Skip to main content

A Half-Dozen Gracious Celebrities in My Town - and I Haven’t Seen a Soul

Kevin Costner at the Cleveland Indians May 2013
My pal Julie's pal Eric snaps a pic of Kevin Costner
at the Indians game in May.
Here’s how the typical Midwest movie conversation goes these days. I arrive at my 9 to 5 and casually mention catching a far off glimpse of the Draft Day film crew at work, no more than a mile from my home.

“Oh, yea,” my co-worker – let’s call her Julie because … well, that’s her name – says, “We saw Kevin Costner at the Indians game. Seems like a really nice guy.”

Or, after posting how I haven’t bumped into any Captain America 2 stars on the old Facebook, my neighbor sends me a shot of Samuel L. Jackson hamming for her friend’s cell phone camera at a popular restaurant downtown. “She says he was a helluva nice guy,” is Allison’s report.

Are you kidding me? Kevin Costner, Samuel L. Jackson, Chris Evans, Jennifer Garner, Scarlett Johansson, Ivan Reitman, Denis Leary, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Cleveland’s own Russo Brothers – and who knows who else – all boppin’ about Northeast Ohio and nary a one has popped into view.

Captain America's Samuel L. Jackson in downtown Cleveland
My pal Allison's pal Katy Quinn snap a pic of
Samuel L. Jackson at the Velvet Tango Room.
I even read somewhere that Dan Akroyd was stopping over in Cleveland to meet up with Reitman to discuss Ghostbusters 3. Are you kidding me?

Okay, true. I’m a 43-year-old father, have a day job, and swim lessons and little league must be attended to. And it’s not likely I’ll find extra time to go to Vosh (where Costner was seen) or the Velvet Tango Room (where my friend’s friend, Katy Quinn, met him). But still. C’mon. They gotta pick up beer at the local Heinen’s or grab a cone at Mitchell’s, right? Right?

Ah well. Maybe it’s not meant to be this time around. That’s okay. I’m just glad that every run-in I’ve read about, or story that was shared with me, talks about how gracious our guests, like Cap 2’s Mr. Jackson, have been.

“He’s really cool,” Quinn says of Jackson. “Down to Earth. Somebody you’d feel comfortable inviting to your backyard barbeque.”

Costner continues to wow Clevelanders. The first reported sighting of the Draft Day star was at Vosh, a jazz club in Lakewood, Ohio. “He thought it was a cool place,” co-owner Ryan Krivosh said of Costner’s visit.

Then there’s the second-hand stories of Costner making sure the Shaker Heights family whose home Draft Day took over felt comfortable with all the activity and made sure he was available for any photos or questions they might have.

Even the New York Post got in on the Midwest action by detailing how Garner is enjoying “small town life” in Shaker Heights. The short blurb mentions how Garner chatted with neighbors while teaching her children how to ride bikes.

And in the midst of a little bad PR for Marvel Studios after shutting down a major commuter highway for two weeks, star Evans tweeted a kind apology for all the mess. (And, please, people. You should know better than to take Detroit as your detour. Get on 90 or 490 to 77 and north to E 9th and Chester.)

But I’m not giving up hope! Both crews are in town for the better part of the first half of June. So there’s time.


I just need to get a babysitter and a little bit hipper.

Comments

Popular Posts

'Avengers Infinity War' coming to Cleveland? Movie studio built on old Geauga Lake property? Both possible say Russo Brothers

Ivan Schwarz, Greater Cleveland Film Commission, Joe Russo and Anthony Russo, Cleveland natives and Marvel directors. They didn’t share any Captain America: Civil War spoilers, but directors Joe and Anthony Russo told fans that Avengers: Infinity War could land in Cleveland. “It’s on the list,” said Anthony. The reveal took place Saturday during a Wizard World Comic-Con Cleveland panel titled Let’s Shut Down Some Streets: Bringing the Avengers, Captain America and the Russo Brothers to Cleveland. The Russos, who grew up in Cleveland and graduated from Case Western Reserve University, were joined by Ivan Schwarz, director of the Greater Cleveland Film Commission. The trio discussed how the region could grow its production slate and how it could attract more features to Northeast Ohio. The first step, said Schwarz, was getting the Ohio legislature to raise the motion picture tax incentive from $25 million a year to $75 million. That legislation will go before Ohio lawmake

Tina Fey, Jay Roach Bringing Kent State Film '67 Shots' to Ohio

Student protestors at Kent State in 1970 Tina Fey is taking a serious turn, producing 67 Shots , a film about the 1970 Kent State shootings. The movie applied for the Ohio Film Tax Incentive earlier this year and plans to film in and around KSU sometime in 2018. 67 Shots focuses on events that led up to the shooting deaths of four students by Ohio National Guardsmen. The title comes from the numbers of shots those guardsmen fired into the unarmed crowd of protestors. Fey is producing alongside Jeff Richmond, her husband and a Kent State alum. Jay Roach, best known for the Austin Powers and Meet the Fockers franchises, will helm the project. Roach is making more socially and politically aware films at this stage in his career, including Trumbo and Game Change . The film is based on the book 67 Shots: Kent State and the End of American Innocence and is adapted by award-winning playwright Stephen Belber. Fey and Richmond’s production company, Little Stranger, will join

'Walking Dead' star Emily Kinney joins 'Anhedonia' cast

Emily Kinney joins 'Anhedonia' Emily Kinney, perhaps best known for her role as Beth Greene on AMC’s The Walking Dead , is joining Anhedonia , the new indie feature from Cleveland’s Eric Swinderman and Carmen DeFranco. Kinney got her start on stage, with roles in Spring Awakening and August: Osage County , before transitioning to guest roles on television and a star turn as Emily on Showtime’s The Big C . Her breakout role would come as Beth Greene, Maggie Greene’s little sister, on The Walking Dead . Kinney became a fan favorite during a series of dramatic episodes in the series’ fourth season when Kinney’s Greene bonded with fellow survivor Daryl Dixon, played by Norman Reedus. Anhedonia co-stars Breckin Meyer and Giselle Eisenberg. "To have the opportunity to work with such an amazing actress like Emily is beyond exciting,” says Swinderman. “It's also very exciting for the city and people of northeast Ohio to have three huge TV stars coming to town to