Did you know that Melissa Peterman was hired for a guest spot on the pilot for Baby Daddy? Then they wanted her to be a part of the show? I could not imagine the show without this funny lady. Melissa had the day off, but she sweetly agreed to come in to meet us and show her parents who were in town to visit, around the set.
Showing posts with label #ABCFamilyEvent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #ABCFamilyEvent. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Exclusive interview with the cast of ABC Family's hilarious show Baby Daddy #ABCFamilyevent
Labels:
#ABCFamilyEvent,
#intothewoodsevent,
disney,
interview,
tv
I recently got to visit the set of the ABC Family hit show Baby Daddy and got to interview
the stars of Baby Daddy, including, Jean-Luc Bilodeau, Tahj Mowery, Derek
Theler, Chelsea Kane, Melissa Peterman! On the set were able to explore have fun with the cast and learn
some fun tidbits…
Did you know that Melissa Peterman was hired for a guest spot on the pilot for Baby Daddy? Then they wanted her to be a part of the show? I could not imagine the show without this funny lady. Melissa had the day off, but she sweetly agreed to come in to meet us and show her parents who were in town to visit, around the set.
Did you know that Melissa Peterman was hired for a guest spot on the pilot for Baby Daddy? Then they wanted her to be a part of the show? I could not imagine the show without this funny lady. Melissa had the day off, but she sweetly agreed to come in to meet us and show her parents who were in town to visit, around the set.
Monday, January 12, 2015
Exclusive interviews with the stars of the ABC Family hit, Melissa & Joey, Melissa Joan Hart and Joey Lawrence #ABCFamilyevent
Labels:
#ABCFamilyEvent,
#intothewoodsevent,
interview,
tv
I have been a fan of these two actors for many years, I grew up watching Blossom, and Sabrina the Teenage Witch... These were some of my favorite shows as a teen... Now I would be able to meet and interview those starts I loved... Whoa! (ok, ok I had to do that.... my inner Joey Russo had to come out for a minute) And no sadly I did not ask Joey to say Whoa... I wanted to keep professional, but the teen inside of me kind of wanted to. To find out these celebrities are just working parents like me, really made me comfortable and relaxed and excited to ask them so many questions... Luckily for us after touring the set, we were able to do just this. First up was the handsome Joey Lawrence, Here are some of my favorite questions from our interview with Joey Lawrence:
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Exclusive Into the Woods interview with the amazingly talented, Costume Designer Colleen Atwood #Intothewoodsevent #Oscars
Labels:
#ABCFamilyEvent,
#intothewoodsevent,
disney,
into the woods,
movie
Colleen Atwood is known for her work on classic films such
as The Silence of the Lambs and Edward Scissorhands. She is a multiple award
winning costume designer who has won 3 Oscars for her magnificent work,
including Best Costume Design for Chicago,
Best Achievement in Costume Design for Alice in Wonderland, and Best Achievement in Costume Design for Memoirs
of a Geisha.
Her body of work is outstanding, to me she is one of the top designers in all of Hollywoo.d Myself and 24 other top bloggers had the chance to interview this very talented lady. Here are my favorite questions from this amazing interview.
Her body of work is outstanding, to me she is one of the top designers in all of Hollywoo.d Myself and 24 other top bloggers had the chance to interview this very talented lady. Here are my favorite questions from this amazing interview.
Question: This film had so many amazing characters and
costumes to go with the characters, which was your favorite to work on?
Colleen Atwood: You know, it's kind of like children, it's a weird question to ask, because I never like one, one day some of them are definitely not my favorites. I had a great time of course with Meryl’s costume because of the textile art that was involved in it. And it involved not just my ideas but the hands of a lot of really talented people, mainly women. Each one has a different beat, so it's kind of fun to- the thing that makes it great for me because I kind of bounce around.
Colleen Atwood: You know, it's kind of like children, it's a weird question to ask, because I never like one, one day some of them are definitely not my favorites. I had a great time of course with Meryl’s costume because of the textile art that was involved in it. And it involved not just my ideas but the hands of a lot of really talented people, mainly women. Each one has a different beat, so it's kind of fun to- the thing that makes it great for me because I kind of bounce around.
It's great that you can go from- in the room you can go from
Meryl’s costume and walk over to, to Billy’s costume, and walk over to the
baker and his wife’s costume. The vocabulary is so varied that, that
when you walk around and go from one thing to the other, you're thinking about
each thing as you go, and you kind of as you hit one, you go oh, and you kind
of go back to the other one. But it's,
it's nice 'cause they're so varied and you can always, you know, take from one
and- and sort of lend to another when it's something isn't working in the room.
Colleen Atwood: You
know, I like the costumes to look like they're worn, so it doesn't bother
me. I cringe on a different level
like if I don't have enough of them to be destroyed. But I don't cringe on an
artistic level at all. Especially with a movie like this because of the
rehearsal period, I kind of knew what the costumes were going to have to do so
I made them to kind of accommodate that.
Into the Woods design by Colleen Atwood
Question: Has there ever been a costume that you were stumped on and that took some time?
Colleen Atwood: You know what, a lot of times for me, when you work on a movie, all the costumes aren't done the first day of shooting. You're still continuing making as you're shooting. Because the schedules for preparing are pretty tight and sometimes the casting doesn't happen at the beginning, and you get the actor later in the story.
To me the costume that kind of stumps me the most is
when I know it's going to be the last costume.
And then you're sort of it's a weird thing, it's like psychological, you
don't want to let go of that costume or something, it's like the baby of the
family. So it- that was all-
traditionally with me the hardest costume to kind of like say, oh it's at the
right thing. Like I get more anxiety about that than the first one, you know,
it's, it's funny.
Question: Whose
costume would you say involved the most from your first thoughts to the
finished product and why?
Colleen Atwood: I’d say Emily’s because she was pregnant. It changed the most of any costume. It had a lot of, it had a lot of panels and, you know, when I got her, she was just barely pregnant. And all of a sudden she got into that like kind of fifth month kind of thing. And she came to work after a weekend and it was like she’d grown I swear.
Colleen Atwood: I’d say Emily’s because she was pregnant. It changed the most of any costume. It had a lot of, it had a lot of panels and, you know, when I got her, she was just barely pregnant. And all of a sudden she got into that like kind of fifth month kind of thing. And she came to work after a weekend and it was like she’d grown I swear.
She’d grown like two or three inches I'm like what happened over the weekend! I was continually kind of modifying her costume because, you know, her bust was bigger and her belly was bigger and- and you're kind of- even though she was incredibly small for how pregnant she was. I was continually like making the body- the apron bigger and- and all that. Thank goodness she was in an apron from the start, and the little jacket, I kept raising the kind of where it buttoned and kind of painting it in darker and darker on the side, so you kind of use a lot of tricks of, the trade. But, that costume I was continually changing and touching the whole time.
Question: I read that Meryl went to school for costume
design, so did she have any input or involvement in her costumes?
Colleen Atwood: Well there's not a aspect of a character development that Meryl isn't involved in. She is the Meryl Streep. But in fact she understands costumes really well, which doesn't like mean she designs them on any level, but she feels them. And any request she made to her costumes were all sort of related to movement in the costume and what it had to do for her. And she embraced all the textiles and stuff in a way that somebody that really knew what it took to make it appreciated it, so it was a really gratifying collaboration to, you know, not only work with someone of her kind of amazing talent.
Colleen Atwood: Well there's not a aspect of a character development that Meryl isn't involved in. She is the Meryl Streep. But in fact she understands costumes really well, which doesn't like mean she designs them on any level, but she feels them. And any request she made to her costumes were all sort of related to movement in the costume and what it had to do for her. And she embraced all the textiles and stuff in a way that somebody that really knew what it took to make it appreciated it, so it was a really gratifying collaboration to, you know, not only work with someone of her kind of amazing talent.
But just somebody that kind of just loved going in the room
and seeing what everybody was doing and, you know, was really great with the stitches. Like she, you know, actually acknowledged
they existed, which is really nice for the people that make the costumes,
because a lot of times, you know, I always try to like get the actors to kind
of walk through when it's done, just to give them that gratification. But a lot of times actors, you know, they're
like, reluctant to do it, and Meryl was just so kind and- and generous in that
way.
Question: Speaking of Meryl’s design, you mentioned that a lot of your inspiration came from the woods and the forest and the light and the dark. But her costume was very blue. Even like when she was the, the, the more evil looking witch, to her transformation. Who’s- who is more, who gave more input, was that her or your- your thought process? And why those blues?
Question: Speaking of Meryl’s design, you mentioned that a lot of your inspiration came from the woods and the forest and the light and the dark. But her costume was very blue. Even like when she was the, the, the more evil looking witch, to her transformation. Who’s- who is more, who gave more input, was that her or your- your thought process? And why those blues?
Colleen Atwood: Well the reason, you know, as a writer pointed out to me, since it was the blue moon, I go yeah, that's like the blue witch, the blue moon. But also when you're doing a film with a lot of dark and you're using black, it's really easy for the black to just turn into a flat blob with the digital photography and- and the lighting. So I wanted to put what I did is I put color behind it to make it not just a dead black thing and the blue kind of came forward.
Into the Woods design by Colleen Atwood
It felt good with the night sky and sort of the elements of witchery that went with her. And then when it- the transformation happened, we just went to the blue. We, wanted the blue. It was sort of the same textures. But amplified and put in satin and sort of what she thought was beautiful, everything matched. The hair the nails the dress the jewelry, everything was blue. And she thought, you know, that would make her the kind of the kind of beauty that her teenage daughter would embrace.
Question: Can you talk just a little bit about the
design process of Cinderella’s costume?
Colleen Atwood: Cinderella’s
costume for me, the first costume in the house in the, you know, that- that
whole world, it's hard to talk about just her without the world, because she's
in the world with the steps. And it kind
of when I saw what Rob was doing with the rehearsals with the, with the girls
and their action and how they were playing that opening scene, where you kind
of establish who they all are, I
immediately went to the eighteenth century for kind of reference.
Because it's such- it, it lends itself well to that kind of comedy. It's exaggerated in a way that really worked with the girls. And I wanted, so for Cinderella she was sort of a nod to that world but with a little bit of a more modern kind of take on it, not so over the top and very peasant and aged down and- and dirty. What you’d expect Cinderella to be in a way. And then when she has her moment, it's based on her- that costume was sort of based on the fact that, the costume was created by her mother.
And in the early Grimm fairy tales, the shoes
are gold not glass. I kind of wanted it to be gold and sort of the tree and the willow. And I started with more green in it, but then
it became, I found this great thirties vintage fabric that I had been hoarding
for a while. And it sort of had the
right feeling of, I wanted it to be when it went through the forest kind of
like a butterfly wing, like when you see a butterfly in the light and it goes
in the dark and you don't see it.
So I wanted it to have that kind of flighty quality to
it. And she had to do a lot in the
dress, I mean, you see, she runs, she goes upstairs, she goes downstairs. You know, I wanted to re- I kept the same
sort of silhouette, but I sort of made the, the, the sort of shape of it more
loose and modern in the sense, and also to get the movement I wanted for the
camera.
Into the Woods design by Colleen Atwood
Into the Woods design by Colleen Atwood
Question: When you watch a film, is it hard to watch the whole film, are you always watching the costumes? Can you get past the costumes and see the whole film?
Colleen Atwood: You know what, I really love movies, I really love watching them still, I always have my whole life, and I can really not go- I think when the costumes are bad or the- or the hair, which is kind of can be more disturbing. I really don't like it. It takes me out of the moment. But if, if the movie is a good movie and stuff, I don't do it. Watching my own work is harder, I'm more self-critical than I am of other people.

Colleen Atwood: You’d think right, it's so funny, in the early Halloween years, I
did a lot of costumes. My favorite was
when my daughter was like in sort of kindergarten, I made her a giant pumpkin,
it was so cute with her little hands coming out and she hated it so much. But it was so- it was really cute. But I love
going to see what the kids- what people do for their kids for Halloween is
pretty amazing, like the kind of low tech and where they go with it is really
crazy.
When my daughter got to a certain age, she went through a huge like Darth Vader, and then she wanted to be Batman Girl and then like she went like I think we had a ninja turtle phase. Like but she didn't want, like she wanted the thing like, you know, she was a total victim of the store bought costume, so it was kind of embarrassing really.
Colleen was a down to earth lady who loved what she did for a living. She is just a working mom like us, who has a job that lets her live out her dreams by designing all of these spectacular costumes. After the interview we all piled around the couch to take a picture with Colleen Atwood.
When my daughter got to a certain age, she went through a huge like Darth Vader, and then she wanted to be Batman Girl and then like she went like I think we had a ninja turtle phase. Like but she didn't want, like she wanted the thing like, you know, she was a total victim of the store bought costume, so it was kind of embarrassing really.
Colleen was a down to earth lady who loved what she did for a living. She is just a working mom like us, who has a job that lets her live out her dreams by designing all of these spectacular costumes. After the interview we all piled around the couch to take a picture with Colleen Atwood.
This was an marvelous experience, to be in the same room as
all of these incredible Into the Woods stars, was just a dream come true! Colleen Atwood is a 3-time Oscar winner with all of her spectacular
work on Into the Woods, it would be great for this to be her to be nominated for
her impressive work with Into the Woods. With the Oscar announcements, coming out soon, I would not
be surprised to see quite a few of the actors from Into the Woods on the list.
It would be wonderful for Into the Woods to be nominated for Best Picture too!
Have you had the chance to see Into the Woods? I have seen the movie twice so far, and it got even better the second time I saw the film. My daughter and my husband were also fans of the film, so if you are looking for a great movie to see with the entire family be sure to see the family friendly rated PG film Into the Woods, I am sure you will love it just as much as we did.
Have you had the chance to see Into the Woods? I have seen the movie twice so far, and it got even better the second time I saw the film. My daughter and my husband were also fans of the film, so if you are looking for a great movie to see with the entire family be sure to see the family friendly rated PG film Into the Woods, I am sure you will love it just as much as we did.
Like INTO
THE WOODS on Facebook
Follow INTO
THE WOODS on Twitter
Follow Into the Woods on Tumbler
Follow Into the Woods on Pinterest
Visit the official Into the Woods website
Follow Into the Woods on Tumbler
Follow Into the Woods on Pinterest
Visit the official Into the Woods website
INTO THE WOODS is
rated PG and is in theaters everywhere!
***Disney provided me with an all-expense paid trip for me to cover this event***
Interview Photos courtesy of Louise from Mom Start
Did you have a favorite costume from Into the Woods?
Disclosure: The reviews and or opinions on this blog are my own opinions . No monitory compensation was received. I was not required to write a positive review. Your experience may differ. The opinions I have expressed are my own I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commissions 16 CFR Part 255: Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsement and Testimonials in Advertising .
Disclosure: The reviews and or opinions on this blog are my own opinions, . No compensation was received. All opinions are my own. This is a unofficial fan site that is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company or Disney theme parks.