Sunday, April 13, 2008

‘A Winter Tale’ impresses Jamaica audiences

NEWSDAY, Port of Spain.
Saturday, April 12 2008

A Jamaican student Talks It Out with actor Peter Williams and director Frances-Anne Solomon at the premiere of A Winter Tale.

WHEN Trinidadian Frances-Anne Solomon’s award-winning feature film opened at a VIP preview in Jamaica on April 3, audience members weren’t the only ones to take notice. Media across the Caribbean have been raving about A Winter Tale, and coverage of the film has been abundant.

During the premiere, Robert Gregory of Jamaica Trade and Invest described A Winter Tale as “a compelling story of struggle, survival and healing” calling it “a quality production, relevant to the times.”

Gregory also said he’s awaiting the DVD release: “I look forward to watching this film over and over again.”

The Canadian Consulate paid for 100 inner-city youth to attend the screening and in the Talk Back session after the screening, the audience witnessed a riveting and heart wrenching outpouring of emotion as the young people expressed their appreciation of the film’s relevance to Jamaica. As a result of the success of the first screening the Winter Tale team has been inundated with requests from local schools and communities to make the film available to their young audiences.

The film is now on general release in Jamaica. Throughout May and June it will travel across the region, opening at cinemas in Trinidad, Barbados, Antigua and St. Lucia.

A Winter Tale tells the moving story of a black men’s support group that forms at a local Caribbean takeaway restaurant after a young boy is killed by a stray bullet. With a plot that revolves around the universal issues of gun violence and drug use, the film beautifully captures the day-to-day emotional struggles of this group of individuals.

Last September, the film took home the People’s Choice Award for Best Caribbean Feature at the 2007 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival. A Winter Tale features a brilliant cast including Trinidadian comedian and actor Dennis “Sprangalang” Hall and famed Jamaican icon Leonie Forbes. It will open in TT next month.

Over the past year A Winter Tale has travelled the world, garnering rave reviews and international recognition through film festivals in Toronto, Montreal, Halifax, New York, Trinidad and England.

The film’s Jamaican release was sponsored by JMMB, Air Jamaica, Hype TV, The Gleaner, The Jamaica Observer, High Commission of Canada, Trinidad and Tobago Consulate, Roots FM, Jamaica Trade & Invest (JAMPRO), National Council on Drug Abuse, Grace Kennedy Corp, CTV, Caribbean Beat, Bank of Nova Scotia and Budget Rent-A-Car.

Frances-Anne Solomon is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, director and producer. She is the president and artistic director of the two companies she founded: Leda Serene Films and CaribbeanTales, and has also worked as a film and television drama producer for the BBC.

Recent projects include A Winter Tale (for Telefilm Canada/CHUM Television); Heart Beat (Bravo!) which profiles Caribbean musical creators; Literature Alive, a multi-facetted multimedia project profiling Caribbean authors; and the Gemini-nominated Lord Have Mercy!, Canada’s landmark multicultural sitcom, for Vision TV, Toronto1, APTN and Showcase.

Photos: Some of the youth who attended the Jamaican Premiere of A Winter Tale at Sovereign Mall on April 3.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

'A Winter Tale' tells of manly chill

published: Wednesday | April 9, 2008

Mel Cooke, Freelance Writer

Leonie Forbes in a scene from 'A Winter Tale'. - Contributed

A Winter Tale, set in the biting cold of Canada, is about a certain manly chill. A certain black manly chill.

It is not the chill of young adult 'DX' (Michael Miller), a pretty 'fly' young man who struggles with the choices he has to make between lucrative drugs and a sense of 'nobodiness'. It is not the chill of a mid-30s looking 'Lloyd' (RO Glasgow), a drug dealer whose snappy dressing is pretty cool. And it is not the chill of an older 'Professa' (Dennis 'Sprangalang' Hall), who lets witty comments fly off the cuff.

It is the chilling silence of black men, migrants all in a strange and not so strange land (depending on when they got there), about the pervasive violence that thins their ranks and sets an unspoken limit on their life expectancy.

A Winter Tale, directed by Frances-Anne Solomon, revolves around the efforts of 'Gene' (Peter Williams) to thaw this chill and let emotions, if not cascade, then at least flow, by forming a support group for men after the murder of young Andrew, Professa's grandson. (There is a chilling scene when, after the fatal gunshots are heard, the bearer of bad news to Professa comes into the room where he is and sits without speaking, as the older man plays his banjo.)

And in this 'thawing out' process, filled with tensions, anguish, laughter, love and life, Solomon tells a good tale well, getting far beyond the regular interpretations of an all-too-regular situation.

Chill of a murder

Andrew's murder affects the entire community, but in a movie which relies much more on interplay between characters to hold interest than fast-paced action and violence (when those scenes come they are relevant and not thrown in for heart-thumping effect), it is gradually revealed what the estrangement between 'Miss G' (Leonie Forbes) and her son, 'Ian' (Peter Bailey), is. It is the chill of a murder which lies between them, that of Miss G's other son, 'Julian'.

A Winter Tale does have its points of humour, mainly through Clip (Barrington), whose hop-along gait and mannerisms (including a tendency to smoke sideways) lend themselves to laughter. And it does have a piece of bright Jamaican fabric (the general 'cloth' kind) in it.

But the touch of humour is balanced well against the dominant concerns of breaking through the chill of silence (or the surface chatter, which skirts the real issues).

Nude scene

While A Winter Tale is concerned mostly with men, it is far from being a 'bull session' and the women do far much more than provide arm and eye candy. So Ian's girlfriend, Julie (Nicole Stamp), is privy to his pain on a driving tour of the old neighbourhood, as he points out where Julian was killed. And yeah, there is a sole nude scene, shot from above, but not erotic, as Gene is held by Elaine (Valerie Buhagiar) when the stress of trying to release the emotions of reluctant men gets too much.

Who actually killed Andrew and why are revealed close to the end, as the initial empty support group meeting in a different place comes to a full, violent confessional in Miss G's place. Close to than end, too, 'Sam' (Lucky Ejim), a rare African in a mostly Caribbean tale, rails in his controlled manner about the ludicrous violence, which he had sought to leave behind in his country of origin, in a rare but very effective indictment on the source of the 'chill'.

A Winter Tale goes into general release islandwide today.

Monday, April 7, 2008

'A Winter Tale' makes Jamaican debut

published: Monday | April 7, 2008

Mel Cooke, Freelance Writer
Veteran Jamaican actress Leonie Forbes (centre) with Ryan Ishmael who plays Sibeka in the movie 'A Winter Tale' and Nicole 'Passion' Weller at the private showing at Sovereign Centre last Thursday.

As the rainy season sloshed its way into the dry spell, a film from a foreign season but inextricably linked to Jamaica made its 'yard' debut at the Palace Cineplex, Sovereign Centre, Liguanea, on Thursday evening.

The hordes, many speaking theatrically, on the landing outside the cinemas' entrance, where the cocktails were more than ample, indicated the importance of A Winter Tale and the cinema was duly crammed.

And director Frances-Anne Solomon, speaking before the tale was told on big screen, spoke simply about the importance of the Jamaican premiere to her and the cast, even after A Winter Tale has traveled far and wide.

"Wow! I am really overwhelmed," she said. Solomon noted that the film, set in Canada and which weaves the often unspoken effects of persistent violence on black men around the nucleus of the killing of a child, had been shown in Canada, the United States and England. However, she and members of the cast were more excited about Thursday night's premier than all the previous ones combined, "because of the importance of Jamaica in terms of our identity as Caribbean people".

There were bouquets from Solomon for Mary Wells, who did the groundwork for the premiere, and film commissioner Del Crooks, then a big hug for Leonie Forbes, who plays 'Miss G' in A Winter Tale.

Earlier, as Brian St Juste, who hosted the launch, had welcomed "the filmmaker and her team, including Leonie Forbes", the squeals had gone up. Also present in the flesh as well as magnified on big screen on Thursday evening were Peter Williams (Gene), Michael Miller (DX) and Ryan Ishmael (Sibeka).

Robert Gregory of Jamaica Trade and Invest (JTI) described A Winter Tale as "a compelling story of struggle, survival and healing" and hoped that it would soon be out on DVD as "I look forward to watching this film over and over again".

"It is a quality production and credible story which is relevant to the times," he said.

Blair Bonnick, political and economic counsellor, Canadian High Commission, made the link with the maple leaf land where the wintry tale was told. "What a glorious evening to be here," he said.

"Canadian films have established a reputation for excellence," Bonnick said, noting that although the filmmaker and persons in A Winter Tale were not from Canada "we consider them our own".

Bonnick said that in Canadian films "less emphasis is placed on special effects" and their approach "proves that captivating stories can be told with small budgets".

And Elaine Campbell-Grizzle of the National Council on Drug Abuse made a connection of a different kind, speaking to the drug trade, which led to the murder of the young boy. "It is so closely related to what we do at the council, to stop the abuse of illegal drugs as well as the abuse of legal drugs," she said.

The audience got a chance to get involved, as there was an interactive session after A Winter Tale had finished and the credits had been run.

A Winter Tale goes into general release islandwide on Wednesday, April 9.
Canadian High Commissioner Denis Kingsley with producer/writer/director of 'A Winter Tale' Frances-Anne Solomon at the special showing hosted by the high commission and Jamaica Trade and Invest at the Palace Cineplex last Thursday. - Winston Sill/Freelance Photographer

Sunday, April 6, 2008

"Winter" in April

'Winter' in April
published: Sunday | April 6, 2008

Ladies with film in their blood (from left), Justine Henzell, Dell Crooks of Jamaica Trade and Invest and film maker Natalie Thompson, hang out before the movie. - Photos by Winston Sill/Freelance Photographer

Guests experienced 'winter' in April on Thursday at a special showing of A Winter Tale.

The movie is the creation of Frances-Anne Solomon, an English-born filmmaker of Trinidadian heritage. The movie stars Jamaican film, TV and radio icon Leonie Forbes; Jamaican-born actor Peter Williams, and up-and-coming Afro-Canadian actor Michael Miller. Those stars, and a few others from the film team, were joined by guests from the local film community at the Palace Cineplex in Sovereign Centre for a special showing.

Guests out included Trinidad and Tobago High Commissioner Yvonne Gittens-Joseph, Lennie Little-White, Alma Mock Yen, Grace McGhie, Franklyn 'Chappy' St. Juste and sons Brian and François, Carol Hart, Alwyn Scott and wife Donna Duncan-Scott, Morin Seymour, Nardia McKenzie, Judith Alberga, Sheila Graham, Angela Patterson and others.

Veteran Jamaican actress, Leonie Forbes (centre), with Ryan Ishmael who plays Sibeka in the movie 'A Winter Tale' and Nicole 'Passion' Weller at the private showing at Sovereign Centre last Thursday.

The President of Jamaica Trade and Invest, Robert Gregory, is seen here with A Winter Tale's writer/producer/director Frances-Anne Solomon (centre) and Jamaican actress Leonie Forbes who stars just before the presentation.

Canadian High Commissioner Denis Kingsley (left) jokes with Deborah Duperly-Pinks and Michael Miller, an actor in the film.

Peter Williams finds 'Wright' role in 'A Winter Tale'

Peter Williams finds 'Wright' role in 'A Winter Tale'

Published: Sunday | April 6, 2008

Krista Henry, Staff Reporter

No stranger to the screen, Jamaican-born and raised actor Peter Williams remains focused on his career in film.

With a Genie Award nomination and more than 50 film credits to his name, this Jamaican-Canadian star was dubbed "one of the country's finest actors" by the Montreal Gazette. Williams was enjoying his return to Jamaica for the premiere of his most recent project, A Winter Tale, when The Sunday Gleaner caught up with the busy star.

Although he pursued geography at the Nottingham University, once Williams experienced the stage first-hand he was an instant addict. "I didn't start acting 'til I came to Canada in a play called Whose Life Is It Anyway. I got the bug from there; that was when I was in my 20s," he said.

Williams got his bearings in theatre at the community theatre centre at the Jamaican-Canadian Association, acting in plays such as Big Yard I and Big Yard II by famed playwright Devon Haughton. According to Williams, the Jamaican crowd is one of his favourites, which gives him the "purest response".

Since getting 'hooked' on his acting career, Williams has constantly been going to workshops and practices with an acting teacher in his home in Vancouver on a weekly basis.

Various roles

Williams has played an array of various different roles, drawing on a vast wealth of personal and acting experience. He has made appearances in the television shows MacGyver and The X-Files to Da Vinci's Inquest, Sci-Fi's Stargate SG 1 and Showtime's Dead Like Me. His work also includes film roles, ranging from Jungleground and Soul Survivor to appearances on the big screen, like the Halle Berry film Catwoman and The Chronicles of Riddick.

Williams considers his role in MacGyver to be his first big break. "MacGyver was a huge internationally syndicated show which was very popular worldwide," he said. Another touchstone for the actor was the movie Soul Survivor, which was written and directed by his brother Stephen Williams.

His most recent work, A Winter Tale, received the Tonya Lee Williams Award for Outstanding Canadian Feature at the Seventh Annual ReelWorld Film Festival. Directed and produced by Frances-Anne Solomon, A Winter Tale will open to moviegoers across Jamaica on April 9. Williams portrays one of the film's central characters, Gene Wright, a concerned social worker who takes it upon himself to start a local black men's support group after a young boy is accidentally shot and killed.

Williams raved about the film. "It's fantastic. I can't tell you how happy I am to be in it. The roles are great, especially the one for Leonie Forbes. Everyone in it is especially good. It depicts the true Caribbean culture in Canada," he said.

Over the last year A Winter Tale has travelled the globe, opening and closing numerous film festivals, winning awards and garnering favourable reviews along the way. It took home the 'Outstanding Canadian Feature Award' at the 2007 ReelWorld Film Festival, the 'People's Choice Award' for Best Caribbean Feature at the 2007 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival, and the award for Best Foreign Film at the San Diego Black Film Festival.

While Williams doesn't have any project at present on his plate, he is looking forward to a fruitful career in the business to "build a bigger body of work like A Winter Tale".

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Leonie Forbes - On becoming myself

Leonie Forbes - On becoming myself published: Sunday | March 30, 2008
Forbes shows little sign of slowing down. She says "I believe in doing everything in moderation."

Avia Collinder, Outlook Writer

Leonie Forbes, flitting from spot to spot as swiftly as a hummingbird, in her bougainvillaea-covered cottage in Kingston, during this March interview, is the elegant epitome of herself. Later, you will understand more of what we mean.

Forbes, who was, on November 20, 2007, recognised by the United States Congress and the Jamaican community in New York for her five decades of professional excellence in broadcasting, theatre and film, is today a petite, energetic woman, eyes glinting above smiling, bow lips.

The silvery strands of her close-cropped hair each testify to the decades of experience garnered in becoming Jamaica's first lady of film and theatre.

In December, Forbes attended the premiere of her 20th film, A Winter Tale, a Leda Serene production shot in Toronto, and which also opened the 15th Annual African Diaspora Film Festival in New York.

The film is the emotional story of a black men's support group, which is formed in a Caribbean takeout restaurant in Toronto, Canada, after a young boy is killed by a stray bullet. It will be launched in Kingston on Thursday, April 3.

In prior productions, Leonie appeared in Glory to Gloriana (2006), Lord Have Mercy! (2003), Tangled Web (2003), Guttaperc (1998), Shattered Image (1998) and Mother (1998).

Her major films - prior to A Winter Tale - were Shattered Image (1998), Soul Survivor (1995), What My Mother Told Me (1994), Milk and Honey (1989) and Children of Babylon (1980).

She has also filled leading roles in 12 national pantomimes and numerous plays.

In acknowledging her outstanding body of work, Acting Consul General Lincoln Downer presented Forbes with her certificate of merit from the consulate general of Jamaica in New York, and a citation from Congressman Ed Towns (Brooklyn), stating that Forbes had blazed a trail of excellence and has also paved the way for aspiring Jamaicans and Caribbean actors and actresses.

Leonie Evadne Forbes was born on June 14 at the Victoria Jubilee Hospital in Kingston, daughter of Roderick Wedderburn and G. Forbes-Wedderburn. She was educated at St George's Girls' School, Kingston Senior School and Excelsior High School.

"I was adopted by an aunt and raised by herself and her husband. It was all I knew.

"You can't miss what you don't know," she says bracingly about her parenthood, stating that her biological mother lives in New York and they share a good relationship.

"I never felt left out. I was always in the top five at school. The teachers at the time were extremely encouraging of my little writings and poems. I loved Miss Lou, but I never wanted to be anyone but myself."

Entering acting

Forbes states that she always knew that she liked to make people laugh. She even got caught by the pastor at church mimicking him.

But, for her, it never was a thing about 'I am going to be an actress'. "Things happened," she says in her usual cryptic manner.

Leonie's first exposure to broadcasting came through Sir Philip Sherlock of the University College of the West Indies (UWI), whom she describes as a "humble, wonderful man who shared".

She worked as a typist for him and then went to work with Barry Reckord, a playwright for whom she would type plays and at times accompany him to the studios of the Government Information Service (now Jamaica Information Service) to watch the recording sessions.

Leonie would do parts in the programmes produced for Government broadcast and in 1955 began work as an announcer at the Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation (JBC).

The late Rita Coore, Leonie reflects, was the first one to say to her, "You have a very nice voice, but you can't talk. Come and see me." Coore was one of several individuals who assisted her in developing her voice and craft.

She also credits Alma Mock Yen, formerly of the UWI's Radio Education Unit, with improving her skills. "She would see my little scribbles and say, come, pointing out little ways to do things." Whatever strides she made in voice and speech in the early years, she says, "that was Alma".

Unusual skills in voice

Meanwhile, Forbes also connected with the Pantomime of Maas Ran (comedian, the late Ranny Williams) and Miss Lou (Louise Bennett-Coverley). Maas Ran, she remembers, "was a great gentleman who looked out for us. We used to have fun provoking him, but it never disturbed him."

Her unusual skills in voice came to the attention of Robin Michelin (who came to Jamaica to help set up the JBC) and he assisted her in securing a scholarship to attend the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA) in England.

Excited and willing to give the theatre everything she had, Leonie left for London, spending six years of study and practice at the RADA, where she pursued a diploma course in Radio Television and Stage. Leonie also worked on scripts for the British Broadcasting Corporation's (BBC) Caribbean Service.

Leonie appeared in several RADA productions, including the pantomime Cinderella. She also played in Unknown Woman of Arras, Days of the Lion, and Antony and Cleopatra in which she was the lead female actor. She has also featured in television drama series on the BBC and Independent Television networks such as Z Cars, Odd Man, Public Eye, Hugh and I, Desperate People and Harper's West.

London critic, Kenneth Tynan, reviewed her first appearance in professional theatre, Busha Blue Beard, a Lloyd Reckord production, in April 1962, that Leonie put on "a bewitchingly ingenious performance".

Forbes declares, "My confidence in acting grew as I saw the response of people who I respected."

Making her characters real

But, she notes, that she never uses the word 'act' in reference to what she does. "I try not to act. Try to become the character. Acting is for comedy, but for drama, you become. I use my experiences in life and observe people. No matter what happens, no matter how painful, how extremely joyful, you observe, look and listen to find things which will make your character real to whoever is going to watch."

This is the reason why, she says, she has little if any regret in relation to any experience in life, as they all contributed to who she could become onstage.

In Old Story Time in which she later played with Charles Hyatt, by the time the rest of the cast came in they knew enough to greet them by saying, "Evening Miss Aggie, evening Pa Ben," because they were already in character.

Leonie remembers, "By 4:30 in the afternoon, I am no good to anybody. I am becoming."

Drama, she says, does not involve running away from reality. "The more you live, the more you experience and the more you have to draw on."

Leonie returned to Jamaica in 1966 after she completed training with RADA, but left again for Australia in 1968 with her husband, Dr Keith Amiel, who at the time was doing research in veterinary science at Queensland University.

In Australia, she appeared in the production of the Shakespearean play Merchant of Venice. She also took part in ABC radio plays, taught drama at three Brisbane schools and worked as a librarian too.

On her return to Jamaica in 1970, she went back to JBC where she worked as a producer/presenter for television. In 1972 came Radio Two JBC FM Stereo Service and the JBC TV Drama Workshop.

Out of the Drama Workshop came A Scent of Jasmine, and Let's Say Grace - a screenplay which she wrote and produced herself. In May 1976, Leonie was appointed to the post of director of radio broadcasting for the JBC.

Participating in numerous plays and several films, Forbes also authored a book called The Re-Entry Into Sound, along with Alma Mock Yen - a text used to train broadcasters all over the Caribbean. She also wrote and directed What's Food For The Goose; Let's Say Grace for TV and Radio.

Terrifying roles

Every role presents its challenges, the actress now says, but the one which was truly terrifying was Night, Mother - a play about a mother losing her child to suicide - which was done with Makeda Solomon.

"I still don't understand why I did it."

At around the same time, a friend of hers had lost her daughter in similar circumstances. "I thought the play would help, but my nerves stayed taut until the final curtain in February 2007."

A few months later, her son, Moyo, went to bed one night and did not awake, just days before his first wedding anniversary. Forbes believes that her experience in Night Mother assisted her tremendously in coping with his death.

On marriage

Leonie, who married three times, is mother of four, and says she has a friendship with her surviving children, which she treasures.

About her marriages she notes, "I don't know that I had a single great love. It is perhaps sad, but none of my marriages lasted. But, I have fabulous memories. I believe in living and let live."

Her youngest daughter, Dianne, works with Air Jamaica, while her older, Keren, is an account executive in advertising. Her surviving son, Robert, lives in North Carolina. Leonie has three grandchildren.

In the threatre, she declares, she has also mothered many, as sharing is a critical part of the experience.

For a lifetime of dedication to her craft, Leonie Forbes was awarded the My Life in the Theatre medal by the Mexican Theatre Centre, for outstanding theatre personalities of Latin America and the Caribbean (2001); the Order of Distinction (Officer Class) Government of Jamaica (1980), a Silver Musgrave Medal, a Centenary Medal, a Bronze Musgrave Medal (1973) and many more.

She also won seven Actor Boy awards (six best actress and one best supporting) and several gold medals for craft.

An adjudicator at the Festival Commission since 1973, Leonie loves the resurgence of interest in local theatre, although she says she would love to see "more of the world" on the Jamaican stage. There are also many emerging Caribbean writers who Jamaicans would certainly enjoy seeing, were their work to be produced locally.

A winter tale

She is never afraid of change and, in A Winter Tale, she was to experience this and embrace it. Forbes notes that preparation started long before the shooting.

"There were workshops and retreats for over two years."

The cast members were integrally involved in development of the characters and were able to become very familiar with community in the depressed area in which the movie was eventually made.

A Winter Tale was shot on a shoestring budget, but many members of the West Indian community helped in any way they could to see it happen - something she would like to see embraced in the staging of Jamaican productions.

Completed in early 2007, A Winter Tale premiered at the Reel World Toronto Film Festival, opening the festival and garnering an award for excellence.

Today, Forbes shows little sign of slowing down. She says "I believe in doing everything in moderation."

The 71-year-old woman admits that she still smokes and is a diabetic. But, it is a situation where she has the condition, it does not have her, she declares. Occasionally, she indulges in ice cream, and still loves ginger bear, bulla and potato pudding.

"I love Jamaican things," she notes. Leonie Forbes enjoys crocheting, collecting art, attending productions of the Carifolk Singers and the University Singers, and doing readings at church.

Every day delivers its own pleasures. An avid gardener, Leonie adores the morning sound of birds who swarm her bougainvillaea.

She says, "God decided that I should be born in the sun. I never wanted to live in Hollywood. I will go anywhere while working but, after, I am coming back home."