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The Leader-Post from Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada • 33

Publication:
The Leader-Posti
Location:
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Leader-Post Regina Nov. 4, 1985 Entertainment 11 Producer flies from B.C. funeral to accept Yorkton film award IGIOIUDIBNI SIHIEfAl The Keg Billy Miners Hamilton 8th Ave. Every Week the Keg offers the same great specials. Monday: Pasta Night Use your noodle! The Keg's pasta Is fresh and prepared to order In the traditional style.

maa includes Garlic 7 Toast. Tuesday: Seafood Night Catch whats fresh with us! Always a quality product priced aa for value! llVy includes Rice Pilaf. A Jl Wednesday: Prime Time The very best Canada Grade A Prime Rib. slow roasted and dressed in Keg spice. Always a flavour favourite.

Includes your choice of Baked Potato. Billy qq Miner Spuds or JW Rice Pilaf. Jl Thursday: Full Meal Deal fAXWAlRIDlSI For those of you who have always wanted an all Inclusive It Is! Soup, Salad Bar, San Francisco Sourdough Bread, Entree. Add-on -d QQ and Dessert. What a Deal! winners were: Best Direction Pluie Ete, directed by Francois DAuteuil for SDA Productions Ltd.

Best Animation The Study of An Apartment, directed by Martin Rose; Best CommercialPromotion-al Sunspirit Saskatchewan, directed by 81-year-old Jack Tunni-cliffe of Harvard Creative Services for the Saskatchewan government; Best Drama Over 30 Minutes La Fuite, directed by Robert Cornellier of Val DOr, Best HealthMed-icine Production Making A Difference, directed by Louise Shek-terof Reuben Nussbaum in Willowdale, Best Instruction-alEducational Dads and Kids, directed by Christian Bruyere of Vancouver; Best Music Video Turn It Off, directed by Allan Stein of Stein MacLean Productions Ltd. of Edmonton; Best NatureEnvironment Elk Island, directed by former Melville resident James Jeffrey for the National Film Board of Canada; Best Public Affairs Poison Of Bhopal, directed by David Kirk of the CBC; and Best Sounding Editing Red Rocket, edited by Steve Mun-ro and directed by Colin Strayer. Three films beside Harvest of Despair Fifth Estate: A Journey Back, directed by Brian McKenna for CBC and Peg Campbells NFB production, Street Kids, and Gary Nichols A Gathering in Denendeh won special citations from the judges called Jury Awards. The jury also gave certificates of merit to Ice Roads, directed by Alan Booth for Yellowknife Films; Cages, directed by Michael Scott for Atlantis Films Limited; and Claude Greniers NFB production, La Vieil-lard et LEnfant. All the award-winning movies will be shown Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.

in the Regina Public Librarys film theatre in the central library. Admission is free. torical documentary about the 1933 Ukrainian famine engineered by Stalin to suppress the Ukrainian independence movement, won three awards the Antoinette Kryski $500 Canadian Heritage Award, a Golden Sheaf Award for Zenoby Zawryshyns Best Original Music Score and received a special Jury Award from judges Jacqueline Bro-die, Martin Borycki, Margaret Britt, Gerald Testar and Gary Deane. One of the six men behind Harvest of Despair is William Kereluk, a former Insinger resident now living in Hamilton. Kereluk, treasurer of the six-man group of amateurs which conceived the idea in 1982 and organized the project, said the facts of the tragedy had been concealed too long.

Some people had been thinking about this quite a ways back. But you know, a lot of the archival material wasnt available. We made it so that things like that wont happen in our world ever again. Le Film DAriane, directed by Josee Beaudet, won award for Best Documentary Over 30 Minutes and Louise Michaude won Best Picture Editing. Rediscovery The Eagles Gift, directed by Peeter Prince for Vision Quest Films of Victoria, also received two prizes a Golden Sheaf Award and the Queen City Junior Film Society $500 Cash Award for Best Childrens Production.

Director Peter Raymonts film, On To The Polar Sea: A Yukon Adventure was the Best SportRecre-ation Production. Raymonts photographer, John Walker, was awarded a Golden Sheaf for Best Cinematog-raphyVideography. It was made by Investigative Productions, Inc. The remaining Golden Sheaf By Edward chroeter of The Leader-Post YORKTON Film producer Barbara Sweetes tears of sadness turned into tears of joy just one hour after her 91-year-old grandfathers funeral. Director Larry Weinstein, one of her Rhombus Media Inc.

partners, telephoned to say their film, Making Overtures, had won the Golden Sheaf Award for Best Movie and Best Documentary Under 30 minutes at the 21st Yorkton Short Film and Video Festival, Canadas oldest continuous film festival. Arlother Rhombus film, Magnificat, directed by Sweete and produced by Weinstein, was named Best Fine Arts movie in the festival. I mean life goes on. Everybody cried for my grandfather and cried for me. He would have been proud.

Its nice, its nice, the films 32-year-old producer said Saturday after flying to the awards banquet in Yorkton from the funeral in Keremeos, B.C. Ive just made a film about him. That film is really important to me because he lives on through it, she said. The same sentiment dominates Making Overtures, an affectionate and often humorous portrait of the Northumberland Symphony Orchestra, whose members range from teenagers and senior citizens to business executives and hog farmers. Canadas amateur symphony orchestras are using the film to promote themselves, raise money to keep themselves afloat, and lobby against government grant decreases.

The most satisfying films to make are those that are artistically good and have a use. Entertainment alone is not enough. I want to make a film that stays alive for the films subjects after its been made, said Call us to find out the special of the dayl 352-9691 Sweete. Theres something in that film thats almost like a spiritual quality. Its very hard to say in words, but thats why its in music.

This film, I think, is filled with love by everybody involved in it and I think thats what the (judges) recognized in it, said Sweete, who earlier during the awards offered a more light-hearted explanation of the victory. When Bruno Gerussi, star of the CBC Television series The Beachcombers, presented her with her Best Movie award, Sweete confessed she used to tend bar at Torontos Four Seasons Hotel and serve Gerussi drinks. And now I want to get on Celebrity Cooks, she joked. Another big award winner was a 24-minute drama called The Painted Door, directed by Bruce Pittman for Atlantis Films Limited of Toronto. Judged the Best Drama Under 30 Minutes, it also received Golden Sheaf awards for actress Linda Goransons Best Performance and Joe Wiesenfelds Best Script as well as the SuperChannel Best Script Cash Award of $1,000.

Directed by Zlavko Nowytski, Harvest of Despair, a 55-minute his Your used piano will bring Interested cash buyers. Call 569-1100 with your ad today. Dining Entertainment Quide Welles remembered as creative genius For enjoyable entertainment or appetizing food you tl discover the perfect spot in The Leader Post Dining and Entertainment Guide COPONETB1 Albert 11th 522-3839 AbULT Daily 7:15 9:00 FOR LUNCH! AILY SPECIAL A QC Includes salad bar 470 ALBERT ST. NORTH (Behind Pinders) CQRONETB Albert 11th 522-3839 2 for 1 SPECIAL ROAST BEEF 1 Tuesday, Nov. 5 6.95 4 p.m.

to 7:30 p.m. only 3J Take Out Orders Available Jl OSS' ivL. Primavara I jr ADULT (Not Suitable For Under 14) Daily 7:00 4 9:15 EEHHZ3ZS1 Albert 11th 522-3839 Another star of Touch of Evil, Janet Leigh, commented: You left us a lot, I do wish you would have been allowed to leave us more. In 1938, Welles panicked radio listeners with a tale of invaders from Mars on his Mercury Theatre of the Air. In 1941, the 25-year-old stunned the film world with his first feature movie, Citizen Kane, which he starred in, wrote and directed.

The story of a newspaper tycoon won a 1941 Oscar for writing and received nominations for directing and acting Oscars. After his success with Citizen Kane, his dealings with Hollywood studios deteriorated, although he continued to turn out films, appear on talk shows, promote wine and act as a narrator. LOS ANGELES (AP) An overflow crowd of 500 people gathered at the Directors Guild Theatre on Saturday to hear film-maker Orson Welles hailed as a creative genius who mastered the art of his profession but not its games. That theme, expressed by television producer Greg Garrison, pervaded the memorial for Welles, who died Oct. 10 of a heart attack.

He was 70. Orson was the most talented man I ever worked with have ever seen, said actor Charlton Heston, who was directed by Welles in Touch of Evil. He was so enormously gifted that things came to him casually. Citing Welless ability to charm, Heston added: The only people Orson never bothered to charm were the studio heads, which is why his body of work is so small. The Adture Aaft RESTRICTED ADULT (Under 1 8 with Parents) (Offensive Language and Violence) Daily 7:30 9:30 I -f ROMANIAN RESTAURANT Si? 15 639 Victoria Ave.

352-3497 DINING ROOM RESERVATIONS 569-4650 DC ClfMwCE. IM TRE nismnuD Victoria A Broad 522-3839 si MUSIC CITY Welcomes Jane Siberry The Speckless Sky Tour IN CONCERT NOV. 5 UNIVERSITY THEATRE D2iUSEZD I RESTRICTED ADULT (Violence Warning) Shows 7:00 4 9:15 Open 6:45 p.m. Princes Salad Reg. 4.95...,, 3.95 Gym in PMa Bread Reg.

4.95 4.25 PMK MORf I INAOVFRTISfD tPfflAlt -si icapitoinfl FOR LUNCH FOR DINNER 7 QC Baked Spaghetti pepporont pa 4 meat sauce. Reg. 6 95 550 Breaded Tender Cutlet ap Peg. 8 50 0.95 PIUS OTHFR UNADVIRTISFD SPECIALS Ham Steak qp Dinner iniude: Soup ft Salad Bar Rq 7 95 O. 3 Choice of Potato or Rice ft Garlic Tn.nt qflgsvjp OK VINII OUK SISiLK KLSIAUKANI, IHl KKUWN ULKBY, 2 HI OCXS FAST OF THf trWVAN ON CORDON ROAD AVfc AT SCAHTH ST Somewhere, somehow, someone's going to pay.

SPECIAL 1 Shows 7:15 4 9:10 Open 6:45 p.m. LCapltoii2j Uth AVE. AT SCARTH ST. 3EB 03200 00131 SPECIAL QurEEV Shows 7:10 4 9:00 Open 6:30 p.m. Stea Cornwall Centres OWED om 3Di(3B QflB ADULT BETTER OFF BEAD Shows 7:10 9:10 Open 6:30 p.m.

an; 'Jam tm 4 hRt am Cornwall Centre 7 RESTRICTED ADULT OSilfilEB Q00 tifliHSi 0B DanccAVtifi ASTRAL A Si' 422K) 31 (Language May Ottend) Shows 7:00 4 9:00 Open 6:30 p.m. Cornwall centre 3d Dewdney or the lawvw PhOft'l2S-03tt 4th WEEK! restricted adult! Shows at 7 20 9.20 Open 6 30 ip or cAsstm IP or CASHTTI 543-9599 A ra mmn 1 1 vsetm.ta.waw MUSIC CITY NORTHGATE MALL iUlft, mj.

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About The Leader-Post Archive

Pages Available:
1,367,369
Years Available:
1883-2024