Arab Times

‘Mary Poppins’ back at right time

Movie musical land in the Oscars race

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By Kristopher Tapley

here’s nowhere to go but up.” Those are the words Angela Lansbury and the cast of “Mary Poppins Returns’ send you home with at the end of Rob Marshall’s sequel to the beloved 54-year-old Disney classic, and they do a good job of illustrati­ng why the film is, perhaps unexpected­ly, a bonafide best picture Oscar player this year.

The movie musical landed in the race this week with guild and Academy screenings, taste-makers and more, hoping for what would rightly be considered the impossible: an embrace. But Marshall and company can breathe a sigh of relief because it’s going over like gangbuster­s. There was applause throughout a Producers Guild screening on Wednesday. A lengthy standing ovation greeted the film’s director and cast at an all-guild screening on Saturday. On Sunday, members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences got a look and erupted when 91-yearold Dick Van Dyke hit the screen. They also met the film’s talent with a standing ovation.

“Does that not feel like the right movie at the right time,” moderator David Friendly said at the start of the PGA’s Q&A session. Indeed, there isn’t much in the Oscar hunt this year that feels like a salve in the way “Mary Poppins Returns” does. Maybe “Green Book”, Universal’s feel-good race relations drama, is the only thing that comes close. And it’s not a saccharine display; it’s earned emotion that directly feeds off the zeitgeist.

“It’s a very complicate­d time we’re living in,” Marc Platt, one of the film’s producers, said at the PGA event. “It’s so valuable to export this to the world at this moment in time, when we wish for more optimism and hope, which we all had as kids.”

Given the political climate both in the States and across the pond in the United Kingdom, that sentiment reads

of Sunday, has destroyed approximat­ely 1,400 structures in the Malibu, Agoura and Calabasas areas. (RTRS)

NEW YORK:

It was the Roaring ‘20s. Calvin Coolidge was in the White House, deeper than platitude. The best picture landscape is full of fabulous craft from artists who are, collective­ly, assembling an exceptiona­l awards slate. But from the heartbreak of “A Star Is Born” to the infuriatin­g analysis of “Vice” to the barbed atmosphere of “The Favourite”, there just aren’t many options for those voters looking for a bit of an emotional respite. “Mary Poppins Returns” fits the bill and then some.

Sequel

The original “Mary Poppins” was the first film Marshall saw as a child and it always stayed with him. If a sequel based on author P.L. Travers’ other novels was ever going to be made, he wanted to be the one to do it. “I wanted to protect the original film,” he said at the PGA screening.

He and producer John DeLuca also always wanted to create an original musical, after previously adapting Broadway hits like “Chicago”, “Nine” and “Into the Woods”. Travers’ works, however, are very episodic and lack much of a narrative at all. So they had to find their story.

The books were written in the 1930s and you can feel the Great Depression flowing through them. Marshall and company were keen to utilize that setting, and given that Walt Disney set the original “Mary Poppins” in 1910, there was an opportunit­y to catch up with the Banks children, Michael (Ben Whishaw) and Jane (Emily Mortimer), 25 years on.

Emily Blunt was tapped for the daunting task of following Julie Andrews’ iconic (and Oscar-winning) performanc­e. She told the all-guild audience, which was packed with Screen Actors Guild members, that she was terrified shooting music-and-dance sequences that incorporat­ed animation that, obviously, wasn’t fully contextual­ized for her on set. But that’s where the two-month rehearsal process came into

the New York Yankees had just won their third World Series title and Mickey Mouse made his debut on the silver screen.

On Sunday, Mickey Mouse, the brainchild of cartoonist Walt Disney that eventually came to symbolize a global entertainm­ent empire, celebrates his 90th birthday. play. Marshall wanted Blunt and the other actors to do it over and over again “until it’s in your body,” Blunt said.

Marshall met with jack-of-all-trades Lin-Manuel Miranda in New York, in between shows of Broadway hit “Hamilton”, to entice him with the role of Jack, the lamp-lighter who joins Poppins and the new Banks children on their many adventures. Miranda was eager to participat­e in something where he was just the actor, not a writer, and of course his musical chops fit like a glove. The rehearsal stretch was even longer than that of “Hamilton”, he said at the all-guild screening.

Meryl Streep and Colin Firth, meanwhile, saw the potential inherent in the material at this moment in history. “They wanted to be part of sending the message of this film out into the world right now,” Marshall told members of the Producers Guild. And by the way, even with a single show-stopping scene, don’t be surprised if Streep lands her 22nd Oscar nomination for this.

Production was a bear. Not only was Marshall conjuring a story almost from whole cloth, but also, of course, he was working with writers on new songs that would have their own sizable shoes to fill. He was also insistent that hand-drawn animation be a part of the film, drawing on the nostalgia of the original. Marshall and his team met with animators from Walt Disney Animation and Pixar Animation Studios on cooking up those elements. Some even came out of retirement for the opportunit­y to take part.

One sequence in particular, which takes place on the surface of a cracked ceramic bowl, brings all of this together beautifull­y. It blends the hand-drawn work with contempora­ry elements like three-dimensiona­l background­s and computer-generated imagery, all interactin­g with live action actors and original compositio­ns with choreograp­hy on top of it all. It’s a jaw-dropping sequence. (RTRS)

The iconic rodent, whose easily recognizab­le silhouette consists simply of a big circle and two little ones for ears, launched his celluloid career in “Steamboat Willie”, at New York’s Colony Theater on Nov 18, 1928.

In the eight-minute-long, black-andwhite cartoon, Mickey pilots a steamboat and entertains his passenger, Minnie Mouse, by making musical instrument­s out of the menagerie on board, according to IMDB.com. (RTRS)

LOS ANGELES:

Model and actress Kim Porter, who dated rapper Diddy for 13 years and is the mother of three of his kids, died on Thursday at her Toluca Lake, Calif, home, a source close to Porter confirmed to Variety.

TMZ, which first reported the news, said Porter went into cardiac arrest on Thursday at noon after suffering from pneumonia for several weeks, though her official cause of death has not yet been revealed.

On Sunday, Diddy broke his silence on Porter’s death.

“For the last three days I’ve been trying to wake up out of this nightmare,” he tweeted. “But I haven’t. I don’t know what I’m going to do without you baby. (RTRS)

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