| by: | Apr 2, 2001 |
More laughs at Comedy Awards
The second annual Canadian Comedy Awards, this year hosted by a cast of comics, promises an extra dose of laughs and entertainment.
"Last year established a groundbreaking award show. This year we are turning it up a notch," says writer/producer Tim Progosh.
Broadcast on The Comedy Network April 22 and on CTV April 28, the awards show is produced by Higher Ground Productions and this year boasts more than 100 nominees in 19 categories that cover writers, directors and performers in TV, film and stage.
Also new this year, Bluma Appel and the CCA have established the Bluma Appel That's Funny Award, which consists of a $1,000 prize for each of the nine winners in the live comedy category.
The Humber School of Comedy and the Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals have joined the CCA board of advisors.
Image fest spotlights Japanese indies
THE 14th annual Image Festival, one of Toronto's foremost media arts showcases, this year presents an extensive survey of Japanese independent films and videos.
Japan Focus includes two features and 22 shorts by contemporary artists whose alternative works are rarely seen outside Japan.
The program includes the festival's opening gala Body Drop Asphalt by Junko Wada and Devotion: A Film About Ogawa Productions by American filmmaker Barbara Hammer.
The festival runs April 12-22 and features 200 independent films and videos.
Among this year's highlights are: Live Nude Girls Unite!, a doc about strippers' efforts to unionize; Philip Hoffman films, a 20-year look at Toronto's foremost diary filmmaker; and Pierre Hebert and Bob Ostertag in performance, the first collaboration between the legendary Quebec animator and the American experimental composer/performer.
Obomsawin wins Governor General's Award
National Film Board filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin was one of seven winners of the second annual Governor General's Awards in Visual and Media Arts.
The award, which is accompanied by a $15,000 prize, was presented in Ottawa by Governor General Adrienne Clarkson on March 21.
Obomsawin's body of work, including Rocks at Whiskey Trench, Christmas at Moose Factory and Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance, which won 18 international awards, has received worldwide acclaim over the past three decades.
Obomsawin was named the Order of Canada in 1993.
Sullivan ends Wind at my Back
After five illustrious seasons, Sullivan Entertainment's Wind at My Back came to a close on April 1, with its final two episodes airing back-to-back on CBC.
"Wind at My Back has had a long life and we felt it best to end the show while fans still loved it," says executive producer Kevin Sullivan.
Sold to more than 75 countries worldwide, the award-winning series chronicles the antics and adventures of the Bailey family, whose high spirits and eccentricities were set against the turbulent 1930s.
But while production on the series has come to an end, viewers can still connect with the Bailey family through a new Wind at My Back interactive, online game developed by Sullivan.
2001 FIFA winners
The Grand Prix Pratt & Whitney Canada, top prize at this year's 19th edition of the International Festival of Films on Art, has been won by Marc-Henri Wajnberg for the France/Belgium coproduction Oscar Niemeyer, un architecte engage dans le siecle, a portrait of the 92-year-old creator of Brasilia.
The $5,000 Telefilm Canada Prize for best Canadian work was awarded to Jacques Godbout for the biography Anne Hebert, a portrait of the late poet and novelist produced by the National Film Board and filmed by cinematographer Michel Brault.
The Banque National Jury Prize was won by French director Catherine Adda for Calatrava, dieu ne joue pas aux des. The $1,000 National Film Board Prize for Creativity went to German filmmaker Julius Werner for Markus Lupertz.
Highlights from this year's edition of FIFA (Festival international du film sur l'art) were screened in Trois Rivieres (March 27-30) and in Quebec City (March 22-25). Subsequent screenings are planned in the months ahead for New York, Washington, DC and Helinski.
Mr. Bill joins LGE
Vancouver-based Lions Gate Entertainment and its Marina Del Rey division CinemaNow have acquired the rights to the Oh Nooo!!! It's Mr. Bill library of claymation shorts from Saturday Night Live. The Mr. Bill skit featured a clay hero who ended up flattened at the end of the episode by a series of mishaps.
The collection, commemorating the 25th anniversary of Mr. Bill, includes never-before-seen episodes such as "Mr. Bill Goes to Space" - an ill-fated trip to Russian space station Mir.
Initial distribution will be on VHS and DVD at sell-through prices under the Trimark Home Video banner and eventually video-on-demand through CinemaNow's Internet distribution.
The library includes the original 19 shorts from SNL and 25 shorts from the Mr. Bill 20th anniversary collection.
Highwire goes interactive
Highwire Entertainment Group in Vancouver has launched Highwire Interactive, a developer of interactive TV products, through a joint venture with interactive program producer Tracy McMenemy.
At ExtendMedia, in Toronto, McMenemy produced interactive TV programs and developed new media business strategies for Alliance Atlantis Communications. She most recently produced interactive TV projects for Cablevision Systems, Digeo Broadband, The Sporting News and PBS. In conjunction with CBC, AAC and Back Alley Film Productions, McMenemy line produced North America's first dramatic interactive TV series, Drop the Beat.



