• Home
  • popular
  • EVENTS
  • submit-new-event
  • CHARITY GUIDE
  • Children
  • Education
  • Health
  • Veterans
  • Social Services
  • Arts + Culture
  • Animals
  • LGBTQ
  • New Charity
  • TRENDING NEWS
  • News
  • City Life
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Home + Design
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Restaurants + Bars
  • Arts
  • Society
  • Innovation
  • Fashion + Beauty
  • subscribe
  • about
  • series
  • Embracing Your Inner Cowboy
  • Green Living
  • Summer Fun
  • Real Estate Confidential
  • RX In the City
  • State of the Arts
  • Fall For Fashion
  • Cai's Odyssey
  • Comforts of Home
  • Good Eats
  • Holiday Gift Guide 2010
  • Holiday Gift Guide 2
  • Good Eats 2
  • HMNS Pirates
  • The Future of Houston
  • We Heart Hou 2
  • Music Inspires
  • True Grit
  • Hoops City
  • Green Living 2011
  • Cruizin for a Cure
  • Summer Fun 2011
  • Just Beat It
  • Real Estate 2011
  • Shelby on the Seine
  • Rx in the City 2011
  • Entrepreneur Video Series
  • Going Wild Zoo
  • State of the Arts 2011
  • Fall for Fashion 2011
  • Elaine Turner 2011
  • Comforts of Home 2011
  • King Tut
  • Chevy Girls
  • Good Eats 2011
  • Ready to Jingle
  • Houston at 175
  • The Love Month
  • Clifford on The Catwalk Htx
  • Let's Go Rodeo 2012
  • King's Harbor
  • FotoFest 2012
  • City Centre
  • Hidden Houston
  • Green Living 2012
  • Summer Fun 2012
  • Bookmark
  • 1987: The year that changed Houston
  • Best of Everything 2012
  • Real Estate 2012
  • Rx in the City 2012
  • Lost Pines Road Trip Houston
  • London Dreams
  • State of the Arts 2012
  • HTX Fall For Fashion 2012
  • HTX Good Eats 2012
  • HTX Contemporary Arts 2012
  • HCC 2012
  • Dine to Donate
  • Tasting Room
  • HTX Comforts of Home 2012
  • Charming Charlie
  • Asia Society
  • HTX Ready to Jingle 2012
  • HTX Mistletoe on the go
  • HTX Sun and Ski
  • HTX Cars in Lifestyle
  • HTX New Beginnings
  • HTX Wonderful Weddings
  • HTX Clifford on the Catwalk 2013
  • Zadok Sparkle into Spring
  • HTX Let's Go Rodeo 2013
  • HCC Passion for Fashion
  • BCAF 2013
  • HTX Best of 2013
  • HTX City Centre 2013
  • HTX Real Estate 2013
  • HTX France 2013
  • Driving in Style
  • HTX Island Time
  • HTX Super Season 2013
  • HTX Music Scene 2013
  • HTX Clifford on the Catwalk 2013 2
  • HTX Baker Institute
  • HTX Comforts of Home 2013
  • Mothers Day Gift Guide 2021 Houston
  • Staying Ahead of the Game
  • Wrangler Houston
  • First-time Homebuyers Guide Houston 2021
  • Visit Frisco Houston
  • promoted
  • eventdetail
  • Greystar Novel River Oaks
  • Thirdhome Go Houston
  • Dogfish Head Houston
  • LovBe Houston
  • Claire St Amant podcast Houston
  • The Listing Firm Houston
  • South Padre Houston
  • NextGen Real Estate Houston
  • Pioneer Houston
  • Collaborative for Children
  • Decorum
  • Bold Rock Cider
  • Nasher Houston
  • Houston Tastemaker Awards 2021
  • CityNorth
  • Urban Office
  • Villa Cotton
  • Luck Springs Houston
  • EightyTwo
  • Rectanglo.com
  • Silver Eagle Karbach
  • Mirador Group
  • Nirmanz
  • Bandera Houston
  • Milan Laser
  • Lafayette Travel
  • Highland Park Village Houston
  • Proximo Spirits
  • Douglas Elliman Harris Benson
  • Original ChopShop
  • Bordeaux Houston
  • Strike Marketing
  • Rice Village Gift Guide 2021
  • Downtown District
  • Broadstone Memorial Park
  • Gift Guide
  • Music Lane
  • Blue Circle Foods
  • Houston Tastemaker Awards 2022
  • True Rest
  • Lone Star Sports
  • Silver Eagle Hard Soda
  • Modelo recipes
  • Modelo Fighting Spirit
  • Athletic Brewing
  • Rodeo Houston
  • Silver Eagle Bud Light Next
  • Waco CVB
  • EnerGenie
  • HLSR Wine Committee
  • All Hands
  • El Paso
  • Avenida Houston
  • Visit Lubbock Houston
  • JW Marriott San Antonio
  • Silver Eagle Tupps
  • Space Center Houston
  • Central Market Houston
  • Boulevard Realty
  • Travel Texas Houston
  • Alliantgroup
  • Golf Live
  • DC Partners
  • Under the Influencer
  • Blossom Hotel
  • San Marcos Houston
  • Photo Essay: Holiday Gift Guide 2009
  • We Heart Hou
  • Walker House
  • HTX Good Eats 2013
  • HTX Ready to Jingle 2013
  • HTX Culture Motive
  • HTX Auto Awards
  • HTX Ski Magic
  • HTX Wonderful Weddings 2014
  • HTX Texas Traveler
  • HTX Cifford on the Catwalk 2014
  • HTX United Way 2014
  • HTX Up to Speed
  • HTX Rodeo 2014
  • HTX City Centre 2014
  • HTX Dos Equis
  • HTX Tastemakers 2014
  • HTX Reliant
  • HTX Houston Symphony
  • HTX Trailblazers
  • HTX_RealEstateConfidential_2014
  • HTX_IW_Marks_FashionSeries
  • HTX_Green_Street
  • Dating 101
  • HTX_Clifford_on_the_Catwalk_2014
  • FIVE CultureMap 5th Birthday Bash
  • HTX Clifford on the Catwalk 2014 TEST
  • HTX Texans
  • Bergner and Johnson
  • HTX Good Eats 2014
  • United Way 2014-15_Single Promoted Articles
  • Holiday Pop Up Shop Houston
  • Where to Eat Houston
  • Copious Row Single Promoted Articles
  • HTX Ready to Jingle 2014
  • htx woodford reserve manhattans
  • Zadok Swiss Watches
  • HTX Wonderful Weddings 2015
  • HTX Charity Challenge 2015
  • United Way Helpline Promoted Article
  • Boulevard Realty
  • Fusion Academy Promoted Article
  • Clifford on the Catwalk Fall 2015
  • United Way Book Power Promoted Article
  • Jameson HTX
  • Primavera 2015
  • Promenade Place
  • Hotel Galvez
  • Tremont House
  • HTX Tastemakers 2015
  • HTX Digital Graffiti/Alys Beach
  • MD Anderson Breast Cancer Promoted Article
  • HTX RealEstateConfidential 2015
  • HTX Vargos on the Lake
  • Omni Hotel HTX
  • Undies for Everyone
  • Reliant Bright Ideas Houston
  • 2015 Houston Stylemaker
  • HTX Renewable You
  • Urban Flats Builder
  • Urban Flats Builder
  • HTX New York Fashion Week spring 2016
  • Kyrie Massage
  • Red Bull Flying Bach
  • Hotze Health and Wellness
  • ReadFest 2015
  • Alzheimer's Promoted Article
  • Formula 1 Giveaway
  • Professional Skin Treatments by NuMe Express

    Appointment TV

    Carrie Underwood is no Julie Andrews — and that's a good thing: Secrets of the new Sound of Music

    Joseph V. Amodio
    Dec 4, 2013 | 4:07 pm

    NEW YORK — Warning: The first words you’ll hear Carrie Underwood sing in NBC’s live production of The Sound of MusicThursday night may not be familiar. Which may be a good thing, because there’s a horde of cranky beasts out there who’ve been flooding the Internet with nasty remarks ever since the casting was announced.

    Yes, we know — Underwood may be an American Idol darling but she’s no Julie Andrews. Got it, thanks for the tip. Now, at least, the ad hoc critics will have to sit quietly and listen — for a few seconds anyway — before they start tweeting again.

    "I’ve always been up for a challenge,” says Underwood, who’s never performed in a musical. Not even in high school, back in Checotah, Oklahoma.

    If you’re a fan of The Sound of Music — the stage show (which first hit Broadway in 1959 starring Mary Martin) — as opposed to the beloved 1965 film version (starring a legendary you-know-who), then the opening lyrics sung in the NBC version will come as no surprise. They were cut from the film, where the opening bars are instrumental, likely because the lyrics mention it’s evening and 20th Century Fox had paid for all that glorious footage of the Alps . . . in daylight.

    This is just one of many surprises in store from this hotly anticipated version of the Rodgers & Hammerstein classic, which stars Underwood as the effervescent nun-in-training, Maria, True Blood’s Stephen Moyer as Captain Von Trapp, plus Broadway’s Audra McDonald (Mother Abbess), Laura Benanti (Elsa), Smash’s Christian Borle (Max), seven adorable kids, plus assorted nuns and Nazis.

    “We’d never want to remake the movie,” says producer Neil Meron. “The movie’s perfect.”

    What they have instead is a TV event the likes of which audiences haven’t seen in 50 years. And they’re hoping it may change the look of television.

    Let's Start At The Very Beginning....

    Back in the 1950s, live variety shows (like Sid Caesar’s Your Show of Shows) and dramas were standard fare. Musicals, too. Mary Martin performed a modified version of Peter Pan live for NBC in 1955, and again a year later. Then came Cinderella, the 1957 Rodgers & Hammerstein musical written for TV, starring a perky British up-and-comer named Julie Andrews.

    But with the advent of videotape, shows could be recorded, and the look of television changed.

    Today, so-called reality TV festers on most channels but Meron and his producing partner Craig Zadan feel we are wearying of it, and another change is in store. “Viewers are ready for something new,” he says.

    They hope to bring back “appointment television,” that nearly extinct tradition of a nation rushing home to catch a special show, enjoying a shared cultural moment, then jabbering about it the next day with friends. Thanks to DVRs, it rarely happens anymore. Except for news and sporting events, primarily — which are live.

    NBC has a lot riding on this one. The production boasts two directors (Broadway vet Rob Ashford, who worked with the cast on character, and Beth McCarthy-Miller, who has helmed live shows like Saturday Night Live) — six lavish sets (Alps, abbey, and so on, constructed in a row, extending about a half mile inside a hangar-like building in Bethpage, Long Island) — and 12 cameras (six to shoot a scene, as another six maneuver into position to shoot the next scene, a leapfrogging dance requiring rehearsal just like the actors).

    Plus one popular if inexperienced star.

    How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?

    "I’ve always been up for a challenge,” says Underwood, who’s never performed in a musical. Not even in high school, back in Checotah, Oklahoma.

    "My school was so small, we didn’t really have drama or things like that,” she says.

    Still, the magic of this particular show is not lost on her.

    “Whenever it came on TV, my mom and I would pop popcorn, curl up in bed and watch it together,” she recalls. “That was our thing.”

    Moyer, who grew up in England, has similar memories.“I remember watching with my sister, on cold winter days,” he says.

    It turns out he sang early in his career (before his success in fangs), and connects with the show’s title. “It’s not some glib four words — the show is about the SOUND of music, how it can unlock people, change lives.”

    The very fact the Twitterverse came alive after Underwood’s casting indicates how much fans relate to this tale.

    “Maria is awakening to love and the person she’s meant to be, the Captain’s awakening to music and reconnecting with his children — it’s about people coming into their own, and I think audiences are always moved by stories like that,” says Benanti, who played Maria in the 1990s Broadway revival. “Plus there’s amazing music, adorable kids, and this political backdrop of one of the greatest atrocities in human history — it sort of has everything.”

    Climb Ev'ry Mountain

    So, OK, clearly that’s why Meron and Zadan picked this property for their TV experiment. But pulling it off live is risky.

    "We’ve timed everything — costume and set changes — around commercials,” says music director David Chase. “They did it in much the same way back in the ‘50s.”

    With one exception — the orchestra played live. Here, it’ll be pre-recorded. To hedge their bets, a pianist will play along for the entire show, so if the unthinkable happens and the orchestral track cuts out, the music will go on.

    Even if all goes smoothly, the differences between the stage version and the film will keep audiences guessing. Like with these songs:

    * “The Sound of Music”—Underwood will sing the opening verse.
    * “I Have Confidence” — sorry, folks, it’s cut — it was written for the movie.
    * “My Favorite Things” is not sung by Maria and the children, but Maria and the Mother Abbess. (“It enhances the relationship between those two characters,” Chase explains.)
    * “The Lonely Goatherd" is sung by Maria to the kids in her bedroom, in place of “My Favorite Things.”
    * “Something Good”— which they’re keeping, even though it, too, was written for the movie. “So many people love it, and the first time we went through the music it was clear Carrie so completely connects with it,” says Chase.

    There are also two additional songs from the stage production sung by Elsa and Max, which flesh out the political subplot of the Anschluss — when Germany annexed Austria in 1938. “I’m sure people will say, ‘That’s not what they did in the movie,’ ” says Chase. “Hopefully they’ll say, ‘That not what they did — but that’s cool.’ ”

    Carrie Underwood stars as Maria in NBC's The Sound of Music.

    The Sound of Music starring Carrie Underwood
      
    NBC.com
    Carrie Underwood stars as Maria in NBC's The Sound of Music.
    unspecified
    news/entertainment
    series/htx-ready-to-jingle-2013

    most read posts

    Meet the Houston siblings bringing old school Tex-Mex to the Hill Country

    9 new bars shaking up Houston with cocktails, live music, and more

    Raise a glass to these 8 can't-miss Houston food and wine events

    Movie Review

    Ben Affleck cooks the books in chaotic sequel The Accountant 2

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 24, 2025 | 2:30 pm
    Jon Bernthal and Ben Affleck in The Accountant 2
    Photo by Warrick Page/Prime
    Jon Bernthal and Ben Affleck in The Accountant 2.

    In this Hollywood era of franchises, finding one to call their own is a priority for many movie stars. Over 30 years into his career, Ben Affleck had yet to find one; he did star as Batman in multiple movies, but that role has been interchangeable. He seemed to get a prime action hero role with 2016’s The Accountant, but somehow it’s taken nine years for The Accountant 2 to come out.

    Affleck’s character of Christian Wolff is a high-functioning autistic man whose abilities to comb through mounds of data quickly and efficiently are matched only by his fighting skills. When Ray King (J.K. Simmons), a former Treasury agent who had previously hunted Christian, is murdered, King’s replacement, Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson), calls on Christian to help figure out what happened and track down his killer.

    The search quickly finds multiple criminal conspiracies, including a hitman ring, a scheme to abduct migrants, and more. Naturally, Wolff claims to need help in the endeavor, so his mercenary brother Braxton (Jon Bernthal) soon joins in on the quest. The two brothers work together to figure out the puzzle while also stopping to have some fun every now and then.

    Directed by Gavin O’Connor and written by Bill Dubuque (both returning from the original), the film feels like it is missing many connective scenes. It often starts down one road and seems to be making good progress when it suddenly veers into another storytelling lane with no explanation. This happens multiple times throughout the film, to the point that it becomes almost impossible to tell what the main story is supposed to be.

    In the first film, the oddity of having an autistic math genius also being a world-class marksman and fighter somehow made sense. This film leans much more into Christian’s physical skills, with the autistic side of things showing up in his (mostly) emotionless demeanor. While that works to a certain degree, the choppiness of the story undercuts the character traits that Affleck does his best to impart.

    The best examples of the messiness of the film come in the multiple scenes that serve as nothing more than comic relief, with not even an attempt at connecting them to the main plot, such as it is. Two of them involve Christian proving himself to be a ladies man despite his lack of conversational skills, both of which fall flat as they seem to be making fun of his autism rather than highlighting positive aspects of it. Each of the comic scenes is so disparate in tone from the rest of the film that they essentially bring the story to a screeching halt.

    Affleck is fine in the part, although he’s much better when Christian turns toward action hero mode than when he has to display the character’s autistic traits. Bernthal is great at being an over-the-top macho guy, and he gets to indulge that side of him throughout the film. Addai-Robinson is disserved by a role that doesn’t give her character any autonomy despite her high-powered position.

    Affleck’s career has been one of the most up-and-down ones of any supposed A-list actor, and The Accountant 2 marks another down moment for him. He may have finally gotten his first sequel for a film in which he’s the main character, but don’t expect there to be a third installment.

    ---

    The Accountant 2 opens in theaters on April 25.

    moviesfilm
    news/entertainment
    series/htx-ready-to-jingle-2013

    most read posts

    Meet the Houston siblings bringing old school Tex-Mex to the Hill Country

    9 new bars shaking up Houston with cocktails, live music, and more

    Raise a glass to these 8 can't-miss Houston food and wine events

    Loading...