SGN October 25, 2013 - Section 2

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Seattle Gay News

Issue 43, Volume 41, October 25, 2013

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

by Eric Andrews-Katz SGN A&E Writer

Steve Anita Shevett

BERNADETTE PETERS WITH THE SEATTLE SYMPHONY BENAROYA HALL October 25 Bernadette Peters is more than a triple threat – she’s every actor’s envious nightmare. Peters has made her mark in the movies, on television, and in a series of children’s books. Her stage work has earned her eight Tony nominations and three awards. The classic porcelain-doll features and curly strawberry-blonde hair are easily recognizable as is her indomitable talent for acting in serious roles or musical comedy. She’s worked with Stephen Sond-

heim, Jerry Herman, Steve Martin, and Martin Short creating some of the most recognizable roles on stage and film. Her work with animal charities is widely recognized and she’s the author of several children’s books. SGN caught up with this amazing artist as she got ready to take Benaroya Hall (accompanied by the Seattle Symphony) by storm! Eric Andrews-Katz: Who were your earliest influences in becoming a performer? Bernadette Peters: As a teenager I was inspired by Margaret Leighton and Katharine Hepburn, Frank Sinatra, and Lena Horne. As far as Broadway, I saw performances on The Ed Sullivan see peters page 8

by Albert Rodriguez SGN A&E Writer by Sara Michelle Fetters SGN A&E Writer

The Wicker Man

RUFUS WAINWRIGHT PANTAGES THEATER October 30 It’s been a year of milestones for Rufus Wainwright. He blew out the candles on his 40th birthday cake in July, he celebrated a one-year wedding anniversary in August with husband Jörn Weisbrodt, and his self-titled debut recording turned a decade old in May. Like always, the AmericanCanadian artist is multi-tasking on his projects, from touring see wainwright page 9

matthias clamer

british lion films

HORROR WEEK FESTIVAL CINERAMA THEATRE October 25 – 31 With a gala screening of Army of Darkness – featuring cult superstar Bruce Campbell in attendance – Seattle’s landmark Cinerama Theatre kicks off Horror Week, a seven-day mini-festival that one hopes will become an annual event. With 17 classic favorites on the schedule, including Stanley Kubrick’s The

Shining, William Friedkin’s The Exorcist, Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, Ridley Scott’s Alien, and Tobe Hooper’s Poltergeist, along with a newly restored look at director Robin Hardy’s 1973 cult sensation The Wicker Man and rare big-screen viewings of the immortal 1931 masterpieces Dracula and Frankenstein, the docket is filed to the brim with spine-tingling cinematic goodness, everything culminating October 31 with, most suitably, a 35th-anniversary presentation of John Carpenter’s Halloween. But putting a festival like this one together isn’t easy. Just ask Greg Wood, the man behind the scenes at the Cinerama responsible for much of the programming as well as plotting the theater’s course into the future. “A lot of it is me talking to my general manager and my staff,” he states candidly. “Our staff is sort of our target audience for all of this, so see horror page 7

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