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brioux.tv: the podcast - Author Ira Wells on Norman Jewison

Author Ira Wells on Norman Jewison

06/10/21 • 68 min

brioux.tv: the podcast

Author Ira Wells spent three years working on "Norman Jewison: A Director's Life." A full year of that was pouring over Jewison's papers, annotated scripts and other manuscripts at Victoria College at the University of Toronto -- where Wells is an assistant professor of literature.
He writes that Jewison's 24 feature films "could just as easily have been a dozen, or three or none." Despite directing two films -- "In the Heat of the Night" and "Moonstruck"-- to Best Picture Oscar wins, landing the next film deal never got any easier. It helped that behind Jewison's nice guy, all-Canadian persona, beats the heart of a lion. As Burt Reynolds once mused, "He must be able to kick the shit out of people in meetings."
Jewison's other talent was to be the director he needed to be in relation to the talent at hand. He could be, as Wells describes him, "a nurturing father figure, a wise older brother, on old fling." Sometimes he was all three on the same film, as he was on the set of "Agnes of God."
Wells goes through Jewison's diverse catalogue -- "The Russians Are Coming...," "The Thomas Crown Affair," "Fiddler on the Roof," "Rollerball," "A Soldier's Story" and "The Hurricane," among others. He takes us through the director's early days at the CBC in Toronto as well as directing superstars such as Judy Garland and Harry Belafonte in American television. He addresses Jewison's passion for mentoring the next generations of filmmakers with the Canadian Film Centre.
The title of Jewison's own 2004 autobiography is "This Terrible Business Has Been Good to Me" and he meant it. As Wells writes, "The image that emerges from the thousands of pages of letters, contracts, memos, production schedules, casting notes, draft screenplays and countless other documents is of a director fighting for every frame of his vision."

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Author Ira Wells spent three years working on "Norman Jewison: A Director's Life." A full year of that was pouring over Jewison's papers, annotated scripts and other manuscripts at Victoria College at the University of Toronto -- where Wells is an assistant professor of literature.
He writes that Jewison's 24 feature films "could just as easily have been a dozen, or three or none." Despite directing two films -- "In the Heat of the Night" and "Moonstruck"-- to Best Picture Oscar wins, landing the next film deal never got any easier. It helped that behind Jewison's nice guy, all-Canadian persona, beats the heart of a lion. As Burt Reynolds once mused, "He must be able to kick the shit out of people in meetings."
Jewison's other talent was to be the director he needed to be in relation to the talent at hand. He could be, as Wells describes him, "a nurturing father figure, a wise older brother, on old fling." Sometimes he was all three on the same film, as he was on the set of "Agnes of God."
Wells goes through Jewison's diverse catalogue -- "The Russians Are Coming...," "The Thomas Crown Affair," "Fiddler on the Roof," "Rollerball," "A Soldier's Story" and "The Hurricane," among others. He takes us through the director's early days at the CBC in Toronto as well as directing superstars such as Judy Garland and Harry Belafonte in American television. He addresses Jewison's passion for mentoring the next generations of filmmakers with the Canadian Film Centre.
The title of Jewison's own 2004 autobiography is "This Terrible Business Has Been Good to Me" and he meant it. As Wells writes, "The image that emerges from the thousands of pages of letters, contracts, memos, production schedules, casting notes, draft screenplays and countless other documents is of a director fighting for every frame of his vision."

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undefined - The 2021 Juno Awards

The 2021 Juno Awards

"We were going to do it in March, we were going to do it in April, we were going to do it in May and finally, come hell or high water, it's going to come off on June 6th," says John Brunton.
The CEO of Insight Productions is talking about the 2021 Juno Awards, Canada's annual music industry award show. Brunton and Insight Senior Vice President Lindsay Cox had already lived through one heartbreaking cancelation a year earlier when the Junos were a last-minute scratch due to the outbreak of the pandemic. They managed to find a way, with the help and goodwill of many of the biggest names in Canadian music, to program this 50th anniversary event as a virtual showcase.
Viewers tuning in Sunday, June 6 at 8 p.m. on CBC will see Anne Murray induct Jann Arden into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame as part of the show, with Jessie Reyez, Justin Bieber, Maestro Fresh Wes, Serena Ryder and more confirmed to perform. There will also be appearances by Alessia Cara; Andrew Phung; TikTok sensations The Basement Gang; Hall of Fame inductees Buffy Sainte-Marie and Gordon Lightfoot; Blue Rodeo’s Jim Cuddy; Michael Bublé; Paul Brandt; Sarah McLachlan; Shania Twain and many more, including The Tragically Hip performing alongside Feist.
How did they pull such a tricky show together under the cloud of COVID? Listen in as Brunton and Cox tell all.

Next Episode

undefined - Brent Butt is back!

Brent Butt is back!

The creator, writer, executive producer and star of Corner Gas Animated returns to brioux.tv:the podcast to set up the fourth and final season of his series. The spin-off from the live-action version of Corner Gas is the No. 1 Canadian original on CTV Comedy. So why is this the fourth and final season? Butt, who has been making TV shows for CTV since 2004, comes up with what he thinks is the answer. He also talks about getting back on the road after his standup comedy act has been shut down for a year-and-a-half due to the pandemic (a tour starts in Ontario this fall). What did he do with his time off the road? Write a book of course. Not the book you'd think he'd write, either. As for Season Four, several guest star voices are featured, including Mark McKinney in the opener as well as Kim Coates, Simu Liu, Rick Mercer, and former Barenaked Ladies frontman Steven Page. There's even a surprise Hollywood superstar who recorded a voice for the final episode. Who? Butt drops a hint or two but we'll have to wait to find out. The new season of Corner Gas Animated premieres Monday, July 5 on CTV Comedy.

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