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The "A Prairie Home Companion" Movie World Premiere Photos

Be sure to go to our movie premiere photos page for some more candid photos from the St. Paul premiere of Robert Altman and Garrison Keillor’s movie “A Prairie Home Companon” at The Fitzgerald Theater and the party that followed at the Landmark Center.

Tim Russell's New Headshot and Bio

Here is my new bearded head-shot and Bio

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Tim Russell
AFTRA/SAG
Website: WWW.PRAIREHOMEVOICES.COM
To book or Audition:contact AmyOppegaard of Wehmann Models and Talent, Inc.in Minneapolis at 612.333.6393 LA Representation:Wes Stevens of Vox at 323.655.8699. Tim Russell has beendoing award winning radio and television voice-overs since 1975. He’s been a regular cast member as an actor on “A Prairie Home Companion”with Garrison Keillor since1994. The show is heard nationally as a 2-hour live broadcast Saturdays at 5PM Central Time on over 500 radio stations, reaching some 4 million listeners. Tim does dozens of characters on the show, including all the voices on the “Famous Celebrities” segment. Tim also works for CBS on WCCO Radio as the Entertainment Editor for the 5-9 am morning show. “The Morning News with Dave Lee”

Listen to Voice demos

AWARDS:

OutstandingBroadcast Personality ofthe Year,
MinnesotaBroadcastersAssociation
Best Radio Host
MPLS ST PAUL Magazine

FILM

2006 “A Prairie Home Companion” Al the stage manager
2002 “Detective Fiction”(Ten Ten Films) Max
1994 “Little Big League”(Castle Rock) Sports Reporter

VOICEOVERS

Many award winningspots.
Notedfor versatility, and a variety of announcer and
Character styles. Top voice impressionist.

RECORDINGS

Grammy nominated “Adventures ofGuy Noir”(2006)
“Dusty and Lefty: the Lives of the Cowboys” (2006)
“A Prairie Home Companion: It’s Only a Show” (2006)
Grammy nominated “GarrisonKeillor’s Comedy Theatre” (2005)
Featured onseveral “Star Wars” books ontape for Lucasfilm.
Wrote, Produced, and acted all 40 voices on“Tim Russell’s Comedy Christmas Carol”, a
parody of the Dicken’s classic.

EDUCATION

1969 University of Notre Dame, B.A., English, Cum Laude.

CHARACTER VOICES

Mason Adams
Don Adams
Woody Allen
Mohammed Ali
Arab
Tony Bennett
Jack Benny
Mel Blanc Voices
Humphrey Bogart
Marlon Brando
Walter Brennan
Tom Brokaw
David Brinkley
Wm. F. Buckley
Bullwinkle
Bugs Bunny
Archie Bunker
Edith Bunker
George Burns
George H. W. Bush
George W.Bush
Truman Capote
Jimmy Cagney
Art Carney
Jimmy Carter
Johnny Cash
Carol Channing
Dick Cheney
Julie Childs
Bill Clinton
Cliff Claven
Chinese Dialect
Winston Churchill
Continental Dialect
Howard Cosell
Jacques Cousteau
Cowardly lion
Walter Cronkite
Bob Dole
Dudley Do-Right
Kirk Douglas
Bob Dylan
Clint Eastwood
Fairy Tale Style
W.C. Fields
Henry Fonda
French Dialect
Elmer Fudd
Clark Gable
John Gielgud
Ira Glass
Jackie Gleason
Al Gore
“Good Ol Boy”
Hugh Grant
Oliver Hardy
Paul Harvey
PeeWee Herman
E.Everett Horton
“Curley” Howard
India Dialect
Irish Dialect
Italian Dialect
Lyndon Johnson
Boris Karloff
Larry King
Kermit Frog
John Kerry
Don Knotts
Ted Koppel
Stan Laurel
Burt Lancaster
Liberace
Peter Lorre
Bela Lugosi
Paul Lynde
Maine Dialect
Jackie Mason
Johnny Mathis
Mickey Mouse
Munchkins
Newsreel Styles
Newt Gingrich
Jack Nicholson
Richard Nixon
Oz Characters
Ozzie Osbourne
Don Pardo style
Gregory Peck
Ross Perot
Porky Pig
Miss Piggy
Elvis
Gomer Pyle
Dan Rather
Ronald Reagan
Mr. Rogers
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Russian Dialect
Scottish Dialect
George C. Scott
Scottish Accent
Rod Serling
William Shatner
Arnold
Schwarzenneger
Homer Simpson
Sly Stallone
Jimmy Stewart
Southern Preacher
Ed Sullivan
Jesse Ventura
Barbara Walters
John Wayne
Jack Webb
Lawrence Welk
Mae West
Western Cowboys
Walter Winchell
Ed Wynn

Listen to Voice demos

Prairie Home At the Hollywood Bowl

2We were looking forward to our second appearance at the fabled Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. On board with us were three of the stars of Garrison Keillor and Robert Altman’s new movie, ” A Prairie Home Companion” , Meryl Streep, John C. Reilly and Virginia Madsen. All three are self-professed long time fans of Garrison’s show and when we met Meryl and Virginia on Thursday for a read-thru at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, they were giddy with excitement. John C. had a talk show appearance to promote the film so he missed that rehearsal. Garrison had written a couple of long scripts to give them all plenty to do and we sat around a table going thru the first drafts. After the read-thru, Meryl and Virginia hugged each other and said something like “We’re going to be on the RADIO!”. It was fun to see their enthusiasm.

The show on Friday turned out to be in front of the biggest crowd in PHC history, around 16,000. Everyone showed up for rehearsal at 4pm for the 8pm show. This was a rare occasion where the show would be taped for broadcast the next day. We read the new drafts of Garrison’s scripts on stage in the blazing late afternoon sun. The temperature was an uncharacteristically high 95 degrees. Garrison said there would be another rewrite, and after rehearsing some of the songs he would sing with Meryl, and other elements of the show, we broke for dinner.

Tim and Judy and Nephew Nick with Martin Sheen

Tim’s wife Judy was bringing their nephew up to the backstage area to say hello when she spotted Martin Sheen coming toward her from the parking lot. Lily Tomlin, another star of the PHC movie, and TV’s ” The West Wing” had told Judy that Martin was a big fan of Garrison’s, so she felt it would be OK to say hi. He was thrilled to talk about what a big fan of PHC he was and how he’d been listening for years. He said at last year’s show he brought “Tony Hopkins”, Sir Anthony Hopkins to movie fans. Tim called Judy’s phone to see where she was and she said, “I’m talking to Martin Sheen!” Tim walked down the hill to meet him and invite him backstage after the show. Martin said he had a “gaggle” of 11 family members and friends with him and that he was kind of shy about doing that. Tim convinced him it would be just fine. He seems like such a nice guy, very energetic and complimentary.

Just before 8pm we received our new scripts. We,(Sue and Tim and Fred Newman), are used to the last minute changes but we were sure the Movie Stars felt a tinge of nervousness about the unpredictability of live radio.

Photo by Russ RingsackThe Stars were great in all the scripts. John C. Reilly did his vulnerable good guy character as a milkman to Meryl’s multitalented old-time radio star in one script, Meryl was beyond comopare all night , both in acting and her lovely singing, and Virginia Madsen stole the show as a ditzy blonde with a passion for charitable causes like “dog dyslexia” in a script that, because of time constraints, was eventually edited out of the show for broadcast the next day. Sound engineer Sam Hudson had the job of trimming 40 minutes from the show that night on the “Red-Eye” flight back to the Twin Cities. Hopefully that sketch will show up in one of our special ,”Best Of”, repeat shows.

After the show we met a lot of folks back stage. Wes Stevens, the head of the LA Voice agency VOX, whom we both just signed with, and the talented voice casting directors, Cathy Kalmenson and her husband Harvey Kalmenson, of Kalmenson and Kalmenson, greeted us with enthusiastic comments about the show. Both confirming their excitement about working together. Lot’s of friends and family and some of the celebs in attendance too.

Will Ferrill

Will Ferrill was there with his dad. He told us his dad, a musician, was a longtime fan of the show. They were there to support John C. Reilly who will be appearing with Will in a new comedy, “Talledega Nights”. Martin Sheen showed up and seemed thrilled to meet Garrison as well as Sue and her husband, Ron. We saw lots of old friends who have become transplants to California, “The Minnesota Mafia”. Meryl and Virginia and John all seemed to have had a great time and seemed energized by the chance to perform in front of a huge, live audience.

A Prairie Home Companion in Iceland

page0_blog_entry34_1Saturday, May 13, we arrived at Kevlavik International Airport this morning after a 6 hour flight. On board Icelandair 665: Sue Scott, Tim Russell and his wife Judy, and several “A Prairie Home Companion” cast and crew members. John C. Reilly and his wife Allison are with us as well. Allison flew in from LA and John from Chicago, where he appeared on the Conan O’ Brien Show on Thursday night. John’s flight was cancelled but he was able to make another to get to Minneapolis in time, however, one of his bags is in limbo. Tony Judge and his wife Valentine have organized this trip which includes a premiere of the movie “A Prairie Home Companion.” Garrison Keillor will have us tape the Iceland radio show for broadcast on May 20th. The Icelandic landscape is very lunar by the airport near Reykjavik, in fact NASA used it to practice their moon maneuvers.

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We arrived at the Nordica Hotel at 8 a.m. It’s quite beautiful in a minimalist, Scandinavian modern way.

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Special Projects Producer Tony Judge had offered to take us around Reykjavik this afternoon and then the gang will be going on a “Whale Watch” this evening. The “Whale Watch” was really a misnomer for what was in effect a “Booze Cruise.”

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This as a close to a whale as anyone got that night. Tim and Judy took one look at the 20-somethings on board and the tubs of beer at hand and decided to see the sights of town instead.

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This was one of the partygoers roaming through downtown Reykjavik on a Saturday night. People here seem to do all their serious partying on the weekends. Sue Scott stayed with the rest and went “Whale Watching” and when they finally returned after much discomfort, they congratulated Tim and Judy on their prescience. If nothing else, it was lovely to see the harbor in the late night light.

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The sun rises at 3 a.m. and sets at around 11 p.m. - so, there’s plenty of sunlight to see the sights. Sunday, May 14, Garrison Keillor , Rich Dworsky and Fred Newman arrived this morning. Garrison started to prepare for the show to be taped on Tuesday at the Iceland National Theater for broadcast on Saturday the 20th. Rich and Fred joined Tim Russell and Judy and several others for the “Circle Tour” of sights around the southwestern part of Iceland. Sue decided to see the sights in town. The weather is ideal: clear skys and relatively warm temps (50 degrees).

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This is one of the Geysers that go off every 3-5 minutes.

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This is the spectacular Golfoss waterfall.

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The scenery on the tour is unbelievably gorgeous: geysers, waterfalls, glaciers, Icelandic horses - it was a lovely day. Tonight is the premiere of the “A Prairie Home Companion” movie at the University theater, a large cinema that holds 1000. The movie had been subtitled in Icelandic, so it was fun to connect this ancient Viking language to what was being said on screen. Some things were undoubtedly lost in translation, for example, “You can’t put the horse before Descartes” ended up referencing Plato.

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After the film, we were escorted to the reception hosted by the Minister of Culture and Education. John C. Reilly and Garrison Keillor were in attendance along with many journalists from Denmark and Norway.

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After the reception John C. Reilly organized a little jam session back at the hotel’s private business lounge. John and Pat Donohue were on guitar, Rich Dworsky on his mouth melodeon, and Fred Newman with his amazing mouth sounds. Judy and Sue and John’s wife made a grocery run. John C. Reilly is amazingly versatile; he sings and plays everything from Hank Williams to lrving Berlin. We made a little too much noise, so we were gently reminded to end the fun at 2 a.m., Monday, May 15. Everybody up late today. We have rehearsal this afternoon. Tim had a late breakfast, included with the room, and placed a call to “The Morning News with Dave Lee” on WCCO Radio to bring his co-workers up to date on the Iceland adventure.

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Tuesday, May 16, tonight the show came from the National Theater of Iceland, taped for broadcast on the 20th. It’s a small but beautiful theater that seats about 500, built in the late 20’s in the Art Deco style. Things went smoothly but the audience seemed a little more reserved than we we’re used to. John C. Reilly joined us in the “Guy Noir” and “Lives of the Cowboys” scripts. After the show, he told us that when he gives up the life of a big time Hollywood star, he wants to be an actor on “A Prairie Home Companion.” He seemed to have a great time hamming it up with the rest of us. John also sang an Irish Sea Shanty and another tune. You can hear all this on the PHC Website archives. The show has been edited down to two hours from the 2:40 actual show time.

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We were the guests of the US Ambassador to Iceland at the Embassy. We met several of the US Base Officers and had a delightful time.

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Finally back to the hotel at 1a.m. where we debriefed in the lounge until about 3 a.m. The endless daylight really throws your body clock off. Most of the crew including Sue Scott left on Wednesday, May 17.

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Tim and Judy stayed on to rent a car and explore Iceland on Thursday and Friday. This is a shot of Tim near Vik. To see some more pictures of the south shore of Iceland, go to Tim’s Blog.

World Premiere of "A Prairie Home Companion" , the movie

Here are some photos from our big night in St. Paul. The world premiere of Garrison Keillor’s and Robert Altman’s film, ” A Prairie Home Companion”, opening June 9.

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Sue Scott and Tim Russell with Meryl Streep and Kevin Kline at the St. Paul Hotel, preceding the parade of horse drawn carriages to the Premiere at the Fitzgerald Theater.

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Sue Scott and Tim Russell with Lily Tomlin. She stars with Meryl Streep as one of the singing “Johnson Girls ” in the movie.

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Sue’s husband Ron Peluso with Sue and Tim in the “Chopped Liver” carriage, Lindsey Lohan was in the carriage right behind us.

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Tim’s wife Judy with Virginia Madsen and Tim. The Landmark Center, where the after party was held is in the background.

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Tim Russell strikes a grandfatherly-like pose with Lindsay Lohan.

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Sue and Tim with the wonderful John C. Reilly, who will be joining us next week for the Movie Premiere and broadcast from Reykjavik, Iceland this month.

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Tim and Sue with Kevin Kline, and the magnificent Pat Donohue from The Guys all Star Shoe Band.

The Robert Altman film, A Prairie home Companion, has a new poster and film trailer

APHC posterpage0_blog_entry29_2Picturehouse Studios wanted to let folks know that they’ve launched a new Web site for the movie A Prairie Home Companion, directed by Robert Altman with a screenplay by Garrison Keillor. Please visit aprairiehomecompanionmovie.com.
The new posters for the film are on the site as well as lots of exciting new features. Look way down on the list of Oscar Superstars and you’ll see the names Tim Russell and Sue Scott.
To see the teaser trailer that features Tim as “Al” reacting to Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly singing their Risque song go to the new website, click on “Trailers”, then click “on Teaser”.

Meeting Friends, Old and New

page0_blog_entry32_1Tim Russell and Sue Scott had a chance to catch up with Emmylou Harris and Mark Knopfler at the recent APHC show in Rochester,MN, the home of the Mayo clinic. It was one of the first opportunities to hear a live performance from their critically acclaimed new CD,“All the Road Running”. The amazing Jearlyn Steele was there as well. Both Emmylou and Mark greeted Sue as a long lost girlfriend. They eventually recognized Tim. Maybe it was the new beard that confused them, or maybe it was the fact that Emmylou had shared her sparkly skin lotion with Sue at one of the shows in New York City’s Town Hall Theater a few years back. They were all a big hit.

North American Premiere at The South by Southwest film festival in Austin, TX

On March 10, the film had it’s North American Premiere at The South by Southwest film festival in Austin, TX. Here is one of lthe reviews from a great movie blog site, Cinematical:

page0_blog_entry31_1SXSW Review: Prairie Home Companion
Posted Mar 10th 2006 7:30PM by Karina Longworth
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, Music & Musicals, SXSW

A Prairie Home Companion is not a masterpiece in the grand, historical sense, but on its own terms, it’s pretty much a perfect film. Scripted by Garrison Keillor, directed by the legendary Robert Altman, and starring a dream cast that manages to include everyone from the most nominated actress in Oscar history to the most gossiped about young starlet of today, the film’s consummate professionalism oozes off the screen. This – to see professional entertainers, not breaking a sweat whilst entertaining – should not be surprising, but the simple, classical ease of the thing feels like a revelation.

page0_blog_entry31_2The bulk of the action takes place over the course of a single night. A local radio station has been bought by a greasy Texas oilman, and their homegrown, long-running, old-timey radio variety show is embarking on its last broadcast before the homebase is demolished. Keillor essentially plays himself, the host of the show and the somewhat foggy father figure to a cast of eccentrics. Kevin Kline plays an incarnation of Guy Noir (a character played on the radio by Keillor), a down-on-his-luck detective “working security” for the theater (read: hanging out backstage smoking hand-rolled cigarettes). Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly pop up as singing cowboys with a taste for cringe-worthy double entendre. Meryl Streep and Lily Tomlin play the remains of a life-long sister act (the story of what happened to the other sisters gives the gals a chance to rock out on the finishing-each-other’s-sentences thing they demoed at the Oscars); the former has brought her sullen teenage daughter (Lindsay Lohan) to watch the last show (read: hang out backstage scrawling poetry about suicide). The film paints over the structure of the actual radio show (many of its regulars appear on stage behind the Hollywood types) with the small, unspoken joke that if any of the up-front regulars had any real talent, they’d probably be somewhere else. It’s not meant to be condescending, though – it’s actually endearing, and enables us to understand why the show means so much to them.

Altman’s greatest gift to filmmaking was his destruction of the fourth wall – actors in Altman films don’t act for the camera, they simply become their characters, and Altman’s camera swoops in and out, as if there are real lives on screen that are going on even when we’re not around to bear witness. Keillor’s script makes the most of Altman’s signature style, figuring the radio show as a slightly more performative slice of its participants’ lives. In some kind of irony that I don’t even know how to parse right now, the film knows it’s hokey and old-fashioned, and it plays on that fact throughout, to the point where it’s actually practicing some kind of post-modernism. That really shouldn’t be surprising – after all, Altman is the guy who wrote himself into the canon through obstinate narrative deconstruction. But Keillor has given him a script that constantly surprises in its self-referentiality. In its neatest trick of all, the script circumvents any criticism of its lack of timeliness by very literally casting the proceedings under a shadow of death.

But on to the real question of the hour: how does Miss Lohan stack up against some of the world’s greatest actors, under the tutelage of America’s best living director? She’s certainly not bad, but then, it’s an Altman film, so she’s cast perfectly. Her much-maligned bleached-blonde skinniness actually works well here; it gives the young Lola a fragility that sits nicely with her Goth bravado, and works especially well in her solo musical number. As for the duet she performs with the gospel powerhouse…well, let’s just say that Lohan benefits greatly from Keillor’s emphasis on the amateurism of the performers.

The Hollywood Reporter Review of the movie "A Prairie Home Companion"

By Kirk Honeycutt
Screened at the Berlin International Film Festival

page0_blog_entry24_1BERLIN — Not since Woody Allen’s “Radio Days” has anyone created such a cinematic Valentine to the wonderfully imaginative medium of radio as “A Prairie Home Companion.” Garrison Keillor, impresario, creator and host of one of radio’s longest running programs — 31 years and counting — and director Robert Altman are a match made in heaven. To these two Midwesterners, the region’s dry, whimsical humor, unfailing politeness and straight-shooting sensibility are as natural as their own skins. There is no artifice or slickness here, just a native, keen intelligence that slyly hides behind homespun wit and verbal slapstick. (…)

The central musical acts belong to Yolanda and Rhonda Johnson (Meryl Streep and Lily Tomlin), the remaining members of what once was a four-sister country music act, and Dusty and Lefty (Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly), singing cowboys and rivals in one-upsmanship.

Yolanda’s daughter Lola (Lindsay Lohan) distracts herself from her mom’s oft-told tales of the theatrical life by penning poems about suicide. Guy Noir, a recurring character on Keillor’s show, is brought aboard here as the program’s “security director.” As the throwback detective, Kevin Kline mixes Chandler-esque dialogue with more than a touch of Peter Seller’s Inspector Clouseau.

To read the full article visit Hollywoodreporter.com

"My Prairie Home Movie: A Diary by Tim Russell"

Mpls.St. Paul magazine published Tim Russell’s behind-the-scenes diary of the making of Robert Altman’s “A Prairie Home Companion” movie in their November 2005 issue. If you missed reading Russell’s insider view of the latest Altman movie on the newsstand, here’s your chance to check out “My Prairie Home Movie: A Diary by Tim Russell.”

(Photos by Melinda Sue Gordon)

“My Prairie Home Movie: A Diary by Tim Russell”

When we found out Tim Russell was joining the cast of The Last Broadcast, AKA “The Prairie Home Companion Movie,” we called to ask him to keep a diary. The radio show veteran and WCCO Radio regular was happy to oblige.

Wednesday, May 18
Tim RussellI found out today that I will be playing “Al, the Imperious Stage Manager” in director Robert Altman’s film based on Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion. Wren Arthur, one of the film producers, called with the good news and said a script would be mailed to me soon. I won’t believe it until I see the script Garrison has written. She gave me the list of stars who will be in the film with Garrison: Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin, Kevin Kline, Lindsay Lohan, John C. Riley, Woody Harrelson, Virginia Madsen, Mary Louise Burke, L. Q. Jones, Maya Rudolph. Holy cow! The fee is scale, which for me is big, but it’s safe to say that a lot of the stars are working for less than usual just for the privilege of working for Mr. Altman.

Tuesday, May 26
I’m finally delivered a script. Yippee! I have lines on twenty-eight pages, and scenes with everyone except the “Ax man”—who comes from the Texas corporation that now owns the station and plans to shut down the radio show forever—a role yet to be cast.

Wednesday, June 15
Today I have a meeting with Bob Altman. He’s been to the show several times and has always been very complimentary. I’m glad he was able to convince Garrison to write the screenplay. He wants to see me and Sue Scott, a fellow actor on A Prairie Home Companion for the past eleven years. We’re the only radio show members to be cast as characters—but Jearlyn Steele, Robin and Linda Williams, Butch Thompson, and the other musicians will be playing themselves. Sue has been cast as “Donna, the Makeup Lady.” I arrive before Sue. Bob is sitting in the corner of his office. He’s very genial and introduces me to David Levy, a producer on many of his films. Bob tells me they want us for the film because the radio show has around 4 million listeners around the world each Saturday and it would be nice to utilize part of the radio family. Sue arrives, and Bob asks us if we feel comfortable in our roles. Of course we do! Who would say no? I tell him that my wife would say the role of a grumpy worrywart trying to keep everything together for one final broadcast is pretty much typecasting. He tells us he expects us to be creative in the “business”—which is the shtick actors create to fill out each of their scenes.

Afterward, we meet several producers and assistant director Vebe Borge, Victor Borge’s son, who we had met in Chicago last week during our appearance at Ravinia Park for a broadcast of APHC. Pictures of all the stars—including Sue and me—line one production-room wall. Mine is from a show this year when Garrison did some last-minute editing of a “Catchup Advisory Board” commercial by putting both arms around me, holding the script steady with his left hand and editing it with his right while I was reading it live on the air. It’s a great shot that seems to capture, for the film people, Garrison’s spontaneity and the magic of live radio. We also find out that Tommy Lee Jones is joining the cast as the Ax man.

Wednesday, June 29
Sue ScottShooting begins today. Meryl Streep and Lily Tomlin, who play “Yolanda and Rhonda Johnson, the Singing Johnson Girls,” and Lindsay Lohan, who plays “Yolanda’s Daughter, Lola,” will film in the basement of the Fitzgerald Theatre, which has been transformed into a number of dressing rooms with a distinctly retro feel. We have to shoot out of sequence so they can leave by the end of the second week. Sue is involved in the background.

Friday, July 1
Sue and I fly out to Tanglewood in Massachusetts for the final APHC broadcast of the season. She fills me in on the amazing work being done and what a big production it is, with dozens of people scurrying about to make our insanely short shooting schedule (twenty-five days) as efficient as possible. I start on Tuesday, the 5th. I’m very excited.

Tuesday, July 5
Today is my first day on the set. My wife, Judy, is an extra, so I’ll have at least one person to console me if I find out my role has been taken by Will Ferrell. I’m shown the Hanna Brothers LA food wagon, where the crew can order breakfast. The caterers also prepare a daily lunch buffet about twenty yards long—served in the Minnesota Business Academy (the former science museum). I go to the makeup trailer where on the first day of shooting there was bedlam, with film crews, paparazzi, Lohanophiles, and gawkers. Today, there’s nothing. I introduce myself to a producer who directs me inside where I sit between Kevin Kline and John C. Reilly. My makeup is not a huge priority. It’s very simple, anti-sweat lotion and powder, especially for my balding pate. Sue introduces me to Kevin, who is playing “Private Eye Turned Security Guard, Guy Noir”. Kevin’s known for his endlessly creative research into the characters he plays. They have been discussing the radio version of Guy Noir. We exchange pleasantries, and I introduce myself to John C. I’m promptly moved along after Terri, my makeup person for the next three weeks, does an excellent job of reducing the glare of my dome.

I finally get to see the Fitzgerald, and it’s great. The lobby has been painted and given the same retro treatment as the basement. The wing where we usually hang during the radio show has been turned into a 1940s-era wood-paneled office for Guy Noir. It’s all very cool. The rehearsal blocking of the day’s first shot starts at 12:30. It’s a performance scene with the Johnson Girls singing a Garrison original, “Farewell to Mama.” I’m standing, well lit, on stage right, at the stage manager’s podium, my home for the next three weeks. My job here is to look like I’m directing the show. I have a body mike and am just making up things to say, calling for lighting shots, throwing cues at random. Who knows if they will use any of this, but I try to look cranky and professional. At 1:30 p.m., Bob starts shooting. We do three or four takes before a live studio audience. Judy is in the audience and mouthing, “Sit down,” meaning rest between takes. But when you’re on stage with Meryl and Lily in a Robert Altman film, you could be hanging from your thumbs and not think twice about it.

In between takes, I notice Woody Harrelson being greeted by John C. They play “Dusty and Lefty, the Singing Cowboys,” and they are in fantastic costumes. Woody has on some kind of “pleather” hat, duster, and boots, because he won’t wear any kind of animal hide. But you could have fooled me—he looked right off the lonesome trail. John C. is decked out in the real thing, including leather chaps. They both have their own guitars and play and sing in real life. They immediately start jamming. The Guys All-Star Shoe Band—Rich Dworsky, Pat Donohue, Arnie Kinsella, Gary Raynor and Andy Stein, with Peter Ostroushko and Butch Thompson sitting in, pick up on the tune and a full-fledged jam session is under way, much to the delight of the audience. John C. also has a lariat and starts to master some rope tricks. Kevin is in costume and keeps looking for new business to do: He’s always coming up with new ideas for the prop department—nylon stockings, garter belts, papers for hand-rolled cigarettes, stuff he can pull from his desk drawer at some opportune time.

We break for lunch after blocking for a performance by Meryl and Lily singing “My Minnesota Home,” another Garrison original. I introduce myself to Meryl, who says she’s a “big fan” and loves the radio show. I meet Lily, and she recognizes me from our APHC appearance at the Hollywood Bowl in June. It’s all pretty heady stuff. I meet Virginia Madsen, who plays “The Dangerous Lady,” and commiserate about her shoes, high platforms that look pretty uncomfortable. My costume is a button-down shirt, a wool vest, black slacks, with a Leatherman tool on my belt, and new Rockport shoes, which start digging into my ankles immediately. I beg the wardrobe person, Cat Thomas, to let me wear my own broken-in casual shoes. No problem. I talk to Garrison about my character. When I tell him I am considering giving Al a light Minnesota accent, long o’s included, he advises me not to box myself into a corner or I won’t have anywhere to go with my voice in later scenes when I have to get really agitated. Good advice.

After lunch/dinner, it’s time for Meryl and Lily to sing. Judy has been in the audience for both performances and is in tears both times—the songs are that moving. We wrap at 9:00 p.m. or so. It’s been quite a day. So far, no lines, but I’m always in some camera shot so I have to look like I’m in charge.

Wednesday, July 6
lindsay_lohanThe call time today, and pretty much for most of the shoot, is 11 a.m., which is nice, because I’ve decided to keep working at WCCO Radio as entertainment editor for The Morning News with Dave Lee from 5 to 9 a.m. Today’s shoot features Lindsay singing a fractured version of “Frankie and Johnny,” which leads to songs with Jearlyn Steele and then to the show finale and curtain bow. Cameras are set by 1 p.m. Bob usually arrives at noon to discuss shots and camera movements, and then we rehearse and shoot. During the noon hour, I camp out in Guy Noir’s office with Woody. He’s plunking away at his guitar and says, “You’re awfully quiet.” I introduce myself and tell him I play the stage manager. “Do we have any scenes together?” he asks. I tell him about the scene where I scold Dusty about an obscene song the Singing Cowboys sang. I give him a few raunchy titles Dusty might use, and he likes the idea. We talk about our mutual friend, Chris Mulkey, a fine character actor who worked with Woody last winter in the Charlize Theron movie North Country, which was shot on the Iron Range. Meanwhile, John C. is now entertaining the set with two lariats. Local entertainer Pops Wagner has been giving him lessons, and he’s a fast learner.

We’re ready to go at 1 p.m., and Lindsay runs through her number before the audience of extras. She does a great job. I introduce myself to Lindsay, who is very tiny, but not dangerously thin as the tabloids had been reporting. She looks like a perfectly normal teenager. She says “hi” in a pleasant way, but I’m thinking she’s thinking, “Back off, geezer.” After several takes, we break at 4:30 p.m.

At 5:45 p.m., we’re back to block a scene involving me, Meryl, Lily, Lindsay, and Maya Rudolph, who plays “Molly, the Stage Manager’s Assistant.” I read the clock, which Maya has secretly tinkered with, and see that we have six not two minutes left, whereupon I ask Meryl and Lily if they have anything that long to fill the time. Meryl uses the opportunity to get Lindsay to sing something. This scene leads up to the shot we did this afternoon. Very little, it seems, is shot in sequence in a Hollywood movie.

Thursday, July 7
We’re shooting a scene with Garrison and Meryl singing a duet, then Meryl and Lily join Garrison and Tom Keith, the “Sound Effects Man,” in a series of commercials, including one for duct tape, at which point Maya runs out with the wrong script and the group has to ad lib as scripts tumble to the floor. Then I run out to try to help and chaos reigns supreme. Finally, Jearlyn sings a coffee commercial. It’s a nine-minute scene and requires a few takes to get the timing down. This is quite a workout for Maya, who is expecting a child with actor Paul Thomas Anderson in November.

After the dinner break, we start with a shot that involves some complicated camera moves as we follow The Dangerous Lady down the long atrium alley through Guy Noir’s office, at which point Kevin follows Virginia to my desk where they have a dialogue. Because of the camera setups, my back, elbow, or more probably my bald spot, is needed in the shot, which means I stand at my post until about 10:15 p.m. I have the script in front of me on my podium, and before the first rehearsal, Kevin asks me about a line. When the rehearsal starts, he pauses at the spot he asked me about, so I give him the missing word. Kevin says, “I’m acting, Darling,” and Virginia says, “We’ll tell you when we need a line.” Ooops! I never claimed to be a veteran at this. I apologize to them after rehearsal, and Virginia laughingly says, “That’s OK, you were just being the Stage Manager.” Yeah, that’s right—I’m a Method actor. That’s the ticket!

Friday, July 8
Our first shot is of the Johnson Girls arriving at the fictional last broadcast. They walk down the long Fitzgerald Atrium walkway toward stage right, through Guy Noir’s office, then onto the stage, where Yolanda reminisces about the past thirty years with the show to Lola, and discusses the final show with Guy Noir. The scene leads to the shots completed the week before, and DruAnn, who keeps track of the script and continuity, remembers that Meryl had some scripts in her hand as she came down the stairs. I suggest that I hand her the scripts as she walks past, thus working my way into the scene. Sneaky me! On the first take, Meryl, Lindsay, and Kevin make their entrance. I complain that they’re always late, hand the scripts to Meryl, and she says, “Thanks, Tim.” Before the second take, I timidly remind one of the greatest actors of our time that my character’s name is Al, I’m Tim. “Of course,” she laughs and then moves on to perfection in all the other takes. Kevin follows Meryl and Lily across the stage, helping them with luggage and merchandise (e.g., Johnson Girls guitar-shaped fly swatters). When Yolanda asks Guy Noir what will become of the fake farmhouse prop, he replies that they just moved a dumpster in behind the theater—and Kevin comes up with some great comedic business, including using the swatter to whack a fly on the cymbal of a drum kit, then picking up the fly and putting it in his coat breast pocket.

I notice Fisher Stevens, an actor (The Fisher King), director, and producer, on the set. Last year, he produced Factotum in St. Paul, starring Matt Dillon, which was a hit at this year’s Cannes Film Festival and should be released soon. It turns out that his production company, Factotum, is an investor in our movie.

Our second shot involves Meryl, Lily, Garrison, Lindsay, Sue, and me, and we discuss the death of “Journeyman Songster, Chuck Akers” (I’m told that’s the pseudonym used by Chet Atkins when he was staying at a hotel), who dies in his dressing room before the show. The scene is difficult to block because of the cramped conditions in the stage right wing, where Guy Noir’s office is located, but Bob is a real genius at figuring out where the camera should be placed and quickly comes up with a plan. We run though the scene a couple of times. Each time, Lily tries out her new line, “Do I look drunk, cuz I am,” causing Meryl and Sue to break up, shaking with laughter instead of grief over Chuck’s death. In between takes, Meryl starts singing the beginning of “I Fall in Love Too Easily” and tells me she can’t remember the next line. It happens to be one of the few songs that I know, so I sing “I fall in love too fast.” We finish the song together. Wow! Back to the scene, which requires an emotional outburst by Lola, who’s upset that Garrison is not going to do something special to mention Chuck in the final moments of the show. Lindsay has been sitting between takes, listening to her iPod, working up real tears, and is ready to go at every take. Garrison says later that she is so authentic in her anger that even though he has written the words; he can’t help but be affected by it every time.

We wrap at 8 p.m. Sue says that Meryl has invited people to join her for dinner, her treat. I call Judy to let her know so she can join us. Sue suggests that on the way to the Saint Paul Hotel, we stop at Mickey’s Diner to do some research for an all-night shoot scheduled for tomorrow. In this epilogue scene, which brings all the characters back together some years after the last broadcast, Sue will be “Donna, the Waitress,” and I’ll be the “Short Order Cook.” The people at Mickey’s are very helpful and give us some lingo.

We walk to the Saint Paul and run into Lily in the lobby. It’s the first time I’ve seen her out of her bright red wig, and she finally looks like the real Lily. She calls Meryl to find out where we’ll eat, and Meryl says Pazzaluna and that she’ll be right down. Lily goes to shower, and I call Judy to tell her where we’re going. Meryl comes down, looking lovely in jeans and a shawl.

Sue, Meryl, and I walk across the street to Pazzaluna. The staff is very accommodating when we request a table for maybe ten or so. Hey, why not? It’s only Meryl Streep for God’s sake! They direct us to the bar, where I buy Sue and Meryl a drink. Meryl tells us again how much she enjoys A Prairie Home Companion, and we ask her about her stay in St. Paul. She rented a house in Highland Park, and she and her daughters had a wonderful time driving around, enjoying the thunderstorms, et cetera. She moved to the hotel after her daughters went home because she was lonely. Virginia shows up and joins us. Shortly after, Lily arrives, and we discuss the project. They are all in love with it. We talk about Kevin and how funny and graceful he is. At this point, several diners whip out their cell phones to talk about the movie stars sitting across from them. They ain’t seen nothin’ yet. Virginia tells us she ran into Woody and John C. and they are coming with Lindsay.

I excuse myself to go to the men’s room and can feel the room wondering who the guy is surrounded by all the movie stars. Judy calls to say she’s running late trying to decide what to wear. I plead with her to hurry—there’s some serious star power in the house. On the way back, I see John C., Woody, and Lindsay walk in and tell them that we have tables for them right this way. Lindsay says, “Look, he’s even playing stage manager here.” We settle into the backroom and discuss a wide range of topics: How great it is to work with Bob, the great screenplay by Garrison, and what a genius he is. Meryl is seated next to me, and we talk about movies I’ve seen recently. Woody is on the other side of me and asks me to bite the end off a strawberry he’s holding because he doesn’t like the ends. So I oblige. It turns out to be rubber. He’s delighted—and tries the gag on several others. Lindsay, next to him with one of her girlfriends next to her, is talking into her wireless headpiece for her Blackberry, or text messaging, or taking pictures with her digital camera. Meryl and Virginia give her some heat for talking to her agent at dinner: “Make them wait until the next day!”

More people arrive—producers, makeup and wardrobe people, the interns, including NBC anchor Brian Williams’s daughter Allison. Judy finally arrives in a stunning outfit; lots of positive comments from the ladies. I wait to introduce her to everyone, but they are discussing the London terrorist attack. Eventually, I introduce Judy, and Woody moves over so she can squeeze in. He says, “Your husband is such a mensch. I sat in your chair for twenty minutes, and he never said a word.”

Judy bonds with Lily, telling her some shopping ideas—for example, Larue’s on Lyndale. Meryl says she knows Lyndale, that’s where the Jungle Theatre is and that she took her daughters to Tatters to shop. Lily tells us her real name is Mary Jean and that she took her mother’s name for show business purposes. Her mother is ninety-one and in ill health and Lily is going to see her after the shoot tomorrow.

Everyone eventually orders, and around 10:30, Meryl leaves. I ask about the bill, and the waiter says Ms. Streep put it on her card. Lily tries to pay, but is told Meryl had insisted it be her treat. At that point, the bill was $1,200. Yikes!

We decided to bail at 11:30 or so, just about the time Kevin walks up. He had fallen asleep and just awakened. I introduce him to Judy, who’s his biggest fan. A lot of folks are outside smoking or chatting, and before we drive off, Woody comes over to say goodbye. He sticks his head in the car window, and we talk about mutual acquaintances in LA, at which point, Lindsay sticks her head in and starts to do a Woody-like monologue: “I don’t consume dairy products, or abuse the environment . . . .” It was pretty cute. What a great, fun night.

Saturday, July 9
Tim Russell and Sue ScottThe all-night shoot at Mickey’s Diner is the only time we will be filming outside the Fitzgerald. Our director’s chairs have been brought over from the theater. It’s rather surreal to see your name embroidered on the back of a chair next to the names of all these Oscar winners and nominees. If nothing else, I’ve got a picture of Lindsay leaning on the back of my chair, with Kevin, Meryl, and Woody in the same shot. As blocking for the shot starts at about 6:30 p.m., maybe fifty people are across the street. Lindsay is wearing cutoff jeans and a plaid shirt, and as soon as she arrives, the long lens comes out. Later, most of the shots will appear in a two-page spread in Star Magazine.

Garrison chats with Bob about the eventual title of the film, and I hear him agree on The Last Broadcast. Woody asks me if I play chess. He has a little fold-up magnetic chess game and is looking for someone who can “kick his ass.” I would not be a challenging partner for a game of Uno. Fortunately, Garrison hears the call, and though he says he’s a little rusty, the two start a game. As the camera setup continues, I chat with Fisher Stevens who’s concerned about the ending and how it might be tweaked. He calls Josh Astrachan, one of the producers, over to talk about it and suggests that maybe the film could end with Guy Noir on a deserted stage noodling on the piano, while we see the farmhouse set end up in the dumpster. The scene at Mickey’s could play as an epilogue. They agree to talk to Bob about it the next day. Another scoop! My big ears—a burden as a first-grader—are starting to pay off.

As a small nod to the fans of the radio show, Bob has Sue and me in the Mickey’s shot. My job as Short Order Cook is to pretend to cook up a storm, which requires lots of miming and griddle-scraping motions. My lines with Sue are cut to condense the scene, and after some rehearsals, we break for dinner. At about 10 p.m., it’s finally dark enough to begin shooting. Garrison, Meryl, Lily, and Kevin are all seated at a booth. Sue and Kevin had worked out a little business with him constantly changing his order, much to my character’s consternation. Woody and John C. walk in, take a seat at the counter, and there’s lots of good-natured ribbing. Then Lindsay walks in and joins the pair. Lola is now a financial consultant in a business suit who has concerns about her mother’s plans to continue the Johnson Girls act. Virginia, The Dangerous Lady, walks in and everyone pauses to evaluate whose life may be in danger. This scene needs some outside atmospherics, so in between takes, a truck hoses down the street and the diner to great effect. Bob announces that this is a wrap for Meryl, and a warm round of applause and goodbyes follows. She’ll be missed.

At 1 a.m., Lily orders $1,000 worth of sushi from Saji Ya for the cast and crew. After a break, the scene continues until 3 a.m. Then the crew sets up across St. Peter, kitty corner from the diner, to shoot what will be part of the opening shot of the movie, establishing the Guy Noir character in a visual homage to the famous Edward Hopper painting Nighthawks, featuring a lone urban diner. I’m still at the grill. Kevin is at the counter. Then he pays and leaves for the Fitzgerald Theater, walking toward the camera across the street. Smoke is needed, so the griddle is fired up, and I add a little cooking oil—and suddenly there is a lot of smoke. It wasn’t too disruptive, perhaps because earlier Mickey’s air conditioning had been augmented with two more units—because Kevin is very particular about keeping the set cool when possible. In between takes, it’s just the two of us, so we have some fun with imagined banter. I try out my Pakistani accent, and he creates lots of funny non sequitors in response. I even try to fry some eggs using one hand to hold the griddle and another to crack the shell, dropping in the egg with one fluid motion. In every take, there is more shell than egg in the skillet. We finish at 5:30 as dawn is breaking.

Tuesday, July 12
This is the first big day for Woody and John C. We set up and shoot their “I Am an Old Cowboy” song, but Bob decides to get L.Q. Jones, who plays Chuck Ackers, into the act. He has big energy and is hale and hardy, just like the character. Robin and Linda join him to sing. The extras have been brought in and enjoy the performance.

Things are quickly set up for the Cowboys’ first number. Woody and John C. have been jamming for a week. The extras are most appreciative, but they have to mime their applause. The assistant director gave them the go-ahead to applaud for real before the last take, and they are taking advantage of it as the boys knock it out of the park.

Wednesday, July 13
Garrison and Lindsay have a scene that has been moved to stage left, which means Maya will do a couple of my lines. It also means creating a new space on stage around the Fitzgerald’s wonderful theater organ, which can be raised from below. It seems only right that it make a guest appearance. The scene is very sweet, with Garrison describing his relationship with Lola’s father. When I see this scene later in the week, I notice two things: Garrison looks great on camera, and there are way too many people milling about backstage. Things are considerably more stable on the real Prairie Home show. After the scene, Bob announces that it’s Lindsay’s last day, and there’s a big round of applause and hugs. Then we set up for another performance by the Singing Cowboys.

After dinner, the extras are brought in for the Cowboys’ second song, “Bad Jokes,” a song Garrison wrote that strings together some semiraunchy jokes with a real toe-tapping melody. It’s a big hit, and on the final take the boys do an extended-play version with even raunchier jokes (“Why do they call it PMS? Cuz mad cow disease was already taken”). This is the song that in a later scene will cause me, as the stage manager ever worried about those FCC decency fines, to blow my top.

Thursday, July 14
As part of my job as entertainment editor at WCCO radio, I scour the papers for information every morning. That’s how I found out yesterday morning that Lily’s mother, Lily Mae, passed away. Lily left the set last Saturday, after the shoot at Mickey’s Diner, to visit her. Her final scene is with me today and, trooper that she is, she shows up on time, subdued but ready to work.

We start blocking the scene, me getting apoplectic about the Cowboy’s “Bad Jokes” song. Bob decides it would be fun to have Tom Keith, who has been the real sound effects man for the radio show for the last thirty years, provide some sounds reacting to the raunchy song and to what Lily and I say to each other. It’s tricky, because it involves a playback of the soundtrack filmed yesterday. They rig Tom and me up with a wireless earpiece so Tom can react and I can talk to Lily in real time. It’s called an “ear prompter” in the voice-over business, and I’ve used it many times to do long monologues on camera in industrial films.

We all extend our sympathies to Lily and begin the shot. It takes awhile to get the timing right. Things come together, and Bob says it will either be very funny or very weird. In the scene, Lily also tells me Chuck Ackers has died in his dressing room. It precedes the backstage shot we did last Friday with Garrison, Meryl, Lily, Sue, and Lindsay. Bob’s wife, Catherine Altman, who has been very sweet and complimentary to those of us from the radio show, tells me the scene worked very well. We’ll see. Bob announces Lily’s departure, and there are lots of hugs, applause, and tears, and she leaves to attend to her mother’s funeral. The adage, “the show must go on,” gets another workout.

We then do a scene with Woody, Kevin, and me. Kevin comes with more inspired physical shtick regarding a phone call to me with news that the Axeman has arrived.

The next scene is between Virginia and Mary Louise Burke, who plays the “Lunch Lady.” Mary Louise made a huge impact as Paul Giamatti’s mother in Sideways and has made an art of portraying dotty mothers and aunts. Mary Louise tells me about her good friend, T. R. Knight, a young actor who went from the Guthrie to Broadway to the new hit TV show Grey’s Anatomy. I used to do radio commercials with him when he was about eight years old.

Friday, July 15
Today’s scenes include knockout performances by Jerilyn and Garrison singing Garrison’s songs. Bob decides to film some numbers by the Guys All Star Shoe Band, and they respond with amazing skill. Those who aren’t familiar with the talented musicians are blown away. It’s a great way to end the day’s filming.

At 9 p.m., at the production offices on 10th Street, there’s a screening of the “dailies”—some of the scenes that have been shot so far. It’s been three weeks, and everyone is wondering what this thing looks like on film. We see many of the performance pieces, and it all looks great. It’s raw footage and from just one camera’s perspective, but I see that depending on the editing, I could easily be left on the cutting-room floor. The lights go up, and there is a thunderous applause for Bob that lasts for about a minute and a half. I think he had a tear of gratitude in his eye as he pronounced the work “adequate,” his favorite term of endearment.

Monday, July 18
We’re starting with a new scene Garrison wrote to set up the second half of the show. It gives me new lines about the station owners who sell out the show, and another chance to be in a scene with Kevin, Maya, and Garrison. We rehearse a few times, and Jimmy, one of the camera guys, pulls me aside to remind me to “look for the light”— in other words, know where the camera is at all times, or I could be blocked out of the shot. Evidently, Hollywood actors don’t need this kind of reminder, so I’m most appreciative.

Tuesday, July 19
We’re taping the action as it moves from downstairs to upstairs. The camera follows Garrison, Maya, L.Q., Robin, and Linda as they leave the makeup room to go upstairs to the front of the stage as the curtain is just about to rise. Garrison still has his makeup bib on and had planned to remove it when Maya cues him, just before the curtain goes up, but when we do the actual shot, he forgets to take the tissues off. I notice it and signal Maya. She goes back to center stage as Garrison sings the opening theme song, and she yanks the tissues from his collar. Bob loves it and tells Maya to keep doing it on subsequent takes.

We shoot the big scene before the call to bring everyone onstage for the beginning of the show. Bob tells Maya and me that he’s combining several scenes, and he ad libs a whole page of dialogue for us. It’s a chaotic shot, and as the take comes to a close, I remember the Stage Manager’s Serenity Prayer I found in my pre-movie research: “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to kill any stagehands who piss me off tonight.” Everyone is talking at one time, so who knows how it will work.

More dailies tonight. The stuff looks great again, and my Serenity Prayer gets a big laugh—and a thumbs-up from Kevin. Life is good.

Wednesday, July 19
Tim Russell and Garrison KeillorIt’s a big day for my side of the stage. We do a long scene that involves Kevin, Woody, John C., Mary Louise, and me. I have a long dialogue with Kevin as I quiz him about Virginia. We have a lot of fun rehearsing, and Kevin never does the same thing twice. It’s a long scene and will probably be edited with another done two weeks ago. It also has me reminding Dusty that the Singing Cowboys have to clean up their act, and he tries to remember which obscene song I’m talking about. Woody uses two or three of the raunchy titles I gave him earlier, and nobody complains.

Bob calls me over and tells me it’s my last shot and thanks me for my efforts. It’s a little premature though, because Garrison wants me to do a voice-over for a commercial about to be filmed. I stick around for it, then Drew, the sound guy, remembers he needs me for a bunch of voice-overs for the announcements I have been making as stage manager in all the other shots. They can’t do it until after the last shot of the day, so five hours later, I am finally wrapped. It’s kind of an odd feeling to be cut loose after all the excitement. What a weird lifestyle this must be, going from family to family, one film to another.

Saturday, July 23
There’s a showing of dailies today for some financial backers. Everything looks great. The producers answer questions about the shoot and are very complimentary about how the community has handled it. They consider it a blessed project and hope to shop around a finished project by the end of November, with a first screening possibly in January at Sundance.

Tonight, Woody is having a birthday party at a house he’s renting in Highland Park. It is unquestionably the hottest day of the year, but Woody is an environmentalist, so he doesn’t believe in air conditioning. Everyone stays out on the front lawn. It’s a good turnout, John C., Virginia, Maya, even former governor Jesse Ventura and his son, Tyrell. As people line up to chat with Jesse, I talk with Tyrell about his life in Hollywood. I introduce Catherine Altman to Jesse, and then have a good talk about impersonations with Brian Williams, who’s here to see his daughter Allison, one of the production assistants, and a favorite. He tells me that when he got back after covering the tsunami in Indonesia last December, he went directly to The Town Hall Theater to see A Prairie Home Companion in New York City. He does the best Tom Brokaw impression I’ve ever heard, and he isn’t shy about doing it. He’s a very funny guy and smart. The food was raw vegan, adventurous but delicious. We headed home at 10:30, with the Aquatennial fireworks finale lighting up the skyline.

Epilogue
I never did get to meet Tommy Lee Jones, because he came into town to do his scenes the following Tuesday, so I guess I’ll never get to show him my promise as an action movie guy. Oh well, the experience has been a once-in-a-lifetime thrill. Now comes the waiting to see if I made the cut. Even if my bald spot is the only thing that survives the editing process, my dreams of participating in a big-time movie came true, and that’s good enough for me.