Razzle
Dazzle
Summit aims to bring Hollywood to the Burgh
PITTSBURGH
POST-GAZETTE
Sunday, October 26, 2003
By
Ron Weiskind
From
L to R: Steeltown Co-Founder and Host Maxine Lapiduss, Peter
Ackerman, Rob Marshall, Carl Kurlander, Eric Gold, Bernie Goldmann,
George Romero
Yesterday's
Steeltown Entertainment summit at WQED-TV took the form of a TV
talk show, complete with live band, featuring former Pittsburghers
working in Hollywood who combined old-home week with an anecdotal
primer on the business of television and movies.
The
only big plans announced at the session came at the end from a member
of the mostly invited audience of civic, political and business
leaders.
With
almost no time left for questions, the summiteers heard a potential
answer to one of the roadblocks in their quest to create an entertainment
production and education center here.
Movie
producer Bernie Goldmann, formerly of Squirrel Hill, had spoken
earlier in the proceedings about how other states and countries
have enacted similar legislation. "Canada built a film industry
using tax incentives," he said.
Director
George Romero, who made his most recent film in Canada after shooting
his other movies in Pittsburgh, said the movie's $5 million budget
was worth half again as much north of the border.
Summit
participants agreed that the region must be economically competitive
to lure filmmakers here. But their goals for Pittsburgh primarily
aim toward developing indigenous talent and resources, educating
them about how the industry works and using their clout in Hollywood
to nurture potential projects.
Rob
Marshall, director of the movie "Chicago" makes a
surprise appearance and dances with Maxine Lapiduss, who hosted
the taping of a forum of the Steeltown Entertainment Summit
at WQED-TV.
Maxine
Lapiduss, a writer and producer of prime-time television series
and a co-founder of the Steeltown Entertainment Project, served
as the summit's mistress of ceremonies. She introduced and interviewed
the guests as TV cameras recorded the event, which will be the subject
of a WQED-TV special next month.
The
proceedings began with clips from "Pittsburgh: Hollywood's
Best Kept Secret," a documentary by former Pittsburgher Laura
Davis, in which many of the day's participants (and a few who didn't
make the trip) talked about how the city helped shape their creative
impulses and about using it as an incubator for talent and material.
In
the live portion of the show, guests talked about how they got started
in the business and what their jobs entail.
Sitcom
producer Jamie Widdoes told how he soaked up peromances (and rain)
at the Three Rivers Arts Festival when his mother, Babs, ran it.
Lapiduss, her sister Sally (also a TV writer) and agent-manager
Eric gold spoke of getting the show-biz spark by watching and meeting
entertainers at the old Holiday House, where their mothers worked
- one as a performer, one on the banquet staff.
"We
got to see three shows a night. We saw how jokes were written and
what live performance was like," Sally Lapiduss said. "There's
no place like that in Pittsburgh now."
Nor,
she said, is there a school here where "they have people in
the business who are teaching." Steeltown envisions workshops
in which Hollywood regulars would do just that.
Actor
David Conrad, starring in the network series "Miss Match,"
acknowledged that he's purchased a loft in the Strip District as
a kind of getaway from Hollywood. Jack Smith, executive producer
of the TV soap "the Young and the Restless," said the
show shoots exteriors in Pittsburgh for less than it could in Los
Angeles and added that writers for the show could live here - he
has staff in Illinois, North Carolina and Arizona.
"The
ideas you guys have of getting some kinds of program going, with
a training element and developing material with Pittsburgh content
- everyone's looking for it, something to put their place of the
map," Romero said.
"You
have to market to Hollywood aggressively," said Eric Gold,
who manager the career of movie superstar Jim Carrey, among others.
"You've got to tell the story of the technology, the town,
the cost savings and you've got to keep doing it. I t ahs to be
aggressive, with a great presentation, and face-to-face."
Others
participating in the panels were Rob Marshall, director of the Academy
Award-winning movie "Chicago"; Carl Kurlander, a screenwriter
and University of Pittsburgh visiting professor and co-founder of
Steeltown; Terri Minsky, creator of TV's "Lizzie McGuire";
and Peter Ackerman, who wrote the animated movie "Ice Age."