Tag Archive: sit down with sara

SARA TALKS WITH SCOTT SCHWARTZ ABOUT ACTING WITH PRYOR AND GLEASON

While appearing on ‘Beverly Hills Pawn Shop” with actor Scott Schwartz, Sara Barrett  was fortunate to get an exclusive interview with Scott Schwartz. They talk about his experience on the set of “The Toy” with Richard Pryor and Jackie Gleason. They also talk about Scott’s new show “Beverly Hills Pawn Shop”SARA BARRETT

SB: How did you first get into acting?

SS: The first job I did was a Yoo-Hoo Chocolate drink commercial. I was going to a movie house with my dad as a kid. One of the other members was a producer of commercials. He was producing this one thing he could use me for. They flew me to Miami for three days and shot two commercials with Yogi Berra from The Yankees.

SB: Do you still have those anywhere?

SS: Oh, yeah. Actually, you can find them on youtube.

SB: So your first big movie was ‘The Toy’?

SS: Yes.

SB: What are some of the best times you remember during filming?

SS: There was an arcade land that was close by. And they had bumper cars and all that kind of stuff. We went there a couple of times. And we went to the movies. We saw ‘Poltergeist’.

SB: What was it like working with Richard Pryor?

SS: He was just mellow, cool, fun, very nice to his fans and co-workers. He liked video games. He would call me to come over to his room and we would play until about three o’clock in the morning and then I would go back to my room, sleep for two hours, then get up to go to work. We shot 120 days. I’d say I was probably in his room playing video games 50 nights. We would just laugh and joke and talk. He was great.

SB: Was there a bond between you and your on-screen father, Jackie Gleason?

SS: There was a bond there. I was different than the typical kid he was used to being around. I was told when I started, ‘Mr. Gleason does not like kids and animals.’ This is before I met him. ACTOR SCOTT SCHWARTZThen I met him and I did some impressions of him and he sort of got a kick out of it. He knew that I watched ‘The Honeymooners’ and he would ask me at some point during the day which episode had been on the previous night. I would always know exactly which one was on and he knew I was watching them. So we got along very well. I was allowed anywhere on the set I wanted to go, except one place and that was Jackie’s trailer. I was not allowed to go inside Mr. Gleason’s trailer. That was off-limits. One day while we were shooting, his assistant came up to me and said, ‘Me. Gleason would like to speak with you.’

I didn’t know where he was because I was I my trailer. So the assistant ended up leading me to his trailer and he invited me in and said, ‘Out there, you have to call me Mr. Gleason. But in here, it’s okay, you can call me Jackie.’ So we got along very well, considering the circumstances of him not wanting to work with kids or animals. He realized that I appreciated what he was about and that I wanted to learn from him. He taught me how to shoot pool. I don’t know how much you know about Mr. Gleason, but he was a pool master.

SB: Did you stay in touch with your co-stars after shooting wrapped on ‘The Toy’?

SS: This was pre-internet, pre-cell phone, but I always had Richard’s number. When he would move from one house to another, he would call me to make sure I always had his current number. Mr. Gleason, I lost touch with until a year before he passed away, I went down to Florida and visited with him. I was down there to see some friends and ended up going to Gleason’s place. I went to the front gate of the gated community and I told the guy whom I was and he called the house and they let me in and I had a very nice conversation with him, which was terrific. I didn’t have a camera with me or anything. I just went.

SB: Were Pryor and Gleason father figures to you?

SS: Gleason I never thought of as a father figure. He was a guy that I worked with that I was very good friends with. Richard was like a second father to me. He was my buddy. He was my muse. When I lost my virginity, I had to tell my dad and I had to tell Richard Pryor. He was hysterical. He was like, ‘You have to tell me how it happened and where it happened.’ We were on the phone for like an hour and a half. Great man. I miss him every day. He was definitely an important person in my life outside just those twelve weeks that we shot the movie. He would give you the shirt off his back. He was as classy as you could possibly imagine. As kind. There aren’t enough words that I can say about how great that man was.

SB: Tell me about the last months of his life.

SS: As his MS progressed, which was what he passed away from, he couldn’t speak. The last couple years of his life, it was really hard. He was in a wheel chair and he couldn’t speak, but I would go over to his house and I would see him and I would talk to him and, even though there was nothing coming back, because MS doesn’t affect the brain, you just can’t communicate, we still had fun. I would tell him what was going on and I could tell he was still there. He just couldn’t respond. There are 365 days in the calendar year. Richard passed away on December 10th, which was the same day ‘The Toy’ opened in the theaters.

SB: How did your life change after the film was released?

SS: Well, it started to change after I got home from shooting, because I was home for less than three months, which was mostly summertime, and I started freshman year of high school and got a movie. So I went to Arizona for ten weeks to shoot a movie called ‘Kidco’. We finished ‘Kidco’ the day ‘The Toy’ opened in the movie theaters. We had the wrap party at the hotel in Tucson, then they had rented six mini vans and took everybody over to the local movie theater and they had bought three or four rows for all of us to see the movie opening night. It just changed because you go from being just a regular person to going to the mall and being recognized. That’s really the extent of the change for that time frame because I was still in New Jersey. I wasn’t out here. I wasn’t a Hollywood kid.

SB: What is the worst experience you’ve ever had on a set?

SS: I couldn’t remember my lines for a commercial. History. The brain was locked and fired and dead and I couldn’t remember my four lines if you paid me. They WERE paying me and I couldn’t remember my lines. And I got replaced. It was the only time it ever happened. I don’t remember what the commercial was for. I was about 12 years old. They flew me down to Atlanta to do this thing. Not a chance. Wasn’t happening. I was fired. I was scratching my head. My dad was scratching his head. We got back to the hotel. We checked out. We got on a plane and he and I both looked at each other, both scratching our heads. That’s the one and only time that ever happened to me.

The first day of shooting for ‘The Toy’ ended up being a disaster. I knew everybody’s lines. But that was the problem. I knew everybody’s lines. Nobody had told me about ad-libbing. And who am I in the scene with? I’m with Gleason. It was the scene in the car, going back to the airport in the Rolls Royce limo at the end of the film. That was the first scene we shot.

He keeps blabbering and he’s not saying anything that’s in my head. I had all the dialogue memorized. And we kept going back and forth, over the bridge and over the bridge. So we got back to the hotel at the end of the day and the producer grabbed me and took me in his office and he called my dad and told him, ‘would you like to explain to us what just happened? Your kid doesn’t know his lines. We just wasted a whole day of shooting.’ He said, ‘Put Scotty on the phone.’ He put me on the phone and my father says, ‘Would you mind telling me what the hell is going on,’ and so I told him.

My dad was the one who told me about ad-libbing. He said, ‘Okay, tomorrow, when you go to the set, I don’t care what they say, when they shut up, say your line.’ So this went on for about two weeks. Basically, in my head, when the other actors were talking, I heard the Charlie Brown wa-wa-wha-wha, and as soon as it stopped, I said my line. Within a couple of weeks, Richard and I were in his room and I said to him, ‘You guys are having fun with this stuff and I’m sticking to the script,’ and he says, ‘Why?’ So, after the second week of shooting, I was ad-libbing right along with them. I just jumped in the pool. It was great. As long as I was close, it was fine. There was no trying to remember dialogue with Richard Pryor and Jackie Gleason. Whereas, ‘A Christmas Story’ is pretty much written the way it is.

It is very much to the script. My scene in that, which was the tongue on the pole scene, they had to do it twice. The first time they under-developed the film, so it came out dark and they had to shoot it again. I had to stay an extra four days so that they could re-shoot it.

SB: How did you get the part of ‘Flick’ in ‘A Christmas Story’?

SS: The director, Bob Clark had seen ‘The Toy’ opening weekend and immediately called my agent. I had just gotten home from shooting Kidco and I met with him. There was really no audition. He just wanted to meet me. After that, he called my agent and told him that I had gotten the film. They sent over the script and I didn’t know I had the role of Flick. I thought I was Ralphie. I had just done the lead in two films. They sent me a script with no notes. So I memorized all of Ralphie’s lines and didn’t find out until the table reading that I had actually been cast as Flick, which was a much smaller part, but one of the most memorable scenes in the film.

SB: What are you currently involved in these days?

SS: My dad and I own a shop called ‘Baseball Cards and Movie Collectibles’ in Woodland Hills.

SB: What inspired you to go into the business of collectibles?

SS: I got into the collectibles business sort of by accident. There was an old friend in Simi Valley, CA with 2 baseball card stores, 1 was in Westlake Village which his kids were running… they were tired of it and he decided to sell it, I told my dad about the place, he then flew from NJ to look at it and see what it was all about. With a basement of “goodies” he’d been collecting for years, he decided that he’d sell his business back in NJ and we’d go into the card store… within 6 months it went from all sports stuff to Baseball cards & Movie Collectibles. I’d always been into the sports cards and my dad was more into the movie memorabilia and non-sports (movie/tv show cards), so it worked.

SB: Did you and your dad collect baseball cards and comic books when you were growing up?

SS: I collected cards since I was a kid and dad had some vintage golden/silver aged comics. OF course he also had a huge collection of movie memorabilia/photo’s/lobby cards (11×14′s), toys, dolls, games etc..

SB: What are some of the most valuable baseball cards you have at the shop?

SS: To be honest, we don’t have “huge” cards at the shop, we’ve bought and sold Babe Ruth’s, Mickey Mantle’s etc.. we have some Mantle’s, May’s, stuff like that, the really “high dollar” cards I have customers for so why keep them in the shop when we can turn them over for profit. MORE we have amazing movie memorabilia like a shirt John Wayne wore in “The Searchers”, a signed John Wayne cowboy hat, a full signed movie poster from “the Godfather” 25th aniv, original comic book artwork and a million other items.

SB: What is the oddest item someone has brought into the shop?

SS: Can’t really name anything “odd” that’s come in, most of it is pretty straight forward “memorabilia”, bought a signed “Dark Knight” & “Independence Day” poster from a woman who worked at Warner Brother’s and 20th century fox for years, Most of the stuff we have come in is pretty good. One former VP at Paramount retired and he brought us in 2 amazing items, a used sword from “Braveheart” and a “knife” from “Crocodile Dundee” which were both used in the films, really NEAT stuff that people truly collect and appreciate. There is 1 guy who brings us in used jersey’s and jackets, not game worn, just “used” clothes basically, he’s a nice guy but his stuff is normally too used for us to buy. We get toy guns, old GI joe dolls… anything you can think of from the past 50 years that was made originally for a kid as a toy, we’ve probably seen it.

SB: What are some of your favorite items?

SS: My personal fav’s are some of our posters, Original Munsters Go Home, a “GoodFellas” poster signed by everyone in the film, a signed album of “Saturday Night Fever” by all 3 Bee Gee’s, the Roy Rogers, Hoppalong Cassidy showcases we have, lots of Elvis Memorabilia, and a photo that’s never sold, been with us since we opened the shop, a signed Ruben Sierra photo when he was a rookie with the Texas Rangers, it’s more sentimental than valuable at this point… that’s the stuff I love.

SB: Where can people catch Beverley Hills Pawn?

SS: I’m not sure when Beverly Hills Pawn is scheduled to be on the air or what station it’s on, so just watch for it towards the end of the year I suppose.

You can follow Scott on his Facebook Page, visit the official Scott Schwartz Website

 

 

 

 

 

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SARA SITS DOWN WITH COMIC BOOK ARTIST BIANCA THOMPSON

Sara Barrett sits down with artists and colorist Bianca Thompson; about all things comic including her work with Marvel comics and her own creation comic book and card series called “Dead Divas”  and how she got started in the comic book industry.

SB: When did you realize you were an artist?BIANCA THOMPSON ARTIST

BT: Back in 1994 i was at a friend’s house and her brother had a X-men Series 2 Jean Grey card laying on the floor. After that I was hooked and knew what I wanted to do!

SB: When did you start drawing and when did you realize that you wanted to be an artist for a living?

BT: I have always loved to draw but never knew I would end up an artist it actually chose me.

SB: You do a lot of work for Marvel, how did you get started with Marvel and have you done other work for them outside of sketch cards, like covers or interior art?

BT: For Marvel Comics I submitted my sketch card art work about a year ago and have worked with them and Upper Deck ever since. I have not had the opportunity to do covers or interiors for Marvel. Other than the Variants. However you can find me on the cover for the up coming #5 issue of SPIRALMIND. (pic below) and of course in my Dead Diva Comics.

SB: Have you worked with other comic book companies, if so what work have you done?

BT: I have worked for DC, Zenescope, Dynamite, The Walking Dead, all under sketch card artist Phi3 as designer of female characters and cover artist for issue #5

SB: What is it about pin-up art that makes that your preferred specialty?

BT: I’ve always loved pin-ups and trading card art. I find pin-ups to be more fun to draw than comics, I’m not big on repetition.

BIANCA THOMPSON DEAD DIVAS

BUY NOW $6.00

SB: Tell us about the Dead Diva Comic Book you are working on.

BT: Dead Diva’s are original character creations by me. The 1st Dead Diva Comic “Paupette” came out on May 24th 2012 at the Phoenix Comic Con. The Dead Diva’s are a series of women that are mysterious and seductive whose charms make sure their demise. They are unlucky souls often led into compromising, dangerous, and deadly situations. Each one of their stories is a lesson in the balance of life.

At this time there are a total of 18 different Dead Diva’s.

For the Dead Divas there is a #2 comic in the works as well as Unstoppable Cards will be producing the first series of Dead Diva Trading Cards with hand drawn sketch cards scheduled for an October release!

SB: Where can we find and buy your Dead Diva #1?

BT: Currently you can find Dead Divas exclusively online and at conventions only; so be sure to check them out there.

SB: Airbrush is your preferred medium. Do you create in any other mediums?

BT: I can work in many mediums i just prefer Airbrush since it is very unique.

SB: I have met a few comic book artists that really don’t read comics, hey just look at the art, do you read comics, if so what titles do you read?

BT: I have quite a collection from the 1990′s mostly X-men you can also find WildC.A.T.S, Mantra and Lady Death in there. As of recent though i skim, having the time to sit and read a comic has become a luxury. Speaking of i better get back to painting my next set of sketch cards!

SB: You own your own Airbrush shop. Where is it located and tell me about the process of the opening of the shop.

BT: I have had my own Airbrush shop inside Castles n Coaster amusement park for over 15 years specializing in Airbrush T-Shirts hats ect..ARTIST BIANCA THOMPSON

SB: Are you available for commissions?

BT: I am available for commission on a limited bases due to my schedule with Marvel Comics sketch Cards

SB: Are there any types of art work that you won’t draw or feel uncomfortable drawing?

BT: Yes, anything vulgar, or has a racial overtone; I draw the line there..

SB: Where and when is your next convention appearance?

BT: I have two conventions coming up. The New Mexico Tri Con Oct 27th-28th  and the AV Comic Expo  November 17th-18th

SB: What would you tell young artists who are interested in starting their own business?

BT: Draw what you love. Advertise like crazy. Dont expect to be a star over night, it takes hard work and dedication to keep a successful business.

SB: What are the best websites for people to see your work and order products?

BT: My website: http://www.thephoenixxx.com/biancaart/ and my art is for sale: http://biancaart.ecrater.com/; you can also find at Marvel and Upper Deck. as a full-time trading card sketch card artist.

I have done a variety of sketch card sets that have been published from 2011 to the present,  as you can see I have been very busy: Vampirella July 2011- San Diego Comic Con Exclusive Artist, MARVEL Kree-Skrull War 2011, CBLDF Liberty Card Set 2011, 5Finity Grimm Fairy Tales 2011, The Walking Dead AMC Tv Show Set 2011, Night of the Living Dead 2012 Avengers 50th Anniversary Set 2012, MARVEL Avengers Movie Set 2012, MARVEL Beginnings 2 2012, Nevermore Alice 2012, Vampirella 2012 – San Diego Comic Con Exclusive Artist, Red Sonja 2012 – San Diego Comic Con Exclusive Artist, Warlords of Mars 2012 – San Diego Comic Con Exclusive Artist, Zenescope Wonderland 2012 – San Diego Comic Con Exclusive Artist, DeadSexy 2012, Transformers, DC Comics 52

I also do a number of charity card sets that include: March of Dimes I & II, Island Dreams I & II, Mac N Trouble, Fatsa, Lord of the Dragon

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SARA SITS DOWN WITH ACTRESS KAREN-EILEEN GORDON

Sara Barrett sits down with er next guest actress Karen-Eileen Gordon; they sit back and talk about her acting career and about her upcoming projects including Magic City, Vegan 101, and Free Bird. .

SB: What inspired you to get into acting?

KEG: HA! I love this question, because I truly feel I came onto the planet already inspired to head in the direction of ACTRESS KAREN EILEEN GORDONan entertainment career. Sometimes I half-jokingly answer that question with, “I started acting in the womb…” (and the home movies of me hamming it up as a toddler definitely support this claim). If I had to narrow it down, I would say it was a combo of three things that inspired me to act: 1. my immersion in a high school debate event called Humorous Interpretation, 2. the unexpected shower of support from my college classmates after a senior talent show, and 3. spending a year in film school, behind the camera. Here’s a tidbit about each of those informing factors…

Humorous Interpretation (H.I. for short) is part of the high school debate world, in a sub-category called Individual Events…along with things like Original Oratory and Extemporaneous Speaking. H.I. is basically a 10-minute one-person show. Each performer memorizes a piece from a published work, and changes their voice and body position and facial expressions to become every character in the piece. Competition ranges from local to national, and that’s how I spent a juicy chunk of my high school years. I was blessed to take home a cornucopia of trophies, regionally and nationally. I still didn’t equate that to a career in acting, though–so I went to college, and got a degree in Economics. At my college senior talent show, I performed an H.I. piece rewritten for my classmates, from the play ADAPTATION by Mike Nichols and Elaine May. After I left the stage, they gave me a standing ovation. I was stunned. I came back onto the stage and tried to absorb it…right then, I heard my spirit say “Let’s do THIS!” I still had zero idea about how I was going to pursue things, or when. Next, I went to graduate film school in England…where I froze my booty off, ate lots of fish-and-chips, produced radio drama with the BBC, and figured out I wanted to try “in front” of camera. When I came back to the states I took my first acting class, joined an improv troupe called “Mental Floss” (for those hard to reach crevices of the mind :), and was off-and-running.

SB: What are your three favorite horror films of all time?

KEG: DELICIOUS question. I tend to like horror that has an element of the psychological involved…things like SECRET WINDOW, IDENTITY and THE OTHERS…and I’m also a huge fan of supernatural-scary flix, like WHAT LIES BENEATH and THE SIXTH SENSE. I saw the original POLTERGEIST 17 times–in the theater.

SB: What is the funniest thing that ever happened on set?

KEG: In an awesome coincidence, I have a project in post-production now that answers that question superbly. I was honored to film the female lead in an independent feature comedy called A FREE BIRD. I play TAMMY, southern hurricane-in-a-jar. She’s the emotional glue of the story, and keeps all the wacky men in the film anchored in reality. We shot on location in-and-around Atlanta, Georgia…in the summer. I was very sassy going into the shoot, because I grew up in South Florida and thought I knew aaaaall about how to handle summer heat. Wrong, wrong, hilariously WRONG. The first day I shot, we were on-location in an adorable house…and the temperature was 98 degrees before they turned on the set lighting. We had to keep the A/C off, so the sound could be recorded “clean.” My very first day, I promptly got heat sick! There are actual photos of me sticking my head in the kitchen freezer to cool off…as well photos of me wandering around for the entire rest of the shoot with HUGE bags of frozen peas on my head. HUH-larious. The R-rated trailer for the film has been released, and I’ll include that link below.
Hmmm…now that I’m thinking about it, there was another incident that may top that one, or at least ties it: I was KAREN EILEEN GORDONshooting a film, on location, in a remote area. (The entire cast and crew were with me, so I felt secure.) In the middle of talking with the director about a scene, a local man wandered through our set…wearing nothing but a thong and combat boots, and carrying a rifle. So, that was “funny-scary.” Fary. Or Scunny.

SB: You star in ‘Magic City’ on the Starz network. Tell us about your role and
what the show is about.

KEG: I play FLORENCE, a tough-smart-sassy New York dame who’s long-time executive assistant to series lead Jeffrey Dean Morgan. Jeffrey Dean plays IKE EVANS, owner of this fictitious Miami Beach glitzy-gorgeous hotel called The Miramar Playa (based on places like the Fontainebleau and the Eden Roc). Flo and Ike have a great relationship; she’s very protective of her boss and his family. The show is set in 1959 on Miami Beach–in fact the pilot opens on New Year’s Eve 1958/1959. It was such a powerfully alchemical time, and series creator Mitch Glazer captures it beautifully. Frank Sinatra and his Rat Pack were royalty. Gambling and prostitution were large-and-in-charge. All the celebs of the day wanted to play/stay on Miami Beach, and it was the dream destination for the average American family. Labor battles were heating up, civil right battles were brewing. All of this “shifting” is seen through Ike’s eyes, and through and the events that take place at the Miramar Playa. In order to keep his grand hotel dreams alive, Ike makes a deal with mob boss Ben Diamond (Danny Huston). His wife Vera (Olga Kurylenko) and his three kids have no idea how hard he’s working to break that tie. Season one has eight episodes, and I was blessed to work on all eight. Season two goes into production this summer, in South Florida.

SB: You star in ‘Vegan 101,’ the award-winning web series, with Eric Roberts. Tell me about that project and when and where we can see upcoming episodes.

KEG: That web series was such a delight to film, and creator Joanne Rose was a dream to work with. Joanne is a long-time vegan, and decided she wanted to create programming that would be entertaining and educational, centered around the World of the Vegan. She felt (and I agree!) that a heaping dose of comedy helps people remember a message. Actor Eric Roberts is also a long-time vegan, and was really delightful to work with, and hilarious on set. In season two, I’m the “Black-Belt Fan”: if you translate the passion of a sports fan who paints their body in team colors and has foam fingers and foam hats and flags and bumper stickers all over their car…I’m that kind of fan for Eric’s character. Joanne allowed me to improvise a lot of what wound up making it into the final cuts of the webisode, and the shirt you see me wearing was my own creation (no spoilers, you’ll have to watch it, LOL!). I brought Joanne the idea, and she loved it. To work with a writer/producer who is that collaborative was just delicious. I was a vegan for a year, and must admit I am inspired to move back in that direction after being around the Vegan 101 gang. I’m honored that Joanne is writing a role for me in season 3, and am so excited to film the next adventure with her (planned for this summer). Upcoming episodes will be posted on the web as soon as they’re completed…fans can check the Vegan 101 site on YouTube.

SB: Do you have anything to say to your fans?

KEG: Yes…THANK YOU. Truly! I absolutely could not do what I do without the support of my amazing fans. You all ROCK. Along with the gift of being in MAGIC CITY has come the gift of having more interaction with my fabulous fans online and in person…and I’m recognized when I’m out-and-about. It’s a new level of visibility for me as an actress, and a new level of interaction. I’m blown away by how blessed I am to have such delicious fans. Let me say it again. THANK YOU. :)

SB: Where can we see more of you online?

KEG: Here are some links…

I was thrilled to do an interview with MoreHorror.com recently:

http://morehorror.com/Actress-Karen-Eileen-Gordon-Guests-on-Eye-on-Entertainment

Click the link for the R-rated trailer for the indie comedy feature A FREE BIRD, in which I play female lead TAMMY:

Another extremely fun interview, with L.A. Talk Radio’s Sheena Metal:
http://www.latalkradio.com/Sheena.php (Click FRIDAY MAY 18th)

My IMDb page has photos and several videos posted, including improvised comedy and animation voice reels:

(…and, I was included on an IMDb list of “Ten Actresses to Watch in 2012″–such an honor. Here’s that link…)

I welcome questions and comments on my Facebook Fan Page, and stop by there often:

Folks are also invited to contact me through Twitter:

My website is being redesigned over the summer, and you can find goodies there even during construction:

THANK YOU for the great questions. And thanks to all your fab readers for…reading! :)

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SARA TALKS WITH DAWNA LEE HEISING

Sara Barret sits down and interviews actress, reporter and former Miss California Dawna Lee Heising about her projects, her shows Eye On Entertainment and Horror In Hollywood.EYE ON ENTERTAINMENT

SB: What inspired you to get into acting?

DLH: I started out as an actress and was Miss Hawaii on Fantasy Island and Cleo the Snake Dancer on the last Magnum P.I., among other roles.   I have an A.A. in Theatre Arts and A.S. in Chemistry and I studied acting at U.C. Berkeley, while majoring in Chemistry.  I’ve always loved entertaining and studied with Sal Romeo for over twelve years.  I took some time out to get my MBA and become a Marketing executive in technology, but I missed the entertainment industry so much that I started a television show called Eye on Entertainment (EOE) that I could do while working full-time.  We covered red carpets and Indie films and filmmakers.  The show really took off after I met Matt Chassin, but I was interviewing all of his exciting clients and I missed acting.   In late 2011, I decided to go back to acting full time and Matt became my manager.  I did 11 films last year and, this year, I became the Hollywood Correspondent for MoreHorror in Hollywood.

SB: You were Ms. World 2008 and have an extensive pageant background. Tell me how you got into pageants and are you planning to do any more in the future?

DLH: It seems like I’ve been doing pageants my entire life, and I am grateful for the opportunities the pageant world has brought me.  When I was Miss Los Angeles Chinatown, I won a trip to Taiwan and Hong Kong and learned a lot about my Chinese heritage (I’m Chinese, Japanese and American Indian).  I was Miss San Francisco Universe when I attended U.C. Berkeley and Miss Orange County Universe when I lived in Orange County, and I learned about the communities around me.

It was wonderful to represent my state as Miss California Hemisphere and Mrs. California United States as I was born here and love everything about it, especially the people, beaches, weather, technology and of course, Hollywood!  I won Mrs. American Achievement through my education and achievements in the film and technology industries so it was very special to me.  Through Ms. World, I’ve worked for the American Heart Association and met so many interesting people from diverse cultures.  During my tenure as Ms. World, I also began doing public relations for the Engeye Health Clinic in Uganda, and that continues to be an eye-opening and fulfilling experience.  Through pageants, I’ve traveled around the world, won scholarship money and met people from many cultures, and I loved the experience.  And no, I’m not planning on doing any more pageants.  Now I want to use my acting training and act in as many projects as I can!

SB: What are your three favorite horror films of all time?

DLH: My uncle Tak Fujimoto was the Director of Photography on “Silence of the Lambs” and “Sixth Sense”, and those are two of my favorites.  The other one is “The Exorcist”, which probably scared me even more because I’m Catholic.

SB: In your show, Eye on Entertainment, you have interviewed just about everybody. Do you produce that show?

DLH: John Cox and I started the show together seven years ago, and I’m the Executive Producer and he is the Producer.   In the beginning, I would get the press credentials and interview subjects and set everything up, and John handled the technical aspects and shot and edited the shows.  I started Eye on Excellence Productions, which is trademarked, and John and I also produced a web series called “The Alien’s Wife” together.  I played the role of the alien’s wife, Betty Styles-Gray.  In the beginning, we shot in the Time Warner Cable studios, but in the last few years, we’ve moved into shooting on location at film sets, film festivals and at industry events.  This year, we’ve moved into the horror community and are shooting shows for Seth Metoyer and the show “MoreHorror in Hollywood”.  It’s been great and I love the Horror community!  I’ve moved into movies now – I was the associate producer on “Finger Bang” and currently am the co-producer on “Shadow of the Monarch”.

SB: What would you tell young people who want to get into the business?

DLH: I would tell them to get a good education in Theatre Arts and to continue acting classes with a great teacher.  Then I would tell them to take advantage of the fact that they’re young and get a good agent.  After that, I would advise them to be tireless in learning to audition, to follow up on every opportunity, to network and to be professional and prepared on every set.   I’d tell them to always stay positive and to learn from every rejection (and there’s a lot in this business!)  It’s also important to know your brand, but not limit yourself.  I’ve played a lot of cougars, prostitutes, strippers and sexy-type (PG-rated roles), but I just played the mother of a Julliard student in Mandy SooHoo and John Cox’s “Unfinished Sonata” and it was wonderful.  I also open John Trujillo’s “A Worthy Gentleman” in my underwear, so I’ve played a wide range of roles.   I’m just returning to the film industry so I have a lot to learn about it myself, but I love it.  I learn something new on every project, make new friends, perfect my craft and every day is rewarding and fulfilling.

SB: Who would you most like to interview?

DLH:  I love interviewing everyone, but Domiziano Arcangeli and Bill Oberst Jr. are two of my favorites.  I always enjoy and learn from the interviews that I do for Seth Metoyer and MoreHorror in Hollywood, as the horror genre is fascinating.  It’s a small and close-knit community, and it’s one of the most profitable areas of film making.

I find it especially rewarding to interview the filmmakers of the projects that I’m working on these days, and helping to market those films and projects.  “The Famous Joe Project” from Eli Rarey is one of the first films I worked on last year and will be premiering this month.  My good friend (and co-founder with Seth Metoyer of Dismal Productions) Bill Oberst Jr. is in “The Famous Joe Project” and is starring in Gregory Blair’s film “Scare Tactics”, which I am excited to have a role in.   I played Lady Goldfist in Creep Creepersin’s “Finger Bang” and will be in his upcoming WIP film.  We also did the special feature interviews for Empire Films’ “Brides of Sodom”.

Last year, I played Michelle, Von Helsing’s assistant, in Domiziano Arcangeli and Steve Oakley’s “Waiting for Dracula”, and I’ll be playing a bikini model named Beth in Oakley’s upcoming “The Moguls”, starring Arcangeli.  I’m a co-producer and am playing Agent Flambeau in John Luksetich’s upcoming mind control thriller “Shadow of the Monarch”.  It’s got a great plot and Agent Flambeau will get to do a pole dance and kill people so I’m excited.  I am excited about working with Seth Metoyer and Bill Oberst Jr.’s Dismal Productions in the near future.  And, last but not least,

I will be appearing in Arcangeli and Mauro Borrelli’s film this summer.  I can’t talk about it yet, but I know it will be HUGE!

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SARA TALKS WITH PENNY DREADFUL ABOUT HOROR, COMICS AND…HE-MAN?

Sara sits down with horror hostess Penny Dreadful in honor of “Penny Dreadful Month” at Comic Book Divas; Penny talks anout being a horror hostess, her inspirations, and about comics including her upcoming comic book “Penny Dreadful’s Cauldron Of Terror”

SB: Your show, ‘Shilling Shockers,’ has been on the air since 2006; Tell me about how that started.Penny Dreadful's Shilling Shockers

PD: ’Shilling Shockers’ started out as a spell that backfired. I cast a magic spell to become a horror movie star, but the spell went wrong and I became a horror movie hostess instead. I’ve since broken the spell, and now host the movies because I enjoy bringing terrifying, terrible, and tenebrous tales to my Dreary Ones. The program is broadcast via BMT (Black Magic Transmitter).

SB: What influenced you into wanting to be a horror hostess and have your own show?

PD: Local TV shows I remember from the 70s and 80s like Creature Double Feature.  Local programming has all but vanished, and I wanted to help bring that feel of a local TV show back to the Boston and Providence areas.

Also, current Horror hosts and indie shows around the country like Ghoul a Go-go and and hosts from the Horror Host Underground were a big inspiration, as was Commander USA.

SB: What horror hosts and actors inspire you?

PD: Honestly, too many to list here and all for different reasons.  A few names I’ll toss out – Vampira, Zacherley, Simon, Morgus the Magnificent, Crematia Mortem, Dr. E. Nick Witty, The Host and Rodney, Barbara Steele, Boris Karloff, Jonathan Frid, Lara Parker, Bela Lugosi, Bette Davis, Lauren Bacall, Billie Hayes, Vincent Price, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Johnny Depp, Elsa Lanchester, Pete Lorre, Lon Chaney, Lon Chaney Jr., Joan Crawford, Maggie Smith, Gary Oldman, Alan Rickman, Carol Burnett, Lucille Ball, George Burns and Gracie Allen, WC Fields, Mae West, Laurel & Hardy, The Marx Brothers.

SB: Who would be your dream guest to have on your show?

PD: Legendary horror host, Zacherley! I just know we’d have a grand old time!

SB: What is the funniest thing to ever happen on the set of your >show?Penny Dreadful's Shilling Shockers

PD: In my attic of doom? Well, once I went crashing through the top of a glass table when I leaned upon it to pick up a lit candle which had fallen over. Everyone seemed to think that was pretty hilarious once they saw that I hadn’t been cut to ribbons! EEK!

SB: Garou is your werewolf henchmen and husband. Where did you >meet him, how long have you been married and has it >strengthened the marriage to work together as well?

PD: You’ll see how I met Garou in the new issue of ‘Penny Dreadful’s Cauldron of Terror!’ I’ve mentioned our meeting several times on the show and in interviews, but you’ll finally see how it happened in the new comic book. We’ve been married for over 300 years and yes, it has absolutely strengthened our marriage. I had quite a…erm…reputation before I met my snarling darling, but now I’m a happily married wicked witch. One might say we were made for each other.

SB: Are you and your fellow cast mates available for personal appearances?

PD: We do make appearances at conventions such as Monster Bash, WonderFest, HorrorHound, Rock and Shock, MonsterFest, The SouthCoast Toy and Comic Show, and other cons. Lately, things have been very busy so we’ve cut down on cons a bit but we do make it out to shows two or three times a year. Upcoming appearances include The Southcoast Paranormal and Psychic Faire on April 21 – http://www.scparanormalfaire.com/ as well as Monster Bash on June 22-24 -http://www.monsterbashnews.com/bash.html. We will also be at the Creature Double Feature convention in Massachusetts on September 29.

SB: Penny, you’ve been alive for a very long time. What are your three favorite horror pictures of all time?

PD: That’s a very difficult question to answer. I like a lot of classic horror films, so it’s almost impossible to pick just three. For the sake of answering your question I’ll go with Universal’s classic ‘The Wolf Man,’ Hammer’s ‘Dracula Has Risen from the Grave,’ and Roger Corman’s AIP Poe film ‘The Pit & the Pendulum.’

SB: You have your own comic book here at Comic Book Divas. Tell me about “Penny Dreadful’s Cauldron Of Terror.”Penny Dreadful Shilling Shockers

PD: Editor and Comic Book Divas owner Jeff Hughes asked me if I wanted to do a comic. We talked about it and decided to move forward with it. It’s done in the style of those great EC horror comics. Jeff is the editor, I’m the writer, and we have a couple of great artists onboard to illustrate the stories: Frankie B. Washington and Josh Barker. We originally wanted to do three tales, but had to cut it to two for space reasons. The first story is a tale of terror in the style of the EC stories. Jeff wanted one of the stories to be about the ‘Shilling Shockers’ gang, so the second tale is a storybook type comic about how Garou and I met.

SB: What comics inspired your comic book, and do you read any comic book titles today?

PD:Tales From the Crypt, Vault of Horror, Haunt of Fear, House of Secrets, and House of Mystery were all direct inspirations for the new comic.  I currently read “Fables,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” and the new “Dark Shadows” comic from Dynamite.  I used to read Batman and Detective Comics but haven’t for awhile.

SB: Some may not know you are a big He-Man and the Masters of the Universe fan, what aspects of the cartoons do you enjoy and are you also a collector of all things He-Man?

PD: I’ve been a Masters of the Universe fan from the day in 1982 when I first saw the Castle Grayskull commercial with He-Man and Beast Man.  I was entranced by the mystery of the castle and the bright orange of Beast Man somehow drew me in.  I wound up collecting many of the figures, loved the classic cartoon, and have been a fan of He-Man and She-Ra for a very long time.

My doppelganger Danielle (she sort of looks like me) is more into it than I am.  She’s even part of this podcast called Roast Gooble Dinner where they talk about He-Man stuff – http://roastgooble.libsyn.com/  and I hear she’s a moderator on the He-Man.Org forums.  She even helps out with this convention called Power-Con that all He-Man, She-Ra, and ThunderCats fans will love – www.thepower-con.com.

SB: Do you have anything you would like to say to your fans?

PD: You are hex-cellent! Yes, all three of you!

SB: What is the best website (or sites) where fans can go to keep >up with your projects?

PD: Our official website is www.shillingshockers.com. We also have a Facebook fan page here: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Penny-Dreadfuls-Shilling-Shockers/191730100857323

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