Page 41 - Flathead Beacon // 11.4.15
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THE MARQUEE
WHAT TO READ, SEE AND APPRECIATE
WHITEFISH THEATRE CO. PRESENTS ‘GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL’
An O -Broadway touring company from New York City will take the stage on Nov. 13 for the one-night-only performance of “Girls Night: The Musical,” presented by the White sh Theatre Company.
It follows the story of a group of women friends through their 30s and 40s, with irresistible hits from the 80s and 90s, such as “Lady Marmalade,” “It’s Raining Men,” “Man I Feel Like a Woman,” “I Will Sur- vive,” and many more.
Tickets are $40 with reserved seating. Tickets can be purchased at the box o ce, located at 1 Central Ave., White sh, or by calling 862-5371. Box o ce hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Fri- day and one hour before the performance. Tickets can also be purchased online at www.white shtheatreco.org.
Have a gallery opening? Just published a new book or album? If you would like to be featured in the “Marquee,” email information to news@ atheadbeacon.com
Scene 98, take three.
This take, Nelson is instructed to stretch the caution tape from the oppo- site direction. Johnston walks down the hallway. The camera focuses on the other actors he passes – the detective questioning Adelita, a maid at the c- tional hotel. Stroking a puppy named Pickles, the actor, Teresa Yendique, sobs silently and waves her hand in the air to bat the detective’s questions away.
Yendique, who is from New York City, had never been to Montana before this lm project. Neither had Donley or Ste- vens, who rst visited in April to scout locations for the movie.
Stevens has shot in rural locations before – his most recent lm, “We Are Still Here,” is set in a sleepy, scary New
England town – but the vast mountains of the west are important to Buster’s character, he says. The massive moun- tains and open spaces evoke a sense of longing, a fundamental sense of incompleteness.
“He [Buster] has his place of busi- ness and his house,” Stevens says, “But he longs to be in the wilderness. Look at those mountains,” he continues, gestur- ing to the wide window in the produc- er’s room on the third oor of the hotel. “The expanse you feel.”
As for why they chose Kalispell and the Flathead Valley, Stevens says, “It’s a story about a good person, and we wanted a town that conveys that wholesomeness.”
clare@ atheadbeacon.com
Crews lm “Buster’s Mal Heart” at a Kalispell hotel.
GREG LINDSTROM
FLATHEAD BEACON
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NOVEMBER 4, 2015 // FLATHEADBEACON.COM