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Tag: warner theatre

  • ‘Everybody Loves Raymond,’ ‘Somebody Feed Phil’ creator gives DC’s Warner Theatre a taste of comedy – WTOP News

    ‘Everybody Loves Raymond,’ ‘Somebody Feed Phil’ creator gives DC’s Warner Theatre a taste of comedy – WTOP News

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    He created “Everybody Loves Raymond” before hosting the food and travel show “Somebody Feed Phil.” On Wednesday, Phil Rosenthal gives D.C. a tasty menu of comedy.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Phil Rosenthal at Warner Theatre (Part 1)

    He created “Everybody Loves Raymond” before hosting the food and travel show “Somebody Feed Phil.”

    2023 file photo of Phil Rosenthal, (Photo by Scott Roth/Invision/AP)(Scott Roth/Invision/AP/Scott Roth)

    This week, Phil Rosenthal gives D.C.’s Warner Theatre a tasty menu of comedy on Wednesday.

    “People ask me, ‘What do you do in the live show?’ and what I want to tell them is, ‘The lights go down, I come on stage, I eat a sandwich, and then I leave,’” Rosenthal told WTOP.

    “No, I have a special surprise guest moderator, especially for Washington D.C., I come out, I tell funny stories about everything that’s happened to me in my life and of course the show. … Then the second half of the show is all Q&A with the audience.”

    He recently visited D.C. to film the second episode of season seven, which premiered March 1 on Netflix.

    “What a phenomenal food town,” Rosenthal said. “I went to Yellow for breakfast, they have the best iced lattes, incredible pastries and one of the best shawarma pitas.”

    “We went to Stachowski’s Market for a gigantic pastrami sandwich; Baked & Wired is delicious; the Indian restaurant is old and famous, Rasika; Ben’s Chili Bowl; Bread Furst; the Mozzeria, some of the best pizza in the country run entirely by deaf and hard-of-hearing people. … One of the best Korean restaurants in the country, Anju, and a Lao restaurant, Thip Khao.”

    Rosenthal even whipped up some bipartisan dining at Maketto on H Street in Northeast D.C.

    “One of my favorite episodes we ever did,” Rosenthal said. “I’m thinking if I’m going to Washington D.C. in 2023, what would I want to accomplish on my trip given I do a food and travel show? What if I could get a Republican and a Democrat to sit and have lunch together?” Rosenthal said.

    “It was not easy to get this, but then I got two great people: Kevin Fitzpatrick, Republican from Pennsylvania, and Pete Buttigieg, our secretary of transportation.”

    Born in Queens, New York, in 1960, Rosenthal attended Hofstra University before eventually breaking into Hollywood as a writer and producer on the popular ABC sitcom “Coach” (1989-1997) starring Craig T. Nelson.

    “I did a bunch of shows working for other people for about three or four years before I got on ‘Coach,’” Rosenthal said.

    “I came into the middle of that run. I worked there I think seasons six, seven and eight, so it was already a well-oiled machine. It was during my third year that my partner and I amicably split up … I stayed on one more year to establish myself as a solo writer. During that season I got a videocassette of a comedian who had just been on the David Letterman show … Letterman thought someone should create a sitcom for this Ray Romano fella.”

    That show was, of course, the hilarious CBS sitcom “Everybody Loves Raymond” (1996-2005), starring Ray Romano, Patricia Heaton and Brad Garrett, as well as the late Doris Roberts and Peter Boyle as Ray’s parents.

    “[Romano had] incredible integrity in addition to being one of the funniest people in the world,” Rosenthal said.

    “In the history of sitcoms, I would say that [Heaton] is one of the best people ever to play the wife. [Garrett] is one of the single funniest people in the world. [Roberts and Boyle had] relatability. … That might be the strength of the entire show. The best compliment we’d ever get was, ‘You were listening outside our house last night!’”

    Along the way, Rosenthal acted in “30 Rock,” “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” and won a Peabody by cowriting the 9/11 telethon “America: A Tribute to Heroes,” simulcast on NBC, FOX, ABC and CBS. However, the idea of hosting a food and travel show took a while to develop, pitch and sell.

    “From the time ‘Raymond’ went off the air to the time I got the first food and travel show on PBS was 10 years,” Rosenthal said.

    “Some people think that because I did ‘Raymond’ and had some success that they just gave me whatever show I wanted, and that’s just not true. I had to really struggle. First of all, nobody wanted anymore sitcoms from me because the business had changed drastically; they all wanted hip, edgy and sexy shows.”

    “I’ll Have What Phil’s Having” aired on PBS before changing the name to “Somebody Feed Phil,” which launched to Netflix in 2018.

    “I sold the show with one line, ‘I’m exactly like Anthony Bourdain, if he was afraid of everything,’” Rosenthal said.

    “PBS gave me six on the air … then thank God Netflix came along. … There’s eight [episodes] this season, our biggest season ever and I think our best season. We go to Kyoto, we go to Mumbai, we go to Taipei, we go to Dubai, we go to Iceland and Scotland. It’s a pretty wide range of cities this year.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Phil Rosenthal at Warner Theatre (Part 2)

    Hear our full conversation on the podcast below:

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jason Fraley

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  • William H. Macy visits DC’s Warner Theatre for special screening of movie masterpiece ‘Fargo’ – WTOP News

    William H. Macy visits DC’s Warner Theatre for special screening of movie masterpiece ‘Fargo’ – WTOP News

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    “It’s just a lovely, lovely script.” WTOP’s Jason Fraley speaks with William H. Macy ahead of the actor hosting a screening of the 1996 film on Thursday.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Fargo’ with William H. Macy at Warner Theatre (Part 1)

    He earned acclaim in films (“Boogie Nights”) and TV series (“Shameless”), but his career role remains his Oscar-nominated performance in the movie masterpiece “Fargo” (1996).

    This Thursday, William H. Macy visits Warner Theatre in D.C. to host a screening of a film that combines the comedy of “The Big Lebowski” (1998) with the drama of “No Country for Old Men” (2007) for a genre bender that remains the Coen Brothers’ best.

    “We’re taking questions from the audience,” Macy told WTOP.

    “I saw the film on a big screen for the first time with good sound, maybe for the first time since we made the thing, and it is a magnificent film. I was knocked out. I was really proud to be in it. Everybody is stunning in the thing. Franny (actress Frances McDormand) just broke my heart yet again and, boy, everything from (cinematographer) Roger Deakins’ shooting to the Coen Brothers, it’s just a brilliant film.”

    The story follows Jerry Lundegaard, a bankrupt used-car salesperson in Minneapolis who seeks an investment from his rich father-in-law. When he’s refused, Jerry hires two criminals in Fargo, North Dakota, to kidnap his wife for ransom money, but the plan backfires and the bodies pile up as do clues for pregnant detective Marge Gunderson.

    “Everything they do is intentional,” Macy said.

    “Joel does most of the directing, but Ethan directs too, then Ethan does most of the writing, but Joel writes too. I think that’s the way they work. It’s really tandem. … They’re funny guys, good Lord they are. I think one of the things that’s so brilliant about the film is that it’s really horrifying and funny at the same time. They treated the violence in such a banal manner that it’s even more horrifying.”

    You won’t find a better slimeball antagonist than Macy’s Jerry, fudging the numbers with a worn pencil and throwing temper tantrums with his ice scraper. His weasel chops are best on display during a concerned phone call off screen, only to realize that he’s just practicing his act, shifting back to a normal tone to speak to the operator.

    “[The operator bit] was a little improv, I suggested it because I knew the camera was gonna come around the corner and catch me,” Macy said.

    “[The pencil bit] I was sitting at the desk waiting for them to set up the shot and I was doodling on the pad, Ethan came over and looked at it and said, ‘Hey, let’s shoot this,’ so they got an insert of the pad. [The ice scraper bit] was scripted that way, some version of: ‘He loses his [crap] in the parking lot.’”

    His naiveté stirs a deadly cocktail with his criminal hires, Steve Buscemi’s motor-mouthed Carl Showalter (“I’m not here to debate, Jerry”) and Peter Stormare’s ice-cold Gaear Grimsrud (“Stop at Pancakes House”). The duo dances on the knife’s edge of murder and buddy comedy, as Buscemi promises “total silence” by relentlessly talking.

    “They’re a great couple — it’s really well drawn,” Macy said. “When the wife gets free from the two kidnappers and starts to run, Steve Buscemi says, ‘No, no,’ and they stand there and watch and laugh as she tries to escape. It’s so horrifying. It’s so cruel. … Peter Stormare is a serious actor, he was Ingmar Bergman’s Hamlet, he’s a serious actor.”

    Still, the best performance arguably belongs to Frances McDormand in her first of three Oscar wins before “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (2017) and “Nomadland” (2020). Voted the American Film Institute’s No. 33 Greatest Movie Hero of All Time, Marge surprisingly doesn’t even show up until a full 30 minutes into the film.

    Not only does McDormand master the Midwest accent for zingers (“I think I’m gonna barf!”), she outsmarts her male colleagues (“I’m not sure I agree 100% with your police work, Lou”) and brings home the bacon to her heart-of-gold husband Norm (John Carroll Lynch).

    This gender reversal was way ahead of its time, flipping the script to show Marge receiving work calls in the middle of the night and Norm waking up to make her breakfast.

    “She really was [pioneering], but it’s not as if they were making something up out of whole cloth,” Macy said. “That’s the reality of most working families and that’s what they wrote and that’s what’s great about it,” Macy said.

    Their relationship is the thematic core of the movie, summarized by Marge in the police car finale: “There’s more to life than a little money.” The answer to that question comes in the final scene where Marge and Norm sit in bed awaiting the birth of their child. A soft lullaby plays as Marge delivers the film’s final line: “Two more months.”

    It’s the perfect punctuation on a masterfully directed film by Joel and Ethan Coen, the former of whom became the first filmmaker to direct his wife (McDormand) to an Academy Award.

    Few filmmakers have ever crafted such a signature atmosphere, capturing the quirky accents of the Upper Midwest and the isolation of frigid landscapes with red blood painted on white snow, all backed by the epic drums and tragic violins of Carter Burwell’s score.

    “It happens in Minnesota every once in a while, you get a brown January,” Macy said.

    “We got up there and there wasn’t any snow, so they immediately started renting all of the snow-making. … The lads had to keep driving farther north to find snow and they finally did … but normally that time of year the snow would be waste high. … Deakins’ initial thing of the Oldsmobile coming up over that hill in that white out, ahh, it’s just stunning!”

    The setting includes statues of Paul Bunyan, whose ax foreshadows a murder. The Coens brilliantly use transitions (cutting from Buscemi’s TV to Marge’s TV), visual storytelling (taillights disappearing during a car chase), black comedy (home invasion), and mise-en-scène (high angle of a parking lot as Jerry finds himself at a crossroads).

    Note how they film Jerry at work, shooting through vertical blinds of his office window like jail bars closing in on him.

    “There are no accidents,” Macy said.

    “The purpose of technique is to bring out your subconscious. Did they choose that shot because it looked like jail bars? One could say, ‘Yes, they chose that shot.’ Did they say to themselves, ‘Hey, it looks like jail bars,’ I don’t know, but that’s what art is. These iconic images come out and I think sometimes the artist had no idea what it was doing. John Lennon said ‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’ is not about LSD.”

    Macy was nominated for Best Supporting Actor but lost to Cuba Gooding Jr. in “Jerry Maguire,” while “Fargo” lost Best Picture to “The English Patient.” I told him that I thought the latter was ridiculous as “Fargo” is superior.

    “I will back you on that,” Macy said.

    “If you’re in one of the top categories and you get a nomination, that’s real, you can take it to the bank that you did a good thing. As to who wins, that’s a little capricious, but I’ll tell ya, it was not a good year to get an Oscar nomination because there were a bunch of great films out that year! ‘Sling Blade’ was out that year, ‘Jerry Maguire,’ I mean the list goes on and on, it was a great year for films.”

    Today, the legacy continues in the acclaimed FX series “Fargo,” which just wrapped Season 5.

    “I think it’s great,” Macy said. “I watched the whole first season. That was Billy Bob [Thornton] right? I thought, man, he should have paid them; he was having so much fun. I thought that was a fabulous season, then I’ve seen bits and pieces of all the other season. They’re ripe characters, it’s a ripe part of the country, it was a great series.”

    Still, as great as the TV series is, there’s no topping the original Coen Brothers flick.

    “It’s just a lovely, lovely script,” Macy said. “It’s so simple and, as you say, profound at the same time — and it tells a walloping good story, one of the best stories that the brothers have ever told, I think.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Fargo’ with William H. Macy at Warner Theatre (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jason Fraley

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