Tuesday, December 2, 2008

WOW MY HEAD LOOKS BIG!


Hey Bobby Dogs people!

Here's a pic from the opening night party of CENTENNIAL CASTING down at the Virginia Stage Company. The show was very funny, and your favorite hot dog man, Mike Boland (right) played the lead character "Vincent." With Mike in this picture are the playwrights, Gino DiLorio and Nancy Bleemer.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

BACK TO WORK


Hey Bobby Dogs people,

I was overwhelmed by the appearance of so many of you at 12 ANGRY MEN in Hartford. Tom and Ellen Reilly, Mike Nastu, Dawn McGee, Rosina Fernhoff, Glory Gallo and Chris Mancini all made the trip. I hope I haven't left anyone out. Thank you to all of you. You really made our brief swing through my home state so memorable.

The next gig will be a little more of a hike. I recently booked the lead in a comedy called CENTENNIAL CASTING, which will be playing at the Virginia Stage Company in Norfolk, VA. Show dates are Oct. 21-Nov. 9. And if you have never been to Virginia Beach in the fall, well, this might be a road trip for you!!

Talk to you all soon and be well,

Fondly,

Mike (Bobby) Boland

Friday, April 25, 2008

HOORAY!!!


"BOBBY DOGS" actors Mike Boland and Dawn McGee celebrate winning at the PRISM AWARDS on Thursday, April 24.

OK, actually, this picture was taken in March, when Dawn made the trip up to Hartford to see her co-star Mike in the Broadway National Tour of "12 Angry Men" at the Bushnell Theatre.

But the picture looked perfect for the awards announcement, and I hated to waste it.

Go BOBBY DOGS!!!

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Film Highlights Bridgeport sites, local actors

Apr 3, 2008
Film highlights Bridgeport sites, local actors
By Brad Durrell

The director of an independent film made mostly in Bridgeport said the city may have a bright future as a place to produce movies.
“Bridgeport was tremendously supportive,” said Tom “T.K.” Reilly of Fairfield, who directed and wrote the film. “It was a great place to shoot. No one we approached had any trouble with us shooting there.”
The uplifting film, “Bobby Dogs,” deals with a middle-aged man’s successful struggle to overcome alcoholism and open up a hot dog stand.
Reilly and four of the actors appeared at a free screening of the film at the downtown Bridgeport Public Library on Saturday, attended by about three dozen people. The actors present were Joshua Eaddy, Damien Langan, Chris Mancini and Michael Nastu.
The movie showcased Seaside Park in particular, where the main character’s hot dog stand — actually a truck — was established. The film crew spent 17 days in Seaside Park.
“Bobby Dogs” also includes scenes shot at Mountain Grove Cemetery and the Bridgeport Garden Apartments in Black Rock as well as numerous neighborhood scenes done in the Hollow, on Fairfield Avenue and on State Street.
Aerial footage was taken with the help of local pilot Morgan Kaolian, who runs an aerial photography business.
“It could not have been more local,” Reilly told the audience after the screening at the library, thanking city Parks Commissioner Gene O’Neill and longtime Board of Education administrator Allan Wallach in particular for their help with making the movie.
Reilly described Wallach as a “real indy film buff” who helped secure a house on Jewett Avenue, in the North End, for one interior scene.
Other scenes were shot in Fairfield. The Super Duper Weenie restaurant in Fairfield, near Black Rock, figures prominently as that is the name of the main character’s hot dog stand in the movie.
The original truck used in real life to start Super Duper Weenie is what the film’s main character uses to begin his business, which appears ready to fail before it wins a culinary contest.
“Bobby Dogs” has been nominated for a Prism Award, given annually to films and other forms of entertainment that accurately depict substance abuse problems.

Filmmakers like the city
Bridgeport has become a popular place to make movies in the past few years, helped by a generous state tax break program that is attracting major filmmakers to many parts of Connecticut.
Reilly, who also has wrote and directed an independent short film, “The Barbershop League,” said Bridgeport has tremendous potential because it offers such a diversity of backdrops.
“If you want to do any kind of urban scene it’s as good as it gets anywhere, plus it’s also near suburban areas,” he said. “It’s also very accessible, with New York so close.”
Many crew members for the films being made in Bridgeport come from New York City and belong to important entertainment unions.
The film doesn’t star any household names but rather an assortment of local actors, many of whom have appeared in Connecticut theater. For instance, Fairfield native Mike Boland, who plays the main character, now is appearing in a national touring company of the play, “Twelve Angry Men.”
Reilly wouldn’t reveal how much it cost to make the film, saying only it involved “a true shoestring budget.”
Only some camera and sound crew members were paid. “This is all a labor of love,” Reilly said.
The actors donated their time and effort because they hope the film helps them get noticed in the industry, according to Reilly. “Their passion is acting,” he said.

Aspiring actor had role
Joshua Eaddy, a native and longtime resident of Bridgeport who now lives in Stratford, has one of the main roles as the primary character’s close buddy and hot dog stand employee.
Eaddy said it was a joy to get up and go to work at Seaside Park every day. “At the time, I didn’t even have to drive there,” he said.
He works for the state-run Greater Bridgeport Community Mental Health Center near Bridgeport Hospital, and has appeared in some other films and local plays as well.
“I hope to make it my sole career,” Eaddy said of acting. He is a 2005 graduate of Housatonic Community College’s theater arts program.
Reilly, who works in the fuel brokerage business, grew up in Westchester, N.Y., and moved to Fairfield about 15 years ago. He is married with three children.
He said the film is fictional, with some “vignettes” of real life used to create the story line.
“Bobby Dogs” premiered last June during a week-long run at Fairfield’s Community Theater. It also has been shown at film festivals in Boston, Beaufort, S.C., and Syracuse, N.Y.
Filming began in December 2006 and took three months to complete, with some breaks. Dozens of local residents had minor acting roles in the film.
The Bridgeport Public Library has two copies of “Bobby Dogs” on DVD available for rental. Copies are sold at Super Duper Weenie.

© Copyright 2008 by Hersam Acorn Newspapers

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

WE ARE IN HARTFORD!


Hey Bobby Dogs family,

Our touring production of "12 Angry Men" is in Hartford this week at the Bushnell Theatre. Come check it out if you can. The dates are March 25-30. That's eight shows only! You can get your tickets at www.12angrymentour.com.

Above is a picture from the action. Your hot-dog loving Bobby Tucker is at the right, trying to keep the peace.

So in that spirit, peace.

Mike B.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Oops


Forgot to post the pic for the blog entry below. Here it is.

Mike

A View From the Stage

If you were wondering what the view from the stage is, here I am at the Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto a couple of weeks ago. We wrapped our five-week stay there with "12 Angry Men" and moved on through Des Moines, IA (no pictures forthcoming from there) and are now in Tempe, AZ. We open tonight at the Gammage Auditorium, which was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. I will definitely send some pictures of that.

All my best,

Mike (Bobby)

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

I miss Toronto already


After five weeks in the beautiful and very hip city of Toronto, our "12 Angry Men" tour has landed in Des Moines, Iowa, where it is just as cold. The city is connected by skywalks, which gives you a couple of weird sensations - that you are in a giant Habitrail, or, if you walk the streets, that you are in some sort of zombie movie. Nonetheless, we had 2,400 enthusiastic patrons at our opening last night. So there is that.

In this picture, I am outside the Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto on our last day there. Every pillar in front of the theatre has a picture from the show. This one has the whole cast, with your favorite hot dog-loving jury foreman in front. We will be at the Bushnell in Hartford the last week of March. If anyone wants to come and see the show, check out the website: 12angrymentour.com.

Mike

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Hey from Toronto


Hey Bobby Dogs people,

I wanted to congratulate everyone on "Bobby Dogs" being accepted to the Beaufort (SC) Film Festival and the Syracuse Film Festival. That is really great news.

I am up in Toronto right now, finishing up our five week stop at the Princess of Wales Theatre with the National (and now, I guess, the international) Tour of "12 Angry Men." We are playing to sold out houses and standing ovations everywhere we go. I look forward to seeing you all when we stop in Hartford in late March.

In this picture, the cast greets Patricia Neal, an Academy Award winner for "Hud," backstage in our recent stop in Cleveland. I slipped a copy of "Bobby Dogs" into her purse, but I don't know if she has seen it yet.

All my best,

Mike