Dennis Boutsikaris aka Mr. Wolfowitz in W.

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Dennis Boutsikaris, the Greek-American actor that portrayed Paul Wolfowitz in W. , talks about his career, his role, and his collaboration with Oliver Stone and Josh Brolin.

Where are you from?
Born in Newark, NJ and grew up in Berkeley Hts. New Jersey. Graduated Hampshire College, Amherst, Mass.

What is your Greek Background?
I’m Greek on my Father’s side. My mother was Jewish. Half Greek/Half Jewish—when I met the comedian Jack Carter he said “Half Greek/Half Jewish? You go to confession, but you bring a lawyer”

Have you ever been in Greece?
No

Was it difficult at first in Hollywood?
No. I was working on Broadway and Off-Bway in New York and all of my film and television work came out of there. I moved my family there when I did my first series but moved back immediately when the job ended. I only keep an apartment there, but my house is in Nyack, NY.

People with long Greek last names usually change them to something shorter, but you didn’t…
My father used the name Baron when making Restaurant reservations but it never occurred to me to change it.

Do you have Greek friends or Greek friends that work in the industry?
I meet Greek people in the film industry all the time. There is an unspoken and sometimes VERY spoken brother and sisterhood which I love. I’ve had people come up to me on the street and tell me their last names almost before saying “hello.”

How it is to work with Stone?
Fantastic. He is passionate, thorough, smart as a whip, funny, and a true collaborator. I was very happy to be around that project. When I showed up they had already been filming for about a month and Josh Brolin was really living inside his George Bush skin and you forgot he wasn’t the President. Oliver was very particular about how much Ear Hair I had in the film and at one point it looked like I had a racoon tail coming out of them. There was a funny moment that I think was cut because of time or it was too cheap of a laugh where the president tells Wolfowitz to trim the hairs. Fun to do. I guess I’m glad its somewhere on the cutting room floor. Although, come DVD time, I’m sure it’ll be hidden among the special features.

You portrayed a person who is described as « the major architect of President Bush’s Iraq policy and … its most fanatical and hawkish advocate» what’s appealing in thiskind of role?

Your Question contains the answer. All of that was appealing. But, I really had a very small role in this film. I was happy just to be there. Except when it was three thousand degrees in Shrevesport and we were walking around in suits making believe we were at the Crawford Ranch. We marched up and down this field from sun up to sun down with breaks for changing our sweat drenched clothes. I think it was truly the hottest day on earth. The dogs we were using had to be wrapped in ice packs it was so hot. I envied them.

What are your personal feelings towards the real Mr. Wolfowitz?
War criminal.

Critics have said that «W.» almost creates a positive image for President Bush. Do you agree?
Bush is a human being and W explores his life. Positive? No. Human? Yes

What are your feelings towards the current administration?
Disaaster.

Tell us a few words about your play in San Francisco?
Called THE QUALITY OF LIFE. I co-star with the amazing Laurie Metcalf and Jo Beth Williams. We performed the play in Los Angeles last year to great success and are continuing now. About two families dealing with personal tragedies. Truly great play that we hope to move to New York.

What do you usually do in your free time?
Parent my two children, work on an old farmhouse I own in upstate NY, play bluegrass banjo, and do lots and lots of worrying.

Choreographer Andonis Foniadakis to premiere work at Joyce SoHo

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Andonis Foniadakis — last seen at The Joyce Theater as choreographer of Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève (2007) and Benjamin Millepied & Company (2006) — now premieres The Rite of Spring at Joyce SoHo, November 20-23. For his Joyce SoHo debut, the Greek-born choreographer will present a solo version of the evening-length work which he created last year for the Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève. This provocative piece, set to Stravinsky’s masterpiece, celebrates the female body as the ultimate instrument and carrier of sexual and unseen internal forces as it recalls her lost primitiveness. Superbly danced by Ioanna Toumpakari, The Rite of Spring charts the passage from ordinary to ecstatic while conveying the violence and eroticism sparked by the battle between the soloist and Stravinsky’s power-packed score. After Hours @ Joyce SoHo, a post-performance Q&A with the artists, will follow the November 21 performance. For Tickets go to www.joyce.org or via phone at (212) 352-3101.

About the Artist:

A native of Crete, Greece, Antonios (aka Andonis) Foniadakis has performed with Bejart Ballet Lausanne under the direction of Maurice Bejart (1994-96), Lyon Opera Ballet under the direction of Yorgos Loukos (1996-2002), and Saburo Teshigawara/Karas under the direction of Saburo Teshigawara (2004). During these years, he also performed works by choreographers Maguy Marin, Jiri Kilian, William Forsythe, Dominique Boivin, Nacho Duato, Mats Ek, Ohad Naharin, Frederic Flamand, Bill T Jones, Herve Robbe, Tero Saarinen, Lionel Hoche, Joachim Schlomer, John Jasperse, Alessio Silvestrin and Jo Kanamori. In 2003 Foniadakis created his own company, Apotosoma, based in Lyon, France, for which he choreographed Sensitive Screens Skins Intervals (Kalamata International Dance Festival, Greece, 2003) and Use (Biennale de la Danse in Lyon, France, 2004). Most recently he has created works for Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève, Greek National Opera, and Lyon Opera Ballet, among others. His credits also include choreography for two operas: Rameau’s Les Boreades (Opera National du Rhin, 2005) and Claudio Ambrosini’s Il Canto de la pelle (Grame Lyon, 2006). Foniadakis has studied at the State School of Dance, Athens and Rudra Bejart in Lausanne.

Oliver Stone among many celebrities to attend Thessaloniki Film Fesival

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Oliver Stone

By Mary Kouinogloy

The eyes of the cinema community are now upon Thessaloniki, where important film directors will be in attendance at the most significant event of the 7th art in Greece, the 49th International Thessaloniki Film Festival.
The most famous guest of the Festival is probably Oliver Stone. The three-time Academy Award Winner director will be there to present his new film W. Starring Josh Brolin as President George W. Bush, W is the new film of Stone’s American president film series, following JFK and Nixon. Oliver Stone will receive an honorary Golden Alexander for his work and will conduct a Masterclass on the 18th of November.
Another interesting Masterclass is expected to be that of Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne on the 15th of November. The multi-awarded Belgium directors have just arrived in Thessaloniki to attend the Opening Ceremony of the Festival. Arta Dobroshi, Dardennes’ star in Lorna’s Silence, will also be present on the occasion of the screening of the film.
Other well-known directors that are planning to give a Masterclass are the Japanese Takeshi Kitano, the English Terence Davies, Richard Jobson, the director of the New Town Killer, the Greek Manos Zakharias and the Serbian Emir Kusturica, who will also perform a live concert with the No Smoking Band.
Two directors of photography are going to have Masterclasses as well. The Academy Award winner for Pan’s Labyrinth Guillermo Navarro and the director of photography of Mama Mia, Haris Zambarloukos are going to reveal the role of photography in the art of cinema.
Apart from their separate Masterclasses, the notorious Greek director Theo Angelopoulos and the actor Willem Dafoe will have a Press Conference in order to present the director’s new release The Dust of Time, in which the actor stars.
Moreover, the two-time Academy Award Winner Argentinean composer Gustavo Santaolalla, the Brazilian director Walter Salles and the screenwriter Diablo Cody are only a few of the big names of modern cinema attending the Festival.

Hollywood travels to Thessaloniki for the 49th Film Festival

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By Mary Kouinoglou
Miles away from Hollywood, on the other side of the ocean, in a quiet small city, a rather large event breathes life into the streets. Avid cinema fans, actors, artists, directors, photographers, journalists, students are all gathering, waiting for the show to start. The 49th International Thessaloniki Film Festival, Greece’s most prestigious event dedicated to Cinema Art, is about to kick off tomorrow Friday, November 14th.

The two hundred and thirty films, including two world premieres, six international premieres and three European ones, will be enough to captivate the audience in front of the big screen for ten days. Nearly one thousand guests, representing fifty-five countries are expected to showcase their work, accompanied by ninety foreign film critics and journalists, who will cover the event.

The official program includes the International Competition, with fourteen films by new and emerging directors, the Out of Competition section, with three films coming from South and North America and the Special Screenings of seven films. Also, this year’s festival will pay homage to the directors Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, Takeshi Kitano, Ousmane Sembene, Terence Davies, Ivan Ladislav Galeta and the greek Manos Zakharias. Other interesting highlights are expected to be the Tributes to Contemporary Turkish and Middle Eastern Cinema and Romanian shorts. Parallel to the Festival, exhibitions, parties and concerts will be taking place across the city.

In the Opening Ceremony tomorrow, the Olympion Cinema, one of the main venues of the Festival, will host an audience who will be taken on a journey through the history of cinema, travelling from America to Thessaloniki. The Wrestler by Darren Aronofsky has been chosen to be the centrepiece of the Ceremony.

Psilakis: Probably the No1 Greek Chef in New York

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Immensely successful chef Michael Psilakis – whose Anthos is one of only two Greek restaurants in the world to receive the prestigious Michelin star- is a first generation Greek-American true to his roots. Psilakis, who learned his trade growing up in the kitchen alongside his mother, has brought new life to Greek cuisine. Breaking free from the glass-on-the-floor tavernas that are so closely associated with Greek food in the US, Psilakis’ sophisticated twist on classic dishes has the critics abuzz with praise.

As a first-generation Greek-American from Long Island, Psilakis grew up immersed in Mediterranean culture and surrounded by other Greeks (cousins, probably).  Food was the center of day to day life for the Psilakis clan, and the young chef recalls boisterous family gatherings complete with spinach pies, baklava, and, of course, lamb roasting in the back yard. His passion for food began as he helped his mother crumble feta and layer phyllo at Christmas one year, and from there he learned to master the classics. Greek cooking was Psilakis’ childhood pastime, and to this day he takes great pride in his culture and heritage. Without having received any formal culinary training, everything this chef knows he learned from his big fat foodie family.

Chef Psilakis’ flavorful upbringing plays a large role in his affinity for Greek cooking, but it is the American influences that helped shape his creative interpretations on traditional dishes. His wildly popular restaurants are some of the best New York has to offer, but don’t go expecting to order that comforting dish your yia yia used to make on Easter.  You won’t find any form of a recognizable Spanakopita or Mousakka at his restaurants. Without losing the identity of what makes food Greek, Psilakis expands on his mother’s teachings and then some. His is the next generation of Greek standards, the same flavors and ingredients you know, inventively deconstructed for the global audience.  Chef Psilakis brings an adventurous element to Greek cooking that has long kept it detached from the advanced culinary pedigree displayed by other regional cuisines. He is exposing people to Greek food and demonstrating that it can be executed at the haute level. What Jean-Georges and Wolfgang have done for French, Psilakis is doing for Greek. Americans have been familiar with Greek food since the first diners opened in New York City in the 1900s. Ironically, it took a Greek-American to elevate Greek cuisine to take its rightful place as a distinguished culinary art.

Jemaine Clement and Miranda Manasiadis became parents

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By Mary Kouinoglou

The New Zealander comedian, who last year shared a Grammy Award with his co-star Bret Mckenzie, has a reason to “fly” after becoming a dad for the first time. Clement’s wife of Greek descent, actress and playwright Miranda Manasiadis, gave birth to a boy in New York last month. The couple named their son Sophocles Iraia Manasiadis Clement after one of Manasiadis’s Greek grandfathers. The boy has been described as the young Jemaine, with his father’s lips. Clement now, although in the middle of filming the second season of the hit comedy show, will try to get a break to spend some time with his family.

Stamos stars at the “Two Mr. Kissels”

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By Anna Dritsas

Full House is longgone and the last season of ER is almost over – so, where will you go to get your John Stamos fix now?!!  I’ve got just what you need! Satisfy your Stamos craving by watching his performance in Lifetime’s new movie, The Two Mr. Kissels. The story is about a pair of brothers seem to have it all – the perfect wives, the perfect homes, money and perfect lives. But nothing is as it seems in the Kissel household, especially when unspeakable tragedy strikes and both brothers are found dead. You won’t believe the directions that this shocking true story takes! And you won’t want to miss a second of it.
Watch the trailer now:
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Meet the characters, watch clips from the movie, and learn more about The Two Mr. Kissels right here:http://www.mylifetime.com/on-tv/movies/two-mr.-kissels

Final results for Greek-American Candidates

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Gus Bilirakis in Florida received 62 percent of the vote to Mitchells 36 percent. Bilirakis the first time that was elected as a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives replaced his father, Mike Bilirakis, who did not run for reelection after 23 years in the United States Congress. Before being elected to Congress, Gus Bilirakis had been a member of the Florida House of Representatives since 1998. He grew up in Tarpon Springs, Florida, as the second-generation son of Greek immigrants. His grandfather opened a bakery in that town. At an early age, Bilirakis began working at his family’s bakery. He attended Tampa Bay area public schools and continued to work in his grandfather’s bakery while growing up.

John Sarbanes of Maryland received 70% of the vote to Haris 30%. Sarbanes was born in Baltimore on May 22, 1961 and is the eldest son of former U.S. Senator Paul Sarbanes. He received a B.A. cum laude from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University in 1984 and a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1988. Sarbanes lives in Towson, Maryland with his three children and wife Dina, who he met at Harvard and wed in 1988. Dina Sarbanes is an Assistant County Attorney with the Baltimore County Attorney’s office. Sarbanes sought the Democratic nomination for Maryland’s third congressional district after then-incumbent representative Ben Cardin chose not to seek re-election in order to run for the United States Senate seat of John Sarbanes’ father, Paul Sarbanes.

In Nevada Democrat Shelley Berkley had a very easy win.  She received 68 percent of the vote while her opponent, conservative  Robert Wagner received only 28 percent. Berkley had been a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives since 1999.  Her grandmother was from Thessaloníki and part of the Greek Jewish community there. Berkley was born in New York City and then moved with her family to Nevada when she was a junior high school student. She attended the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and earned a degree in political science and served as the UNLV Student Body President. She then entered the University of San Diego, graduating with a degree in Law. She served in the Nevada Assembly from 1982 to 1984 and was involved in civic affairs locally. While in the state legislature, she advocated consumer safety laws, campaigned against drunken driving, and founded the Senior Law Project. Berkley was also appointed vice chair of the Nevada University System Board of Regents, serving at the position from 1990 to 1998. Elected to the House for the first time in 1998, she serves in the Committees on Veterans’ Affairs, and Ways and Means. As a representative, Berkley views her top priorities as to fight for affordable health care coverage for all Americans, veteran’s rights, and alternative energy.

Dina titus of Nevada won a very difficult battle against Republican Jon Porter. Titus received 47.4 percent of the vote while Porter received 42.3 percent. Titus has been the Minority Leader of the Nevada Senate since 1993. She is also a political science professor at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She has taught American and Nevada government at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, for 30 years. Before her recent congressional run, she was considered likely to seek a rematch with current Republican governor Jim Gibbons in 2010.

Democrat Zack Space of Ohio  also won the race with 59.8 percent while Republican Fred Daily received 40.2. Space of Dover, Ohio, is an American politician of the Democratic Party and presently serves in the U.S. House of Representatives for Ohio’s 18th congressional district. Space won the seat for the first time in the November 7, 2006 election, defeating state Senator Joy Padgett. Space’s seat was formerly held by Republican Bob Ney, who pled guilty to conspiracy and making false statements in relation to the Abramoff scandal. Republican Fred Dailey is currently running against Space in the 2008 election. Born in Dover, Ohio, in 1961, Space is the son of Socrates Space and Sandra Gallion. His grandparents immigrated to the United States from Greece in the early years of the 20th century. His grandfather and namesake, Zacharias Space, earned U.S. citizenship through service in World War I. Space attended Kenyon College in Knox County. While earning a degree in political science, he was awarded All-American honors in football and was named the 1982 Athlete of the Year at Kenyon. After his graduation from Kenyon, Space enrolled in the Ohio State University College of Law and earned his Juris Doctor in 1986. He is married to Mary Wade, the first woman judge in Tuscarawas County history. She was re-elected in 2005 with 64 percent of the vote.

Niki Tsongas was running without an opponent and of course keeps her seat in the U.S. House of Representatives for Massachusetts’s 5th congressional district. Tsongas is the widow of Greek-American U.S. Senator Paul Tsongas. She has three Greek-American daughters and she calls herself “Greek by Osmosis”. She is the first woman elected to Congress from Massachusetts in 25 years and the first female Democrat elected to Congress from the state in 35 years. Niki was born to Marian Susan Wyman, an artist and copywriter, and Colonel Russell Elmer Sauvage, an engineer in the United States Air Force who survived the attack on Pearl Harbor. She was a 1964 graduate from Narimasu American High School in Japan while her father was stationed at Fuchu Air Force Base and then spent one year at Michigan State before attending Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. After graduating from Smith College in 1968, she moved to New York City where she took a job as a social worker for the Department of Welfare. Niki has a law degree from Boston University and started Lowell’s first all-female law practice. She defeated her four opponents in the Democratic primary with a plurality of the vote, 36%. During her campaign she received endorsements from the three major newspapers in the area: The Boston Globe, The Boston Herald, and The Lowell Sun.

Barack Obama: our new President.

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I woke up this morning (or should I say yesterday morning) both elated and scared. Dead scared. Elated the moment of truth was here. Scared there might still be a chance it won’t be so. Dead scared.

Now, fear is not one of those things neither Greeks nor Americans tend to feel. Me being Greek-American means I shouldn’t feel much fear, should I? Except this was nothing but a fearful situation. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think John McCain means bad, but then again did George Bush mean bad? What I am trying to say here I am finally freaking elated! No fear. Just elated. Yep. I know…it is not over, there’s a long way ahead …of course…sure, yet right now, right this moment I think we all deserve a moment of passion. Very dramatic, very ancient; passion. This is no longer about parties, policies and the financial interests of the few. This is about a chance to make this world a fairer place to live in. It is about establishing a higher life standard for all. Both literally as well as emotionally and ideologically. America rejoice! Barack Obama is our new President.

So, where does culture shock comes into play here, you may ask.

It doesn’t. No culture shock today. Sorry. Not at all sorry, actually.

Is Jennifer Aniston pregnant?

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According to People’s magazine the Greek American actress that had a leading role in the famous TV series “Friends” is speculated to be pregnant. In a past interview for that magazine she did say that she would like to have a child in her life. Her traditional Greek father of the actress was talking about in his Greek American surroundings, that he would love to have a grandchild. Her insisting father and the anonymous sources that People’s magazine  claims to have probably confirm the rumor that is floating over Hollywood. Some people are even talking about the possibility that her pregnancy is related on getting together with singer

John Mayer.