I looked for the chair as well...you can't really see the chair that he sits on. I guess that sweatshirt and designer sweatpants cover it all up, if that is the same chair.
I thought maybe Adam was sitting in that chair during Today For You, but that's just a guess.
The December 5th Broadway Beat has a feature on the movie. There are clips and some of the interviews they did on the set. Nothing particularly new, but I was happy to watch something I hadn't seen before.
Wasn't he sitting in the cushy chair?
Stand-by Joined: 9/16/05
Thanks guys.
Yeah I think he was sitting on a chair that was lower to the ground..possibly one of the other crappy chairs on ebay.
Aw, Emcee. I just read your message on your movie thread. It's been such a long ride - a rollercoaster of emotions all around. I don't think I'll ever have an experience like this again with a film - Rent is something on another level.
Updated On: 12/17/05 at 12:03 AM
I'm going to miss it. I mean, watching it on my TV isn't gonna be the same! (The Giant Face of Adam won't be so big!)
Yes he was, and that one was on eBay too. I thought that was the one we were talking about, but evidently not. The kitchen one instead?
I saw your wrap-up to your review thread, but didn't want to reply there, as it seems like that should be the last post on it. Am I being more sentimental about this than you?
I was thinking about that tonight while watching Your Eyes. When I see it on my laptop, Adam's head will actually be proportional to mine.
Btw Em, the PBS show is on at 12:30, not 1.
eep, okay! Thanks.
I condone sentimentality, Chloe. That post feels so final, and I don't like the way I ended it. I'm not sure what I want to say -- I feel it, but I can't articulate it. I'll edit when it comes to me, I guess. I feel like I keep rambling on, trying to find it, but I don't ever get there.
What PBS show?
Theatre Talk -- tonight they're talking about closeted actors in relation to the new play at Second Stage.
Theater Talk: a discussion of "Stars In the Closet"
Oh right, I read about that. Should be interesting. Elton has said that there are many closeted actors, especially in Hollywood, and of course they're all worried about jeopardizing their careers. Apparently it isn't just a matter of how the public responds, but the execs in their usual cowardly and paranoid way pigeonhole openly gay actors in casting.
I've been thinking about all the varied reactions and rather inglorious fate of the movie. It would have been wonderful for it to have had more of the impact and acceptance of the original show, but in 20/20 hindsight that sort of lightning hardly ever strikes twice, and I think the show is just at an age when it is even less likely. Nothing is less "in" than what was in ten years ago. I don't mean to imply that I think of RENT as just some trendy flash in the pan, but anything that popular has a bit of that trendiness to it, no matter how worthy it is.
However, the clothes everyone throws out as *so* last season have a tendency to become treasured classics after a few more seasons have gone by, and I would be very surprised if the movie didn't have a long life ahead of it. Someone wrote on CB that it will be treasured by a few and forgotten by everyone else, but I don't think that will happen. It may take a while, but I really believe that it will be enjoyed by greater and greater numbers of people in the future.
Updated On: 12/17/05 at 12:23 AM
The play they're discussing is about a gay actor whose career is on the rise, and he wants to come out, but his agent insists it's a terrible idea. It's a really fun play, but there's a lot to consider in it, too. The playwright is going to be on the show. I can't imagine they'll sit there and read names -- they can't possibly.
I think it's sad that they had such high expectations -- they thought lightning *would* strike twice. I mean, they had no reason to think that couldn't happen. It seems to have just gone in and left under the radar, almost.
No, I'm sure there will be no names named.
As Anthony wrote, they got a lot of great feedback in the industry, but I think as soon as some of the bad reviews came out (and there did seem to be more in LA than elsewhere) a lot of those people decided that it wasn't cool to like it.
Don't go to Hollywood, Adam!
*clings to his leg*
Broadway Legend Joined: 12/8/04
Which should I see first - THE PRODUCERS or KING KONG?
I really feel he's better off here too.
King Kong.
Maybe since it wasn't the huge hit that they thought it would be, he'll decide to stay in NYC?
Updated On: 12/17/05 at 12:43 AM
Right on, Chloe. Although I tend to be very much a numbers person, it's clear that sometimes numbers alone don't give the full picture. While the movie didn't make a huge splash, I feel like its impact is already larger than the box office would suggest and will only continue to grow. I have a feeling that many of the people who saw the movie in theaters were teenagers and young adults, some unfamiliar with the story, others who already knew and loved every note of the OBCR but had never seen it brought to life, who will carry the experience with them for the rest of their lives. I doubt that the same can be said for most of the movies that outgrossed Rent this holiday season.
I'm relatively new to the Rent fandom (it's only been about 2 months since the first time I saw the show), but I've seen, heard, and read enough to realize that it tends to have an amazing effect on people once they experience it, that my reaction of being blown away by the power of the music and the story is par for the course. I rarely go to the movie theater more than once or twice a year, yet I saw this movie 4 times in 22 days because I couldn't get enough.
Douglas Carter Beene is sure funny.
Onthesky, I've put up a couple things on ebay and while it gives you the option of withdrawing an item, it says you shouldn't do this if you're dissatisfied w/ the final price, which is prob what happened in this case. However, they just say should and they really have no way of enforcing it. Sorry, but yeah the negative feedback is probably the only thing to do.
Did you guys see Take Me Out? Of course I have many reasons for loving the show, but the idea behind it is pretty interesting. I mean if you think how hard it is for actors to come out, can you imagine the strain put on athletes? Two former baseball players who I came out, the only ones I know to have done so, never worked in the sport again(in case you don't know, after retiring, many many players will coach either major or minor league terms, or become some kind of scout or have some front office job, so it's unusual for them to never work again. It really is sad, but I wouldn't fault any closeted athlete.
Just read the main board review thread thingie...I missed Adam stuffing his face? There were a couple of times you guys were laughing and I didn't understand why, maybe that was one of them.
Broadway Legend Joined: 11/8/05
Wait, when did Adam stuff his face? I'm confused...
Broadway Legend Joined: 12/8/04
In the scene when he is ALL alone with Angel.
Low blow.
Updated On: 12/17/05 at 02:28 AM
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