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The Official Adam Pascal Love Thread, part two- Page 154

The Official Adam Pascal Love Thread, part two

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3825let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 11:32am

Maybe so, I also have not heard the music. I kind of gave up on Disney films after Hercules.


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

Chloe Profile Photo
Chloe
#3826let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 11:45am

Hi guys. Interesting, Emcee. It could be that the Storyteller is no longer part of the show, or that they definitely want Adam for it so are not putting it out to be cast. If the RENT movie does well, having Adam in any musical around that time could be a big plus for it. Maybe that's part of their thinking.

However, as I've said umpteen times now, I'm hoping the Pink Floyd The Wall musical will happen, and that Adam will be in that. It just sounds much more interesting and appropriate for him.

And yay for all the great Billy Elliot reviews!

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3827let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 11:47am

Well, somebody just said EPA's (which are casting calls, I assume?) are required by Equity, even if the role has already been cast. There's so much speculation we could do, though.

How far off is the Pink Floyd thing? Maybe he'll do both?


A work of art is an invitation to love.

Chloe Profile Photo
Chloe
#3828let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 11:55am

I haven't seen much about a schedule for The Wall, but it might have been predicted for 2006. There does seem to be active work going on for it.

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3829let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:04pm

Wow am I ever out of the loop. What kind of Wall thing is being done?


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

Chloe Profile Photo
Chloe
#3830let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:11pm

There hasn't been much publicity about it so far. Are you familiar with Pink Floyd, the British rock band? Years ago they made a concept album called "The Wall." Roger Waters based it on a chilling moment during one of their concerts when he found himself actually spitting on a male fan trying to climb the stage. It's about the emotional paralysis and alienation of a rock star.

The band created an innovative stage show out of the album, in which a wall between Pink Floyd and the audience was built on stage over the course of the evening. Then a rather strange movie was made out of it - although Waters participated, he felt that the humor he intended in some of the songs got left out.

Now he and, I believe, Lee Hall of Billy Elliot are working on a stage musical version. (I just don't have time to look everything up right now.)

ETA: Adam was quoted in Show People magazine last fall as being interested in this show. He's a Pink Floyd fan.
Updated On: 5/12/05 at 12:11 PM

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3831let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:16pm

Very interesting, I love Pink Floyd, I actually have all of their albums. But this is the first I have heard of this!


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

Chloe Profile Photo
Chloe
#3832let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:21pm

It's been kind of under the radar so far. Doesn't it seem like a great part for Adam?

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3833let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:23pm

It really does, almost perfect!
I can see it already. I hope the whole thing gets off of the ground.


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

Chloe Profile Photo
Chloe
#3834let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:35pm

::breaks down and does a quick google::

There was a story about this just a few days ago, as it happens:


May 08, 2005 
THE HOT SEAT WITH ROGER WATERS

By JAMIE SCHRAM

PINK Floyd's "The Wall," released in 1979, combined a symphonic blast of classic rock with a storyline about alienation, war and the life of an English schoolboy. It spent 15 weeks at No.1 on the U.S. charts.

Then, in 1982, director Alan Parker turned "The Wall" into a feature film starring Bob Geldof as the turbulent, burned-out rock star "Pink." The story followed Pink as he descended into madness while alienating the rest of the world by building a wall around him brick by brick.


Now, more than two decades later, "The Wall" is returning, but this time to the Broadway stage. Last year, Miramax honcho Harvey Weinstein and former Sony music chief Tommy Mottola inked a deal with Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters to produce a play based on "The Wall."


Mottola said it was "too premature" to know when "The Wall" would hit the stage, but said he'd like to hire a director within a year. Waters is currently working on the stage adaptation.



On Tuesday, The Post conducted an exclusive phone interview with the British-born Waters, who talked about how he'd like to bring out the funny side of Pink.


Q:Whose idea was it to bring "The Wall" to Broadway?


A:Well, I was approached by Harvey Weinstein and Tommy Mottola last summer. So I went and had a meeting with them in New York. I had been toying with the idea for a number of years. I think Harvey had been wanting to get into Broadway production for some time. I think they'd been investing in Broadway shows for some time. Harvey is a music guy. I believe his original background is in radio in Albany. He comes from a rock 'n' roll background.


Q:What is "The Wall" about?


A:It's about a sort of self-imposed alienation. It's about being too frightened to open up to other people. It's about how fear alienates us from our fellow man. It's largely autobiographical. On the record and in the movie, I have borrowed from other people's lives. There's a bit of Syd Barrett in there. (Barrett was the drug-addled, co-founder of Pink Floyd who was kicked out of the band in the late '60s due to his increasingly odd behavior.) I don't remember throwing a TV out of a window (as in the film). That's something out of Led Zeppelin.


Q:After the success of the movie and the album, why did you decide to take "The Wall" to Broadway?


A:My motivation is primarily that both the record and film, proud of them as I am, well, they have depth. They endure. There are no laughs anywhere. There are not many jokes. Humor is very important part of my life. I think it's a part of the life of the central character in the film, Pink. There will be a lot more humor in the Broadway version.


Q:What are the differences between the play and the film?


A:I don't think the play will be anything like the film. A situation where you have live music is quite different from sitting in a cinema. I have been writing episodically. I have been trying to get some humor off my chest. I have been talking with Adrian Noble to direct. He was a director of the royal Shakespeare. He directed "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" in London. Another person involved is a young English writer Lee Hall. Lee Hall is helping me write. He has written a lot for radio in England. He has written a number of plays.


Q:Who are going to be the actors?


A:I haven't the faintest idea. I haven't even begun to think of casting. The first thing is to get down the story.


Q:What songs are you going to perform?


A:Well, I would think most of the songs off "The Wall." And some of the other songs: "Money" and "Have a Cigar."


Q:Are you going to play any of your early songs like those featured in (the 1972 concert film) "Pink Floyd at Pompeii"?


A: I kind of doubt it. If you were watching, there is a little scene where Adrian Maben, the director, asked me, "What is the music about?" I'm really stoned. I'm just looking at him for a long time. I said, "What do you mean about?" I take a drag from my cigarette. I am refusing to be interviewed. It's sort of weird humor. That's the guy (Pink) I want people to see in the theater - sort of a strange Englishness about the character. It's a sort of particular English humor.


Q:When is the play going to open, and at what theater?


A:No idea. We are just trying to find the heart and soul of the story. The music we know is powerful. That's a given. I will really want to make the audience laugh.


Q:Are you trying to take the story in another direction?


A:I don't think we're trying to take "The Wall" into a total different direction. I think we're trying to illuminate another side of Pink's personality. He was kind of hard to empathize with in the movie. And if you can't empathize with him, he can't help you to understand life.


Q:Are there going to be any special effects?


A:I would think it would be extremely unlikely that there won't be. And when you are permanent in the theater, it gives you time to get it right. I am really excited about that - to stay in one place and to get the lighting and the special effects really perfect.


Q: How do you think the production is going to turn out?


A:I'm trying not to think about it. You get into a whole bunch of questions. First of all, we need to see it in black-and-white on the page. We are right in the middle of doing the work right now. Maybe about halfway there. Yeah, some of it makes me laugh.


Q:Can you tell me something about the material?


A:No, I don't want to give away anything.


Q:Are you nervous about the production?


A:Of course I am. Yeah, of course I am nervous. It's a conundrum. There are a lot of very, very difficult questions that need to be answered whether people are going to see it or not. We can't just reproduce what people already know. It would be dull. That would just be a purely commercial venture. But to give it new life by bringing humor to it will make it more palatable for the theater. I think the message - what "The Wall" is saying to us - is still important to us 20 years later.


Q:Are any of your former bandmates contributing to the project?


A:No, they are not.


Q:Are you in touch with any of your former bandmates?


A: I had dinner with Nick (Mason) recently. He was in New York doing a book signing. We've rekindled our friendship. I'm very happy about that. I never see Dave (Gilmour) or Rick (Wright). We have very little in common.


Q:Are you going to be living in New York during production of "The Wall"?


A:I will be spending a lot of time in Manhattan. I already spent a lot of time there.

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3835let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:38pm

wow, nice work Chloe!


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

Chloe Profile Photo
Chloe
#3836let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 12:43pm

I'm known for my Google. And now I *really* have to get back to work!

camerangel Profile Photo
camerangel
#3837let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 3:49pm

Looks like Penguin is Shilling DRS..

how is everyone today?


"All work and no smut makes Cammy lose her edge." ~DG

"Someday I'm going to have a baby and I'm gonna name her L'il Mimi Marquez and I and will sing to her every day and when she's a toddler I will say "L'il Mimi Marquez, clad only in a bubble diaper, will perform her famous play pen handcuff dance to the sounds of breast milk being pumped!" ~Kringas

BroadwayDiva Profile Photo
BroadwayDiva
#3838let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 3:58pm

Emcee, congrats on all of those BWW member awards!!

Penguin-- very cute icon!!

I'm okay, kinda tired. How are you??


I have my books and my poetry to protect me...

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3839let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 3:58pm

LOL, penguin - that is SO CUTE.

Thanks, Diva!


A work of art is an invitation to love.

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3840let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:16pm

Fuzzels sold out and is now shilling DRS full time.
Yes congrats Emcee.
I'm doing well. I have actually done some school work so that's new.


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3841let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:17pm

aw, well... good for Fuzzels.


A work of art is an invitation to love.

Ellie3
#3842let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:23pm

I see the contacts are in today. But surely the scarf is unnessecary - summer is here! Do penguins migrate?

Snaps
#3843let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:27pm

Hey, everyone, and congrats on all the awards, Emcee.


"Bangarang, Rufio!" --Hook

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3844let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:29pm

The scarf must stay on, I wouldn't want to be accused of breaking the guidelines by showing too much feather.
Gotta wear the contacts to read the playbill.


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

Ellie3
#3845let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:35pm

Don't the other audience members at DRS get confused when they find a penguin in the seat next to them? Do penguins get special rates?

Snaps
#3846let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:37pm

I'd comp a ticket for a Penguin, especially if he was in a scarf.


"Bangarang, Rufio!" --Hook

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3847let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 4:40pm

Norbert and John usually let me in through the stage door so I won't get trampled. I always do the lottery though, I could get comps but I want to show my support for the show by paying.


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

insomniak
#3848let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 5:30pm

knock knock, who's there?



Penguin- I like the whole same-stuffed-toy-with-accessories thing. It's sort of your signature, or it should be.

Adam should not do Tarzan, but Pink Floyd sounds good.

smartpenguin78 Profile Photo
smartpenguin78
#3849let's see how long this takes.
Posted: 5/12/05 at 5:37pm

I agree with the no Tarzan, for Adam. I am very intrigued by the Pink Floyd though.
So I have updated my signature for you, nia


I stand corrected, you are as vapid as they say.

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