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The making of oversized ‘Dune’ villain Harkonnen: no CGI, just a lot of prostheticsBryan Alexander | USA TODAYon October 29, 2021 at 2:00 pm

The prosthetics that actor Stellan Skarsgard wore to play the “Dune” villain Baron Vladimir Harkonnen weighed more than 80 pounds. | Warner Bros.

Often unclothed, the 600-pound bad guy is ‘more dangerous naked,’ says Stellan Skarsgard, the actor who plays him.

Swedish actor and “Mamma Mia” star Stellan Skarsgard wants to address the 600-pound villain in the “Dune.”

There were no computer-generated imagery enhancements for his complete transformation into the epically evil and extraordinarily large Baron Vladimir Harkonnen.

That’s all Skarsgard, 70, with intricate makeup and a full-body prosthetics suit creating the cruelly cunning Baron, who was built to the size described in Frank Herbert’s classic Dune” sci-fi novels.

The transformation was made all the more difficult with Skarsgard’s “monster” appearing in various stages of nakedness throughout “Dune,” including a stream bath.

“Harkonnen is more dangerous naked than in armor,” says Skarsgard “His evilness comes from the inside.”

Achieving the menacing look required a prolonged process. It took five make-up artists 6.5 hours to apply the foam body suit and full makeup to Skarsgard (and two hours to get it all off).

There were seven prosthetic pieces just for the actor’s face, and hand prosthetics over his knuckles alone weighed nearly 10 pounds. Skarsgard says the suit in total weighed close to 88 pounds.

“So I was not as heavy as I looked. But dragging around [88 pounds] and trying to act normal physically is pretty hard,” says Skarsgard, who relaxed during the marathon makeup sessions. “You set your mind to just accept it. Don’t panic and sit still, watch the experts paint every vein by hand. It’s quite fascinating.”

A required hidden cooling vest attached to a portable refrigerator system added to the burden whenever the actor wore the all-encompassing ensemble on set.

“Without it, you would have heat stroke in no time,” says Skarsgard. “So I had a big tube going [down my back] through which they were pumping cold water all the time. Not very dignified, but it helped me survive. Definitely. It looks just ridiculous, of course.”

But his Baron is far from ridiculous on screen, showing unfathomable cruelty as he and his family rule the mining planet Dune and then scheme to get it back from the House Atreides, led by Duke Leto Atreides (Oscar Isaac).

Skarsgard and director Denis Villeneuve wanted to bring a villain to the screen that audiences had not seen before, avoiding the blister-filled face Baron Harkonnen (Kenneth McMillan) featured in 1984’s “Dune” (“too distracting” says Skarsgard) and rebuffing suggestions such as adding armor to the all-powerful character.

During one of the most striking visual scenes, the wounded Harkonnen rises ominously from a healing mud bath, a vision that came from the depths of Villeneuve’s subconscious.

“I had a dream to have the Baron under the liquid and emerge like a hippopotamus,” Villeneuve says.

The stunning scene required “an engineering feat” to pull off, says Donald Mowat, the head of makeup and hair design.

“Submerging in that particular oil was problematic since it took the makeup off, and we discovered the suit was buoyant. We lost a full suit cutting holes in it to weigh him down,” says Mowat.

Nor was it fun submerging underneath the murky depths for Skarsgard.

“I don’t know what that goo was and was a little afraid to ask,” he says. “But it was some sort of sticky emulsion of water, slime, oil and black color.”

He’s in no rush to go through the transformation again to shoot the “Dune” sequel. Skarsgard jokingly made that clear to filmmakers at the Venice Film Festival premiere last month.

“I said, ‘Please put Harkonnen in the sequel just for a scene or two,’ ” Skarsgard recalls. “I don’t want him to be around too much.’ “

Read more at usatoday.com

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The making of oversized ‘Dune’ villain Harkonnen: no CGI, just a lot of prostheticsBryan Alexander | USA TODAYon October 29, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Blackhawks sexual-assault scandal: Our latest reporting and commentarySatchel Priceon October 29, 2021 at 2:45 pm

Stan Bowman is no longer the general manager of the Blackhawks. | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Major organizational changes are coming to the Hawks as part of the fallout from the team’s mishandling of 2010 sexual-assault allegations.

The Chicago Blackhawks will be searching for new leadership after the team parted ways with its top two hockey executives as part of the fallout from the scandal over the team’s handling of 2010 sexual assault allegations against former coach Bradley Aldrich.

Stan Bowman’s 12-year reign as the Blackhawks’ general manager and hockey operations president ended Tuesday. Technically, he resigned from his position. Bowman’s right hand man, Al MacIsaac, was also forced out.

Their departures headlined a major organizational overhaul after an independent investigation conducted by the Chicago law firm Jenner & Block, which said it interviewed 139 witnesses over the past four months.

Read our ongoing coverage of the allegations against Aldrich and the team’s handling of them below.

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Blackhawks sexual-assault scandal: Our latest reporting and commentarySatchel Priceon October 29, 2021 at 2:45 pm Read More »

Blackhawks formally request for Brad Aldrich’s name to be removed from Stanley CupSatchel Priceon October 29, 2021 at 2:44 pm

A close-up look at names etched on the Stanley Cup trophy. | Chicago Sun-Times

Hawks chairman Rocky Wirtz sent a letter Friday asking the Hockey Hall of Fame to consider “x-ing” out Aldrich’s name on the famous trophy.

Three days after the release of an independent investigation into the Blackhawks’ handling of 2010 sexual assault allegations against former coach Bradley Aldrich, the team sent a letter Friday to the Hockey Hall of Fame formally requesting the removal of Aldrich’s name from the Stanley Cup, ESPN reports.

“The names of some of hockey’s most talented athletes appear on the Stanley Cup. But so does the name ‘Brad Aldrich,’ whose role as video coach made him eligible for the engraving. His conduct disqualified him, however, and it was a mistake to submit his name,” team chairman Rocky Wirtz wrote in a letter to Lanny McDonald, the head of the Hockey Hall of Fame.

The request to “X out” Aldrich’s name on the Stanley Cup comes as the latest development in the aftermath of the investigative report unveiled by law firm Jenner & Block earlier this week, which led to top executives Stan Bowman and Al MacIsaac leaving the organization.

The Hawks’ head coach at the time, Joel Quenneville, was also implicated in the report and a subsequent interview given by former player Kyle Beach, who revealed himself as one of Aldrich’s victims. Quenneville resigned from his post as the Panthers’ head coach Thursday night.

There is precedent for the removal of a name from the Stanley Cup, which Wirtz pointed out in his letter to the Hall of Fame. In 1984, one of the Oilers owners at the time put the name of his father, Basil Pockington, on the Cup even though the man had no connections to the NHL team. After the league discovered this, it ordered the removal of the name, which is now covered by a series of “X” marks.

Wirtz requests the same treatment on the Cup for Aldrich: “I am humbly requesting that the Hockey Hall of Fame consider “x-ing” out his name on the Stanley Cup. While nothing can undo what he did, leaving his name on the most prestigious trophy in sports seems profoundly wrong.”

Read the full letter from Wirtz to the Hall of Fame below.

Here is a copy of the letter Rocky Wirtz sent to the Hall of Fame.

“Names have been engraved and then for years. Taking a stand on the unforgivable behavior of Aldrich should include erasing his name from the Cup.” pic.twitter.com/cpTtvaUmun

— Emily Kaplan (@emilymkaplan) October 29, 2021

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Blackhawks formally request for Brad Aldrich’s name to be removed from Stanley CupSatchel Priceon October 29, 2021 at 2:44 pm Read More »

Boy, 14, dies after being shot by man he allegedly tried to rob in Belmont HeightsDavid Struetton October 29, 2021 at 1:52 pm

Sun-Times file photo

Pablo Alvarez died Monday morning, two days after he was shot by a FOID card holder who opened fire when the teens grabbed his gaming console without paying, police said.

A 14-year-old died after he and another teen were shot by someone they allegedly tried to rob over the weekend in Belmont Heights on the Northwest Side.

Pablo Alvarez died Monday morning, two days after he was shot by a FOID card holder who opened fire when the teens grabbed his gaming console without paying, police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

The teens had arranged online to buy the man’s gaming console Saturday night in the 3600 block of North Octavia Avenue, police said.

When one of the teens grabbed the console and walked towards a parked vehicle without paying, the 29-year-old man opened fire, striking Alvarez in his head and the 19-year-old in his shoulder, police said.

Both teens were taken to Community First Hospital, where Alvarez was listed in critical condition and the 19-year-old in fair condition.

Police said charges were only filed against the older teen but did not immediately provide details.

It’s unclear if the 29-year-old had a concealed-carry license or opened fire from his home.

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Boy, 14, dies after being shot by man he allegedly tried to rob in Belmont HeightsDavid Struetton October 29, 2021 at 1:52 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls prove they miss two key players in loss to KnicksRyan Heckmanon October 29, 2021 at 1:29 pm

Thursday night, Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan and the 4-0 Chicago Bulls celebrated a special night as they hosted the New York Knicks. Former Bull and beloved fan favorite, Joakim Noah, was being honored as a Bulls ambassador in front of the home crowd. Many of Noah’s former teammates were in attendance as he received a […] Chicago Bulls prove they miss two key players in loss to Knicks – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Bulls prove they miss two key players in loss to KnicksRyan Heckmanon October 29, 2021 at 1:29 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs Rumors: A Javier Baez reunion is likelyJordan Campbellon October 29, 2021 at 1:00 pm

When the Chicago Cubs made the decision to trade the likes of Javier Baez, Kris Bryant, and Anthony Rizzo at the Major League Baseball trade deadline this past season, there was an idea at the time that the Cubs may look to bring back at least one of the three in the off-season as they […] Chicago Cubs Rumors: A Javier Baez reunion is likely – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Cubs Rumors: A Javier Baez reunion is likelyJordan Campbellon October 29, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

‘Later Days’: Likable grown-ups relive high school in a clever Chicago comedyRichard Roeperon October 29, 2021 at 11:48 am

Pam (Majandra Delfino) is less than thrilled by the 1980s-themed surprise party her husband, Mike (David Walton), puts on for her birthday in “Later Days.” | Creative Works Media

The funny actors, playing reunited classmates from the 80s, jell like the cast of a high-quality sitcom.

When we say a feature film reminds us of a sitcom, that’s not necessarily a good thing and is in fact often a slight, but in the case of the breezy, funny, clever and well-acted “Later Days,” it’s actually a compliment. Sure, I’d watch a weekly half-hour show about these relatively normal, likable and relatable characters, who have reached that age where they should have things figured out when it comes to family, love, career and friendships — but they’re still workin’ on it and probably always will be.

Directed, written by and produced by Brad Riddell and Sandy Sternshein, “Later Days” was shot entirely in and around Chicago and features a number of talented younger players leading the core ensemble cast, not to mention the always welcome presence of Second City veteran and longtime Chicago-area resident Tim Kazurinsky and Chicago native Lisa Zane in minor but hilarious supporting roles.

Real-life married couple David Walton (“About a Boy,” “New Girl”) and Majandra Delfino (“Roswell”) shine together as Mike and Pam, who have a sweet if slightly sarcastic rapport and long ago reached that point where they’re totally themselves in each other’s presence, for better or worse. (Mostly better.) Mike is a one-time pro pitching prospect who blew his arm out and is considering applying for the head baseball coaching gig at the local high school, while Pam is an overworked and so-far underpaid transactional attorney who has been tethered to her phone and working 24/7 on a big deal that could result in a major step toward financial security for the family.

On Pam’s birthday, all she wants is a nice dinner at a real restaurant followed by a little “sexy time” with her hubby before she gets some much-needed sleep — but Mike, in classic sitcom-hubby mode, completely misreads the situation, goes on Facebook and invites basically everyone from their high school days (including current friends and people they haven’t seen in 20 years) to join them for a surprise, 1980s prom-themed birthday party.

Cue the sounds of “Destination Unknown” by Missing Persons, “Dance Hall Days” by Wang Chung, “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears for Fears and “Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?” by Culture Club, and that’s quite the fantastic catalog for a lower-budget film. The music is put to great use as we’re plunged into the classic It All Happens In One Crazy Night tribute to the romantic comedies of the 1980s — only the characters are mostly about 40 but still getting mixed up in hijinks involving unrequited crushes from long ago; misunderstood motivations and intentions; the living-well-is-the-best-revenge story of a onetime bullied geek; ridiculous physical alterations, and even the toilet papering of a house that was the victim of serial TP’ers back in the day.

Through the night, we meet a variety of colorful and goofy but mostly endearing characters, played with sharp comedic timing by Chicago theater actors David Pasquesi, Audrey Francis, Robyn Coffin, Geno Walker and Cassidy Slaughter-Mason, among others. Mostly, though, this is about Mike and Pam, who have been through times good and not-so-good for years now, and will no doubt stay together and lean on each other forever, as the sounds of “Just Can’t Get Enough” play on the soundtrack of their lives.

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‘Later Days’: Likable grown-ups relive high school in a clever Chicago comedyRichard Roeperon October 29, 2021 at 11:48 am Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks: Joel Quenneville is out as Florida coachVincent Pariseon October 29, 2021 at 12:00 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks are in deep trouble now that there are public findings from the sexual assault allegations that they have been dealing with for a while now. We know that everything that has happened is incredibly disgusting and heads are rolling as a result. It started with Stan Bowman and Al MacIsaac being let […] Chicago Blackhawks: Joel Quenneville is out as Florida coach – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Blackhawks: Joel Quenneville is out as Florida coachVincent Pariseon October 29, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: 4 trade packages that could be pivotalTom Kavanaughon October 29, 2021 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Bears entered the season with an unclear direction. They drafted a rookie QB that foreshadowed a reset. But, were led by a regime that needed to win now and was tied to one of the oldest rosters in the NFL because of that regime. Through seven weeks, the Bears are status quo mediocre […] Chicago Bears: 4 trade packages that could be pivotal – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Bears: 4 trade packages that could be pivotalTom Kavanaughon October 29, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Jane Foley, famed conservator who restored German U-boat for Museum of Science and Industry, dead at 71Maureen O’Donnellon October 29, 2021 at 10:45 am

Conservator Jane Foley. | Robert Taylor photo/www.taylor-photo.co.uk

During a career she didn’t start till her 40s, she preserved relics and objets d’art all over the word, including some of the most beloved museum artifacts in Chicago.

When Jane Foley was beginning her career as a conservator of antiquities, she got assigned to spruce up the walls at Buckingham Palace.

She’d later tell the story of how she was up on a ladder one day, “looked down, and there was a nice old woman with a handbag looking up at me.”

It was Queen Elizabeth.

Her Majesty asked: “Are you cleaning the gilding?”

“Halfway up a ladder,” Ms. Foley told her family, “I attempted a curtsy and said, ‘Yes, ma’am, I am.’ “

Ms. Foley, 71, who lived in Evanston and Wales, died of pancreatic cancer Oct. 10 at her home near the Welsh town of Builth Wells.

She was a renowned conservator who was called upon to preserve relics and objets d’art around the world, including some of the most beloved artifacts at Chicago’s museums.

Among them: the German U-505 World War II submarine at the Museum of Science and Industry. Captured by American forces in 1944, it’s the only German submarine on U.S. soil.

JB Spector / Museum of Science and Industry (C)2019
Jane Foley cleaned instruments, floors and decks of the captured U-505 Nazi submarine at the Museum of Science and Industry and removed corrosion from its propellers. She was skilled at removing old coatings and at matching the color of vintage paints.

Her memories of chimney sweeps in her native England inspired her work on that, according to head curator Kathleen McCarthy. Ms. Foley modified chimney-sweep tools to clean the conning tower — the mini-tower in the middle of the sub, a space so cramped it can fit just than a ladder, a periscope tube, the top hatch and a seat the size of a bike saddle.

“She always came up with ingenious ways” to solve problems, McCarthy said.

Ms. Foley used to work on the sub after hours at the museum with fellow conservator Inez Litas, who was her wife and business partner.

“At night, it was very eerie to work there,” Litas said. “We’re thinking, ‘German soldiers walked here.’ ”

Ms. Foley also spent months cleaning and restoring Colleen Moore’s Fairy Castle, the Museum of Science and Industry’s miniature palace. She painstakingly brushed away decades of dust that had settled on its 1,500 tiny objects and 19 rooms.

“Jane treated each individual room — mother-of-pearl, terra cotta, gold, platinum, silver, diamond-encrusted pieces of furniture and lighting,” said Margaret Schlesinger, a former museum curator.

Museum of Science and Industry
Conservator Jane Foley cleaning and preserving a baby carriage from Colleen Moore’s Fairy Castle at the Museum of Science and Industry.

“She approached every project with the skills of a scientist, an investigator, a problem solver, a detective — with MacGyver thrown in,” Schlesinger said.

At Wheaton College, she helped restore the Perry Mastodon, carefully removing layers of old shellac on the bones of the fossil found in a Glen Ellyn garden in the 1960s, according to Anna Weiss-Pfau of Third Coast Conservation, who worked on the project.

Inez Litas
Jane Foley restoring the Perry Mastodon at Wheaton College.

Ms. Foley was called in to help the Field Museum when it had to tear out wool carpeting due to a moth infestation that could have threatened historic textiles and taxidermied animals, said JP Brown, interim head of conservation.

All was going well until people realized that a section of carpet remained under the 2,600-year-old Egyptian sarcophagus of Pefthaukhonsu, a five-feet-by-nine-feet, black-granite crypt that weighed more than three tons.

Ms. Foley studied a structural crack in the sarcophagus and worked with Methods & Materials, a rigging and installation company, to devise a way to lift it.

“It was nerve-wracking,” Brown said.

But it worked.

“She wasn’t afraid of anything,” her wife said.

Chicago History Museum curator Holly Lundberg described Ms. Foley’s attitude this way: “We can do it!”

“She was not afraid to get dirty, to get down underneath things,” said Roger Machin, director of Methods & Materials.

A month before she died, Ms. Foley completed a plan advising the Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University on how to preserve its statues and sculpture garden.

“In Chicago, everyone knew Jane,” said Kristina Bottomley, assistant director of collections and exhibition management at the Evanston museum.

Ms. Foley’s remarkable career was all the more so because it began only in midlife. A single mother, she’d held jobs in England running a nanny agency and an art gallery. But she wasn’t happy, according to her daughter Clare Foley Gilliland. The gallery struggled. Their home was repossessed.

“She could have hit the floor then and never picked herself up,” her daughter said, “but she turned her life around.”

At 43, Ms. Foley enrolled at City & Guilds of London Art School to study conservation.

“We were massively proud of her,” her daughter said.

“It took an enormous amount of bravery,” said her sister Fiona Croft.

“As soon as she had a career she enjoyed, she was happy,” her daughter said.

Before finishing college, “She’d never been beyond Europe,” Foley Gilliland said.

Then, as her reputation grew, she was called on to travel the world for her work. In Kuwait, she catalogued antiquities for the United Nations. In England, she worked on the restoration of the stage and decorations for Shakespeare’s Globe theater. She also preserved weaponry and armor at the Tower of London and gilding and paint at St. Paul’s Cathedral.

Inez Litas
Jane Foley working on “The Spirit of the Fighting Yank” sculpture in Chicago.

In Chicago, she worked on sculptures at the Museum of Contemporary Art, 19th century Japanese panels at the Art Institute and the Lorado Taft “Recording Angel” statue at the University of Chicago.

At the Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie, she helped maintain a German railroad boxcar like those used to transport millions of Jews to death camps during World War II.

She also worked on a rare urn and other objects at the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio in Oak Park.

Inez Litas
Jane Foley repairing totem poles at the Louis L. Valentine Boys & Girls Club, 3400 S. Emerald Ave.

Her wife said the Field Museum hired Ms. Foley to teach conservation techniques to Iraqi museum officials.

“Jane was very conscious and upset when sculptures, famous archaeological sites, etc. in the Middle East were destroyed by Isis,” she said.

Ms. Foley felt so strongly about this that, in 2019, despite an aversion to being onstage, she appeared in a performance piece about the destruction of antiquities — called “Atlas Unlimited (Acts V-VI)” — at the Logan Center gallery at the University of Chicago.

Her interest in preservation started early. Growing up near Warblington Castle in Hampshire, England, young Jane once found a couple of battered bronze lanterns on her family’s property.

“She renovated them beautifully, using all the right materials,” her sister said.

Twenty years ago, Ms. Foley was a conservator of stone, wall paintings and mosaics at the British Museum when it lent items to the Field Museum for a 2001 Cleopatra exhibition. She accompanied the treasures to the Field.

That’s where she met Litas, her future wife.

They went on to also work together at their companies Litas Liparini Restoration Studio of Evanston and Foley Conservation in Wales.

In addition to her wife, daughter and sister, Ms. Foley is survived by her brothers Patrick and Martin, step-siblings Sarah, Clare, Mandy and Joanna, stepchildren Christine and Alex and granddaughters Evie and Leia.

A funeral service is planned for 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at St Thomas a Becket Church in Hampshire.

From her gravesite, “You can see the house where she grew up, and you can see the window of her first bedroom,” her sister said.

She asked that her service feature the music of DeBussy’s Claire de Lune, the Mideast-inspired “Facing East” by Thievery Corporation and Moby’s “God Moving Over the Face of the Waters.”

Ms. Foley always cared about the planet, her daughter said, so she will be buried in an eco-friendly bamboo coffin. Tucked inside will be an antique, ivory-covered prayer book that her grandparents gave her, which she had beautifully conserved.

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Jane Foley, famed conservator who restored German U-boat for Museum of Science and Industry, dead at 71Maureen O’Donnellon October 29, 2021 at 10:45 am Read More »