Tag Archives: Celebration Cinema

Celebration! South one of the Mel Trotter Ministries’ Turkey Drop sites

By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org


Mel Trotter Ministries will be collecting turkeys at its annual Turkey Drop set for Wednesday. (pxhere.com)

Mel Trotter Ministries will host its 18th annual Turkey Drop this Wednesday with Celebration! Cinema South being one of three turkey drop-off locations.

The event collects frozen turkeys from area residents which will be given to those in need for the holiday season. Last year, Mel Trotter Ministries had the goal of collecting 2,500 frozen turkeys and the community’s outpouring resulted in surpassing the goal by more than double. Organizers said they hope to surpass last year’s numbers.

Frozen turkeys may be dropped off curbside. Mel Trotter Ministries’s staff and volunteers will be grabbing the turkeys from the vehicles quickly and safely while wearing masks and gloves. Mel Trotter Ministries is partnering with Feeding America West Michigan who will be distributing the frozen turkeys to food pantries and local organizations at no cost to them. 

Drop off is from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday at Celebration! Cinema South, 1506 Eastport Dr. SE; Celebration! Cinema North, 2121 Celebration Dr. NE, and Mel Trotter Ministries Downtown, 225 Commerce Ave. SE. 

For more information about the event, visit meltrotter.org/turkeydrop

Local theater, zoo use ‘Lion King’ movie as platform on lion conservation

Since The Lion King was release 25 years ago, Africa has lost half of its tiger population. (John Ball Zoo)

By Darci David
John Ball Zoo



John Ball Zoo and Celebration Cinema are announcing a community partnership coinciding with the release of The Lion King movie and Lion Day at John Ball Zoo. The partnership is to bring awareness and education towards conservation of African lions.

Africa’s lion numbers are declining. Since the original The Lion King movie was first released 25 years ago, half of Africa’s lions have been lost. Only 20,000 remain. This decline and need for increased conservation efforts are what brought JBZ and Celebration Cinema together. People and organizations are key to saving species. Together, we can find solutions that benefit people and wildlife.

Lion Day at John Ball Zoo is Saturday, July 20. Guests can learn about African lions in the wild and at the Zoo. Activities will focus on education, including learning how one person can make a conservation difference through actions both big and small. MSU’s Snares to Wares will also be onsite to talk about their work improving human livelihood and protecting wildlife in and around the village of Pakwach, Uganda.

John Ball Zoo guests are also encouraged to watch The Lion King at Celebration Cinema. The first 2,000 Zoo guests through the gate on July 20 will receive a coupon good at any Celebration Cinema location for a free popcorn with paid admission to The Lion King.

“We are excited to be partnering with Celebration Cinema,” said John Ball Zoo’s Chief Development & Community Engagement Officer Michael Lomonaco. “Lion conservation is an important initiative for the Zoo and Celebration Cinema supports our work. The release of The Lion King provides a great opportunity to partner and bring public awareness in order to engage our community in conservation efforts that help save the lives of endangered species such as lions.”

The Lion King movie at Celebration Cinema opens the same weekend on Friday, July 19. The “live action” movie features animals of the African savanna, many of which can be seen at John Ball Zoo; including – African lion, warthog, Southern Ground hornbill, and coming in the future Meerkats.

The partnership makes seeing the Zoo’s African animals easier too. People can receive 50 percent off a paid admission at the Zoo with proof of admission to The Lion King at Celebration Cinema.

For cinema locations and to purchase The Lion King tickets online, visit Celebration Cinema at celebrationcinema.com. Details on Lion’s Day at John Ball Zoo can be found at jbzoo.org/lionday.

Canopy by Hilton breaks ground in Grand Rapids

 

By Callie Cain

Lodgco Hospitality

 

On Thursday, May 31, Canopy by Hilton, Hilton’s lifestyle hotel brand, along with Michigan-based Lodgco Hospitality and Olsen Loeks Development, celebrated the groundbreaking of Canopy by Hilton Grand Rapids Downtown. Slated to open in summer 2020, the property will provide a comfortable stay for guests in search of thoughtfully-local experiences in the energetic Downtown Grand Rapids neighborhood.

 

The 155-room hotel, which includes 2,400 square feet of meeting space as well as a transfer lounge where guests can relax, change their clothes or store luggage in lieu of an extended check out, is located at 131 Ionia Ave., SW, at the corner of Ionia Avenue and Cherry Street in downtown Grand Rapids. The rapidly expanding area is set to be popular destination with an exterior piazza, a nine-screen Studio C! movie theater, apartments, retail and office space as well as a parking ramp in the first phase. Canopy by Hilton Grand Rapids Downtown, which will employ up to 90 local residents, will sit as the southwest anchor of the larger development of Studio Park, which is being developed by Jackson Entertainment, an offshoot of Celebration! Cinema Group.

 

“Grand Rapids Downtown is an ideal neighborhood for our Canopy by Hilton brand,” said Gary Steffen, global head, Canopy by Hilton. “The community is both a business hub and recreational destination with attractive shopping, dining and entertainment opportunities. We are confident that our hotel will reflect the best of the neighborhood through locally-inspired design, partnerships and food and drink.”

 

As with all Canopy by Hilton hotels, Canopy by Hilton Grand Rapids Downtown is inspired and influenced by its local surroundings. The hotel’s design will reflect the old warehouse buildings previously in the neighborhood with oversize aluminum windows in the guest rooms and use of exterior brick. A two-story glass façade along Ionia Street provides fantastic daylight to public areas. The interior design concept will have a touch of mid-century modern design which has deep roots in the Grand Rapids area.

 

The property will be home to a café, known as Canopy Central, featuring a casual menu offering, as well as a bar serving local breweries. The hotel will also include an upscale, intimate local biergarten-themed rooftop bar with a view of the city, open air seating on balconies with a fire pit and will be open to the public. This bar will allow guests and patrons to experience the local neighborhood through locally themed food, craft beers, as well as locally-themed aesthetics. Canopy by Hilton properties also offer Wi-Fi and a local artisanal breakfast included in the room rate.

 

“We wanted to be able to share this ground-breaking ceremony with the community, this is going to be a hub of activity for the neighborhood and travelers will be able to experience the local vibe of Grand Rapids,” said Lodgco Hospitality PresidentAnn Kelly.

Doing Good: Wyoming, Kentwood businesses step up to the challenge

 

Bringing together and celebrating the good that locally-owned businesses have done for the Greater Grand Rapids has been an initiative that LocalFirst has been focused on in the past year.

 

Recently, the organization celebrated its Good for Grand Rapids campaign by announcing the eight top-scoring businesses that received Good for Grand Rapids Awards. Two of which were from the Wyoming and Kentwood areas: Lindo Mexico received a Good For Employees and Celebration! Cinema received a Good for Community.

 

LocalFirst Marketing Manager Mieke Stroub was on the WKTV Journal to talk about the impact of the awards with host Donna Kidner-Smith.

 

“It is to bring together and celebrate companies that are using businesses for good,” Stroub said about the Good for Grand Rapids. “And what that means is that they are being good to their employees; they are giving back to the community; they are creating high quality and more jobs for the people that live here.”

 

Businesses that participated took a quick impact assessment that is available on the LocalFirst website. Stroub said a business owner or someone very familiar with the business could do the assessment which would take anywhere from a half hour to an hour to complete.

 

“The assessment is industry specific,” Stroub said. “A restaurant is going to have different questions than a PR company. So the business owners who go in and take it only have questions relevant to them.”

 

More than 70 different business participated in the program. From the Wyoming and Kentwood areas that includes Daddy’s Dough and JoJo’s House of Beauty along with Lindo Mexico and Celebration! Cinema.

 

Participating in the program not only gives business insight into what they are doing well and what they need to improve upon, but another tool to attract high, quality talent to the West Michigan area, Stroub said.

 

LocalFirst Marketing Manager Mieke Stroub

“A common challenge across industries is talent or acquiring talent,” she said. “As we are noticing, the work force that is entering, they want to work for a company that they are proud of. They want to work for a company that pays attention to social issues, that gives back to its community. We are giving businesses the tools that they need to facilitate that.”

 

Along with the assessment, LocalFirst is also offering a series of workshops focused on helping business with their sustainability efforts. Information on the first three Good for Grand Rapids workshops are now available on the LocalFirst website along with other events such as mixers to get to know those who are in LocalFirst and have taken the Good for Grand Rapids assessment.

 

The Good for Grand Rapids assessment tool is also available on the website. Stroub said it is a free resource that a business owner can complete on his/her own time.

 

For more about LocalFirst, visit localfirst.org.

Mel Trotter Ministries and Celebration! Cinema host ‘Same Kind of Different as Me’ film premiere tonight

 

By Abbey Sladick, Mel Trotter Ministries   

 

Mel Trotter Ministries partnering with Celebration! Cinema, will host red carpet event to raise awareness, support for rescue mission

 

Based on the New York Times bestselling book, Paramount Pictures and Pure Flix Entertainment will release the blockbuster film Same Kind of Different as Me in theatres nationwide on October 20, 2017. In addition, Mel Trotter Ministries (MTM) is hosting a Grand Rapids exclusive, pre-release red carpet charity event at Celebration! Cinema on October 18, 2017, in order to raise awareness and support for the rescue mission.

 

Same Kind of Different as Me  (PG-13) is the true story of international art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear), who befriends a dangerous homeless man (Djimon Hounsou) in hopes of saving his struggling marriage to Debbie (Renée Zellweger), a woman whose dreams will lead all three of them on the most remarkable journey of their lives. Jon Voight plays Hall’s father, with whom he reconciles thanks to the revelations of his new life.

 

With much of the story taking place at a rescue mission, MTM has joined rescue missions across the country by hosting the pre-release red carpet event. These events were created to help organizations break down the misconceptions of homelessness and increase support. The ultimate goal of these events, as inspired by the powerful messages found in the film, is to inspire people in Grand Rapids to build relationships with people who are not like them.

  • Event: Same Kind of Different as Me: Grand Rapids Movie Premiere
  • Date: October 18, 2017
  • Time: 6 pm–Reception,  6:30 pm–Remarks, 7 pm–Showtime
  • Location: Celebration! Cinema Grand Rapids North & IMAX, Grand Rapids
  • Tickets: $25 each: includes movie, program, pop/popcorn combo (proceeds go to Mel Trotter Ministries)

Get your seat: www.meltrotter.org/movie or call 616.454.8249.

Writer/Director Amy Heckerling offers sound, no-nonsense advice for West Michigan filmmakers

amy-with-wktv-geoff-haney
Amy Heckerling with Geoff Haney (WKTV’s cool PR & Promotions guy)

By Victoria Mullen

WKTV

 

If you enjoy watching films like Clueless, Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Look Who’s Talking (among other Amy Heckerling films), you would have been in seventh heaven last Friday and Saturday.

 

Heckerling was in Grand Rapids September 8 and 9 to screen Clueless and share her thoughts and perspective on film-making — and making it in an annoyingly male-dominated industry — at the Visiting Film Artists Series (VFAS), presented by West Michigan Film Video Alliance (WMFVA) at Celebration!Cinema North. On Friday viewers watched Clueless, the 1996 film written and directed by Heckerling. Saturday featured a luncheon and intimate Q&A with Heckerling.

 

Not surprisingly, guests had many, many questions on how to break into the biz. Heckerling was gracious, engaging and no-nonsense with her answers.

 

In a nutshell, here’s what helps get you in:

  1. Are you rich?
  2. Do you know somebody in the biz?
  3. Are you related to anybody in the biz?

It really is who you know. And sometimes you have to suck up an ‘attaboy sandwich,’ Heckerling’s term for biting your tongue and being gracious about a studio producer’s really stupid idea.

 

But the overarching theme in Heckerling’s presentation was that of perseverance and believing in yourself and your talent. Keep working. Hard. Follow your dreams. Things like that.

Tips for successful filmmaking and getting a big cheese to consider your idea:

  • Think about what’s in your heart that you want to say.
  • Be willing to plan what you want to do, but be flexible enough to change that plan.
  • Follow your dreams but you need to have smart dreams. Be smart and figure out the game.
  • Research people and try to maneuver your way in. Look for chinks in the barrier.
  • These days it’s easier to put together a reel but it’s hard to get someone to watch it; you still need to know someone in the industry.
  • It’s non-stop work. You must want it more, be pushier and work harder than the next guy.
  • Find out what studios are looking for and what’s in your heart you want to do.
  • Fight and stand up for your stuff; every now and then you get to do something you really want to do.
  • Sometimes you have to do something you don’t like on your way to getting where you want to be.

(And don’t forget that ‘attaboy sandwich.’)

 

Heckerling has been recognized for her talent and contribution to the industry with several awards: National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay; Writer’s Guild of America Best Screenplay Written Directly for Screen; Women in Film Crystal Awards; and the American Film Institute Franklin J. Schaffner Award.

 

 

Discover some of Kentwood’s restaurants in this year’s Taste of Kentwood

Participants check out the 2015 Taste of Kentwood event.
Participants check out the 2015 Taste of Kentwood event.

Every wonder what a Smash Burger tastes like? How about a sub from Boardwalk Subs? Or just curious about what food items Celebration! Cinema has to offer?

 

Thursday, March 3, area residents will have the opportunity to find out as the Kentwood Park and Recreation Department hosts its 15th Annual Taste of Kentwood at the Kentwood Activities Center, 355 48th St. SE.

 

“It is a nice opportunity to sample several different offerings from various local places,” said Laura Barbrick, marketing and events coordinator for the City of Kentwood Parks and Recreation.

 

This year, about 13 restaurants from the Kentwood area will participate. Each restaurant brings in samples of some of its well-known food items. Participants sign up for one of the two sessions, 4:30 – 6 p.m. or 6:30 – 8 p.m., and during the session go from table-to-table trying the various foods.

 

“There will be a nice variety from soup, sandwiches, burgers, pasta, curry dishes and Mexican food,” Barbrick said. There are about 13 restaurants participating in this year’s event. Those restaurants include Peppino’s Grille and Pizzeria, Zoup!, Bloop Frozen Yogurt, Rak Thai, Pizza Ranch, Smash Burger, Jet’s Pizza, Potbelly, On the Border, Boardwalk Subs, Dave & Buster’s and Celebration! Cinema.

 

The annual event, which is marking its 15th year this year, is quite popular, bringing in about 500 people to the 2015 event, according to Barbrick. On average, Taste of Kentwood raises about $3,000 – this includes money from a silent auction – which is used to provide scholarships to programs at the City of Kentwood Parks and Recreation.

 

Tickets for the event are$5 in advance and $7 at the door. Children 5 & under are free. For more information or other City of Kentwood Park and Recreation programs, visit the department’s website.

Award-winning Production Designer to speak on ‘The Art of Film Production Design’ at Calvin College

jeannine_oppewall_destaqueOn October 6 and 7, local film aficionados will have the opportunity to meet a motion picture industry great: Jeannine Oppewall, a highly respected production designer, art director and Calvin College alum, will share her ideas and experiences as a motion picture production designer during a Q&A after the screening of Catch Me If You Can at Celebration! Cinema North on October 6.

The following evening, Oppewall will present ‘Design and Ideas in the Film Industry’ at Calvin College. Both events are free and comprise the Loeks Inaugural Lecture in Film & Media, co-produced by Calvin College and Celebration! Cinema. RSVPs are required for the film screening. (Go here.)

About Jeannine Oppewall:
Professional on set, modest in her personal life, and an engaging conversationalist, Oppewall makes magic by turning a director’s vision (or lack thereof) into a coherent whole. Meticulous attention to detail is just one of her hallmarks. She has received numerous accolades, including the Camerimage Award to Production Designer with Unique Visual Sensitivity in 2014. Photo credit: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

Simply stated, Oppewall is responsible “for everything an actor walks in front of, sits on, drives through or picks up.” In addition, each item must be historically accurate, right down to the color and texture. She has worked on more than 30 movies in such roles as production designer, set decorator and set designer.

Depending on the project, Oppewall may or may not receive any overall direction. To illustrate the enormity of the job, each project may take up to nine months of her life, working 14-hour days.

“A large number of directors don’t have a vision,” she said. “Some are visual, some are verbal and some are not interested as long as I get the job done.”

For exJeannine_Oppewallample, on Bridges of Madison County, Clint Eastwood was very hands off. On Tender Mercies, Oppewall received only five or six specifications on production design from director Bruce Beresford.

“It depends on the individual,” she said.

Overall, to succeed in her field, designs must be clean, neat and simple. For Oppewall, this is not a problem; design is in her genes.

“I came from family of designers and tried to intellectualize my interest in art, theater and culture,” she said. “I wanted to be the family intellectual, but the genes won out.”

In an industry dominated by high-powered males, Oppewall credits her years as editor of Chimes, the Calvin College student newspaper, for toughening her up; working with the big boys in Hollywood doesn’t intimidate her one iota.

“I was young and stupid and chaotic and idea-driven,” said Oppewall of her tenure at Chimes. “I was full of righteousness. But I learned how to assert myself and stand up for myself. I gave as good as I got, and I learned how to deal with males.”

And she does not cry. Ever.

“I get angry, but I do not cry,” Oppewall says. “I don’t know how to do it.”

On rare occasions, however, she may be rendered speechless. In her twenties, she worked for iconic American designer Charles Eames. She had lucked into the job by first touring the Eames studio and then asking a secretary if there were any positions open. Serendipity. There was.

“They needed someone to curate the slide library, black-and-white negatives and photos, and do reading and research for the National Council of Arts,” Oppewall said. IMG_0160

Another aspect of the job concerned film post-production. She knew she could handle everything but film post-production. She didn’t let that stop her.

“I made a few phone calls and contacted someone I knew who was knowledgeable about film post-production,” said Oppewall. “He told me to meet him at the Technicolor plant. ‘I will show you what your job is,’ he told me. ‘If you know your job, it will make my job easier.’”

Much later, during a conversation with Eames, “out of nowhere, he broke out singing, ‘Jeannine, My Queen of Lilac Time,’ the same way my mother did when I was a young girl,” said Oppewall. “I was flummoxed.”

She has this advice for newcomers to the film industry: “In Hollywood, you can find out everything about anyone,” she said. “All it takes is two well-placed phone calls, and you will know everything about everybody, if you know just whom to call. Find two people who like you and want to help you. That is how you begin.”

About the film:
detailStarring Leonardo DiCaprio, Catch Me If You Can is based on the true story of Frank Abagnale, Jr., who worked as a doctor, a lawyer, and as a co-pilot for a major airline—all before his 18th birthday.

Abagnale (Leonardo DiCaprio) was a master of deception and also a brilliant forger, whose skill gave him his first real claim to fame: At the age of 17, Abagnale became the most successful bank robber in the history of the U.S. FBI Agent Carl Hanratty (Tom Hanks) makes it his prime mission to capture Frank and bring him to justice, but Frank is always one step ahead of him.

WHEN: October 6 at 7 p.m. WHERE: Celebration! Cinema North. Click here to RSVP.

About the lecture:
On October 7 at 7:30 p.m., Jeannine Oppewall will present ‘Design and Ideas in the Film Industry.’ Using illustrations and anecdotes, Oppewall will explain how she expresses color, shape, texture, location, and construction on a project.

“It’s something I do by instinct, and most people have no idea what I do,” said Oppewall.

The event is free and open to the public. WHERE: Covenant Fine Arts Center Recital Hall, Calvin College.