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Emmy Award-winning producer visits Victory Theater
Emmy Award-winning producer visits Victory Theater

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Emmy Award-winning producer visits Victory Theater

HENDERSON, Ky. (WEHT) — Poet, educator, Emmy Award-winning producer and New York Times bestselling author of 40 books Kwame Alexander is coming to the Victory Theater. Organizers with the event say Alexander is an Emmy Award-winning producer of 'The Crossover', his Newbery Medal-winning novel turned Disney+ TV series, and the creator of the new animated PBS special 'Acoustic Rooster's Barnyard Band'. Alexander will be at the Victory Theater Thursday night to discuss his work and share insights. The event is free to the public and starts at 7:00 p.m. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Kwame Alexander on Bringing the Free Spirit of Jazz to Young Viewers
Kwame Alexander on Bringing the Free Spirit of Jazz to Young Viewers

New York Times

time01-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Kwame Alexander on Bringing the Free Spirit of Jazz to Young Viewers

In 2010, the poet and novelist Kwame Alexander faced a challenge that is familiar to parents everywhere. His younger daughter, then a year old, wouldn't stop wailing. Lullabies failed. Rocking didn't help, nor did a car ride. Finally, Alexander put on a few records and found the solution: It was jazz, Baby, jazz! 'So I would play her Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald,' he said in a video interview in mid-April. 'I would play her bossa nova, and she would stop crying. And I thought: Wow, this is kind of cool. Maybe I should write something about jazz for her.' The result was 'Acoustic Rooster and His Barnyard Band,' Alexander's first children's book. But an enterprising rooster doesn't crow only once, and the author's feathered, guitar-strumming character has lived on, in a 2021 Kennedy Center stage musical and in three more books. And now Rooster is making his television debut: On Thursday, PBS Kids is premiering 'Acoustic Rooster and His Barnyard Band,' a one-hour animated special that Alexander created with the screenwriter Kay Donmyer. (The special is streaming on all PBS digital platforms; check local listings for broadcast times.) Alexander, 56, is no stranger to TV: He was the showrunner of 'The Crossover,' the Disney+ 2023 adaptation of his Newbery Medal-winning middle-grade novel about basketball, which won an Emmy for best young teen series. In 'Acoustic Rooster,' he and Donmyer, who collaborated on the script and the lyrics, are presenting a, well, cockier version of the book's strutting hero. In the special, Rooster wants to win a jazz band contest, but first he needs to be part of a group. He plans to join the famous Barnyard Band — which has members like 'Mules Davis,' 'Lil Herdin' and 'Ella Finchgerald' (voiced by the jazz singer Dee Daniels) — and help it win the competition by being its undisputed star. But he has a few things to learn, as does the show's preschool audience. 'Acoustic Rooster,' which features original songs composed by the jazz musician Mark McLean (who also wrote additional lyrics) teaches young viewers not only about jazz but also about collaboration and compromise. Produced by GBH, the special is accompanied by 'Acoustic Rooster: Jazzy Jams,' a series of 20 three-minute animated shorts, each including a song and often solving a problem, musical or emotional. Two jams from the series, which features guest artists like the pianist Herbie Hancock and the bassist Amy Shook, have been officially released already. Others will follow weekly, starting on May 9, and several can be previewed on YouTube. (Like the special, the shorts are being broadcast and streaming.) An interactive online game, Groovin' With Acoustic Rooster, will offer children opportunities to create their own music. 'They'll come away understanding what it means to improvise,' Alexander said. 'They'll come away with what scat is — Skip-it-a-bebop, boo! They'll learn a little bit about the history of jazz, which, in fact, is about the history of America. And really jazz is about the history of democracy, and how you have all these people onstage, and they've all got to work together to create this beautiful piece.' These are edited excerpts from the conversation. What is the origin story of the 'Acoustic Rooster' characters? You've said you were in Tuscany when you got the idea. I was on a writer's fellowship, and every morning, on my walk to the local cafe to get tea and a croissant, I would pass by a farm. And on this farm were all these animals who were dancing. At least in my imagination, they were dancing and partying. And one thing led to another. Acoustic Rooster was the first character I came up with. And then I had to sort of begin to give the rooster a community. And from there, I thought, Well, there's got to be a cousin, and maybe the cousin, if the cousin is related to the rooster, then the cousin might be a hen or a duck. And then it just hit me: Duck — Duke — Ellington. And once I got that [Duck Ellington], that was my first sort of jazz-inspired animal. Why did you and your collaborators decide to give the TV adaptation this form — as opposed to, say, a series with half-hour episodes? This is an introduction to jazz. And so the idea is, if you like it, if you love it, if you show us you love it by watching it, then absolutely, I think there are a lot more stories to tell in a full, fledged-out series. What we're trying to do with the shorts is try to give people sort of a quick slice of what this universe, this rooster jazz universe, is like. Does Acoustic Rooster represent you at all? My advanced-creative-writing professor, sophomore year [at Virginia Tech], was Nikki Giovanni, may she rest in peace. And I thought I knew everything there was to know about poetry as a sophomore. And, of course, she's a legend, and I would challenge her nonstop, and she would give me Cs. And I remember having a conference with her during office hours, and she said to me, 'Kwame, I can teach you how to write, but I can't teach you how to be interesting.' And I remember just being livid at that, like, 'What are you talking about?' And, of course, you know, she would end up becoming, besides my parents, the most influential person in my writerly life. And it took me a while to see it. I think part of our goal with Rooster is to follow him on this journey, so he can get to that point. Why did you decide to use original songs instead of works from the jazz canon? For the special, it was important for us to create, to really be highly original, and to really showcase our talents. And again, this is an introduction. I really view this as a way to engage kids into this brilliant, masterful music, American form of music, that we call jazz music. I think outside of that, perhaps it just may be a little too expensive at this stage to secure some of the rights. Did you have a say in the look of the animation [by Global Mechanic Media]? Part of my big thing was our show should not look like any other show. It should incorporate the jazz motif of albums from the '50s and the '60s. It should be electric. It should have a certain color palette that screams, 'Verve!' Herbie Hancock is one of your guest musicians. Why did you think he was a good fit for the 'Acoustic Rooster' shorts? Herbie Hancock likes to tell this story about how he was playing with Miles Davis's band in Germany. They were on tour [around 1963-64], and Miles was known to be a pretty ornery person, and if you did the wrong thing, you could get fired immediately. And Herbie Hancock talks about how he played a chord that was the wrong chord. He totally messed it up. In that moment, he knew that he was going to get fired, like it was over for him at the end of that show, and he said the note that Miles played next made Herbie's chord sound brilliant. I feel like that's a big lesson that improvisation and jazz teaches, and something that I adhere to. We're going to do some things that we may not think are going to work, or we're going to be told 'no' in life, or we're going to have the blues. But the measure of our humanity is not how we succumb to that. It's how we overcome it. It's how we bounce back.

Scholastic Announces Interactive Mystery Series 'The Last Resort' — See the Cover! (Exclusive)
Scholastic Announces Interactive Mystery Series 'The Last Resort' — See the Cover! (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time07-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Scholastic Announces Interactive Mystery Series 'The Last Resort' — See the Cover! (Exclusive)

Scholastic is bringing young readers "the next evolution of storytelling" — with a little help from some ghoulish friends! The publishing company will be launching The Last Resort series in September, offering an innovative and interactive twist for middle-grade mystery lovers. And now, PEOPLE can exclusively reveal the cover of the first book in the series, from Newbery Medal-winning author Erin Entrada Kelly. The Last Resort, which is set to offer three books from three different acclaimed authors, gives kids the chance to see "ghosts" rise from the pages of their books and ask them questions that give key details to the mysteries at hand — all with the use of a QR code or web link. The process is relatively simple: readers just scan the pages to see "ghosts" appear via their phones or mobile devices, offering the chance for them to "crack puzzles" and "solve the mystery," as well as a chance for some out-of-book conversation, the publisher explains. The first book in the series will arrive on Sept. 2 from Kelly, a New York Times bestseller and two-time Newbery Medal winner. Its follow-up from Newbery Honor author Jasmine Warga arrives in Spring 2026, with a third book set for fall 2026 from an author yet to be announced. Related: Head Back to the Emerald City with Ultimate Oz Universe: The Lost Lands — See Inside! (Exclusive) Kelly's book — intended for kids between the ages of 8 and 12 — follows the story of a 12-year-old named Lila who has to spend her summer in Ohio at her late grandfather's "creepy Victorian Inn," where "strange things keep happening," per a synopsis from Scholastic. After Lila runs into her Grandpa Clem at his own funeral, he tells her he was murdered and that his inn is actually a "portal between the land of the living and the realm of the dead." Now, she must stop "evil spirits desperate to make their way back into the human world" with the help of some friends — a fitting twist to a series where kids get a chance to see the ghouls for themselves. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "It was such a rewarding experience to approach storytelling in this way," Kelly tells PEOPLE of the series. "Young readers are constantly evolving. Cross-platform literacy offers so much for modern readers — it allows them the joy of traditional prose, the excitement of interacting with their devices in an active — rather than passive — way, and it honors readers whose attention spans are constantly pulled in different directions. Stories can be told in many ways; this series proves that." Related: Tori Amos Releases First Kids Book — And a Surprise Accompanying Soundtrack! (Exclusive) Warga, who authored the second book in the series, adds that working on her own book "has been wildly fun" and gave her the opportunity to "write in a completely new genre." "The cross-platform nature of the project gives the storytelling such an immersive and rich feel, and it's creatively inspiring to think about how the book characters are going to be brought to life in other ways for our readers. It's challenged me as a writer to think about storytelling in a more expansive and interactive way," she says. "Also, I'm a huge fan of Erin's, and so it was also such an honor and thrill to get to expand on her interpretation of the characters and collaborate with her." "The whole project has felt like such a team effort, from Erin to the brilliant editorial team at Scholastic to the awesome game development team — I'm really delighted to get to be a part of it," Warga adds. Kelly's The Last Resort arrives on Sept. 2 via Scholastic and is available for preorder now, wherever books are sold. Read the original article on People

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