#1 Fansite for Neal Bledsoe. Full Gallery & Downloadable Clips! Best know for his role as Daniel's long lost brother on "Ugly Betty", his stint as Miranda's Assistant on "Sex and the City 2" and then mostly for his infamous Chuck Bass kiss on "Gossip Girl". This site is made and maintained by a simple supporter and I hope this can be a place for all fans to enjoy. So look around, have fun, if you want to comment just use the form on our contact page! xo - Tonya
July 3, 2011     Under - Junction, Media Updates, Projects     0 Replies // Add Comment
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HomePublic Apperances2011“Junction” Wrap Party

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For the past month, Fort Lee has been the filming location for the upcoming thriller Junction, written and directed by Tony Glazer. Filming has been taking place on Jassamine Way and has been generating a lot of interest among locals. Patch spent one chilly night on the set and got an in-depth look at the daily process that takes the film from idea to completion.

The cast and crew of Junction is like one big, unusually functional family. Many of the cast and crew have known Glazer and his wife Summer Crockette Moore for years. A number of people are performing multiple functions for the film. Moore is  acting in the film, and she and Glazer manage one of the film’s production companies, Choice Films. The three production companies, Choice, Movie Ranch and Pâté Productions have all collaborated on a series of shorts before. Pat Patterson of Pâté Productions also has a part in the film.

The story follows four meth addicts who discover dark secrets about the homeowner of the house they are burglarizing. The Junction cast includes Anthony Rapp (Rent), David Zayas (Michael Clayton, “Dexter”), Michael O’Keefe (The Great Santini) and two time Emmy winner Tom Pelphrey (“Guiding Light”). Both Glazer and Moore said they felt lucky to have found such a wonderful cast. On the set for the big finale night were Zayas, who plays a lieutenant, O’Keefe as a police officer and Pelphrey, one of the meth addicts involved in a hostage situation.

The set was swarming with activity, and on such a cold night, everything was moving with purpose. Most of the film is shot inside one house, and next door the crew has their own house to eat, prep, get into costume and makeup and watch the filming live on large TV monitors.

The cast of Junction has had a lot of time to get to know each other and grow into the “family” they say they have become. In addition to the month of shooting, Glazer insisted on holding rehearsals for the film, something almost unheard of in the film industry. Moore said that when she first read her part it was difficult to imagine how she would be able to play a strung-out meth addict, but once she met up with the cast, it instantly began to fall into place. On the night we met, Moore was excited not be acting and to be free from her “meth face,” so she could show off her lovely smile and glycerin-free hair.

“It’s so much fun to come to work, ” Moore said. “There’s this warm, controlled energy that keeps us all on schedule, and it’s nice to be close to home.”

On the tour, Patch was taken through the amazing world of costumes and makeup, which have spilled over into the upper level of the prep house. The makeup is essential to the actor’s performance and to the reality of the film. Makeup artist Amy Forsythe was excited by the challenge of creating the look for the meth addicts. The looks grow increasingly more disheveled as the storyline moves forward and the action increases, so Forsythe is very careful to document all of her work and compare the photographs both during shooting and when she has actors in her chair. I watched her transform the handsome Tom Pelphrey’s face into a strung-out nightmare. Forsythe uses airbrushing, and a type of prosthetic glue to create darkening of the face and dried out lips. There’s also an ample amount of glycerin applied to the hair and face to replicate sweat. Amazingly she has the entire makeup process down to only twenty minutes per person. The airbrush is surprisingly comfortable, according to Pelphrey, but the dried out lips are much less so.

When asked how the makeup affects his ability to get into character, Pelphrey said, “The makeup is so great, I actually feel like I have to act up to the makeup.”

As actors are prepped in makeup, there are touch-ups being added to costumes several feet away and people bustling in and out grabbing hats and badges. Everyone on set is operating at full capacity as crews is move light fixtures, rearrange cameras and set up equipment. Except for a few actors waiting for their scene, no one is standing still.

Junction is the realization of a long process for Glazer.

“It’s been great. This is the end of a four-year process, and even your worst days coming in to film are still the best. It’s coming together even better than I could have expected,” Glazer said.

The production of ‘Junction’ will be wrapping up soon, and then the film is off to post-production and a series of film festivals in the autumn before being released in early 2012.

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November 16, 2010     Under - Junction     0 Replies // Add Comment

Camera’s will begin rolling on Wednesday, November 17 in Fort Lee, NJ as Tony Glazer’s Junction, gears up for a six week shoot, including large SWAT scene complete with helicopters and sirens, which is scheduled to shoot December 11 & 12.

Junction follows four strung-out meth-addicts who discover a dark secret about a homeowner during a burglary, pitting them not only against the police but against each other. And as they spiral out of control toward the explosive climax the lines blur between right and wrong until the final unexpected twist is revealed.

The Junction cast includes: David Zayas as Lt. Tarelli (SAG Award Winner, OZ), Michael O’Keefe as Walters (Academy Award Nominee Golden Globe Nominee), Anthony Rapp as Connor (Broadway’s “Rent”), Anthony Ruivivaar as Tai, Harris Doran as Spot, Tom Pelphrey as David (Two-time Emmy Award Winner for GUIDING LIGHT), Neal Bledsoe (GOSSIP GIRL; AS THE WORLD TURNS), Summer Crockett Mooore as Kari, Sharon Maguire as Jennifer, Makenzie Aladjem as Mia, Pat Patterson as Patrice (A Younger Man, The Night of the Iguana, The Job, Paramour), BRYAN DEEHRING as Bateman, Joanna Bayless as Mrs. Pendelson, Laurence Blum as Patrol Officer Laurant (ALL MY CHILDREN), Matthew Reines, Yvonne Jung as Reporter Sandra Wood.

Junction will mark Glazer’s debut as a feature-film director. Glazer previously directed a series of digital shorts as part of dual multi-media showcases, as well as a variety of theater productions in New York City and Los Angeles. Glazer recently directed “Better Living,” a stage-play produced by T. Schreiber Studio in NYC, which was nominated for 3 NYIT (New York Innovative Theater) Awards for Excellence. He is the author of the stage-plays “Stain,” “In the Daylight” (both of which had successful runs in New York); co-author of the stage-play “Safe” (along with Anthony Ruivivar) and author of two of the Top 25 short stories published in the Writer’s Digest’s 2006 Best Short Story Competition (selected out of more than 7,900 submissions). Glazer was recently awarded the prestigious L. Arnold Weissberger Award for playwriting for his play “The Substance of Bliss.” He also is in post-production on a short film he co-produced with Pâté Productions, Ltd and Movie Ranch Entertainment entitled A Younger Man and he will premiere three plays in New York in 2011, “The Homeless Dogs of Egypt,” “American Stare” and “The Substance of Bliss.”

Junction is being produced by Choice Films, Movie Ranch Entertainment and Pâté Productions, Ltd. Producers: Summer Crockett Moore, (Choice Films), Roy McDonald (Movie Ranch Entertainment), Pat Patterson (Pâté Productions, Ltd) with Associate Producers Pat McCorkle (McCorkle Casting Ltd.), Matthew “Matt DeMatt” Reines and Denise Tomasetti. Director of Photography / Cinematographer is Adrian Correia.