Cast and Crew

Bistro Buddies!  The comfy casting couch for this production was largely the famed Corner Bistro in the West Village of New York, like friend Edlin Pitts, a Miles Davis look-a-like who manages a bike shop and John Adams who lent us the trumpet and renewed his acting career with his appearance here as Joe Coffey, the camera operator in”FILM.”  And there’s the well-traveled and so talented sax tenor Grant Stewart whom I’ve known for twenty years!    I also befriended our Producer at the Bistro five or so years ago, James Richard, and Jake Salas, the “Rod Serling”-esque Narrator, and actor Benjamin Foronda, whose role here I won’t divulge!  Don’t want to spoil THAT surprise!  You’ll see Jay O’Brien here too, as an hilarious “come on guys, I gotta go home” late night restaurant chef, Guido.  It was Steve Smith, here Buster Keaton, who did the most to welcome me at the Bistro some twenty-one plus years ago.

Many of the featured background cast I met in other “under Broadway” productions, like “Mystery Woman” Gargi Shinde, who played Nurse Mortimer in a reading of “A World of Solitude” by Peter Dizozza at La Mama e.t.c. a couple of years ago (or more?), a musical spoof of the James Bond movies in which I played Bond’s Uncle James, and I worked with Jay Greenberg as Ernest Hemingway in Rob Urbinati’s “Karaoke Night at the Suicide Shack” which played in Queens Theatre in the Park and which unfortunately nobody in Manhattan or Brooklyn ever saw.  Jay had been cast as Mark Rothko, another celebrity suicide among the others: Kurt Cobain, Dorothy Dandridge, “Frankenstein” director James Whale, Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton.  Here, Jay is the director of Beckett’s “FILM,” Alan Schneider.  Jay also worked with us as an Associate Producer for “To Paint the Portrait of a Bird,” an award-winning short film based on the Jacques Prevert poem available at the iTunes store.

Cynthia Shaw, the Costumer in  “FILM,” comes to us by way of the The Shelter creative collaborative whom we often work with, Michael Kingsbaker, in particular, who was our “Writer” character in “Dinner on the Riviera.”  Cynthia also worked in Joe Quartararo’s first feature, “The Candy Flip,” which was the first vehicle in which I got to know Lou Matthews who is the all-important actor wanna be Waitress, and John Payne who played the lead.   Here he is Norman Grantz, the jazz impresario of the 50’s and 60’s.  Czech-born Camilla Mraz, whom we use here to recall the late, great cabaret/jazz singer Blossom Dearie, is a singer/pianist/composer and “dear” friend.   The “Jazz Groupie” is Meghan Norbut whom Joe ran into on a subway during production which inspired the very idea for her role, and our Beatnik, Adam Walck,  who doubled as the company carpenter (thank you Adam!) came to us through his friend  and ours, Anna Kathleen.

Director Joe Q is now in India working with the Sundarum Tagore Gallery recording sound for a Louis Kahn (architect) documentary and he can fill you in later on how he met most of the patient and tireless production crew, but for now I’d like to acknowledge and thank them all here starting with Production Designer Anna Kathleen who also worked with Joe on “Charity” — as did our shooter, Donavon DeCesare, the director of photography for “The Candy Flip” as well.  Brian McElroy is our invaluable First A.D., and his wit (and wisdom) provided much of the fuel we needed to barrel through some of the normal bog that just seems to go along with film production.

Gaffer Matt Kessler, a/c Anthony Carella,  Nick Massey, Key Grip and Mike Sutter, Best Boy, Sam Schmitz, Dolly Grip, Annette Heart, H/MU, Set Decorator Hannah Caggiano, Script Supervisor Sabrina Hillp, Production Coordinator Candece Munroe , Set Photographer Rachel Brunell, 2nd A.D.’s Nick Ambro and Emma Zbiral Teller; P.A.’s were Vijay Joshi, David P. Evans (who also doubled as a Busboy, thank you!), Ian Friedman, Daniel Lambroso.  And we cannot, should not, will not take Lakhota Film Sound Guy Jose Ramirez for granted!  Thanks Jose !

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Production Begins

January 3 we load in at Windmill Studios in Williamsburg, Studio D, a big black box with a very high ceiling … Saturday January 4 project dramaturg and actor T. D. White (Samuel Beckett) , director Joseph Quartararo, cinematographer Donavon DeCesare, Production Designer Anna Kathleen, Producer James Richard, Brian McElroy First A.D., actors Steven Lloyd Smith (Buster Keaton) and Lou Matthews and the rest of cast and crew  begin the shoot with our Red Digital Cinema Scarlet and 788 Sound Recorder and Lectrosonics lavs.

We were fueled throughout by the truly fantastic tasting tacos supplied by our Bistro buddies at Los Tacos # 1 in Chelsea Market, Kyle Cameron and Tyler Sanders.  (Hello to Christian!)

The desire to film “Banana Man” arose after we mounted the Don Nigro play in 2011 at the now condominium once 35-seat Red Room black box theatre on East 4th Street along with another”Manhattan” play, “The Mouse-trap” by William Dean Howells. We also  screened three Manhattan short films, one by Joe Quartararo (“Abigail in Place”), “Private Eyes” by Sam Hayes, and the ironically entitled “Dinner on the Riviera ” by T. D. White.  We called the evening “Aisle Take Manhattan.”  Although “Banana Man” is primarily dialog, we thought it lent itself to imaginative filmmaking  and here we are!  And “The Mouse-trap” isn’t safe from us either!

AFTER we shot all the interiors over the four icey days, we came to realize that the half-our short will be released in the same year that marks the 50th Anniversary of the shooting of Samuel Beckett’s one and only film — “FILM” directed by Alan Schneider – in 1964!!  … which really asks the question “Is coincidence coincidence or is coincidence our cosmic  reality?”

“Banana Man” features an imagined dialog between silent film star Buster Keaton and the Irish literary lion.   But it’s the Waitress in the Italian restaurant where they met in the evenings during the production of “FILM” who steals the show.  She has acting ambitions as many waitstaff in the big city do, and fond memories that will make us all the more aware of the power, and importance, of performance.

Adding “color” to this piece, shot in an early television/noir style, are the musical atmospherics surrounding the profound artistic shifts in 1964, and the discussions between Buster and Beckett that celebrate and memorialize Hollywood, silent films, Fatty Arbuckle, Beckett’s theatrical work, life itself, and the philosophy of one Irish Lord, George Berkeley  (esse est percipi !), and let’s also now and forever memorialize and celebrate the lives of the dog, the cat, the parrot, the fish while we’re here.  We are all stars in the night and in the day, seen or unseen.

We will soon spend a day shooting exteriors, but the majority of the film is being prepped now for edit and should release in Spring.  We will update you periodically here and at Lakhota Film Facebook and the Loose Moon Productions, Inc. website.

(50 years now since Beckett shot “FILM,” fifty years since “She Loves Me” and “Can’t Buy Me Love” and “A Hard Day’s Night,”   “Oh, Pretty Woman,” Herbie Hancock’s “Empyrean Isles” and”Other Planes of There” by Sun Ra,  “Under the Boardwalk” by the Drifters and “Dancing in the Street” by Martha and the Vandellas! {just a few of Billboard Hot Singles of 1964 … take a look at the list: you’ll be amazed!})  This was the year of Andy Warhol’s “Blue Monroe!”

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