Журнал из Торонто, Канада, даже, скорее, толстая газета.
После того, как я посмотрела фильм "Жизнь в стеклянном доме", стала поклонницей Фаба, он мне очень понравился и от этого вдвойне рада этому журналу.
Harrelson, with Fabrizio Filippo, Marya Delver and Marcello Cabezas. Presented by maclDeas and Banack Awerbuck Productions at the Berkeley Street Theatre Upstairs (26 Berkeley). Previews from Thursday (September 18), opens Monday (September 22) and runs to October 18, Monday-Saturday 8 pm, matinees Wednesday and Saturday 2 pm. $20-$65.416-368-3110.
FABRIZIO FILIPPO HAS SHARON STONE TO THANK FOR HIS
big break that never happened.
You've seen the charismatic actor - even the guy’s hair has star quality - and writer in lots of TV and film.
He was vampire slayer Buffy s post-Angel love interest.
He captured a generation's anomie by flying through a mall in Gary Bums's indie hit waydowntown. And recently he played the classical violinist who plucked away at the heart of the blond kid from Queer As Folk.
But things could have taken a different turn a decade ago, when he nabbed a screen test for the big-budget western The Quick And The Dead, starring the blond with the Basic Instincts.
ft
iffiien in his late teens, the fast-rising actor (he was Busy's brother in Ready Or Not) auditioned for the Sam Raimi film and got flown down to Tucson to test for Raimi and the film's producer. The big leagues.
“I knew something was wrong as soon as I entered the room,” he says, lounging in the back yard of his house in lower Riverdale, bought last year with “my American TV series" money.
“But I did the test anyway, and Raimi told me I was a very good actor. I learned later that Sharon Stone had put up half her salary to get Leonardo Di Caprio for the role. Everyone there knew that.”
The film shot blanks at the box office; Filippo's career might have ended up quick and dead, too.
“And I really wasn't ready for it,” he says. “To have had that kind of thing thrust on me back then wouldn't have been good. I would have lost my trajectory.”
Some trajectory. He's gone from the local indie theatre scene as a naive, straight North York teen nurtured by gay theatre types like Daniel Maclvor and the late Ken McDou- gall to playing opposite Sophia Loren in the upcoming TV adaptation of Nino Ricci's Lives Of The Saints.
In between he's filled out his resume with lots of TV work - the Jay Mohr series Action is his fave, he admits - and features (watch for his committed work this fall in Peter O'Brian's Hollywood North).
So why is he stepping onto a Toronto stage for the first time in eight years? He plays the dangerous alpha male Dennis in Kenneth (You Can Count On Me) Lonergan's This Is Our Youth, a paean to being young and restless.
“I haven't had words like this in my mouth in so long," he says about his role in the play. He's sitting back, drinking his freshly ground Italian coffee and flashing his smile, which Youth co-star and producer Marcello Cabezas describes as “a smile that makes you want to sob and immediately want to listen to him.”
"The writing shows you everything," continues Filippo, whose own scripts include The Gospels Accordingly and the Chalmers-nominated Waiting For Lewis. “Even where Lonergan puts the accent on a word. It's been ages since I've been excited to speak words, to relish them.”
Besides the Lonergan play - directed by Woody Harrel- son - Filippo's part of the Tarragon's Playwrights Unit, developing a sсript under artistic director Richard Rose, one of the first directors to cast him as something other than a Guatemalan refugee or Brazilian street kid.
Oh yeah, the ethnic thing. For years Filippo got pigeonholed here as the dark-haired ethnic guy.
“I couldn't be actor Matthew Ferguson (Nikita). I couldn’t get those roles even though I wanted to. Yet after two weeks in L.A. I was at CBS auditioning for leading man parts.”
His experience with Lives Of The Saints - Ricci's mythopoetic look at Italian immigrants - indirectly helped him come to terms with his background.
“When I read the book I realized that Fab was Vito,” says director Jerry Ciccoritti, who had worked with Filippo on
the 1999 feature Life Before This.
“Our parents both came over from Italy in that immigration wave. We share this sense of dislocation. Are we Canadian or Italian? How much of that mythologized old country, sex and Mastroianni, is in us?”
“The older I get the more I embrace the Italian,” explains Filippo. “The part of me that’s Italian is the passion, the misery, the love of women. I spent so much of my life pushing it away because of all the stereotypes. But when we were in Italy shooting, Jerry and I looked around and laughed. The Italians were walking cliches.”
Visiting his extended family in Calabria in southern Italy, he signed hundreds of autographs, famous as the kid who worked with Sophia Loren. Back home in Canada, his mom refused to meet Loren - she was too nervous - but admitted that her son's gig made her feel like a success.
He knows that his post-Hollywood success can help him kick-start projects.
“Stardom exists as an economic reality,” he says. “I want to be able to green-light movies. I want to generate projects. Being visible in America is important for that.”
And theatre?
“People say theatre is dead, but to me it's a truly alternative art form,” he says. “There was a time when everyone
went to the theatre for their entertainment. Now they go to movies. If you're going to a play now, you're seeking something else. So you're creating art for people who are seeking it, who need it and can't find it anywhere else.”
He also wants to shake up the local scene with his international smarts.
“Here we've got an American director doing an American play, all Canadian actors and producers whose average age is between 25 and 30,” he explains.
“We're taking theatre out of the government subsidy model. Don't get me wrong. A country like ours needs government subsidies. But I've always had problems writing grants, because you have to convince someone that what you're doing is good for society.”
[email protected]
После того, как я посмотрела фильм "Жизнь в стеклянном доме", стала поклонницей Фаба, он мне очень понравился и от этого вдвойне рада этому журналу.
Распознанный текст
THIS IS OUR YOUTH by Kenneth Lonergan, directed by WoodyHarrelson, with Fabrizio Filippo, Marya Delver and Marcello Cabezas. Presented by maclDeas and Banack Awerbuck Productions at the Berkeley Street Theatre Upstairs (26 Berkeley). Previews from Thursday (September 18), opens Monday (September 22) and runs to October 18, Monday-Saturday 8 pm, matinees Wednesday and Saturday 2 pm. $20-$65.416-368-3110.
FABRIZIO FILIPPO HAS SHARON STONE TO THANK FOR HIS
big break that never happened.
You've seen the charismatic actor - even the guy’s hair has star quality - and writer in lots of TV and film.
He was vampire slayer Buffy s post-Angel love interest.
He captured a generation's anomie by flying through a mall in Gary Bums's indie hit waydowntown. And recently he played the classical violinist who plucked away at the heart of the blond kid from Queer As Folk.
But things could have taken a different turn a decade ago, when he nabbed a screen test for the big-budget western The Quick And The Dead, starring the blond with the Basic Instincts.
ft
iffiien in his late teens, the fast-rising actor (he was Busy's brother in Ready Or Not) auditioned for the Sam Raimi film and got flown down to Tucson to test for Raimi and the film's producer. The big leagues.
“I knew something was wrong as soon as I entered the room,” he says, lounging in the back yard of his house in lower Riverdale, bought last year with “my American TV series" money.
“But I did the test anyway, and Raimi told me I was a very good actor. I learned later that Sharon Stone had put up half her salary to get Leonardo Di Caprio for the role. Everyone there knew that.”
The film shot blanks at the box office; Filippo's career might have ended up quick and dead, too.
“And I really wasn't ready for it,” he says. “To have had that kind of thing thrust on me back then wouldn't have been good. I would have lost my trajectory.”
Some trajectory. He's gone from the local indie theatre scene as a naive, straight North York teen nurtured by gay theatre types like Daniel Maclvor and the late Ken McDou- gall to playing opposite Sophia Loren in the upcoming TV adaptation of Nino Ricci's Lives Of The Saints.
In between he's filled out his resume with lots of TV work - the Jay Mohr series Action is his fave, he admits - and features (watch for his committed work this fall in Peter O'Brian's Hollywood North).
So why is he stepping onto a Toronto stage for the first time in eight years? He plays the dangerous alpha male Dennis in Kenneth (You Can Count On Me) Lonergan's This Is Our Youth, a paean to being young and restless.
“I haven't had words like this in my mouth in so long," he says about his role in the play. He's sitting back, drinking his freshly ground Italian coffee and flashing his smile, which Youth co-star and producer Marcello Cabezas describes as “a smile that makes you want to sob and immediately want to listen to him.”
"The writing shows you everything," continues Filippo, whose own scripts include The Gospels Accordingly and the Chalmers-nominated Waiting For Lewis. “Even where Lonergan puts the accent on a word. It's been ages since I've been excited to speak words, to relish them.”
Besides the Lonergan play - directed by Woody Harrel- son - Filippo's part of the Tarragon's Playwrights Unit, developing a sсript under artistic director Richard Rose, one of the first directors to cast him as something other than a Guatemalan refugee or Brazilian street kid.
Oh yeah, the ethnic thing. For years Filippo got pigeonholed here as the dark-haired ethnic guy.
“I couldn't be actor Matthew Ferguson (Nikita). I couldn’t get those roles even though I wanted to. Yet after two weeks in L.A. I was at CBS auditioning for leading man parts.”
His experience with Lives Of The Saints - Ricci's mythopoetic look at Italian immigrants - indirectly helped him come to terms with his background.
“When I read the book I realized that Fab was Vito,” says director Jerry Ciccoritti, who had worked with Filippo on
the 1999 feature Life Before This.
“Our parents both came over from Italy in that immigration wave. We share this sense of dislocation. Are we Canadian or Italian? How much of that mythologized old country, sex and Mastroianni, is in us?”
“The older I get the more I embrace the Italian,” explains Filippo. “The part of me that’s Italian is the passion, the misery, the love of women. I spent so much of my life pushing it away because of all the stereotypes. But when we were in Italy shooting, Jerry and I looked around and laughed. The Italians were walking cliches.”
Visiting his extended family in Calabria in southern Italy, he signed hundreds of autographs, famous as the kid who worked with Sophia Loren. Back home in Canada, his mom refused to meet Loren - she was too nervous - but admitted that her son's gig made her feel like a success.
He knows that his post-Hollywood success can help him kick-start projects.
“Stardom exists as an economic reality,” he says. “I want to be able to green-light movies. I want to generate projects. Being visible in America is important for that.”
And theatre?
“People say theatre is dead, but to me it's a truly alternative art form,” he says. “There was a time when everyone
went to the theatre for their entertainment. Now they go to movies. If you're going to a play now, you're seeking something else. So you're creating art for people who are seeking it, who need it and can't find it anywhere else.”
He also wants to shake up the local scene with his international smarts.
“Here we've got an American director doing an American play, all Canadian actors and producers whose average age is between 25 and 30,” he explains.
“We're taking theatre out of the government subsidy model. Don't get me wrong. A country like ours needs government subsidies. But I've always had problems writing grants, because you have to convince someone that what you're doing is good for society.”
[email protected]
@темы: Пресса, Фабрицио Филиппо, Интервью