Friday, October 03, 2003
Div news
Noah Watts just launched his new official website:
http://www.noahwatts.com/
And I have a new front graphic on my site, hope you like it!
http://www.nativecelebs.com/
http://www.noahwatts.com/
And I have a new front graphic on my site, hope you like it!
http://www.nativecelebs.com/
Rino Thunder has passed on
Manuel Seferino Candeleria
Aka Rino Thunder, Ute Nation, Sahwachee, CO
October 29, 1934 - September 27, 2003
Following a lengthy illness it is with deep sadness to announce the passing of Manuel Candeleria aka Rino Thunder (Ute) on September 27, 2003 at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. A long-time resident of New York City, on the Lower East Side, Rino was one of the first successful contemporary Native American actors. Rino broke ground as a Native American playing many non-traditional and diverse roles in film, television and video and was especially popular in Europe where as an actor, he was specifically requested. As Rino's friends, we will miss him. Services will be arranged in NYC for peers, friends, and family. His contribution to contemporary Native American cinema will never be forgotten. - Friends of Rino
Film
· 7th Street (2002)
· Fresh Kill (1994)
· Geronimo: An American Legend (1993)
· Beyond the Law (1992)
· Hot Shots! (1991)
· Power (1986)
· Wolfen (1982)
Television
· Miracle in the Wilderness 1992
· Invisible Thread Penn & Teller 1987
· Three Sovereigns For Sarah - American Playhouse ‘John The Indian’ 1985
· Stone Pillow Starring Lucille Ball 1985
· Dance in America ‘Song For Dead Warriors’ - Narrator (Emmy Award) 1984
· Johnny Appleseed And The Frontier Within - ‘Shamen’ (Emmy Award) 1983
· Leatherstocking Tales - Singing Bear (Emmy Award: Outstanding Childrens’ Anthology/Dramatic Programming) 1982
Soaps (TV)
· One Life To Live ‘Joe Hawk’
· Another World
· As The World Turns
Commercials
· MCI ‘Family Affair’ 1991
· Pinguino De Longhi ‘Orso, Di Orso Grigio’ Principal (filmed in Spain, shown in Italy) 1990
· Bazooka Bubblegum ‘Bazerk’ 1989-1991
· RCA Dimensia ‘Experience’ 1989
· I Love NY ‘Summer/Fall’ 1987
· Subaru Of America 1986
· General Foods ‘Log Cabin’ 1976
And many more
Foreign Films, Too Many To List
Radio
· First Person America: Voices From The 30’s/ Smoke and Steel WGBH 1983
· The Bleeding Man Narrator ZBS 1982
Aka Rino Thunder, Ute Nation, Sahwachee, CO
October 29, 1934 - September 27, 2003
Following a lengthy illness it is with deep sadness to announce the passing of Manuel Candeleria aka Rino Thunder (Ute) on September 27, 2003 at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. A long-time resident of New York City, on the Lower East Side, Rino was one of the first successful contemporary Native American actors. Rino broke ground as a Native American playing many non-traditional and diverse roles in film, television and video and was especially popular in Europe where as an actor, he was specifically requested. As Rino's friends, we will miss him. Services will be arranged in NYC for peers, friends, and family. His contribution to contemporary Native American cinema will never be forgotten. - Friends of Rino
Film
· 7th Street (2002)
· Fresh Kill (1994)
· Geronimo: An American Legend (1993)
· Beyond the Law (1992)
· Hot Shots! (1991)
· Power (1986)
· Wolfen (1982)
Television
· Miracle in the Wilderness 1992
· Invisible Thread Penn & Teller 1987
· Three Sovereigns For Sarah - American Playhouse ‘John The Indian’ 1985
· Stone Pillow Starring Lucille Ball 1985
· Dance in America ‘Song For Dead Warriors’ - Narrator (Emmy Award) 1984
· Johnny Appleseed And The Frontier Within - ‘Shamen’ (Emmy Award) 1983
· Leatherstocking Tales - Singing Bear (Emmy Award: Outstanding Childrens’ Anthology/Dramatic Programming) 1982
Soaps (TV)
· One Life To Live ‘Joe Hawk’
· Another World
· As The World Turns
Commercials
· MCI ‘Family Affair’ 1991
· Pinguino De Longhi ‘Orso, Di Orso Grigio’ Principal (filmed in Spain, shown in Italy) 1990
· Bazooka Bubblegum ‘Bazerk’ 1989-1991
· RCA Dimensia ‘Experience’ 1989
· I Love NY ‘Summer/Fall’ 1987
· Subaru Of America 1986
· General Foods ‘Log Cabin’ 1976
And many more
Foreign Films, Too Many To List
Radio
· First Person America: Voices From The 30’s/ Smoke and Steel WGBH 1983
· The Bleeding Man Narrator ZBS 1982
Thursday, October 02, 2003
Wes Studi interview about Coyote Waits
This interview is available to journalists from wgbh (They're doing publicity for Coyote Waits), and I brought it over from there.
Leaphorn lays it on the line.
An interview with WES STUDI
co-star of COYOTE WAITS and A THIEF OF TIME,
American MYSTERY! Specials on PBS
Actor Wes Studi arrived at the role of Lt. Joe Leaphorn, co-hero of Tony Hillerman's Navajo police thrillers on American MYSTERY!, with a reputation for scalping (Dances With Wolves), eviscerating (The Last of the Mohicans), and massacring (Geronimo) his adversaries. Now he's giving them the courteous Joe Friday treatment.
Hailed by the New York Daily News for his "smoldering performance" in Skinwalkers, the first of the Hillerman specials on MYSTERY!, Studi is now back in two new episodes: Coyote Waits (November 16 at 9pm) and A Thief of Time (spring 2004).
He recently talked about the series and his wide-ranging interests from his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Q: Were you familiar with Leaphorn and Officer Jim Chee before you started making these films?
A; I had read a couple of Tony Hillerman's books. In fact, the one that we did first, Skinwalkers, I read back in the eighties when it first came out.
Q: When you were approached about playing Leaphorn, did you think, "Oh yeah, I can see myself as Leaphorn?"
A: I had actually thought of myself more in the Chee role from a number of years ago. Back when they were casting for Dark Wind [a Hillerman-inspired movie released in 1991], Chee was the part I gravitated toward. Not now, because time has passed and I'm a bit older and I couldn't do the Chee character. But I was very happy to learn with the script for Skinwalkers that Leaphorn has been changed to reflect a different background. In the books he is a fellow who has been on the reservation the larger part of his life. With these scripts Joe has an urban upbringing and is therefore a different kind of guy.
Q: What is his relationship to Chee?
A: In Leaphorn's eyes Chee is overly reliant on his learning as a medicine man. But Joe is slowly beginning to accept the value of these traditional ways, mainly because a lot of the people he deals with on the Navajo reservation are of the same belief system as Chee. And Leaphorn knows that he's seen as an outsider and has to deal with that.
Q: You're a native speaker of Cherokee and have spoken various Indian languages in your films. Do you get to speak Navajo as Leaphorn?
A: To this point, I have not. I think it fits into Leaphorn's character that he doesn't. While his wife does speak Navajo, Joe was raised in an urban environment, particularly Phoenix. He doesn't have an open disdain for the fact that he's Navajo, it's just that it hasn't been that much a part of his real life.
Q: How does Leaphorn handle his immersion into Navajo culture?
A: Because he's an Indian, because he's Navajo, Leaphorn is easily accepted into that circle, simply because physically he appears to be an Indian. So it's incumbent upon him to be respectful of what goes on, whether it's something that he believes in or not. I think most Indians have this attitude. Going from tribe to tribe over the years I've found that it's just a matter of being respectful of other people's rituals and ceremonies. That's more or less expected of you because that's what you yourself would want to see from other Indians.
Q: Is it a sensitive issue with Navajos for you, a Cherokee, to be playing a member of their tribe?
A: It may be with some, but I find that most Indians agree that it's better to have another American Indian playing the part whether they're a member of the tribe or not.
Q: A few years ago you wrote and starred in a one-man show called Coyote Chews His Own Tale. Would this be the same coyote figure as in Coyote Waits?
A: Not exactly. In Coyote Waits coyote is related to the darker side of the figure of coyote. Coyote has dozens of personalities and dozens of uses as far as his myth goes. Coyote is not only present in Navajo stories; he's a trickster type of character in many other tribes' stories and belief systems as well.
Q: And how did he figure in Coyote Chews His Own Tale?
A: Coyote Chews His Own Tale was a collection of stories from different sources that relate aspects of coyote's character to how humans act today. You see people behaving like coyote all the time.
Q: What are your interests besides acting?
A: I'm in a six-piece band called Firecat of Discord. My wife Maura is our lead vocalist. I'm the bass player. We do mainly original music that four of us in the band write.
Q: And I understand that you're a sculptor?
A: I'm a carver.
Q: What's the difference?
A: Sculpting is quite a process of different techniques. Myself, I just carve stone. I started out carving pipes. Then I went into different kinds of figures-fanciful things, some that are almost monstrous looking but have a humorous edge to them. I'll give a character human arms that have an extra joint-things that are beyond our realm.
Q: And you've written a couple of children's books?
A: Yes, I did write two books: The Adventures of Billy Bean and More Adventures of Billy Bean. They were part of a bilingual education program designed to insert the Cherokee language and the Cherokee syllabary into stories for distribution in schools in the Cherokee area of Oklahoma.
Q: How alive is the Cherokee language? I know that some Indian languages are endangered.
A: I'd say it's about half alive. There are efforts being made to instill the use of Cherokee within families and schools in northeastern Oklahoma.
Q: Beyond your books, are you involved in this effort at all?
A: I work with a group here in Santa Fe called the Indigenous Language Institute, which is a clearinghouse for ideas and methods for teaching, maintaining, and encouraging the use of native languages. Indigenous languages around the world are suffering a time of loss right now. It's a worldwide epidemic. They say that every five days another language goes extinct.
Q: What films are you working on now?
A: Right now I'm starting a contemporary film called Cactus. It's a dark comedy like Texasville, which has a little bit to do with Indian casinos. I recently finished a film called Edge of America about an Indian girls' basketball team, and I have a very small part in The Alamo, which is opening in December.
Q: Who do you play in The Alamo?
A: I play a character called Chief Bowl. He was a Cherokee who was quite the traveler. He wound up in Texas long before the Trail of Tears brought the Cherokees to Oklahoma. He was more or less a mentor for Sam Houston, who was married into the Cherokees. I believe this is the first time Indians have showed up in an Alamo movie.
Q: Why haven't there been more films like Smoke Signals [1998, directed by Chris Eyre, director of Skinwalkers and A Thief of Time] that show the lives of Native Americans today?
A: That was a good film. Unfortunately, it wasn't the breakthrough film that was going to have more like it made. I think that Hollywood still likes the romantic image of the Indian on horseback with feathers flying in the wind. It's easier to sell.
Q: Do you have any favorite PBS shows?
A: I do enjoy Mr. and Mrs. "Bouquet" on Keeping Up Appearances. Also Helen Mirren on Prime Suspect, and Juliet Stevenson on MYSTERY! [Trial By Fire].
Q: Audiences best know you for your roles in Dances With Wolves, The Last of the Mohicans, and Geronimo. Are there lesser-known parts that you'd like to call our attention to?
A: Actually, I kind of liked my role in Mystery Men [1999]. It was a comedy about a bunch of people who thought they were superheroes. I was the Sphinx who came along to show them how to become superheroes. I liked that.
Q: What would be your dream role?
A: Maybe if Joe Leaphorn were to have some sort of emotional breakdown and go absolutely nuts and then come back from the brink-something with a huge arc to it in terms of development. That would be great!
Q: You'll have to talk to Tony Hillerman about that.
A: [Laughs] Yeah, I'll whisper in his ear next time I see him.
MYSTERY!: WES STUDI interview (September 24, 2003) page 1
Leaphorn lays it on the line.
An interview with WES STUDI
co-star of COYOTE WAITS and A THIEF OF TIME,
American MYSTERY! Specials on PBS
Actor Wes Studi arrived at the role of Lt. Joe Leaphorn, co-hero of Tony Hillerman's Navajo police thrillers on American MYSTERY!, with a reputation for scalping (Dances With Wolves), eviscerating (The Last of the Mohicans), and massacring (Geronimo) his adversaries. Now he's giving them the courteous Joe Friday treatment.
Hailed by the New York Daily News for his "smoldering performance" in Skinwalkers, the first of the Hillerman specials on MYSTERY!, Studi is now back in two new episodes: Coyote Waits (November 16 at 9pm) and A Thief of Time (spring 2004).
He recently talked about the series and his wide-ranging interests from his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Q: Were you familiar with Leaphorn and Officer Jim Chee before you started making these films?
A; I had read a couple of Tony Hillerman's books. In fact, the one that we did first, Skinwalkers, I read back in the eighties when it first came out.
Q: When you were approached about playing Leaphorn, did you think, "Oh yeah, I can see myself as Leaphorn?"
A: I had actually thought of myself more in the Chee role from a number of years ago. Back when they were casting for Dark Wind [a Hillerman-inspired movie released in 1991], Chee was the part I gravitated toward. Not now, because time has passed and I'm a bit older and I couldn't do the Chee character. But I was very happy to learn with the script for Skinwalkers that Leaphorn has been changed to reflect a different background. In the books he is a fellow who has been on the reservation the larger part of his life. With these scripts Joe has an urban upbringing and is therefore a different kind of guy.
Q: What is his relationship to Chee?
A: In Leaphorn's eyes Chee is overly reliant on his learning as a medicine man. But Joe is slowly beginning to accept the value of these traditional ways, mainly because a lot of the people he deals with on the Navajo reservation are of the same belief system as Chee. And Leaphorn knows that he's seen as an outsider and has to deal with that.
Q: You're a native speaker of Cherokee and have spoken various Indian languages in your films. Do you get to speak Navajo as Leaphorn?
A: To this point, I have not. I think it fits into Leaphorn's character that he doesn't. While his wife does speak Navajo, Joe was raised in an urban environment, particularly Phoenix. He doesn't have an open disdain for the fact that he's Navajo, it's just that it hasn't been that much a part of his real life.
Q: How does Leaphorn handle his immersion into Navajo culture?
A: Because he's an Indian, because he's Navajo, Leaphorn is easily accepted into that circle, simply because physically he appears to be an Indian. So it's incumbent upon him to be respectful of what goes on, whether it's something that he believes in or not. I think most Indians have this attitude. Going from tribe to tribe over the years I've found that it's just a matter of being respectful of other people's rituals and ceremonies. That's more or less expected of you because that's what you yourself would want to see from other Indians.
Q: Is it a sensitive issue with Navajos for you, a Cherokee, to be playing a member of their tribe?
A: It may be with some, but I find that most Indians agree that it's better to have another American Indian playing the part whether they're a member of the tribe or not.
Q: A few years ago you wrote and starred in a one-man show called Coyote Chews His Own Tale. Would this be the same coyote figure as in Coyote Waits?
A: Not exactly. In Coyote Waits coyote is related to the darker side of the figure of coyote. Coyote has dozens of personalities and dozens of uses as far as his myth goes. Coyote is not only present in Navajo stories; he's a trickster type of character in many other tribes' stories and belief systems as well.
Q: And how did he figure in Coyote Chews His Own Tale?
A: Coyote Chews His Own Tale was a collection of stories from different sources that relate aspects of coyote's character to how humans act today. You see people behaving like coyote all the time.
Q: What are your interests besides acting?
A: I'm in a six-piece band called Firecat of Discord. My wife Maura is our lead vocalist. I'm the bass player. We do mainly original music that four of us in the band write.
Q: And I understand that you're a sculptor?
A: I'm a carver.
Q: What's the difference?
A: Sculpting is quite a process of different techniques. Myself, I just carve stone. I started out carving pipes. Then I went into different kinds of figures-fanciful things, some that are almost monstrous looking but have a humorous edge to them. I'll give a character human arms that have an extra joint-things that are beyond our realm.
Q: And you've written a couple of children's books?
A: Yes, I did write two books: The Adventures of Billy Bean and More Adventures of Billy Bean. They were part of a bilingual education program designed to insert the Cherokee language and the Cherokee syllabary into stories for distribution in schools in the Cherokee area of Oklahoma.
Q: How alive is the Cherokee language? I know that some Indian languages are endangered.
A: I'd say it's about half alive. There are efforts being made to instill the use of Cherokee within families and schools in northeastern Oklahoma.
Q: Beyond your books, are you involved in this effort at all?
A: I work with a group here in Santa Fe called the Indigenous Language Institute, which is a clearinghouse for ideas and methods for teaching, maintaining, and encouraging the use of native languages. Indigenous languages around the world are suffering a time of loss right now. It's a worldwide epidemic. They say that every five days another language goes extinct.
Q: What films are you working on now?
A: Right now I'm starting a contemporary film called Cactus. It's a dark comedy like Texasville, which has a little bit to do with Indian casinos. I recently finished a film called Edge of America about an Indian girls' basketball team, and I have a very small part in The Alamo, which is opening in December.
Q: Who do you play in The Alamo?
A: I play a character called Chief Bowl. He was a Cherokee who was quite the traveler. He wound up in Texas long before the Trail of Tears brought the Cherokees to Oklahoma. He was more or less a mentor for Sam Houston, who was married into the Cherokees. I believe this is the first time Indians have showed up in an Alamo movie.
Q: Why haven't there been more films like Smoke Signals [1998, directed by Chris Eyre, director of Skinwalkers and A Thief of Time] that show the lives of Native Americans today?
A: That was a good film. Unfortunately, it wasn't the breakthrough film that was going to have more like it made. I think that Hollywood still likes the romantic image of the Indian on horseback with feathers flying in the wind. It's easier to sell.
Q: Do you have any favorite PBS shows?
A: I do enjoy Mr. and Mrs. "Bouquet" on Keeping Up Appearances. Also Helen Mirren on Prime Suspect, and Juliet Stevenson on MYSTERY! [Trial By Fire].
Q: Audiences best know you for your roles in Dances With Wolves, The Last of the Mohicans, and Geronimo. Are there lesser-known parts that you'd like to call our attention to?
A: Actually, I kind of liked my role in Mystery Men [1999]. It was a comedy about a bunch of people who thought they were superheroes. I was the Sphinx who came along to show them how to become superheroes. I liked that.
Q: What would be your dream role?
A: Maybe if Joe Leaphorn were to have some sort of emotional breakdown and go absolutely nuts and then come back from the brink-something with a huge arc to it in terms of development. That would be great!
Q: You'll have to talk to Tony Hillerman about that.
A: [Laughs] Yeah, I'll whisper in his ear next time I see him.
MYSTERY!: WES STUDI interview (September 24, 2003) page 1
Wednesday, October 01, 2003
Div news
I forgot - for the second time in a short while - to replace the old table of contents in the newsletter yesterday.
This is what it was supposed to look like:
1) New on NativeCelebs
2) JJ Harper news
3) Update from Pato Hoffmann
4) Update from Glen Gould
5) Update from Joseph Runningfox
6) Misc news
7) Misc interviews
8) TV-Listings
There's also a new story about the JJ Harper movie, with statements from Eric Schweig
This is what it was supposed to look like:
1) New on NativeCelebs
2) JJ Harper news
3) Update from Pato Hoffmann
4) Update from Glen Gould
5) Update from Joseph Runningfox
6) Misc news
7) Misc interviews
8) TV-Listings
There's also a new story about the JJ Harper movie, with statements from Eric Schweig
Monday, September 29, 2003
Div news
Coyote Waits is airing November 16 at 9:00 pm EST.
I've put some promotional photos here for now:
http://www.nativecelebs.com/subs/coyote/
The people at PBS would like for the word to get out, so if you just casually mention this movie to all your friends?
Interview with Wes Studi about Coyote Waits
I'll have career updates from Pato Hoffmann, Joseph Runningfox and Glen Gould in the newsletter tomorrow...
NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH SPECIALS ON DPTV
Including COYOTE WAITS, TRUE WHISPERS, SKINWALKERS
2003 National Indian Education Association convention
Aside from the education convention stuff, there's also a gospel sing and pow wow open to the public.
Concerts by Floyd Red Crow Westerman, Jana and Ulali (are these open to the public?)
Docudrama recounts killing of J.J. Harper
I've put some promotional photos here for now:
http://www.nativecelebs.com/subs/coyote/
The people at PBS would like for the word to get out, so if you just casually mention this movie to all your friends?
Interview with Wes Studi about Coyote Waits
I'll have career updates from Pato Hoffmann, Joseph Runningfox and Glen Gould in the newsletter tomorrow...
NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH SPECIALS ON DPTV
Including COYOTE WAITS, TRUE WHISPERS, SKINWALKERS
2003 National Indian Education Association convention
Aside from the education convention stuff, there's also a gospel sing and pow wow open to the public.
Concerts by Floyd Red Crow Westerman, Jana and Ulali (are these open to the public?)
Docudrama recounts killing of J.J. Harper
Casting notice
Got this in the mail today, and got permission to post anywhere:
I'm directing a music video for a new reality show where they take a
couple directors, a couple of bands - pair 'em up - give 'em limited crew,
budget and 5 days to see what they've got.
My resume is solid with two music videos currently on MTV (here and
abroad) as well as a contract with Nautica (fashion videos) and many
award-winning short films so while this project is a bit off-the-wall your
talent will be working with pros (or as the show says "hot new directors
just under the radar").
The sticky part there is no $ and we shoot Tuesday 10am - 8pm on Coney
Island, NYC. Not a lot of prep time.
If you have any actors, models and/or performers that need some quality
footage for their reel, resume and some air-time this will be helpful - if
not it probably won't be - feel free to call me if you'd like further
explanation.
I appreciate your time and consideration.
~GEOFF
---
Looking for actors, performers and the likes for a music video this
Tuesday (10am-8pm) shooting on Coney Island for the new reality show
"Video Evolution". The video is directed by Geoff Ryan (Senses Fail, iiO)
and features the band "Dog Fashion Disco". The making of the video is
being sponsored by IFC and will be broadcast as part of the Video
Evolution series. We are in need of actors of all types from the beautiful
to the freakish for a "Grease" spoof. Featured roles for the "Sandi",
"Rizzo" and "Greasers" parts as well as extra and featured extra roles for
all interested. Send headshots for featured roles or just show up for
extra parts (all will be accepted - the more the merrier).
Due to short notice time is of the essence. Unfortunately, we can't offer
$, (I ain't getting paid either), but it is truly a great opportunity to
get yourself on national TV (which is why I'm doing it, shameless self
promotion). All actors & performers will be interviewed for the TV show as
well as receive a video copy of the music video and will be invited to the
premiere party on Oct. 22 hosted by IFC.
Look forward to working with you.
~GEOFF RYAN
SPORKproductions
4249-341 Lafayette Street
New York, NY 10012
917-312-2030
Www.SPORKproductions.com
preferred attire: "Grease" style (think Travolta, the Pink girls, nerd...)
or dress punk, metal, thug, preppy or for more fun mix. The crazier the
better (and the more screen time you'll get.
I'm directing a music video for a new reality show where they take a
couple directors, a couple of bands - pair 'em up - give 'em limited crew,
budget and 5 days to see what they've got.
My resume is solid with two music videos currently on MTV (here and
abroad) as well as a contract with Nautica (fashion videos) and many
award-winning short films so while this project is a bit off-the-wall your
talent will be working with pros (or as the show says "hot new directors
just under the radar").
The sticky part there is no $ and we shoot Tuesday 10am - 8pm on Coney
Island, NYC. Not a lot of prep time.
If you have any actors, models and/or performers that need some quality
footage for their reel, resume and some air-time this will be helpful - if
not it probably won't be - feel free to call me if you'd like further
explanation.
I appreciate your time and consideration.
~GEOFF
---
Looking for actors, performers and the likes for a music video this
Tuesday (10am-8pm) shooting on Coney Island for the new reality show
"Video Evolution". The video is directed by Geoff Ryan (Senses Fail, iiO)
and features the band "Dog Fashion Disco". The making of the video is
being sponsored by IFC and will be broadcast as part of the Video
Evolution series. We are in need of actors of all types from the beautiful
to the freakish for a "Grease" spoof. Featured roles for the "Sandi",
"Rizzo" and "Greasers" parts as well as extra and featured extra roles for
all interested. Send headshots for featured roles or just show up for
extra parts (all will be accepted - the more the merrier).
Due to short notice time is of the essence. Unfortunately, we can't offer
$, (I ain't getting paid either), but it is truly a great opportunity to
get yourself on national TV (which is why I'm doing it, shameless self
promotion). All actors & performers will be interviewed for the TV show as
well as receive a video copy of the music video and will be invited to the
premiere party on Oct. 22 hosted by IFC.
Look forward to working with you.
~GEOFF RYAN
SPORKproductions
4249-341 Lafayette Street
New York, NY 10012
917-312-2030
Www.SPORKproductions.com
preferred attire: "Grease" style (think Travolta, the Pink girls, nerd...)
or dress punk, metal, thug, preppy or for more fun mix. The crazier the
better (and the more screen time you'll get.
