Posts Tagged ‘Olivia Newton John’

NEWSTALK 1010: Singer and ‘Grease’ actress Olivia Newton-John dead at 73.

I join the hosts of NewsTalk 1010’s “The Rush,” Scott McArthur and Deb Hutton to talk about the life and legacy of Olivia Newton John, who passed away today at age 73. WE also pay tribute to Gord Lewis, the late guitar player of Teenage Head.

Listen to the whole thing HERE!

GREASE DVD: 4 STARS

John_travolta_in_grease_orignialsIt might be the most famous summer romance in movie history.

Even though John Travolta was 24 and Olivia Newton John was 30 when they made Grease, they played Danny and Sandy, teenage sweethearts who meet on summer break. He’s a greaser, she a squeaky-clean exchange student from Australia. They have a fling, but when the falls comes, and they find themselves at the same school Danny thinks he’s too cool for the virtuous Sandy.

Grease is filled with all the icons of 1950s America—hot rods, leather jackets and malt shops—and some great songs, good light romantic comedy but it is the cast that makes the movie memorable. John Travolta channels a fleet-footed Elvis Presley, while Olivia Newton John is a composite of the best of sexy-but-sweet 50s stars like Annette Funicello and Sandra Dee.

The newly released DVD features loads of extras and comes wrapped in an authentic T-Birds black leather jacket.

Legend Olivia Newton-John returns to musicals after 30 years RICHARD CROUSE FOR METRO CANADA Published: October 14, 2010

score_display_imageAlthough she sang with John Travolta in Grease, danced with Gene Kelly in Xanadu and recently featured her hit Let’s Get Physical on Glee, Olivia Newton-John hasn’t appeared in a full-on musical on the big screen for 30 years. That will change this weekend when she will be seen playing an overprotective hockey mom in Score: A Hockey Musical.

Director Michael McGowan wanted Newton-John, but didn’t think he’d be able to get the Australian superstar, who now makes her home in Florida, to come north to shoot the film.

“She’s funny and she doesn’t take herself seriously,” he said, “but for her to say, ‘This is the film, a hockey musical shot in Toronto, in February, seemed virtually impossible.”

When asked why chose to do this film, Newton-John laughed and said, “Because it was fun. Marc Jordan (who plays her husband in the film) is my friend and he is married to Amy Sky, one of my best friends who also produces my music, so why not?”

Shooting in Toronto in frigid February temperatures, she says, was “an experience,” but the working with the cast and crew made it worthwhile. “My memory of the movie was having fun,” she adds.

Working with her friend Jordan, who is best known as a solo singer-songwriter (he wrote the hit Rhythm of My Heart for Rod Stewart), caused to her to occasionally get the giggles so badly she could barely contain herself.

“I was really embarrassed in the end because you can break up a couple of times but you have to know when to stop, but Marc was just so hysterical.”

Ditto her director. “He is marvelous,” Newton-John says. “He has such a quirky sense of humour which fits in with mine really well. On the set he was very relaxed; he’s worked with everyone before so it was a real family atmosphere. There was no stress, there was no, ‘Oh he’s yelling at you.’”

She saves her highest praise, however, for her young co-stars, Noah Reid and Allie MacDonald who play her son and his best friend. When asked if she passed along any tips to the neophytes she said, “They are both really gifted. I probably should have asked them for hints rather than the other way around.”

Quotable

“It’s a lot of good fun, but the peace message is good I think. I’m not one for violence and was brought up in the same kind of family as (the character of home-schooled-pacifist-hockey-prodigy-Farley Gordon). Maybe not quite as stringent but my father was a professor and parents were academic and peace was a big thing for my mother. It wasn’t important to win, it was important to play fair, so (Score: A Hockey Musical) kind of rung true for me.”
—Olivia Newton-John

Olivia Newton John: Hockey Mom? Movies PEOPLE zoomermag.com Thursday, October 14, 2010 By Richard Crouse

FAMOUSONJ-02632Does a country that already has a Hockey Hall of Fame, a omnipresent coffee chain named after a defenseman and Wayne Gretzky Riesling really need an all dancing, all singing tribute to the sport? Olivia Newton-John apparently thought so when she signed on to star in Score: A Hockey Musical a parody of hockey violence set to a soundtrack that rhymes baloney with Zamboni.

She hadn’t appeared in a full-on musical in thirty years, not since the one-two punch of Grease (which saw the 29 year old play a high school senior and score the biggest box-office hit of 1978) and Xanadu which paired her with Hollywood legend Gene Kelly. Score writer and director Michael McGowan always imagined John in the role of the hockey prodigy’s pacifist mom but didn’t think he’d be able to get the Australian superstar, who now makes her home in Florida, to come north to shoot the film.

“She’s funny and she doesn’t take herself seriously,” he said, “but for her to say, ‘This is the film, a hockey musical shot in Toronto, in February, seemed virtually impossible.”

The key word there is “virtually.” As McGowan soon learned nothing is impossible when the movie co-stars one of your potential leading lady’s best friends.

“Marc Jordan [who plays her husband in the film] is my friend,” said Newton-John, “and he is married to Amy Sky, one of my best friends who also produces my music, so why not?”

She wasn’t quite prepared for shooting in Toronto in frigid February temperatures—that was “an experience,” she says—but the warmth of the Canadian cast and crew took away any edge she may have been feeling. “My memory of the movie was having fun,” she says.

Occasionally she had a bit too much fun with co-star Jordan—a solo singer-songwriter who wrote the hit Rhythm of My Heart for Rod Stewart—who would cause her to get the giggles so badly she could barely contain herself. “I was really embarrassed in the end because you can break up a couple of times but you have to know when to stop, but Marc was just so hysterical.”

She also notes that McGowan “has a quirky sense of humor which fits in with mine really well,” but saves her highest praise for her young co-stars, Noah Reid and Allie MacDonald who play her son and his best friend. When asked if she passed along any tips to the neophytes she said, “They are both really gifted. I probably should have asked them for hints rather than the other way around.”

She describes the final product as “a lot of good fun” but insists there is a message to the film.

“I’m not one for violence and was brought up in the same kind of family as [the character of her home-schooled-pacifist-hockey-prodigy-son Farley Gordon]. Maybe not quite as stringent but my father was a professor and parents were academic and peace was a big thing for my mother. It wasn’t important to win, it was important to play fair, so [Score: A Hockey Musical] kind of rung true for me. I like that message. I thought it was sweet but it also funny and ironic and campy and that is part of what people like about it.”

When it was all said and done did playing a hockey mom and shooting in the home of the Maple Leafs make her a hockey fan? “I guess I’ll have to become one,” she laughs. “My husband loves it and he took me to a game a few years ago in Florida. I couldn’t keep up with the puck though. It was too fast.”