Newport turns Tinseltown
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Lolita Harper
Newport Beach, a historically alluring coastal community to Hollywood
types, will once again roll out the red carpet for its silver screen
aficionados as it prepares for the Newport Beach Film Festival this
week.
The city will come alive as the glamour and allure of the big
screen infuses its magic in the sunny beach town, officials said.
The workload for Todd Quartararo, publicist for the festival, has
taken an expeditious velocity as he readies for Thursday’s kickoff
event: Opening night.
“It’s going to be jampacked and a lot of fun,” Quartararo said.
“It really sets the pace for the upcoming week.”
And the pace is fast and furious -- even without Vin Diesel. Night
after night, spotlight films will be featured in such categories as
animation, anniversaries, tributes and various ethnic groups. After
the excitement on screen, the festival will host corresponding
parties each night at popular area venues.
Quartararo listed, with expert quickness, a rundown of all the
movie merrymaking:
A gala event at the Radisson, following a screening of opening
feature, “Miranda.”
A post party at the Hard Rock Cafe following the 20th anniversary
screening of “The Outsiders” -- which launched the careers of
numerous big name actors.
A party at El Torito Grill after the showing of Latino spotlight
film “A Beautiful Secret.”
The list goes on and on, and as Quartararo runs them down, the
pitch of his speech also quickens.
“There are lots and lots of parties and simultaneous parties every
night,” he said.
If a week of continuous carousing weren’t lure enough, the
festival boasts a dizzying schedule of overlapping screenings,
showing various genres of films all over Newport-Mesa and introducing
the locals to the talents of tomorrow.
While the glitz and glamour may be the draw for industry
outsiders, for those who make a living off making movies, the closing
night holds its own allure. The final night is awards night -- the
night the filmmakers receive tangible evidence their films are
moving, entertaining, poignant and beautiful.
Organizers say the reputation of the film festival, which runs
through April 11, is growing and they are seeing a vast number of its
entrants go on to achieve loftier goals, such as Academy Award
nominations.
Despite its bankruptcy in the fall of 1999, the event has
benefited from a successful revival, a slight renaming and an
increased passion. Organizers expect about 25,000 visitors this year.
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