watching Diana Rigg and Patrick Magee in “The Avengers”. I avidly followed their wacky 1960s spy spoof adventures on German TV, where the show was called “Mit Schirm, Charme und Melone”, which has a fun ring in German, but translates literally rather awkwardly to “With Umbrella, Charm and Bowler Hat”.

Rigg was arguably the best Bond Girl in the most maligned Bond film “On Her Majesty’s Secret Service”. I saw it in a rerun theater when I was 12 and was stunned when she – spoiler alerts – marries Bond; and then was abjectly bummed out at her shocking death right before the end credits.

Avengers and Bond may be her most lasting claims to fame, but she has had a grand career on stage and screen. Her Medea on Broadway remains my favorite production of the Greek tragedy. And her formidable presence in “Game of Thrones” sublimely bookends her legend.

To console myself at her loss I will play – multiple times today, surely – another one of my Happy Songs for Dark Times, the Theme Song for The Avengers by the Laurie Johnson Orchestra, another one of those great 1960s big band grooves. It’s not quite as giddy as the Miss Marple Theme, another 1960s franchise theme that still unfailingly makes me happy (fond childhood memories obviously being a factor – those 1960s theme greats were ubiquitous growing up in 1970’s Germany), but boy is it suave, sexy and good fun, just like Diana Rigg and Patrick Magee in The Avengers.

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So last night I received the JUDY GARLAND AWARD

The Tell-Tale trailer being shown during the Zoom awards ceremony

I could say I’m over the moon…

… actually, I’m over the rainbow

Cindy Mich, holding up a trophy

Last night the Art is Alive Film Festival held its awards ceremony.

Just like the festival, it was a virtual affair. Cindy Mich, festival founder, convened a Zoom meeting which most of the nominees in all categories joined.

The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” was nominated in two categories. The first being Best Special Interest Film, which Cindy described as including any film that didn’t fall into a traditional drama or comedy category. My gothic musical was joined by a documentary and an animated film, for example.

The second nomination was for Best Musical Score. This year, Cindy announced, that category would be named, in honor of one of her favorite performers, the Judy Garland Award.

If I was going to win one of these awards, I knew which one that should be… after all, I’m old enough to remember gay men referring to themselves as Friends of Dorothy.

(Do I need to explain that Judy Garland played Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, and that once was a seminal movie in young queer men’s developments? And Judy Garland was a major gay icon, so much so that her death is credited with helping spark the Stonewall riots? I don’t know if any of that still resonates with the younger generations.)

The Award for Best Special Interest Film was the first to be presented, which included a Zoom introduction and interview of each film’s nominees by Cindy, and the playing of their trailers.

You can see a screenshot of the Tell-Tale trailer above, as well as screenshots of a partial gallery views of the Zoom meeting (there were so many participants, their screens spread over two pages, but the two screengrabs are from the first page at various times during the evening).

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INDIEDANCE AWARDS

“The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” wins two awards from Indiedance Film Festival 2020

Yesterday I was informed via a recorded zoom call that Indiedance film Festival 2020 awarded “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” with a Gold Award for Horror Short and a Silver Award for Music Score.

Indiedance will post the videos of their announcement and their interviews with all the winners including yours truly soon and I’ll link to that then. For now, here are some screen shots from their website:

Sweet! Kinda makes me feel like dancing!

(A look at the on-set monitor during the Tell-Tale shoot)

ALSO… just before posting this I got notice that the judges from Art is Alive Film Festival have nominated “The Tell-Tale-Heart – a musicabre” in two categories: Best Special Interest Film and Best Musical Soundtrack.

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TELL-TALE TONIGHT!

SOMETHING THAT’S THRILLING

SOMETHING THAT’S CHILLING

SOMETHING TO STILL YOUR HEART

A MUSICABRE TONIGHT!

8:15PM EST – ON-LINE SCREENING OF

THE TELL-TALE HEART – A MUSICABRE

FOLLOWED BY A Q&A WITH YOURS TRULY!

HOSTED BY ART IS ALIVE FILM FESTIVAL

MORE INFO AND TICKETS HERE!

THIS IS THE FIRST OF FOUR FESTIVALS SHOWING “THE TELL-TALE HEART – A MUSICABRE ON-LINE THIS MONTH.

READ ALL ABOUT THAT HERE!

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Art is Alive Actor Workshop

Danny Ashkenasi

Thursday, Sep 3 – 6pm – 7pm CDT (7pm – 8pm EST)

Silverspot Cinema (Brookfield, WI) 320 Market Street, Brookfield, WI 53045

I will be taking part in an Actor Workshop with the actor Michael Gentile, moderated by Cindy Mich, founder of the Art is Alive Film Festival.

Michael and Cindy will be present in person in the Silverspot Cinema just outside Milwaukee. I will be patched in via the wonders of the internet.

Tickets may be purchased here.

Not sure if this panel discussion will be broadcast on-line, or if you need to be at the Silverspot Cinema to partake. For now it appears to be the latter. I’ll update this post when I know more.

According to plan, we will have a round table discussion on the following three areas:

Improv – The New Tool for Acting Improvements
Surviving the Struggle: Staying Employed and Engaged in 2020
Strengthening the Relationships Between Filmmakers and Fine Actors

But who knows, maybe I’ll also tell some juicy anecdote from the Tell-Tale set, like the day I murdered my husband… 😉

UPDATE: Panel has been done; it was fun. Cindy said she’ll send me a video of it; so I hope to share that on the blog in the future.

Michael Gentile
Cindy Mich

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SEPTEMBER FESTIVALS

Four Festivals Feature ‘THE TELL-TALE HEART” this month

Covid 19 has done a number on the film festival circuit, effecting many festivals that had been scheduled to screen “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” earlier this year. There have been postponements and cancellations and switching from the traditional theater format to on-line screenings.

The good news for you, dear reader, though is that on-line festivals are rather conveniently accessed from the comfort of your home. And it so happens that this September there will be four festivals sponsoring online screenings of my short film musical adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” (happy recipient of over 40 awards already). I will be doing some online Q&As as well as panels/workshops. It’s going to be a busy month.

I will post more details on each individual festival later, but for now, here’s a quick rundown of the September festivals featuring me and my musicabre:

Art is Alive Film Festival – Sep 2-6

“The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” will screen online this Friday, September 4, at 8:15 EDT (7:15 CDT) followed by a Q&A with me.

Click here for the Event Page.

One day before that, Thursday, September 3, I will take part in an Actor Workshop . 7pm EDT (6pm CDT).

Click here for the Event Page.

Click here to get tickets.

Orlando International Film Festival – Sep 15-25

The Orlando International Film Festival is screening some feature films in a physical theater, but most of their selection, including the short films of which “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” is one, will be screened online.

Information on the on-line screenings is still forthcoming. Check their website or this blog for more info.

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BLACK LIVES MATTER MURALS in MADISON, WISCONSIN

Black Lives Matter Art in State Street and Environs, Madison, WI

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GRAND ARMY FOUNTAIN

Statues Splashed in Water and Light

I have already posted pictures of what I called The Lovers of Grand Army Plaza. But those spring pics are few and overcast compared to these sun drenched shots I took over several days this summer. So today I’ll post more from the fountain at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, with the understanding that sometimes more is more.

The central couple of the art deco fountain are meant to represent Wisdom and Felicity.

One approaches the fountain from the south through the arch of Grand Army Plaza, which itself faces the entrance into Brooklyn’s Prospect Park. The arch was built to commemorate the preservation of the union after the Civil War. Union Street leads right to it, rising up through Park Slope.

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48 FINAL DAYS OF OUTDOOR MEMORY ESCAPES

All Things Come to an End, if not this Pandemic (yet)

I’ve continued posting the awkwardly named Daily Outdoor Memory Escapes far longer than I thought I would. Arguably the pandemic is worse in the whole of the USA than it was when I posted my first Outdoor Memory, locked down in our home in Brooklyn. New York has so far weathered the worst of the storm, and along with New England is now managing to manage Coronavirus more like Europe, unlike the rest of the States, which are mostly in Covid disarray.

So it would be a good reason to stay put where it’s safer rather than travel in the country. But we have our reasons for travel – by car, not plane – and we have our masks, and our hand sanitizers, and our social distancing. And so new outdoor memories are being made. And collected here are the final 48 of the 128 Daily Outdoor Memory Escapes I posted, with the first two installments located here and here.

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #81:

Taking a boat ride into one of the falls of Iguaçu

(not what you would do if you want to avoid aerosolization)

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #82:

A selfie with Ed, many winters ago in Vermont

(Vermont would have required us to quarantine for 2 weeks, if we had visited when I posted this.)

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #83:

Spreewald – Spree Forest, Germany

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #84:

Another Spreewald pic, as I wonder when we’ll ever be able to return to Germany again…

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #85:

One final Spreewald pic, not only because the thought of visiting it anytime soon is a dead ender, but because the canals there have regular dead end street signs too.

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #86:

Grand Canyon – Bright Angel Trail

Daily Outdoor Memory Escape #87:

Grand Canyon – South Rim

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BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN REOPENED

After 5 months locked out, a return to the gardens

Last March, on the weekend where Broadway was already shut down and schools were cancelling performances and assemblies, but the rest of the city was still open for a few more days, Ed and I went to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden while we still could. There were many people there, but it was possible to keep six feet distance from another, which the public was already mostly practicing. Two days later the gyms and bars and restaurants and museums and the botanic gardens closed, and the full city wide quarantine was enforced the following Sunday.

Nearly five months later, as New York slowly moves through phases of incremental opening, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden is finally unlocking its gates. Last weekend BBG members could visit. The general public is welcome starting this weekend. However, advance timed-entry tickets are required, which will limit how many people are in the gardens at any one time.

Ed and I being members, we visited last Saturday, and found we had much of the park nearly to ourselves. In addition to reduced admittance, warning signs and one-way markers and the cordoning off of narrow paths attested to the brave new world of Covid we live in. Also, unsurprisingly, indoor areas including the café, shop, library, and conservatory remain closed.

On the plus side of novelty, several sections of the gardens that were still being redeveloped in March are now finally on view. August may not be the most colorful season in the garden – the cherry blossom, tulip and rose seasons passed unseen by the public this year due to the lockdown – but the beautifully landscaped new areas can now be shared and promise to grow even more delightful in years to come. These photos were taken by both Ed and me.

The Brooklyn Museum of Art as seen from the garden.
Hmmm, the biggest Giant Snowflake I know is orange… and in DC….
Sweet Pepper Bush

The Sweet Pepper Bush is just one in many new plants at the garden that have a unique and delightful scent. We decided to order some for our own front porch.

However the Fragrance Garden, traditionally planted with flowers and plants that encourage visitors, particularly the vision-impaired, to touch as well as smell, has had all its plants removed, presumably because its main use in these times was deemed too unsafe.

Ed, genuflecting before his True God
This is the picture Ed took during his devotional
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TELL-TALE RUNNER UP

An Acting “Silver Medal”

I’m happy to report that I won Runner Up Best Actor of Year 2020 from Flicks Film Festival for my performance in “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre“.

I’ve already posted about the Flicks Film Festival giving me an acting award in November 2019 and the long and winding road that led to me finding out about it.

This month the festival announced the semi-finalists and the finalists and finally the winners for the year on their facebook page.

Like every other festival this year, Covid 19 seriously effected how they would proceed:

So, July 14 the full list for the Best of the Year 2020 were announced. This required more than one page. I’ll share the page that includes my category (middle of the right column):

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TELL-TALE over TIMES SQUARE

The Tell-Tale Poster Shines on a Big Billboard over Broadway

Last night Ed and I travelled to Times Square to watch the poster for my gothic musical short film “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” be broadcast over Times Square.

Here a quick clip of the moment it happened:

And now for the whole story, including more pics and video.

My musical Poe adaptation is part of the Shockfest Film Festival 2020. As such it has also been included in their Poster Competition.

Last night Shockfest commandeered (or rather, rented time on) “the most technically advanced screen in the United States, Silvercast Media’s ‘Godzilla Billboard’ located smack dab in the middle of Times Square, the largest billboard in all of New York City.”

Part of their presentation was featuring all the entries in the poster competition. Ed and I could either watch the Shockfest show live on-line culminating in the airing of the billboard presentation. Or we could go to Times Square and catch that part live in person.

Haunted horror house.

We decided to go to Times Square.

It would be only my second subway ride since mid March, when the Covid 19 lockdown began. Even though New York City has so far weathered the worst of the pandemic and is slowly, responsibly opening up, subway ridership remains low (and well masked) and Times Square is sparsely populated, nothing like the mass of tourists that thronged the area all day long in the past.

Ed wearing his “rainbow bandit” mask.

The Shockfest billboard presentation was scheduled for 9:30pm. We arrived at Times Square around 9:20pm and perched ourselves across the street and waited.

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FESTIVAL PANDEMIC POSTPONEMENTS

See you in … 2021?

Below is the 2020 Official Trailer for the Denali Film Festival. It’s a beautifully put together trailer, full of lovely images of the great outdoors. You get a strong sense for the festival’s overriding theme, of nature and humanity placed in a diverse, panoramic landscape.

And then you get the exception that proves the rule: me smirking satirically into the camera, the first of three clips edited into the trailer from “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre“, a gothic, interior chamber piece without the slightest bit of sunlight or nature.

When I first saw the trailer, I joked on facebook:

I looked at this really cool trailer and thought “one of these things is not like the others…”

To which the festival directors responded: “You fit right in! Excited to see you in 2021!

This after they already privately told me “We both really enjoy your work! We sang ‘true, nervous, very very dreadfully nervous’ most days the last month“, establishing them in my mind as among the sweetest festival directors I have interacted with so far.

But however my film fits in to the wider festival, I am still taken with how much the Tell-Tale clips stand out in this trailer – and I mean that as a compliment for how well the trailer is put together, and uses those quick clips as contrasting punctuation.

I get a kick of how the edit follows up my criminal smirk with a close-up of a bird of prey. And how the other two clips from Tell-Tale also appear to be chosen for being of most startling contrast to the rest of the trailer. (I include screenshots of all three at top and just below.)

I’ve now watched the Denali Film Festival trailer almost as much as my own trailer for Tell-Tale, which is another way of saying I really like it, how it represents the Denali Film festival, and how it positions my little gothic musical within its program.

But there’s more to this post, as you might have surmised by the title, and by what one sees at the end of the Denali Film Festival trailer:

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