GLOUCESTERCAST 701 Interview with Filmmakers Michael Cascio and Phil Grabsky about their Edward Hopper documentary premiering on PBS Jan 2nd AMERICAN MASTERS – HOPPER: AN AMERICAN LOVE STORY

Interview hosted by Joey Ciaramitaro with Michael Cascio and Phil Grabsky, award-winning filmmakers who collaborated as co-writers and directors on  PBS American Masters | Hopper: An American Love Story , a documentary that premieres nationally on PBS January 2, 2024 at 9pm.

Despite being one of America’s most iconic 20th century artists, Edward Hopper has not been the subject of an American Masters biopic until this feature.  

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This interview was broadcast from the Maritime Gloucester museum in Gloucester, Massachusetts on December 21, 2023. Host: Joey Ciaramitaro and Catherine Ryan with support from Pat Dalpiaz.

TOPICS INCLUDE

Michael Cascio (filmmaker); Phil Grabsky (filmmaker); the choice of the title (at 8:00min); Edward Hopper; Josephine Nivison Hopper (spouse & fine artist); the origins of Edward Hopper’s and Jo Nivison Hopper’s collaboration; the filmmakers’ access to locations of significance that inspired Hopper’s art (his formative years in Nyack where he was born and raised, Paris (33 min), Gloucester (15:22 min), Truro (Cape Cod), and Washington Sq. North in NYC; more Gloucester, Sebastian Junger & The Perfect Storm;  Hopper artworks Nighthawks, 1942 (23 min and lengthier dive at 26:40 min), Soir Bleu, Automat 1927, and The Mansard Roof (18:14 min); showcasing archives rare color footage of Edward Hopper interviews (21:00 min) and Jo’s diaries (23:00 min); Hopper’s cinematic qualities (26 min); solitude; luminaries mentioned in passing such as Mozart, Vermeer, Rembrandt; recent Edward Hopper exhibitions at the Whitney Museum (Hopper’s New York), Cape Ann Museum, and the Hopper House Museum (which featured work by Jo Nivison) 

American Masters – HOPPER: An American Love Story premieres nationwide Tuesday, January 2 at 9 p.m. ET on PBS (check local listings), pbs.org/americanmasters and the PBS App.  

TIMESTAMP SELECTION:

  • Michael Cascio (2:58): Mentions Cape Ann Museum and Whitney: “The most important thing was the art.”
  • Phil Grabsky (3:21): The first Hopper exhibit I saw as part of this project was in Nyack which is fantastic, a wonderful place where Hopper was born and lived…fortunate that they had an exhibit of Josephine Nivison’s work…hadn’t happened very often since she met Edward Hopper in Gloucester…One of the great revelations of the film of course is you can’t understand him without understanding her and that is all cemented in Gloucester…
  • Michael: Film is done for American Masters on PBS that specifically looks at person and relationship to what they do. When I realized that American Masters had not done one on Hopper, which was a big surprise because they had done Wyeth and Rothko and others,…”
  • Joey Ciaramitaro (8:00 min.): How did the title Hopper An “American Love Story” come about?
  • Michael (13:00): Jo picked up the thread. She was the opposite…Story of modern day, of a wife giving up a very promising career to promote his…”
  • Phil (13:50): Also have to look at the evidence…The Whitney exhibition, Hopper’s New York…featured (theater) ticket stubs–multi-color torn in half, and they’d write on them what they’d seen–in a fantastic display case. You cannot understand the paintings which are iconic without understanding his biography, and you can’t understand his biography without understanding their relationship…
  • Joey (15:22): Edward Hopper and Jo Hopper clearly painted side by side in Gloucester. St. Ann’s steeple, if you’re from Gloucester, you know that site right away…
  • Michael: It’s amazing. Visual proof right there.
  • Phil (16:30): Surely you know in your community, what’s so attractive in Gloucester to artists and so many artists would come and paint (Joey: the light) boats, and fishermen. Hopper paints the front of buildings. What’s so great in Gloucester, and the film has these dissolves, these buildings are still there…You can see exactly what Hopper was painting. It’s fascinating to see how he transforms the 2-dimensional canvas into a painting. It really kicks off his career. Without Gloucester…
  • Michael (17:50): You can make the case without Jo there wouldn’t necessarily have been Edward Hopper. Without Gloucester there wouldn’t have been the two of them. It was a meeting point for both of their lives…
  • Joey (18:14): Was Mansard Roof the painting?
  • Catherine Ryan (CR) (18:30): You kick into Gloucester about 14 minutes into the documentary and the music changes. And it’s a light piano…
  • Michael (18:43): It’s a love story at that point. They’re falling in love. It’s a great moment. It’s essential to the story. It’s the pivot point for the entire story. And I think that’s part of what’s different in this particular documentary…Jo’s influence and the beginnings of which are in Gloucester are central to the story…
  • CR1(19:50): Can you tell us about the voice overs, the process working with them and getting such big notables (JK Simmons reading Ed and Christine Baranski reading Jo)
  • Michael (20:06): Our friends over at PBS (and the pandemic and the actors’ strike)…Christine Baranski was the perfect voice…They’re all wonderful. Christine Baranski was Jo personified.
  • Phil (21:00): Adds the first thing you do when you’re making a documentary film is try to find correspondence…letters, for more recent artists filmed interviews, video interviews. Because then you get their actual voice…Our fear with Hopper…can you imagine a very successful artist basically not interviewed (on the cover of Time magazine), he was almost like a recluse at times, but really what’s the reality?…when he does speak, when he writes a newspaper, when he does give an interview, he is extremely…What are the pictures telling me?
  • Joey (24:30): I found the interviews that you include fascinating and show that he cared about his legacy. He was not aloof.
  • Michael : You can see he’s thoughtful in the black and white earlier interview. And the color one which we dug up in the NBC archives which no one as far as I know had done anything of substance with it. He’s reflective. Back on his career and shows humor. He’s extremely observant about his career and his own work. There are no accidents. He’s very aware.
  • Phil (25:41): There’s an interesting point you raise there which is the extent to which he cared about what he thought after he died. (26:05 segues to cinematic qualities in Hopper’s work.)
  • Michael (27:25): And why am I, are we, so attracted to it…people bring their own views…Maybe the solitary aspect of it or communal…
  • Phil (28:26): What we do in the film is provide a chance to look at it again…
  • CR (29:00): I admired how you let the curators/experts’ personalities come through. They’re all seated. They’re almost all like Hopper (paintings)…I thought the film structure mirrors the artist’s process in that way. You let the art speak and the people interpreting.
  • Michael (30:00): The art is the star. The art tells the story. We’re not going to mess with it…As a result there are 30 or 40 images there that help tell the story. We didn’t skimp!
  • Phil (30:50): You want to have the audience have the questions in their minds before you give them, or some of the answers…

Continue listening! Find and/or download the Gloucestercast podcast 701 here

Images: Edward Hopper artwork discussed in the interview

 
 
 

GloucesterCast 701 PBS American Masters – Hopper: An American Love Story Link to Join Here-www.facebook.com/goodmorninggloucester

GloucesterCast 701 PBS American Masters – Hopper: An American Love Story

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MONARCH BUTTERFLY FILM UPDATE AND JESSE COOK’S “BEYOND BORDERS” PREMIERES TONIGHT!

I am beyond excited to share that we have been able to license the music that I dreamed about for my Monarch Butterfly documentary. This may not sound like a huge deal, but we have been working towards this for several years. The four songs were composed and arranged by world renowned guitarist Jesse Cook and they are: “You,” “Fields of Blue,” Afternoon at Saties,” and “El Cri.” My husband, Tom, introduced me to Jesse’s music, and from the moment I heard it, I knew that we would find music to score Beauty on the Wing from his repertoire of beautiful songs 

Jesse Cook: Beyond Borders is his newest concert special and begins airing on WGBH tonight at 8:30pm!

Beyond Borders is Cook’s most recent album and while touring the record over a 31 day period, from Canadian coast to Canadian coast, they filmed the performances in 4k every night. “The result is an immersive musical journey that treats the audience to a sense of being on stage with the band from the opening note to its energetic finale.”

From PBS:

JESSE COOK: BEYOND BORDERS

Premieres March 2, 2019 on PBS

A Musical Journey with the Genre Bending Guitarist

JESSE COOK: BEYOND BORDERSthe latest concert special by the acoustic guitar virtuoso, was filmed over the 31 days of his coast-to-coast tour of Canada. Instead of filming just one show in one night, the cameras rolled every night, allowing Jesse to place the best version of each song into this unique concert experience. The result is an immersive musical journey that treats the audience to a sense of being on stage with the band from the opening note to its energetic finale — a Jesse Cook “Rhumba Party.” JESSE COOK: BEYOND BORDERS is part of special programming premiering on PBS stations in March 2019 (check local listings).

Canadian guitarist, composer and producer Jesse Cook blends rumba and flamenco with elements of jazz and world music. He is a three-time winner of Canada’s Smooth Jazz Award for Guitarist of the Year, as well as a Juno Award-winner (Canada’s version of The Grammy) in the Best Instrumental Album category for Free Fall. In 2009, he was Acoustic Guitar’s Player’s Choice Silver Winner in the Flamenco category.

JESSE COOK: BEYOND BORDERS features these performances:

    • “Beyond Borders”
    • “Tempest”
    • “Come What May”
    • “Hembra”
    • “Jumpstart”
    • “Chendy’s Caja” solo
    • “Dance of Spring”
    • “Bombay Slam”
    • “Ho Hey”
    • “Double Dutch”
    • Medley (“Bombay Diner,” “Closer to Madness,” “That’s Right,” “Baghdad”)
    • “Beneath Your Skin”

Jesse Cook, a master guitarist known for his intoxicating fusion of world music, has travelled the globe looking for sounds that resonate with him. “I like finding common ground for different music traditions, a space where music from around the world can come together,” Cook explains. “A place where modern sounds can mix with ancient timbres.”

BBC and PBS AUTUMN WATCH: NEW ENGLAND CAPE ANN MONARCH EPISODE AIRS FRIDAY NIGHT

Dear Friends of Beauty on the Wing,

My friend Patti Papows shares that she heard a promo on PBS for the Autumnwatch Cape Ann Monarch migration episode, which we believe airs Friday night at 8pm. The BBC team is still editing the segment so if anything changes, we will let you know.

The Monarch migration interview was filmed at Patti’s beautiful garden in Gloucester, at Good Harbor Beach, and the episode includes footage from my forthcoming film Beauty on the Wing: Life Story of the Monarch Butterfly.

Patti is a fantastic hostess and the producer Sophie, cameraman Bobby, and his wife Gina were thrilled with her warm hospitality and the refreshments she provided. It was cold and damp and drizzly, yet despite that, half a dozen Monarchs emerged from the chrysalises I had brought to the interview. Everyone was excited to see this and I think it was all meant to be.

The three night series airs Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday at 8pm (October 17th-19th).

Photos from an October passel of Monarchs migrating along our shores and nectaring at the late blooming asters.

PBS and BBC Announce AUTUMNWATCH – NEW ENGLAND

Some press for the show that I have been working on with the BBC! The shows air October 17-19th, at 8pm. I don’t know yet which night the Cape Ann Monarch episode will play, but will let you know.

– Travel journalist Samantha Brown, wildlife cinematographer Bob Poole, and BBC presenter Chris Packham host the live nature show celebrating fall in New England –

PBS announced, as part of its co-production partnership with the BBC, that a new three-part live event, AUTUMNWATCH – NEW ENGLAND, will air Wednesday-Friday, October 17-19, 2018, at 8:00-9:00 p.m. ET (check local listings).

Travel journalist Samantha Brown, BBC presenter Chris Packham and wildlife cinematographer Bob Poole will host the multi-platform television experience from alongside Squam Lake, New Hampshire. Similar in format to PBS’ previous summer spectacles BIG BLUE LIVE and WILD ALASKA LIVE, the new series will include a mix of live feeds and pre-taped footage from across New England.

Unique to AUTUMNWATCH – NEW ENGLAND, the live event will focus on cultural traditions and historical sites in addition to local wildlife and the colorful gold and red landscapes in the region that’s best known for them.

To accomplish this, local experts in food, wildlife, music, literature, and history will join the trio of hosts each night to showcase characteristics special to New England.

“In AUTUMNWATCH – NEW ENGLAND, audiences will experience exquisite outdoor adventures while surrounded by nature’s most picturesque imagery,” said Bill Gardner, Vice President, Programming & Development, PBS. “We look forward to partnering with the BBC once again to present this ambitious live production and share this American experience with PBS and BBC viewers.”

AUTUMNWATCH – NEW ENGLAND cameras will be there to capture time-lapse changes of fall foliage; a quest for majestic moose in Maine; the Monarch butterfly migration through Cape Ann, key wildlife species like squirrels, chipmunks and turkey gangs as they invade backyards in preparation for the winter months; and the critters like owls, bats and bears that make the most of nighttime.

Audiences can expect to see segments that highlight Native American history and traditions, Halloween traditions, regional fairs and the many farms that provide the region with its rich varieties of apples, pumpkins, cranberries and maple syrups.

“I’m thrilled that AUTUMNWATCH is moving to New England for this very special week of live programming,” Tom McDonald, BBC Head of Commissioning, Natural History and Specialist Factual, said. “The teams are heading to one of the most iconic locations in the USA to experience the great American ‘fall’ for what promises to be an unforgettable chapter in the Watches’ history.”

Female (left) and male (right) Monarch Butterfly. These two beauties (resting on native wildflower New England Aster) eclosed (emerged) during the BBC filming of the Monarch migration through Cape Ann.

Listen for #GloucesterMA on the radio! Mass Cultural Council’s WCRB, WBUR, WICN and NEPR spots for Cultural Districts start next week 📻🎙️😊

Last year, the Mass Cultural Council purchased series of 10, 20, and 30 second spots on WCRB, WGBH, WBUR, WICN, and NEPR to promote each of the Massachusetts designated Cultural Districts,” Meri Jenkins explained. They’re doing it again for 2018. Beginning next week, you may hear radio commercials wishing Gloucester and its two cultural districts great success in 2018 (Downtown Cultural District and Rocky Neck cultural district). Email Mayor Romeo Theken’s arts hotline: sefatia4arts@gloucester-ma.gov (subject line MCC radio spots) with the day and time you heard “Gloucester”, where you were and what you think.

Some of the radio spots are scheduled during the following shows

  • Two (2) WFCR News spots rotating thru Morning Edition, All Things Considered and Marketplace – Monday thru Saturday
  • Two (2) WFCR Run of Station spots rotating thru Classical Music, Jazz and Entertainment programing – Monday thru Saturday
  • TWO (2) WNNZ News Network spots rotating Monday thru Saturday
  • TWO (2) WNNZ News Network BONUS spots rotating Monday thru Sunday

The MCC is also expanding outreach thru increased collaboration with the state’s office of Travel and Tourism. See Massachusetts excellent and popular travel site. 

The Gloucester page has not been edited, yet–it’s just a placeholder. We can edit and businesses can add in. The calendar is an exciting opportunity integrated with the interactive cultural districts map and information. I’m hoping the GMG and chamber calendars can just be synced up.

MCC new landing page on MOTT ma vacation

It’s time to laugh

Feel like you’re drowning in negative buzz?  Maybe it’s time to laugh. You’ll laugh alright on Saturday night, right down the road in Beverly at 9 Wallis when Loretta LaRoche takes you back to Brooklyn and back in time to the humor of growing up with her Italian family in her hysterical show Love, Laughter, and Lasagna.

You can even eat some lasagna prepared by Beverly’s favorite deli Gloria Food Store before the show to get you in the mood.

You may remember Loretta from her PBS specials (see video below) or inspirational programs at North Shore Music Theatre a few years ago — and those programs were funny. Trust me: Love Laughter and Lasagna is even funnier!  Come on down; you’ll feel better!

AMERICAN EXPERIENCE “RACHEL CARSON” PREMIERES TONIGHT ON PBS (AND DEBORAH CRAMER IS IN IT!)

I’ve been very much looking forward to the debut of Rachel Carson and posted it on facebook yesterday as it is premiering tonight. Cape Ann environmental author Deborah Cramer then shared that she is in the documentary!!!

From an American Experience, “Rachel Carson is an intimate portrait of the woman whose groundbreaking books revolutionized our relationship to the natural world. When Silent Spring was published in September 1962 it became an instant bestseller and would go on to spark dramatic changes in the way the government regulated pesticides.

Rachel Carson premieres January 24 at 8/7c on PBS.”

Visit Deborah’s website for more about her beautiful book The Narrow Edge: A Tiny Bird, An Ancient Crab, and An Epic Journey, which was named Best Book by the National Academy of Sciences, and is the winner of both the Rachel Carson Book Award and the Reed Award in Environmental Writing.

carson

2 Days Until “Meet The Coywolf” on PBS

Meet The Coywolf on PBS This Wednesday, January 22, at 8.00 PM.  Find out where all that howling at the moon on Cape Ann is coming from.

sixweekcoywolf
Six Week Old Coywolf.

The coywolf, a mixture of western coyote and eastern wolf, is a remarkable new hybrid carnivore that is taking over territories once roamed by wolves and slipping unnoticed into our cities. Its appearance is very recent — within the last 90 years — in evolutionary terms, a blip in time. Beginning in Canada but by no means ending there, the story of how it came to be is an extraordinary tale of how quickly adaptation and evolution can occur, especially when humans interfere. Tag along as scientists study this new top predator, tracking it from the wilderness of Ontario’s Algonquin Park, through parking lots, alleys and backyards in Toronto all the way to the streets of New York City. -PBS

From Henry Ferrini- PBS to air Polis is This

olson

SEMINAL POET FEATURED IN FILM ON WGBH

POLIS IS THIS – Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place (‘2007, 57m) The film traces Charles Olson’s process of self-discovery and makes it clear why Kerouac, Ginsberg and others traveled to the oldest fishing town in America to meet the father of literary post modernism.

A second-generation modernist and former political advisor to the administration of President F.D. Roosevelt, Olson forsook politics and turned to full-time writing in the final twenty-five years of his life.  An outsized man of passionately held beliefs, expansive theories and ambitious projects, Olson was rector of the groundbreaking experimental art school Black Mountain College, Asheville, N.C.  Today he is best known for his brilliant literary essays, letters and his massive epic The Maximus Poems. Devoting his life to preserving Gloucester, Massachusetts from suburban overdevelopment, Olson created a template for the artist as social and political activist.  He was  a huge influence on the Beat scribes of the 1950s and is credited with coining the term “postmodern.”

In Olson’s world the universal is the local without walls. Filmmakers Henry Ferrini and Ken Riaf surpass the challenges of containing this giant and his ideas in cinematic form while expanding our awareness of the role of the poet in his community. A generous amount of Olson footage, striding his 6’8” corpus about his beautifully photographed polis or engaging in the teacher’s art, we also meet the polis of this film: the artists – Amiri Baraka, Robert Creeley, Diane di Prima, Vincent Ferrini, Michael Rumaker, Pete Seeger, Ed Sanders, John Sinclair, Anne Waldman, Jonathan Williams, – and the locals who knew him. Hosted, after an Olsonesque fashion, by John Malkovich.

In this time of great change, Polis speaks of the will to change.  Olson understood that the local was a deep source for understanding ourselves and solving contemporary problems Gloucester, Massachusetts as his lens. He wanted others to dig into their own place and encouraged us to think and act locally.  Just imagine what shape we would be in if all our local banks didn’t sell their mortgages to the big boys? We all have something to learn from this overlooked poet.

National Poetry Month Presentation

Monday, March 30, 9pm New Jersey Network –2

Tuesday, April 1 8pm New Jersey Network –2

Tuesday, April 1 8pm WHUT, Washington, D.C

Sunday, April 5 7pm WGBH, Boston, MA

Friday, April 24 2:30am WNET, NYC

Friday, April 24 1pm WHYY, Philadelphia

contact: Henry Ferrini www.polisIsthis.com

978-281-2355 henry.ferrini@verizon.net

Complete Screening Dates & Times http://polisisthis.com/screenings.html