Friday, September 20, 2019

CBS Sunday Morning 9/22 on CBS

LEGENDARY COMPOSER JOHN WILLIAMS TELLS “CBS SUNDAY MORNING” HE DOESN’T LISTEN TO HIS OWN MUSIC ONCE THE FILMS HAVE BEEN RELEASED, NOR DOES HE LISTEN TO MUCH MUSIC AT ALL
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Legendary composer John Williams doesn’t listen to his scores in the final films once they’ve been released, nor does he listen to much music at all, he says in an interview with Tracy Smith for CBS SUNDAY MORNING to be broadcast Sunday, Sept. 22 (9:00 AM, ET) on the CBS Television Network.
Williams, who wrote the scores for such blockbusters as “Star Wars,” “Indiana Jones,” “Schindler’s List” and three “Harry Potter” films, says he finds no comfort listening to his work in the final product for a couple of reasons.
“No – because I’m writing music all the time,” he tells Smith. “And therefore, it’s no comfort to listen to it. I don’t listen to music very much.”
Why doesn’t the most successful film music composer of all time, with a record 51 Oscar nominations, listen to music?
“If you go to a dinner party, which I do rarely, and somebody has music on, I’m thinking, ‘Well, that’s in D major. And, oh, my God, the F sharp is flat.”
Williams also finds himself torn listening to other composers.
“If I listened to great classical composers, I would only think, ‘That’s much better than anything I could write.’”
He doesn’t find it comforting or inspiring.
“No,” Williams says. “It does make me think that one can always be better.
Smith talks with Williams in Los Angeles and at Tanglewood in Lenox, Mass., where he has a summer home and where he performed with the Boston Symphony Orchestra in August.
Williams says he has written some of his most successful movie scores while in Tanglewood.
“Its effect on me is very spiritual and very exciting,” Williams says. “And I’ve written so much music here, so many film scores in this place.”
CBS SUNDAY MORNING is broadcast Sundays (9:00-10:30 AM, ET) on the CBS Television Network. Rand Morrison is the executive producer.
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ACADEMY AWARD WINNER RENEE ZELLWEGER TALKS ABOUT PORTRAYING JUDY GARLAND AND THE PRICE OF FAME IN A REVEALING INTERVIEW FOR “CBS SUNDAY MORNING”

Zellweger Tells Lee Cowan of Celebrity: “It Enters the Room Before You Do, So Any Perception of Who You Might Be, That’s Who They Meet”
Academy Award winner Renee Zellweger talks about portraying Judy Garland and also the challenges of fame in a revealing interview with Lee Cowan for CBS SUNDAY MORNING to be broadcast Sunday, Sept. 22 (9:00 AM, ET) on the CBS Television Network.
Zellweger, known for her work in such films as “Cold Mountain,” “Jerry Maguire” and the “Bridget Jones’s Diary” franchise, portrays the iconic yet deeply troubled entertainer Judy Garland in “Judy.” The film, opening later this month, has already earned Zellweger critical acclaim and generated Oscar buzz.
“There is something other-worldly and undeniable,” Zellweger says of Garland, who was just 47 when she died in 1969.
The film focuses on the end of Garland’s career, when audiences sometimes tossed dinner rolls at her during off-balanced performances. There were also unflattering portrayals in the media.
Zellweger says she understands some of the challenges Garland faced in the public eye, though not to the same degree. Growing up, Zellweger had not planned to be an actor, but an acting class at the University of Texas changed everything. A series of film roles led to the hit “Jerry Maguire” with Tom Cruise and her career soared.
“I don’t know. I don’t remember much of my 30s,” Zellweger says. “Sounds like a joke, but it’s true. But it just feels compressed. It feels like it just happened like that. So fast. I didn’t want that to happen again.”
She tells Cowan she needed to press the pause button on her acting career, but remained active off camera.
“It was going by too fast,” she says. “And then I started to repeat myself.”
In a wide-ranging conversation, Zellweger talks about breaking into the business, her career, stepping back from making films for a while and her return. She also talks about the controversy over a 2014 red carpet appearance that created speculation about her perceived change of appearance and her decision to go public about society’s sexist double standards.
“At that point it had become necessary, not for me as an actress, but as a citizen or a person who was looking at the bigger picture of that, the implication of that,” Zellweger says. “It became necessary just to point at it, is all.”
Zellweger says she is not sure anyone is born with the faculties to navigate fame and celebrity.
“I like normalcy, and I like genuine exchanges with people. I like to meet people,” she says.
Being a celebrity changes that experience, though.
“Well, it enters the room before you do, and so any perception of who you might be, that’s who they meet,” she says.
CBS SUNDAY MORNING is broadcast Sundays (9:00-10:30 AM, ET) on the CBS Television Network. Rand Morrison is the executive producer.
            Follow CBS SUNDAY MORNING on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and CBSNews.com. Listen to CBS SUNDAY MORNING podcasts on all podcast platforms.

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