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Playlist: Courtney Bierman's Portfolio

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Whit Stillman, Episode 1: I'm Not Entirely Joking

From KIOS-FM Omaha Public Radio | Part of the The Entertainment series | 54:00

This is the first of five episode charting the life, career and influence of filmmaker Whit Stillman during the rise of a new American auteur movement in the 1990s, featuring conversations with Stillman himself; collaborators like actor Taylor Nichols and composer Mark Suozzo; as well as critics Fran Hoepfner, Marya E. Gates and Girish Shambu. Join us each week as we work through Stillman's filmography and contextualize it in a constantly shifting cinematic landscape.

The_entertainment_small If you’ve ever seen a Whit Stillman film, such as Metropolitan, the odds are you’d recognize another. Each of Stillman’s films features this kind of smart, witty, multilayered dialogue — often focusing on an ensemble of young people who have read a lot more about life than they’ve lived, fearing that they are at the tail end of an age of prosperity, looking ahead with apprehension or refusing to look forward at all in favor of attempting a Gatsby-like recreation of the past. More than that, they grapple with the concept of failure: failure to develop into the person you want to be, failure to acquire the means to live the life you want, failure to appreciate what you have and failure to preserve the worthwhile traditions of the past in a rapidly shifting world.

Stillman, though he bristles at the affiliation, emerges out of what is called the Auteur movement, a construction rooted in French criticism in the 1950s as they looked back at classical Hollywood hits of the 1930s and 1940s. Simply, they argued for the celebration of a filmmaker’s body of work as a coherent whole. Thus the body of work could be viewed through a lens of authorship, with the director as authority analogous to the way we view a singular ownership over the work of novels by their writers or paintings by their artists.

This is the first of five episode charting the life, career and influence of Stillman during the rise of a new American auteur movement in the 1990s, featuring conversations with Stillman himself,;collaborators like actor Taylor Nichols and composer Mark Suozzo; as well as critics Fran Hoepfner, Marya E. Gates, and Girish Shambu. Join us each week as we work through Stillman's filmography and contextualize it in a constantly shifting cinematic landscape.

The Entertainment was created and is hosted by Tom Knoblauch. The show is a production of KIOS 91.5 FM Omaha Public Radio and is produced by Courtney Bierman. Today’s show featured music and clips from Metropolitan, Jules and Jim, The Wild Angels, and Filmmaker Magazine’s podcast.

Whit Stillman, Episode 2: Like Oil and Water

From KIOS-FM Omaha Public Radio | Part of the The Entertainment series | 52:44

In this second episode of our series on the career, legacy, aspirations and regrets of Whit Stillman, we hear from the filmmaker — as well as actor Taylor Nichols and critics Fran Hoepfner and Girish Shambu — to tell the story of a man moving onward and upward, having written and directed two successful films–one explicitly independent and the other fitting into the new brand of American independent cinema.

The_entertainment_small

The 1990s saw a boom in independent filmmaking going mainstream in American cinema. Audiences found that the art house could merge with the multiplex as filmmakers with distinct voices such as Quentin Tarantino, Paul Thomas Anderson, Alexander Payne, Nicole Holofcenter and many more were able to pull off an interesting paradox: making independent films mainstream, and making them through traditional studios. 

Rather than describing the economics, calling a movie "independent" often began to describe the aesthetic. These were the authentic voices in a sea of corporate sludge, bringing perspectives and styles that only they could. This includes the focus of our episode today, Whit Stillman, who came onto the scene right at the outset in 1990, with Metropolitan: a debut about debuts that would go on to earn him an Academy Award nomination for its screenplay.

Stillman's follow-up, Barcelona, pushes him into a more political, broadly comedic realm as a common thread emerges: the struggle to preserve virtues in an increasingly barbarous world.

In this second episode of our series on the career, legacy, aspirations and regrets of Whit Stillman, we hear from the filmmaker — as well as actor Taylor Nichols and critics Fran Hoepfner and Girish Shambu — to tell the story of a man moving onward and upward, having written and directed two successful films–one explicitly independent and the other fitting into the new brand of American independent cinema.