Archived News Releases

Feb. 18, 2008
Contact: Josh Woods
Office: 256-765-4225
Cell: 256-856-2950
jlwoods1@una.edu

TICKETS ON SALE NOW FOR FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS SHOW

By Rebecca Walker
UNA Student Writer

FLORENCE, Ala. — Tickets are now on sale for the George Lindsey UNA Film Festival Award Show, scheduled for 8:00 p.m. March 8 at the Ritz Theatre in Sheffield with a pre-show reception beginning at 7:00 pm.

General-admission tickets are $15, and student tickets are $10. General-admission tickets will cover the awards show and after-party at the Cypress Moon Studio at Muscle Shoals Sound. Tickets for only the after-party are $10.

Tickets are available at the UNA Bookstore in the Guillot University Center, Cold Water Books in Tuscumbia and Coffee-Ol-Ogy Coffee Shop in the Florence-Lauderdale Public Library. Tickets can also be obtained by e-mailing lindseyfilmfest@una.edu.

For more information, visit www.lindseyfilmfest.com or call 256-765-4592.


Feb. 13, 2008
Contact: Josh Woods
Office: 256-765-4225
Cell: 256-856-2950
jlwoods1@una.edu

UNA TO OPEN LINDSEY ARCHIVE AT MARCH FILM FESTIVAL


By Josh Woods
Director of University Relations

FLORENCE, Ala. – University of North Alabama students will soon have a library of major Hollywood scripts and films at their fingertips when UNA opens the George Lindsey Archive. Lindsey will be present for the archive’s dedication and grand opening at the George Lindsey UNA Film Festival at 10 a.m. March 7 in the Collier Library.

Lindsey, a 1952 graduate of UNA, established the archive with his entire collection of films, scripts and memorabilia from “The Andy Griffith Show” and a long list of other television, movie and Broadway productions.

“I hope that, through this archive, students wanting an acting career can use these items, study them and benefit from them,” Lindsey said.

The archive will reflect Lindsey’s entertainment career as well as the careers of others, including Oscar-winning actor and Lindsey’s personal friend Ernest Borgnine. Borgnine’s collection at UNA will include his entire set of scripts, including the 1955 motion picture “Marty” and the entire “McHale’s Navy” television series.

“This archive is truly a piece of Americana,” said Dr. Garry Warren, UNA vice president for academic affairs and provost, who has been involved with the film festival since its inception 11 years ago. “There have been people give their scripts because of the significance of the memorabilia and films archived here.”

Warren said the significance of the collection for students will be the “hands-on opportunities” it offers. “You can pick up one of the scripts of the ‘Andy Griffith Show,' and you can see where the actors or writers have made handwritten changes. You can hold and study an Oscar-winning movie script. This is first-hand experience,” he said.

Lindsey is founder and co-sponsor of the annual George Lindsey UNA Film Festival. A graduate of UNA as well as the prestigious American Theatre Wing in New York, his career has included Broadway musicals, motion pictures and a long list of television shows. While his career has extended well beyond Mayberry, he is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Goober on the classic “Andy Griffith Show” from 1964 to 1968.

For more information on the 2008 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival, visit www.lindseyfilmfest.com or call 256-765-4592.


 January 30, 2008

FLORENCE LIBRARY HOSTS “BILLY BOB’S BEST” AND PERSONAL FAVORITES

FLORENCE, Ala. – In preparation for the 2008 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival, the Florence-Lauderdale Public Library will honor the festival’s scheduled guest – Academy Award winner Billy Bob Thornton – with a month-long series of film screenings leading up to the filmmaker’s festival appearances on Friday,
March 7.

Movie historian Terry Pace, who teaches English at the University of North Alabama, will host “Billy Bob’s Best … Plus a Few of His Favorites,” combining Thornton’s own screen milestones – including the director’s cut of his Oscar-winning 1996 masterpiece Sling Blade – with some of the classic movies and television episodes that influenced and inspired him.

“One of the main reasons Billy Bob is coming to the festival is because he is a great admirer of our founder, George Lindsey, and George’s lovable role as Goober on The Andy Griffith Show,” explained Pace, who also serves on the festival’s steering committee.

Billy Bob also remains very passionate about two films he has loved all his life – the classic Western High Noon with Gary Cooper and the haunted-house comedy The Ghost and Mr. Chicken with Don Knotts,” Pace added. “We thought it would be fun to build up some community interest in the festival – and introduce audiences to the diversity of Billy Bob’s career – by showing some of his finest films, along with his favorite Andy Griffith Show episodes and his two favorite films.”

Thornton has been actively involved in planning the “Billy Bob’s Best” series and personally selected the individual film titles as well as the Andy Griffith Show episodes that will be shown from Feb. 1 through March 1 in the library’s conference room.

“Billy Bob has intimate ties to the Muscle Shoals music industry and the Sun Records musical heritage of Sam Phillips, the Florence native who discovered Elvis, Jerry Lee, Johnny Cash and so many others,” Pace remarked. “Muscle Shoals songwriting legend and veteran movie actor Donnie Fritts has become close friends and songwriting partners with Billy Bob, and he issued the official invitation for Billy Bob to join us at the festival.”

To mark those local connections, the “Billy Bob’s Best … Plus a Few of His Favorites” series will also include a “Salute to Two Sams” double feature made up of two television documentaries: the A&E Biography special Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock ’n’ Roll (which Thornton narrated) and a cinematic study of Sam Peckinpah’s West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade, which features on-screen interviews with Fritts (who appeared in three of the controversial director’s films) and lifelong Peckinpah fan Thornton.

“By the end of this film series,” Pace promises, “I think audiences will have a really vivid and colorful idea of who Billy Bob is and why he’s such a perfect fit for this area and this festival.”

The lineup for the free “Billy Bob’s Best” series, sponsored by the library and Pillar of Fire Productions, will feature:    

Friday, Feb. 1, 7 p.m.The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001),
plus the “Opie the Birdman” episode of The Andy Griffith Show (1963)

Friday, Feb. 8, 7 p.m.A Simple Plan (1998),
plus the “Fun Girls” episode of The Andy Griffith Show (1964)

Tuesday, Feb. 12, 7 p.m.The Astronaut Farmer (2007),
plus the “Man in a Hurry” episode of The Andy Griffith Show (1963)

Wednesday, Feb. 20, 7 p.m.  Monster’s Ball (2001),
plus the “Goober Makes History” episode of The Andy Griffith Show (1966)

Sunday, Feb. 24, 5 p.m. A “Salute to Two Sams” Double Feature
Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock ‘n’ Roll
(2000)at 5 p.m.,
plus Sam Peckinpah’s West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade (2004) at 7 p.m.

Friday, Feb. 29, 7 p.m. – The Director’s Cut of Sling Blade (1996),
plus the short film “Some Folks Call It a Sling Blade” (1994)

Saturday, March 1, 2 p.m. – A Double Feature of Favorites
“The Haunted House” episode of The Andy Griffith Show (1963) at 2 p.m.
The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (1966), starring Don Knotts, at 2:30 p.m.
and High Noon (1952), starring Gary Cooper, at 4 p.m.

The Florence-Lauderdale Public Library is located at 350 N. Wood Ave. in downtown Florence. For details on the Lindsey festival (set for Thursday, March 6, through Sunday, March 9), visit www.lindseyfilmfest.com. For details on the library series, contact Pace at (256) 366-4512 or tgpace@una.edu , or call the library at (256) 764-6564.


January 30, 2008
Contact: Josh Woods
Office: 256-765-4225
Cell: 256-856-2950

jlwoods1@una.edu

   FILM FESTIVAL TO WELCOME OSCAR
   WINNER BILLY BOB THORNTON

 

 FLORENCE, Ala. – Academy Award winner Billy Bob   Thornton – an Arkansas native who rose to fame and critical acclaim with the offbeat Southern drama “Sling Blade” – will be the special guest for the 2008 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival.
The 11
th annual festivities will take place March 6-9 at the University of North Alabama and across the surrounding Shoals area.

“Billy Bob Thornton is an incredible talent and a giant in the entertainment industry. This is an exciting opportunity and a milestone in terms of the quality and growth of our film festival, said festival founder and UNA graduate Lindsey, who became a household name through his classic role as goofy, good-natured garage mechanic Goober Pyle on television’s 1960s sitcom “
The Andy Griffith Show.” 

Thornton – who calls himself “the world’s biggest fan” of “The Andy Griffith Show” and its colorful Mayberry characters – is scheduled to appear at the Lindsey festival March 7. 

Highlights of his UNA visit will include a retrospective tribute to his career and a celebration of his Oscar-winning work on “Sling Blade.” 

“I’m honored to be a part of the George Lindsey Film Festival at UNA, and I look forward to seeing everyone there,” Thornton said. “I’m such a big fan of George.” 

In addition to his award-winning work as a screen actor, director and writer, Thornton is a seasoned musician whose latest album, “Beautiful Door,” was released last summer. When he was 17, Thornton and his band traveled from Arkansas to Alabama to record their first album at Widget Sound, one of the fabled Muscle Shoals studios. He was invited to attend UNA’s film festival by his close friend and frequent songwriting partner Donnie Fritts, a Muscle Shoals songwriting legend and longtime Lindsey festival favorite. 

“I look forward to the festival every year because I love George and I love movies,” Fritts said. Fritts has also appeared as a colorful character actor in films ranging from the Sam Peckinpah classics “Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid” and “Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia” to “A Star is Born” and the music-industry mockumentary “The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico.” 

“This year, the festival is going to be extra special because my good friend Billy Bob has agreed to attend,” Fritts added. “When I first asked him about it, as soon as he heard George Lindsey’s name, he automatically said, ‘Yes, I definitely want to do it.’” 

Thornton is scheduled to participate in a question-and-answer session covering his career at 2 p.m. March 7 in the Performance Center at UNA’s Guillot University Center. The program will be moderated by Terry Pace, who teaches English at UNA and has written extensively on film history and the Muscle Shoals music industry. 

At 7 p.m., the festival moves to the historic Shoals Theater in downtown Florence, where Pace will host a salute to “Sling Blade,” the groundbreaking film that earned Thornton an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. Immediately afterward, Thornton will join Fritts and the Muscle Shoals rock-and-soul band The Decoys for an all-star jam session on the Shoals Theater stage. 

“Billy Bob is such an ideal fit for this festival,” Pace said. “In addition to his admiration for George, his friendship with Donnie and his history with Muscle Shoals music, Billy Bob has worked closely with one of our area’s homegrown screen actors, Lucas Black, on ‘Sling Blade,’ ‘All the Pretty Horses’ and ‘Friday Night Lights.’ He also worked with another multi-talented and equally popular character actor from this region, the late Michael Jeter.” 

In 2000, Thornton narrated “Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock ’n’ Roll,” an episode of the A&E series “Biography” that was filmed on location in the Muscle Shoals area and Memphis, Tenn. The two-hour documentary honored the musical legacy of Sun Records founder Phillips, a rock ’n’ roll revolutionary who remains one of Thornton’s musical heroes. 

“Billy Bob has such deep roots in the South, but he seems to share an especially close kinship with the movie and music talent from this part of Alabama,” Pace remarked. “This is like a big Muscle Shoals homecoming for Billy Bob, and he’s excited about being here and joining the celebration. He’s definitely one of us.” 

For more information on the 2008 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival, visit www.lindseyfilmfest.com or call 256-765-4592. For details on Thornton’s scheduled appearances, contact Pace at 256-366-4512 or tgpace@una.edu.

HANDY FESTIVAL ADDS ENCORE SCREENING OF AWARD-WINNING LINDSEY FILM FESTIVAL DOCUMENTARY, ERIC ESSIX: AT HOME

July 27, 2007 

FLORENCE, Ala. – An encore screening of the award-winning documentary Eric Essix: At Home has been scheduled for 4 p.m. Sunday, July 29, in the conference room of the Florence-Lauderdale Public Library, 350 Wood Ave., downtown Florence.

The film was part of this week’s W.C. Handy Music Festival film series, Handy Meets Lindsey: A Showcase of Award-Winning Works from the 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival.

Due to popular demand, an additional screening has been added on the final day of the 2007 Handy festivities. Admission is free and open to the public.

Eric Essix: At Home was the first-place winner of the 2007 Golden Lion Award in the Lindsey festival’s faculty filmmaking division.

The 57-minute film, produced and directed by Birmingham filmmaker Dwight Cammeron, tells the story of a longtime Handy festival favorite Eric Essix, a Birmingham-based jazz guitarist and Muscle Shoals recording artist.  

  For details on other 2007 Handy events, call the festival
  headquarters  at (256)   766-7642 or visit the website at
 
www.wchandymusicfestival.org.

GEORGE LINDSEY UNA FILM FESTIVAL ISSUES 2008 CALL FOR ENTRIES
July 18, 2007

 
By Terry Pace
University Relations Consultant
 
FLORENCE, Ala. – The George Lindsey UNA Film Festival has issued its official call for entries for 2008.
 
The Lindsey festival is a university-based showcase of student, faculty and professional works by local, state, national and international filmmakers.
 
The 11th annual festival will take place from Thursday, March 6, through Sunday, March 9, with screenings, workshops, panel discussions, parties, receptions and other film-oriented events taking place on the UNA campus and other locations throughout the Muscle Shoals area of northwest Alabama.
 
Previous guests for the festival range from Academy Award-winning actor Ernest Borgnine, Oscar-nominated actress Diane Ladd and
Sling Blade stars Lucas Black and Natalie Canerday to Emmy Award-winning Seinfeld and NewsRadio writer Tom Cherones, Angel and Buffy the Vampire Slayer makeup-effects creator Robert Hall and recording-industry figures Mike Curb and Ray Stevens.
 
The festival – founded by UNA alumnus George Lindsey, best known for his work on television’s classic sitcom
The Andy Griffith Show – awards cash prizes to Golden Lion Award winners in each competitive category.
 
A grand prize of $3,000 is awarded to the student, faculty or professional film named Best of Show. A $2,000 cash award is presented to the winner of the Clyde “Sappo” Black Sweet Home Alabama Award, honoring the Best of State entry filmed anywhere in Alabama.
 
Categories recognize student, faculty and professional excellence in documentaries, short and full-length narratives, music videos and animated works. Student divisions cover kindergarten through college-age students.
 
An early-bird special for festival submissions ends Aug. 14. Until then, entry fees are $10 for standard entries as well as student works.
 
From Aug. 15 through Oct. 14, standard entry fees will be $20, while student entry fees remain at $10.
 
A late deadline has been set for Nov. 14, with entry fees at $30 for standard entries and $20 for students.
 
Entries will be accepted through an extended deadline of Dec. 14, with the final entry fees at $35 for standard entries and $25 for students. For more information, call the festival office at (256) 765-4592, visit
www.lindseyfilmfest.com  or www.myspace.com/georgelindseyunafilmfest, or e-mail lindseyfilmfest@una.edu.

July 12, 2007
 
MUSIC, MOVIES JOIN FORCES AS “HANDY MEETS LINDSEY” FOR FILM SCREENINGS AT 2007 W.C. HANDY MUSIC FESTIVAL


FLORENCE, Ala. – This year’s
W. C. Handy Music Festival will feature free screenings of two music-related films that earned honors in the 10th annual film festival at the University of North Alabama.

The music documentaries
Eric Essix: At Home and Richard Johnston: Hill Country Troubadour will be shown at the Florence-Lauderdale Public Library during a new two-day Handy event, Handy Meets Lindsey: An Encore Showcase of Award-Winning Works from the 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival.

“Three of the documentaries that won awards at this year’s film festival featured musicians who are closely associated with the Handy festival and Muscle Shoals music,” said 2007 Lindsey festival chairman Dr. Garry Warren, UNA’s Dean of Information Technologies and Special Assistant to the President.
One of those films –
Iron City Blues, featuring Birmingham-based blues artist Big Mike Griffin – is currently in negotiations with a potential distributor.

“That’s great news, but unfortunately it means that the film cannot be shown at this time,” Warren noted. “However, we are pleased that Handy has chosen to spotlight two other films from the Lindsey festival that celebrate this region’s musical heritage. They’re certainly a nice fit for Handy week.”

The documentary
Eric Essix: At Home, winner of the Golden Lion Award in the Lindsey festival’s Faculty Division, will be screened at 11 a.m. Thursday, July 26, in the conference room of the library, 350 N. Wood Ave., downtown Florence.

The 57-minute film, produced and directed by Dwight Cammeron, tells the story of a longtime Handy festival favorite Eric Essix, a Birmingham-based jazz guitarist and Muscle Shoals recording artist.

“The Handy festival has become a deep tradition for us,” says Essix, who will perform at a number of 2007 Handy events. “We’ve recorded there at FAME Studios, and we’ve played live shows all over that area, so Muscle Shoals really feels like our home away from home.”

The second film,
Richard Johnston: Hill Country Troubadour, was the first-place winner of the Lindsey festival’s 2007 Clyde “Sappo” Black Sweet Home Alabama Award. The 57-minute documentary also earned the Golden Lion Award for first place in the Lindsey festival’s Professional Documentary competition.
Johnston – who has performed at previous Handy festivals, but is unavailable to attend this year – is an Alabama-based white blues musician whose one-man-band performances mix voodoo rhythms with the traditional black blues of juke joints in the Mississippi Delta.

 “When I first saw Richard perform, he blew me away,” recalled Tuscaloosa-based filmmaker Max Shores, the documentary’s producer and director. “He’s an amazing musician and a fascinating person, and I simply wanted to tell his unique and colorful story in a documentary format. I’m delighted that the film has been embraced by so many people.”

Now in its 26th year, the Handy festival – set for Friday, July 20, through Sunday, July 29 – honors the life and music of Florence native W.C. Handy, the world-famous “Father of the Blues” who wrote
St. Louis Blues, Beale Street Blues, Memphis Blues and other classic compositions.
Both films in the
Handy Meets Lindsey series will be introduced by Terry Pace, a UNA adjunct instructor of English who serves on the Lindsey festival’s steering committee and teaches a continuing-studies course on the history of the Muscle Shoals recording industry.

“Much of this area’s music heritage began with the blues of W.C. Handy – he was the first to export the music of this region to the rest of the world,” Pace explained. “Modern musicians like Eric Essix and Richard Johnston are clearly two of the torch-bearers of that tradition. Each of them is preserving Handy’s musical heritage in his own innovative and distinctive way.”  

The 10-day Handy festival includes more than 200 music-themed events held at parks, theaters, auditoriums, restaurants, nightclubs, schools, museums, libraries, art galleries and businesses throughout the Muscle Shoals area of northwest Alabama.

Festivities include a headliner concert by
Take 6, a contemporary-gospel group that originated at Oakwood College in Huntsville. That performance begins at 8 p.m. Saturday, July 28, at Norton Auditorium on the UNA campus. Admission is $25 for the general public and $15 for students.

For details on other 2007 Handy events, call the festival headquarters at (256) 766-7642 or visit the website at
www.wchandymusicfestival.org.
 

June 20, 2007

Dates have been announced for the 2008 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival, a university-based showcase of student, faculty and professional works by local, state, national and international filmmakers.  The 11th annual festival will take place from Thursday, March 6, through Sunday, March 9, with screenings, workshops, panel discussions, parties and other film-oriented events taking place on the UNA campus and other locations throughout the surrounding Shoals area.

Please add the George Lindsey UNA Film Festival dates to your event calendars and planning schedules for the upcoming year.

If you have any questions, please call us at (256) 765-4225, or e-mail tgpace@una.edu or klmclelland@una.edu.

March 9, 2007

LINDSEY FILM FESTIVAL CONCLUDES FIRST DECADE WITH NEW WINNERS, NEW RECORDS

By Terry Pace
University Relations
 
      FLORENCE, Ala. A UNICEF-sponsored short film that earned Academy Award accolades earlier this year was named Best of Show during the 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival at the University of North Alabama.
 
      The Oscar-nominated
Binta and the Great Idea, written and directed by Spanish filmmaker Javier Fesser, also won Una's Golden Lion Award for Professional Short Narrative during the annual festival awards show March 3.

    We were sad for (losing) the Oscar, Fesser remarked when he discovered that his film had won $3,200 in cash prizes and two of the festival's Golden Lion Awards, but now we are so happy again about this.
 
     
Binta involves a seven-year-old African girl (the title character) who tells the parallel stories of her cousin (a young woman who longs to go to school, but is forbidden by her inflexible, old-fashioned father) and Binta's own sweet-natured, idealistic father (who has developed a grand but unorthodox idea that he hopes will change the world).
 
     This is a delightful film, concluded award-winning filmmaker and University of North Carolina at Greensboro film professor Emily Edwards, a Florence native who served with stage and screen actor Will Stutts (widely considered America's Master of the One-Person Playť) and filmmaker and radio personality Mark Thompson (of
Mark & Brian Show fame) as final judges for this year's Lindsey competition.
 
     I was reminded at times of
The Gods Must Be Crazy, Edwards observed. (The film featured) beautiful production values, but the story never took a back seat to the cinematography.
 
     The makers of
Binta and the Great Idea (who were unable to attend the festival) will receive a $3,000 cash prize for Best of Show as well as an additional $200 cash prize for the Professional Short Narrative honor.
 
     This year's success exceeded all of our expectations,ť said festival director Dr. Garry Warren, who also serves as UNA's Dean of Information Technologies and Special Assistant to the President. We had more films entered than ever before, we welcomed more filmmakers than ever before, and we attracted bigger crowds than ever before.ť
 
     The festival's Clyde "Sappo"ť Black Sweet Home Alabama Award, which honors films shot entirely or in part anywhere in the state of Alabama, was awarded to the documentary
Richard Johnston: Hill Country Troubadour. The film received a $2,000 cash award as well as an additional $200 cash prize for winning a second Golden Lion Award in the category of Professional Documentary.
 
    There were some extremely strong entries that qualified for the Sweet Home Alabama award, noted film and television actor David "Shark" Fralick (
The Young and the Restless, Gone in 60 Seconds), who served as the final judge for that competition. Ultimately, this film stood out because it told a compelling story about an intriguing subject and proved to be outstanding in every respect.
 
     Tuscaloosa-based producer-director Max Shores attended the festival and accepted the awards for
Hill Country Troubadour, an hour-long look at a white blues musician whose one-man-band performances mix voodoo rhythms with the traditional blues of juke joints in the Mississippi Delta.
 
      "When I first saw Richard perform, he blew me away," Shores remarked. "He's an amazing musician and a fascinating person, and I simply wanted to tell his unique and colorful story in a documentary format. I'm delighted that the film has been embraced by so many people."
 
      More than two dozen filmmakers from all over the world attended the 10th annual Lindsey festival, a four-day affair that combined screenings of 99 films (selected from this year's record total of 243 entries) with panel discussions, workshops, parties, receptions, an awards show and live music concert (headlined by Muscle Shoals singer-songwriter and veteran screen actor Donnie Fritts) and a retrospective tribute to Oscar-winning actor Ernest Borgnine (
Marty, The Wild Bunch, The Poseidon Adventure).
 
      "Good, bad or indifferent, you're contributing," the 90-year-old Hollywood legend told this year's filmmakers. "You're making films. You're accomplishing something, and that's what it's all about."
 
Borgnine joined his longtime friend,festival founder and UNA alumnus Lindsey, best known for his role as Goober on the classic sitcom
The Andy Griffith Show, in honoring and encouraging a new generation of filmmakers.
 
     "My name may be on it," Lindsey told the crowd, "but this festival belongs to you."
 
      One of the filmmakers who attended this year's event, north Alabama screenwriter Gena Ellis, accepted an Honorable Mention for Professional Full-Length Narrative for a film based on her original screenplay
Angela's Decision.
 

      I wrote the script as part of my graduate thesis at the University of Oklahoma in 2003, before I moved to the Huntsville area, Ellis told the audience during the awards show. "Mat King is an Australian director, and he contacted me through an online script site, InkTip.com. It's still my screenplay, but he adapted it to an Australian setting and turned it into an Australian film."ť
 
      Festival judge and Florence native Mark Thompson was particularly impressed with
Angela's Decision, the dramatic story of a young woman facing a series of real-life challenges that could alter her life forever. When the final judges' scores were tallied, the film tied for second place with a feature called The Garage and earned an Honorable Mention in the highly competitive contest for the best Professional Full-Length Narrative.
 
     "I thought all three full-length narratives were well done, but I gave the nod to
Angela's Decision because of the impeccable performance by the actress who played Angela," Thompson explained. "She could be working in Hollywood right now, with no one to stop her. (She) reminded me of a young Meg Ryan, simply fantastic. Her performance is what true acting is all about."ť
 
     The UNA Chapter of Habitat for Humanity presented a Celebrity Silent Auction during the festival that raised $1,200. Top items included a
Grease poster signed by John Travolta (top bid was $250), a Marty poster signed by Borgnine (top bid was $200) and a M*A*S*H script signed by Mike Farrell (top bid was $100).
  
     "The auction was a great success,"ť said UNA Habitat adviser Cynthia Burkhead, who teaches English at UNA and serves on the festival steering committee. "We hope to have another celebrity auction during the Lindsey festival next year." 
 
     All three of this year's final judges were raised in the Shoals, attended UNA, and are now working in the film and entertainment industries. Sheffield native Stutts attended the festival and participated in an acting workshop.

     "This is a wonderful educational opportunity for students, and it's a wonderful way for filmmakers to come together to show and share their work,"ť Stutts remarked. "I was just delighted to be a part of it, and I was thrilled to have the chance to see so many fine films that were entered this year."ť
 
     Winners of each 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival category include:
 
     Best of Show,
Binta and the Great Idea, Javier Fesser, writer-director, Manuel Garcia, producer (Madrid, Spain)
 
     Clyde 'Sappo' Black Sweet Home Alabama Award,
Richard Johnston: Hill Country Troubadour, Max Shores, producer-director, Elizabeth Brock, producer (Tuscaloosa, Ala.); Honorable Mention: Iron City Blues, Scott Jackson, director, Matthew Pessoni, producer (Nashville, Tenn.)
            
     Professional Full-Length Narrative,
Beautiful Dreamer, Terri Farley-Teruel, director, Jack Robinson, producer (Westminster, Calif.); Honorable Mentions: Angela's Decision, Mat King, producer-director, Gina Ellis, writer (Madison, Ala.); The Garage, Carl Thibault, producer/director (Burbank, Calif.)
 
     Professional Short Narrative,
Binta and the Great Idea, Javier Fesser, writer-director, Manuel Garcia, producer (Madrid, Spain); Honorable Mention: A.W.O.L., Jack Swanstrom, producer/director, Jessica Wethington, producer (Los Angeles, Calif.)
 
     Professional Documentary,
Richard Johnston: Hill Country Troubadour, Max Shores, producer-director, Elizabeth Brock, producer (Tuscaloosa, Ala.); Honorable Mention: The Clinton 12, Keith McDaniel, producer/director (Oak Ridge, Tenn.)
 
     Professional Animation,
Big Dreams, Robyn Von Arx, producer/director (Los Angeles, Calif.); Honorable Mention: Sensational City, Tarik Cherkaoui, director (New York, N.Y.)
 
     Music Video,
Everything You Said, Kenny Beaumont, producer/director, Orlando, Fla.; Honorable Mention: Happiness in Milligrams, Kurt Nishimura, producer/director (Portland, Ore.)
 
     Faculty,
Eric Essix: At Home, Dwight Cammeron, producer/director (Tuscaloosa, Ala.); Honorable Mention: Fire Creek, Charles Cranney, Dennis Packard, and Seth Packard, producers, Jed Wells, director (Provo, Utah)
 
     Student Narrative,
Dancing Ground, Julian Robinson, Mark Walterskirchen, and Mitchell Gutman, producers, Tobin Addington, director (Brooklyn, N.Y.); Honorable Mention: Rite of Passage, Sara Gordon and Tamara Kihs, producers, Sara Gordon, director (Fullerton, Calif.)
 
     Student Documentary,
Saying I Do, Carol Stanger, producer, Jennifer Uihlein, director (Hicksville, N.Y.); Honorable Mention: She's a Lady: Memoir of a Downtown Theater, Alan Franks and Ginny Humber, directors (Warrior, Ala.)
 
     Student Animation,
Mirage, Youngwoong Jang, producer/director (New York, New York); Honorable Mention: Linear Progression, producer/director, Kat Kosmala (La Habra, Calif.)
 
      Young Filmmaker, Grades 9-12, 
First Day at the Firm, Remington Dewan, producer/director (Austin, Texas); Honorable Mention,  Rozwell, Hodges Usry, director; Hodges Usry and Rob McRae, producers (Augusta, Ga.)   
 
      Young Filmmaker, K-Grade 8,
Unexpected News, Keith Collins, director; John Collins and Kristi Collins, producers (Lutz, Fla.); Honorable Mention, Patrick in Progress
, Mitch Collier, producer/director (Austin, Texas)  


 

GEORGE LINDSEY UNA FILM FESTIVAL NEWS...
February 28, 2007
 
10th ANNUAL LINDSEY FESTIVAL INCLUDES PROFESSIONAL PANELS, WORKSHOPS ON WIDE-RANGING ARRAY OF FILMMAKING TOPICS
 
FLORENCE, Ala.  The George Lindsey UNA Film Festival begins Thursday, March 1, with film screenings, professional panels and gatherings of professional and amateur filmmakers from across Alabama and around the world.
 
The four-day festival begins its 10th-anniversary year with free screenings of entries on the student, faculty and professional levels of competition. Films accepted for the 2007 festival will be shown on the UNA campus as well as in public venues throughout the surrounding area.
 
The initial day of the festival also includes a free afternoon panel discussion on the topic "Breaking In; Just How Do You Get Started in the Film Industry?"ť Screenwriters, actors, casting agents, producers, and technical experts will participate in a panel discussion that begins at 4 p.m. in Loft of the Guillot University Center of the UNA campus.
 

The festival continues Thursday night from 6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. with an informal gathering and discussion titled "Sweet Home Alabama: Filmmaking from Mobile to Muscle Shoals."ť Local officials, filmmakers, and film-industry recruiters will attend this reception and celebration of filmmaking across the state.  The event, which is free and open to the public, will take place at the Keynote Room, 310 N. Pine St., Florence.
 
Other free festival panels and workshops include:
 
Friday, March 2
"Why Film in the Tri-States?"ť (10 a.m.-Noon, Loft of UNA's Guillot University Center) - Representatives from Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi's various state and city film commissions will discuss resources, benefits, and incentives for filming in the tri-state region. Panelists will include Ward Emling, Mississippi Film Office; Eva Golson, Mobile Film Office; Tonya Holly, Alabama Filmmakers Association; Les Edwards, Memphis and Shelby County Film Office; Mark Stricklin, Birmingham/Jefferson Film Office; and Linda Swann, Alabama Film Office. The moderator will be Giles McDaniel, director of the Shoals Entrepreneurial Center.

"Children's Filmmaking Workshop"ť (10 a.m.-1 p.m., Children's Museum of the Shoals, 2810 Darby Drive, Florence) - It's never too early to teach next year's prize filmmakers the basics of filmmaking. This workshop will be taught by Huntsville-based Don Tingle, Director of the North Alabama Film Co-op's summer "MovieMakers, Filmmaking Workshop for Kids."ť The three-hour seminar-style workshop will summarize the basics of movie making at an age appropriate level. The emphasis of the workshop is on learning practical skills, easy techniques and, most importantly, teamwork. The seminar will include demonstrations of techniques and equipment.  The workshop is currently full, but call (256) 765-0500 to be placed on a waiting list.

"Screenwriting Workshop- Have an Idea for a Movie?"ť (1-3 p.m., 124 Communication Building, UNA) - Screenwriter, novelist and UNA alumnus Chris Halvorson will conduct an open workshop focusing on the basics of screenwriting, including developing an outline, approaching a story through characters, arcs, and the three-act breakdown. Halvorson has recently sold movie rights for his novel, The Santa Suit.  This workshop is sponsored by UNA's Department of English and The UNA Writers' Series.  

"
Animation Workshop for Children" (2-4:30 p.m., Children's Museum of the Shoals, 2810 Darby Drive, Florence) - Steve Richerson of Concrete Dream Pictures will teach a hands-on stop-motion workshop for young people using Boinx Istopmotion software. Istopmotion is a simple and inexpensive Macintosh-based software used to create astonishing works of animation (aka Claymation) and time-lapse recording.  Before the workshop begins, there will be a surprise visit by two special guests who have provided voiceovers for a number of popular animated works.

"Acting for Film Workshop" (3:30-5 p.m. Room 124, Communications Building, UNA) - Actors David "Shark" Fralick (The Young and the Restless, Gone in 60 Seconds), Natalie Canerday (Sling Blade, October Sky), Danny Vinson (Walk the Line, Two Soldiers), and Will Stutts (Trading Places, George Washington II: The Forging of a Nation) will introduce participants to the basics of screen acting.  
The festival's Welcome/Information Center will be open daily through Saturday, March 3, at the Kennedy-Douglass Center for the Arts, 217 E. Tuscaloosa St., downtown Florence. Event tickets, programs, schedules, maps and official festival merchandise (including caps, T-shirts and other collectibles) will be available at the center from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. weekdays and from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. Saturday.
 

For further details, including a complete schedule of screenings and other events, visit www.lindseyfilmfest.com, email lindseyfilmfest@una.edu, or call the festival office at (256) 765-4592
.
 

GEORGE LINDSEY UNA FILM FESTIVAL NEWS...
February 27, 2007
 
OSCAR WINNER ERNEST BORGNINE RETURNS TO UNA FOR RARE FILM FESTIVAL APPEARANCE, TRIBUTE TO HIS SCREEN CAREER

By Terry Pace
 
FLORENCE, Ala. - As a rule, Hollywood legend Ernest Borgnine politely declines invitations to make personal appearances at many of the biggest, best-known film festivals in the world.
 
"I don't like the tendency some people have to try to overanalyze things," the Oscar-winning actor maintains. "To me, that takes a lot of the joy and beauty out of the whole experience. If a picture is good, it doesn't need explanation. All that matters is that the audience enjoys your work."
 
Out of love and loyalty for a longtime friend, however, Borgnine, the star of movie classics ranging from
From Here to Eternity and Marty to The Wild Bunch and The Poseidon Adventure, made a startling exception eight years ago, when he visited the University of North Alabama campus as the featured guest for the second annual George Lindsey UNA Film Festival.
 
"It was love at first sight,"ť recalls Lindsey, a 1952 UNA graduate who went on to show-business immortality playing the role of good-natured, dim-witted gas-station attendant Goober Pyle on television's classic 1960s sitcom,
The Andy Griffith Show.
 
"Ernie and I have been pals for years, and he wanted to help us get the festival off the ground,"ť Lindsey explained. "He enjoyed being here, he fell in love with the school, the town and the people, and they fell in love with him, too. I think he liked the whole flavor and feel of what we were doing."ť
 
Borgnine returned to UNA later that year to deliver the school's fall 1999 commencement address and, as an unexpected surprise, donate his entire leather-bound collection of film and television scripts to the university's Collier Library archives. He returned to the Lindsey festival for a second appearance in 2004, and he's making his fourth visit to UNA this week as the festival celebrates its milestone 10th anniversary.
 
"We couldn't be happier to have a chance to welcome world-renowned actor, loyal actor and wonderful friend back to our campus," says festival director Dr. Garry Warren, UNA's Dean of Information Technologies and Special Assistant to the President. "Ernest Borgnine has been extremely generous to us with his time and talents over the years, and we want to honor him this year in some very special ways."
 
The 2007 Lindsey festival takes place from Thursday, March 1, through Sunday, March 4, with activities ranging from film screenings, panels, workshops and discussions to parties, live music performances and a star-studded awards show. One of the centerpieces of the festival will be a special tribute,
From Marty and McHale to Mermaidman: An Evening with Ernest Borgnine, set for 7 p.m. Friday, March 2, at the Keynote Room, 310 N. Pine St., downtown Florence.
 
"Gary Cooper was one of my role models.  I worked with him on a picture called
Vera Cruz,"ť
Borgnine recalls. "Just watch him when he's on screen. You can actually see him listening, and this is what makes an actor. You listen and act accordingly to another actor's words. Acting is nothing more than the response and accord between two people. Otherwise, it's not acting, it's just saying words."ť
 
The tribute evening, in which Borgnine will discuss highlights of his career and answer questions from the audience, will feature classic scenes from many of the actor's most memorable film and television appearances. The retrospective covers his career from early roles in
From Here to Eternity and Bad Day at Black Rock and his Academy Award-winning performance in the title role of Marty to his television success in the, 60s sitcom McHale's Navy and his later work in The Dirty Dozen, The Wild Bunch, The Poseidon Adventure, The Devil's Rain, Jesus of Nazareth, All Quiet on the Western Front and Escape from New York, plus his more recent recurring role as the voice of retired superhero Mermaidman on the animated children's series SpongeBob SquarePants.      
 
"Shakespeare said it best in
Hamlet, with his Advice to the Players,"ť Borgnine believes. "When I'm handed a script, the character is already created. I go in and do the work and let the character take care of itself. It's that simple. If I can find just the right key, I've got it made."
 
Borgnine, who turned 90 on Jan. 24, arrives at UNA after completing his latest starring role, playing a grandfather and old-time movie star in an upcoming Hallmark Hall of Fame television drama called Bert & Becca. Needless to say, screen retirement isn't on the actor's list of professional priorities.
 
"Through it all, I've worked for one thing, to make people happy," Borgnine concluded. "My mother told me, If you can make one person happy in the span of a day, you've achieved a great deal. Somewhere, somehow, my pictures have made people happy, and that makes me very happy."
 
Admission to
From Marty and McHale to Mermaidman: An Evening with Ernest Borgnine is $15 for the general public and $10 for students. Tickets are available in advance at the UNA Bookstore on campus, Pegasus Records, Tapes and CDs in downtown Florence, and ColdWater Books in downtown Tuscumbia. Seating is limited, and tickets are expected to sell out in advance.
 

For further festival details, including daily updates and a complete schedule of events, visit the festival's website, www.lindseyfilmfest.com, call the festival office at (256) 765-4592, or e-mail lindseyfilmfest@una.edu.

 

George Lindsey UNA Film Festival News...
February 26, 2007

FESTIVAL AWARDS SHOW SALUTES FINE FILMS, FUNKY MUSCLE SHOALS MUSIC
By Terry Pace


 The Oscar-nominated short film Binta and the Great Idea is among  99 titles being screened across the Muscle Shoals area during this
 week's 10th annual George Lindsey UNA Film Festival.  (CREDIT:  GEORGE LINDSEY UNA FILM
 FESTIVAL)

FLORENCE, Ala. - The George Lindsey UNA Film Festival is commemorating its 10th anniversary with a four-day schedule of film screenings, panels, workshops, discussions, parties, and a star-studded awards show featuring the funky flavor of the world-famous "Muscle Shoals sound."

This year's festival, set for Thursday, March 1, through Sunday, March 4, will showcase 99 high-quality professional, student and faculty films from all over the world. Top prizes include a $3,000 cash prize for the festival's Best of Show Award and a $2,000 cash prize for the Clyde "Sappo"ť Black Sweet Home Alabama Award.

"We're only showing the best of the best,"ť noted festival director Dr. Garry Warren, UNA's Dean of Information Technologies and Special Assistant to the President. "Once the films came in, our teams of preliminary judges narrowed the field down to 99 films that we accepted for screening. Then our prestigious panel of final judges were very selective in picking the winners in each of our competitive categories."ť

Winners of the festival's Golden Lion Awards will be announced during the annual awards show starting at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 4, at the Keynote Room, 310 N. Pine St., downtown Florence.

"The Best of Show Award honors a film from any category that receives the highest total number of votes from our final judges," Warren explained. "The Clyde "Sappo" Black Sweet Home Alabama Award will be awarded to the best film shot either entirely or in part somewhere in the state of Alabama. Plus we have awards for student and professional narratives, documentaries, faculty films, music videos and animated works."

This year's accepted entries, which will be screened throughout the festival at venues on the UNA campus and across the surrounding community, range from the Oscar-nominated live-action short film Binta and the Great Idea and films featuring familiar actors like Martin Donovan (Weeds, Saved!), James Denton (Desperate Housewives), Colin Egglesfield (All My Children) and David Morse (The Green Mile, Contact) to the locally shot Iron City Blues, a documentary in which Alabama blues-rock guitarist and motorcycle enthusiast Mike Griffin (a perennial favorite at Florence's annual W.C. Handy Music Festival) explores the notorious lawless legacy of a tiny Tennessee town located just across the state line from the Shoals.

"As far as the films go, we have an extremely diverse lineup this year,"ť Warren remarked. "In addition to Iron City Blues, we have documentaries featuring two other musicians who are well-known in this region for their appearances at the Handy Festival, blues artist Richard Johnston and jazz guitarist Eric Essix. You'll also see everything from films shot on familiar Alabama locations to films that were made all over the world."
   
After the Saturday-night awards ceremony, filmmakers and fans can enjoy a live hour-long performance by legendary Muscle Shoals singer-songwriter and frequent screen actor Donnie Fritts, who will be backed by members of the Muscle Shoals rock-and-soul band The Decoys and other special guests.

"This night is going to be one of my favorite gigs," says Fritts, who wrote the classic hits We Had It All for Ray Charles, Breakfast in Bed for Dusty Springfield, Choo-Choo Train for The Box Tops and A Damn Good Country Song for Jerry Lee Lewis. His big-screen credits include acting roles in Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid and Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia, Cockfighter, A Star is Born, Songwriter, The Last Ride of Frank and Jesse James and the recent music-industry "śmockumentary,"ť The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico.

"This is just a great way to celebrate the success of the UNA film festival as well as the great musical tradition we have here in Muscle Shoals,"ť Fritts added. "The Decoys feature some of the best players in the world, great Muscle Shoals guys like Scott Boyer and Kelvin Holly on guitar, David Hood on bass and N.C. Thurman on keyboards, plus we've got Delbert McClinton's drummer, Lynn Williams, coming down from Nashville to play with us."

In addition to live music, the Saturday-night awards show will feature appearances by festival founder and UNA alumnus George Lindsey (best-known for his classic role as goofy, sweet-natured garage-mechanic Goober Pyle on The Andy Griffith Show), Academy Award winner Ernest Borgnine (making his fourth visit to the UNA campus) and festival award-presenters ranging from veteran movie character actor and UNA alumnus Danny Vinson (Two Soldiers, Walk the Line) and screen favorite Natalie Canerday (Sling Blade, October Sky) to award-winning bluegrass musician, actor and storyteller Bill Foster (who teaches English at UNA) and Emmy-winning stage and screen actor and UNA alumnus Will Stutts (widely regarded as the "Master of the One-Person Play"ť for his characterizations of Mark Twain, Edgar Allan Poe, Noel Coward, Walt Whitman and many others).

"We try to make the awards show lively and laid-back, with great food, great music and Southern hospitality, plus we show a generous sampling of clips from the winning films in order to introduce those films to a wider audience,"ť said Jayne Jackson, a member of the festivals steering committee and one of the organizers of the awards show.

After the awards are handed out, audiences still have a chance to see those particular titles the following day, when we spend the final Sunday afternoon of the festival screening all of our winning films starting at 1 p.m. at the Florence-Lauderdale Public Library," Jackson explained. "That gives people one last opportunity to see all of the films that our final judges selected, all in one continuous afternoon lineup."ť

This year's final category judges include Sheffield native Stutts as well as two Florence natives who are also former UNA students, award-winning filmmaker and educator Emily Edwards (who teaches film at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and won a 2006 Golden Lion Award for her faculty film
Root Doctor) and nationally known broadcaster and screenwriter/director Mark Thompson (half of the Los Angeles-based Mark and Brian morning show), whose critically acclaimed feature film Mother Ghost was screened at the 2004 Lindsey festival.

Finalists for the Clyde "Sappo"ť Black Sweet Home Alabama Award were judged by veteran character actor and former Alabamian David "Shark"ť Fralick, who plays a recurring character on the CBS daytime drama The Young and the Restless. Fralick (who will also participate in a festival acting workshop with Stutts, Canerday and Vinson) has appeared in the big-screen features Gone in 60 Seconds, Desert Heat, Lockdown and Chill Factor as well as well as Shoals filmmaker Tonya Holly's locally made When I Find the Ocean, which premiered at the 2006 festival.

"I think the caliber of our judges reflects well on the quality of this festival and the quality of the filmmaking talent that comes out of UNA and the rest of the Shoals,"ť Warren observed. "All four of these judges are at the top of the profession and have impeccable credentials, and all four of them are closely connected with this university and this area. They're qualified to judge any film festival in the world.

Other 2007 festival events include panel discussions on "Breaking In: Just How Do You Get Started in the Film Industry?"  "Sweet Home Alabama : Filmmaking from Mobile to Muscle Shoals"ť and "Why Film in the Tri-States?"ť Workshops cover topics ranging from children's filmmaking (taught by guest filmmakers from the Huntsville-based North Alabama Film Co-op) and screenwriting (taught by UNA alumnus Chris Halvorson) to computer animation (taught by Shoals filmmaker Steve Richerson) and the acting workshop featuring Fralick, Stutts, Canerday and Vinson.

"Training and education has been the goal of this festival all along,"ť says Lindsey, who most recently hosted the Emmy Award-winning
Liars & Legends series on Turner South and played a Southern preacher in When I Find the Ocean. "Filmmakers can come together at UNA and screen their work in a festival setting, but they can also learn from industry professionals who are willing to share their experience and expertise. This kind of opportunity simply wasn't available when I was in school."ť

All festival film screenings, panels and workshops are free and open to the public. Admission to the 10th annual George Lindsey UNA Film Festival Awards Show is $15 for the general public and $10 for students.

The only other ticketed event presented during the four days of the festival will be From Marty and McHale to Mermaidman: an Evening with Ernest Borgnine.  The Oscar-winning actor will be honored with a retrospective salute to his career at 7 p.m. Friday, March 2, at the Keynote Room, 310 N. Pine St., downtown Florence. An after-party at Cypress Moon Studios at Muscle Shoals Sound, 1000 Alabama Ave., Sheffield, will feature live music by Tupelo, Miss.-singer-songwriter Paul Thorn.

Tickets for the awards show and the Borgnine tribute (which includes the party) are available in advance at the UNA Bookstore on campus, Pegasus Records Tapes and CDs in downtown Florence, and ColdWater Books in downtown Tuscumbia.

The festival will also host a Welcome/Information Center daily from Wednesday, Feb. 28, through Saturday, March 3, at the Kennedy-Douglass Center for the Arts, 217 E. Tuscaloosa St., downtown Florence. Event tickets, programs, schedules, maps and official festival merchandise (including caps, T-shirts and other collectibles) will be available at the center from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Wednesday through Friday and from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. Saturday.

For further details, including a complete schedule of screenings and other events, visit www.lindseyfilmfest.com, email lindseyfilmfest@una.edu, or call the festival office at (256) 765-4592.

Additional photos of performers, judges, panelists and other festival films are available upon request.



 


GEORGE LINDSEY UNA FILM FESTIVAL NEWS...
February 19, 2006

PRE-SCREENING OF ERNEST BORGNINE IN MARTY AT FLORENCE LIBRARY
FLORENCE, Ala. - The Florence-Lauderdale Public Library sets the stage for the 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival with a special pre-festival screening of a cherished Hollywood classic.

The library will celebrate the stellar career of this year's featured festival guest, stage, screen and television legend Ernest Borgnine, with a free showing of the actor's Oscar-winning performance in the tender, touching 1955 movie drama
Marty.

The film will be screened at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 23, in the conference room of the library, 218 N. Wood Ave., downtown Florence.

Movie historian Terry Pace, who teaches English at UNA, will introduce the 91-minute feature with a 15-minute pre-show program, "Oscar and
Marty: A Star is Born."ť

"This event is an example of the positive partnerships the film festival is building in the surrounding community,"ť said festival director Dr. Garry Warren, who also serves as UNA's Dean of Information Technologies and Special Assistant to the President.

The 2007 festival, which offers film screenings, panels, workshops and a star-studded awards show, is scheduled for Thursday, March 1, through Sunday, March 4.

"A number of screenings and other special events take place at locations off-campus, including the library," Warren added. "This special screening of
Marty allows us to preview this year's festival and salute our honored guest, Mr. Ernest Borgnine, by reviving the film that earned him an Academy Award for Best Actor 51 years ago."ť

Based on the critically acclaimed television play by Paddy Chayefsky, the film version of
Marty cast Borgnine (best-known at the time for playing brutal villains in From Here to Eternity and Bad Day at Black Rock) in the sympathetic role of a love-starved Bronx butcher, a frustrated, self-described,fat, ugly man, who falls for an equally lonely schoolteacher (Betsy Blair).

In his original
New York Times review of Marty, film critic Bosley Crowther called Borgnine's performance "a beautiful blend of the crude and the strangely gentle and sensitive in a monosyllabic man,"ť adding, "It is amazing to see such a performance from the actor who played the stockade sadist in From Here to Eternity."ť

After
Marty, Borgnine (who recently turned 90) went on to star in the screen classics The Catered Affair, The Vikings, Barabbas, The Flight of the Phoenix, The Dirty Dozen, Ice Station Zebra, The Wild Bunch, Willard, The Poseidon Adventure, Emperor of the North, Jesus of Nazareth, All Quiet on the Western Front and Escape from New York as well as the wacky, 60s sitcom McHale's Navy. Yet the sweet, sympathetic title role of Marty still holds a special place in his heart.  "A fine-looking guy can be a louse, and a hard-looking man can be a real person,"ť Borgnine told a newspaper reporter in 1955."I was glad to make the switch for a change. Anybody can play a rowdy role, but it takes something on the ball to play a good guy."

The 10th annual Lindsey festival marks Borgnine's fourth visit to UNA. The actor, a longtime friend of festival founder and UNA alumnus Lindsey, was the special guest at the second annual Lindsey festival in 1999. He returned later that year to deliver UNA's commencement address and donate his career collection of film and television scripts to the school's archives. He last visited the Shoals for the 2004 Lindsey festival.

This year, Borgnine will participate in a special tribute,
From Marty to Mermaidman: An Evening with Ernest Borgnine, at 7 p.m. Friday, March 2, at the Keynote Room, 310 N. Pine St., downtown Florence. The evening will include a wide-ranging collection of classic scenes from Borgnine's movie career as well as on-stage recollections from the actor and questions-and-answers with the audience.

Admission to
From Marty to Mermaidman: An Evening with Ernest Borgnine is $15 for the general public and $10 for students. Tickets are available in advance at the UNA Bookstore on-campus, Pegasus Records, Tapes and CDs in downtown Florence, and Cold Water Books in downtown Tuscumbia. Those who attend the Marty
screening at the Florence library on Feb. 23 can purchase tickets at a discounted price of $10 for the general public and $5 for students.

For complete festival information, including a schedule of events, visit the website at www.lindseyfilmfest.com, or call the festival office at (256) 765-4592.

 

January 25, 2007

FLORENCE, Alabama - The 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival will salute Alabama's rapidly expanding film industry with a special award named after one of the festival's earliest and most loyal supporters.

Beginning this year, the festival will present one of its top two filmmaking awards, the annual Sweet Home Alabama Award, in honor of the late Clyde "Sappo" Black, a lifelong friend of the festival's founder, veteran actor, comedian, and UNA alumnus George Lindsey.  The winner of the award will receive a cash prize of $2,000 as well as one of the festival's coveted Golden Lion Awards for filmmaking excellence. 

"The Clyde "Sappo" Black Sweet Home Alabama Award celebrates and honors the extraordinary talents and achievements of our homegrown film industry,"ť said festival director Dr. Garry Warren, who serves as UNA's Dean of Information Technologies and Special Assistant to the President.  "The award will be presented to a 2007 entry from any of our professional, student, or faculty categories that was filmed, entirely or in part, anywhere in the state of Alabama."  

UNA's 2007 film festival begins Thursday, March 1, and continues through Sunday, March 4. Screenings, panels, workshops, a star-studded awards show, a tribute to Oscar-winning actor Ernest Borgnine and other festivities will take place on the UNA campus and throughout the surrounding Muscle Shoals area of north Alabama.   

"We have a record number of 253 entries this year, and more than 30 of those qualify for the Clyde "Sappo" Black Sweet Home Alabama Award," Warren noted.  "This year's festival marks our 10th anniversary, and I think it's wonderfully fitting that we're able to present this award in memory of a man who helped inspire, encourage and support this festival from the very beginning.  Now his family is continuing that high level of support through the establishment of this prestigious award."

Black's widow, Missy Black, and the rest of his family have established the Clyde "Sappo" Black Sweet Home Alabama Award in honor of the Alabama businessman's once-in-a-lifetime friendship with the festival's founder.  Black grew up with Lindsey, who went on to achieve pop-culture immortality as lovable, dimwitted gas-station attendant Goober Pyle on the classic sitcom The Andy Griffith Show,  in the rural north Alabama town of Jasper.   

""Sappo" has been a big part of my entire life," Lindsey wrote in his 1995 autobiography, Goober in a Nutshell.  "We played together before grade school, and went to grade school, junior high, high school and college together.  He has given me a great source of material and great comfort being with me on the road."

After Lindsey went on to show-business success, a colorful series of jokes and anecdotes about "Sappo"ť gradually worked their way into the entertainer's stand-up comedy routine.  Some tales were based on actual Sappo Black memories, encounters and misadventures, while others simply lent themselves to the audience's own vivid image of Lindsey's boyhood pal.  

"I use the word "Sappo" because anybody can conjure up what they think a "Sappo" is,"ť  explained Lindsey, whose career also covers Broadway shows, feature films, and character roles on classic television shows ranging from The Twilight Zone and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour to Gunsmoke and M*A*S*H.   "As I travel, a lot of times I hear people say, "Tell some Sappo stories." I hear stories, and I immediately convert them into Sappo stories." 

When Lindsey decided to establish a film festival at his college alma mater, Black remained his staunchest supporter and closest confidant.   

""Sappo" was the Rock of Gilbraltar in my life," Lindsey recalled.  "He was a great father and husband, and he was a financial wizard.  He was a humanitarian who worked tirelessly for education and charitable causes, and most of all he was my pal.  I can think of no better way to honor Sappo's memory than with an award honoring the finest films being made in the state that he and I loved so much."ť

For details on this year's George Lindsey UNA Film Festival, visit the festival's website at www.lindseyfilmfest.com, call the festival office at (256) 765-4592, or e-mail lindseyfilmfest@una.edu.

8/31/06

ENTRIES NOW BEING ACCEPTED

FLORENCE, Alabama - Entries are now being accepted in all competitive categories for the University of North Alabama's 10th annual George Lindsey UNA Film Festival. 

The 2007 festivities are scheduled for Thursday, March 1, through Sunday, March 4, at venues on the UNA campus and throughout the surrounding Muscle Shoals area of northwest Alabama.

Last year's festival broke all previous attendance and entry records, attracting a wide variety of feature films, documentaries, short films and music videos created by more than 200 student and professional filmmakers from all over the world.

"With two months left to go until the final deadline, we already have 100 entries,"ť noted festival director Dr. Garry Warren, UNA's Special Assistant to the President and Dean of Information Technologies.  "We could be well on our way to topping last year's total number of entries."ť

The winner of the Lindsey festival's 2007 Best of Show Award will receive a $3,000 cash prize. The festival also awards a $2,000 cash prize for its Sweet Home Alabama Award, honoring the best film made (entirely or in part) in the state of Alabama. Golden Lion Awards are presented in each professional, faculty and student category. The festival's Lion Cub Award recognizes the film world's next generation in a category for students in kindergarten through eighth grade.

"We'll be celebrating the festival's 10th anniversary in 2007 by showcasing and honoring some of the finest films by today's most impressive and promising talent,"ť Warren added.  "Oscar winner Ernest Borgnine is scheduled to appear (making his third appearance at the UNA festival), and we hope to be able to announce other special guests in the coming months."ť

Deadline for entries in the George Lindsey UNA Film Festival is September 15, with the standard entry fee at $20 ($10 for students). The late deadline is October 15, when the standard entry fee increases to $30 ($20 for students). An extended deadline is November 15, with a standard entry fee of $35 ($25 for students).

"In addition to having far more films last year, we also had more filmmakers actually attend the festival than ever before," Warren noted. "The presence of so many filmmakers adds even more of an exciting atmosphere and dynamic to the festival. They all come together to share and discuss their work, learn from each other and hopefully become better filmmakers."

The university-based festival was co-founded in 1997 by veteran stage and screen entertainer Lindsey, a Jasper, Alabama, native and UNA alumnus who envisioned a Southeastern showcase for independent filmmakers as well as educational opportunities for film students and up-and-coming screen artists. In addition to daily screenings, the festival features workshops, panel discussions and an annual awards show honoring winners in each competitive category.

"If something like this festival had existed when I was in college, I wouldn't have had to go to New York to learn my craft," says Lindsey, whose screen credits range from his classic comedic role as Goober on television's long-running Andy Griffith Show to Broadway plays, feature films and memorable guest roles on The Twilight Zone, The Rifleman, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Gunsmoke and M*A*S*H.

For complete details and updates on the 2007 George Lindsey UNA Film Festival, visit the festival's website at
www.lindseyfilmfest.com , or call (256) 765-4592.

 


      George Lindsey
    UNA Film Festival
 







 



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