Monday, September 09, 2013

Production Begins - Serial Daters Anonymous

                      Serial Daters Anonymous 

                                                         



Scottish actress Louise Linton and Milwaukee's own Sam Page have been cast in theromantic comedy, “Serial Daters Anonymous” filming in Milwaukee this month. 

Upon discovering her fiancé cheated, a witty, driven fashion columnist (Linton), jilts her husband-to-be at the alter and goes on a retaliatory dating streak to avenge the city’s women and give men their comeuppance! But when she runs into her first love (Page), will he ignite the fire or put out the flames?

The film is tipped to be an All American Romantic Comedy in the ilk of “Runaway Bride”, meets “Bridget Jones Diary”.

Linton, has just completed the lead role in the psychological thriller ‘Intruder’. Her other credits include, ‘CSI: NY’, ‘Cold Case’, ‘Lions for Lambs’, ‘Scavengers’, ‘The Echo’ and ‘William & Kate.’ 

Sam Page is completing filming on Season II of ‘House of Cards’ opposite Kevin Spacey. He is known for his roles on ‘Scandal’, ‘Gossip Girl’, ‘Mad Men’, ‘The Client List’, ‘Desperate Housewives’, ‘Shark’, and ‘CSI: NY’. 

The pic was penned by local filmmaker, Christopher Carson Emmons who is set to direct. The film also stars reality TV star Scotty Dickert (All Signs of Death - Alan Ball - HBO), Kristin Anderson (Winner Best Actress 2012 Naperville Film Festival), Sean Foran (member of local Milwaukee band Kiings), Milwaukee actor Matthew Nichols and much more local talent. Justin Lothrop, Drew Britton, and Sam Kozel are producing. 

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Updates - Financing - Progress

Well, the summer continues to bring a lot of exciting activity whether it be auditions, current film projects or the ongoing process to raise money for film financing.

Auditioning and commercial work is a strange beast in-and-of itself.  Just when you're asking yourself if there is any work out there, or if you're ever going to get called...ring, ring...and you are presented with two or three auditions right in a row.  You have to be grateful for those calls when they do come and make the most of those auditions.

I thought it would be fun to make my phone calls from agencies more entertaining, so I changed my ringer to the sound of the old-fashioned, casino change that used to fall from slot machines.  Since one of my favorite pastimes is to play slot machines...I thought the sound of the ring from the agencies would tell me that 'money was coming', or at least I hoped it would lead to money eventually.  Now I get really excited every time I hear that ching, ching, ching.  Pretty cool.

I was also fortunate to have my Actor's Demo Reel put together by a very talented film editor, Lupe Valdez of Anteros Entertainment.  (http://anterosentertainment.com)  Lupe makes his home in the popular film market of Austin, Texas and has done incredible work with a variety of actors and film projects.  I couldn't be more grateful for his help and professionalism.  The links to the reel are below.


http://www.imdb.com  - Matthew Nichols     or     https://www.facebook.com/mnicholswi


I'm currently finishing up some university, student thesis film projects for the summer as well.  The unfortunate struggle for the students is getting everyone to be in the same place at the same time to keep shoots consistent.  I'm working with a wonderful young, female writer/director Jessica Usagi Knap who is very good at what she does and is incredibly organized and professional.  I felt bad however, when she had to reshoot several scenes, because my son who is in the film with me, broke his arm skateboarding.  That led to continuity issues and his 'green' cast had to be reincorporated into the film.  All is well though and we have a few more days of shooting.  It's been a great crew and cast (no pun intended), to work with.

I'm also looking very forward to the filming of Serial Daters Anonymous which is scheduled to begin shooting in Milwaukee, July 8th - July 28th.  Louise Linton is an L.A. actress who will be playing the lead role, along with another L.A. actor, originally from Milwaukee.  His name cannot be mentioned yet, due to finalizing contract discussions.  I'm fortunate in that I will have the opportunity to have a few scenes with Louise Linton and it will bring some great experience to my acting and future opportunities.  The film is written and directed by Milwaukee's Christopher Carson Emmons, a very talented young director in the area.  He is very excited to start production as well.

My experience with acquiring film financing has been an incredible journey thus far.  I have met with a great variety and number of investors to secure financing for the film we are working on.  You get the opportunity to meet with some very interesting people along the way.  Most of whom are extremely pleasant and easy to talk to.  At times there have been some individuals who can be short with you or appear too busy, but when you are polite, patient and understanding of what they have going on, they are equally as willing to sit down to listen and share information.  You also find that while many people have the assets to invest, putting money toward an independent film usually doesn't fall in line with their usual investment practices.  It comes down to security and longevity for most of their desired investments and taking the leap to something exciting, but less tangible as producing a film, is a lot harder for them to wrap their minds around.  I must say however, that every single person who passed on the film investment, was no less than grateful for being considered and polite to the last in their wishes and hope for success.  No matter how you choose to handle the rejection, you have to walk away feeling good that you had the opportunity to meet some great people and open their eyes to some unique, and incredibly creative ideas and possibilities.  I can't wait to say, "In your face!", when the film/s become a huge success too.  I'm...just...kidding!  What would be great is if after the film/s are successful, that I would meet up with one or more of these investors someday and they say, "Hey, congratulations on the success of your film.  I'm really happy for you."  That would be a really nice thing to have happen.

More exciting things are on their way.  Stay tuned...and thank you for reading.

Best Wishes

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Summer Projects



















Summer Projects

It's interesting how far in advance and detailed the planning is when it comes to making and producing a film.  I am fortunate to be a part of a great project being filmed in Milwaukee, Wisconsin this summer entitled 'Serial Daters Anonymous', which is already in its pre-production stages.  It features Louise Linton, a very successful and upcoming actress/model from Los Angeles (imdb.com).

Serial Daters Anonymous was written by the very talented, young director Christopher Carson Emmons, who just completed the short film Prone.  Prone is a relationship, driven drama following the unique lives of two individuals, and is a prequel to Serial Daters Anonymous.

Serial Daters Anonymous is about a young woman who, after discovering her fiancé cheated, goes on an introspective, dating quest to discover why men aren’t worthy of a relationship.  On her wedding day, in front of all her guests and family, Claire finds out that her fiancé Jared slept with her younger sister Grace.  She storms out of her wedding, getting drunk at a bar later that night by herself.  Claire decides to move in with her best friend Michelle and comes up with an idea for a new blog.  Each time she goes on a date with a new guy, she goes home right after and writes about all the reasons a relationship with them would fail, whether eventually or right away.  Soon, her blog catches on, but it causes problems in her personal and professional life. Michelle can no longer stand living with her, and Claire inevitably gets fired from her job for blogging about a co-worker.  Claire is forced to move to her parents’ house, where she starts to reflect on her past life.  An old flame of Claire’s sees her blog and reconnects with her, challenging all of the pessimistic views she’s newly adopted about relationships.  Her past and present choices come back to haunt her, forcing her to confront all of her decisions and decide what she really feels about love.

Principle photography will begin in early July of 2013.  Pre-production continues with review of recent auditions for remaining roles, scouting locations, and budgeting duties.  The film will be shot in and around the Milwaukee area showcasing a variety of restaurants, bars and familiar establishments.

Stay tuned for more details!

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Let the Chase Begin

Let the Chase Begin

I figured it was a good catch phrase for the next step in this process of filmmaking.  Chasing the elusive dollar that is needed to produce and make a film.  To this point I have been in front of the camera - acting, and in front of a computer - writing screenplays.  Now I am taking on a new role, that of a producer/executive producer and helping to raise funds for a film.

I won't get into the politics of crowd funding versus investment financing to raise money for films, because the advocates for both are passionate and often cut-throat about their positions.  More important is my desire to create something unique, something incredible and visually beautiful that audiences will find themselves engrossed in, and forget about life for a while.  But to make that happen (usually), you need money.  

Terry Green, a very successful filmmaker from the mid-west taught me, that one thing you absolutely want to learn about film - is finance.  To know how to raise money and to understand the financial side of the business.  It is so crucial to a good production and I am becoming more and more aware of that importance every day.  For the record, I am a big advocate of Robert Rodriguez who essentially says, "Get a camera and make a movie.  Just get out there and 'make' a movie".  There is so much to be said for that view of filmmaking as well, because it gives so much encouragement to those who believe in being creative and simply telling a story.  'Everyone' has to start somewhere.

With that said, knowing the finite intricacies of finance can get you a long way too.  I am finding this out firsthand as I am on the road raising investor funds for two films to be produced in July and August of 2013 (Serial Daters Anonymous/Hash Browns)  My young and growing production company Polarity Media Productions, LLC is learning just how challenging the business and process of film production can be.  I am currently in talks, meetings, letter writing and networking to secure the funds to produce these two films.  It is challenging, but educational and eye-opening.  It's about meeting great people, seeing if where they are financially is in line with the creativity and need that I have with the projects I am selling.  It's getting people to believe in you (me) and what it is we are trying to bring to life.

Sales are tough to begin with and you have to walk away from "no" with the same confidence as you first walked into the meeting with.  It builds character and builds confidence.  One of the greatest satisfactions are when someone does say "yes", and you get that feeling of euphoria that something wonderful has happened and that 'someone' shares your passion for the project.

It's very exciting and simply adds to the enthusiasm of taking a thought that you or someone else had (a story), putting it on paper (screenplay), and bringing it to life through the camera and sound (film/movie) - to give viewers and audiences something to feel on a personal level.  Pretty cool!

The chase has begun...and I am extremely excited to see these projects to fruition...and help create something incredible.  Stay tuned...  

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Updates - March 2013

2013 has been as exciting a year as ever so far.  Many, many wonderful things happening and going on.  I would like to give you some updates of what has transpired from January - March thus far.

Please know that anything I chose to share with you is for 'informational' purposes and not for 'bragging' purposes.  I'm proud of the things I have accomplished, but am equally aware of the ups and downs my career field can have, so I am keenly aware of the humility it can bring in an instant.  My parents were great examples of many things, one of which was humility and keeping things in perspective.  You obviously were interested or curious enough to stop by to see what was happening with me, so please know that from the start.

January started off with a burst of excitement and crashed in three weeks of very severe depression.  I had completed a new version of the working title, film Bipolar and had shared it with several industry professionals, including directors, producers and actors/actresses.  It was well received by several, but completely torn apart and criticized by another industry professional.  It was someone (to remain nameless), who has been very successful and involved in million dollar projects, and a person who I really looked up to.  Again, the film, television and print business is layered with rejection of all kinds, but to have something you have worked on (screenplay/project) for twelve years and have it so harshly criticized was overwhelming.  Having taught for 18 years I knew the balance that was needed with students if they were struggling with something, and still offer positives to encourage learning and growth in them.  My experience with this industry professional was wrought with negatives, and positive encouragement was nowhere to be heard.  Regrettably I didn't take it well and shut down emotionally.  The project is very personal to me and I felt it was no longer worthy or had value to anyone.  So I 'shelved it', or gave up on it for a lack of better words.  For the following three weeks I was extremely depressed and humiliated, and had given up on the project for good.  I questioned many things about my career choice and wondered if I would ever have the desire to follow through on so many years of tenacious writing and passion for making movies, both writing and acting.

In addition to that situation, I had dove head first into another life, long dream to pursue my passion for art and owning my own business.  Just eight months earlier I had been an elementary teacher for eighteen years and I decided to 'retire'.  I was burned out, stressed and wasn't having fun anymore.  I didn't want to look back retiring at age fifty-seven, and say, "I wish I would have..?"  So...I rented a space for my production office and decided to use the store space to open a gallery!  The second I signed the lease, there was no turning back and the Polarity Gallery was on it's way to fruition.  My hope was to finally show the art I had been working on for years, give friends and other artists the chance to showcase their incredible work, and pursue my film production dreams as well.  The distraction of painting walls, getting lighting put in and getting the space ready for a gallery opening in two months, became therapeutic for the depression I was experiencing from the recent film project I was so discouraged about.  With the help of my son, and friends Johnny Lechner and Mike Peterson (many thanks to them), progress was moving.

As we all know, to achieve something great, the risks are going to be high.  I'm a big believer in the power of intention and visualizing what you want, and what you need to accomplish.  I needed to do that with this venture.  Each day I had a very specific set of goals and things to accomplish, but how I was going to get it all done and ready in two months I didn't know.  I just kept believing it would get done and trusted in the process.  It worked.  March 2, 2013, I opened the doors to Polarity Gallery, showing five different artists for Waukesha, Wisconsin's first Art Crawl of the year.  

Allowing myself to focus on the gallery, the discouragement and disappointment of January began to fade away.  Fortunately at the same time, my acting and modeling continued to give me opportunities and I was able to keep busy there as well.  I had opportunities in three independent films, several web commercials, an industrial video and a radio commercial, all of which gave me a lot of needed encouragement.  My inspiration to write again was also coming back and the creative juices began flowing.

I can't speak for everyone, but at one time or another I think we have all experienced certain places or events that would cause us to say, "Hey, that would make a good movie!"  I had two ideas that had been put in my 'mind's idea file' for quite some time.  When I was first shown the space for the gallery in December of 2012, a walk down into the historic basement was all I needed to inspire an old story back to life.  Eight years earlier I had lived in a high rise apartment building in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin when my son was just four.  The basement where we did laundry was creepy and I knew there was a good story to be created behind it.  I made notes and locked them away in my mind for many years.  When I stepped into the dark, cool, damp, historic brick basement in Waukesha I knew I had a perfect location for the psychological thriller I had been wanting to write for ten years.  It was now February and I sat down to the computer with Final Draft, (screenwriting program) and the working title of Lowrise was created.  It felt perfect and the words and ideas flooded the pages.  By the end of February I had a first draft and my inspiration was back.

My second idea came from a job eleven years ago in the small town of Shelton, Washington when I was working for a company that set up glow-in-the-dark driving ranges for casinos.  I frequented a small family restaurant every morning, meeting kind hearted, genuine people who were simple and appreciated a simple life.  It inspired the story about a lonely man who would become the main character for a heartwarming drama in a small town.  Just a block away from the gallery in Waukesha is a small restaurant called Dave's Restaurant, and the idea for the film 'exploded' back into my head.  I originally had the idea to call it Toast and then a wonderful suggestion from my son created the working title Hash Browns.  Two stories were brought to life or back to life I should say.  The disappointment of January was behind me now and I was (am) inspired to do great things with these stories.

Making a film takes an incredible amount of patience, persistence and a tenacious desire to succeed.  It means finding the people who share your passion and who are encouraged to take a seed of an idea, and bring it to life through the incredibly creative process of filmmaking.  Then there is the idea of money.  Like anything, money drives the project and finding it to make your film is an incredible challenge, but not impossible.  Some favor the road of low budget, run-and-gun filming working simply for food.  Then there are those who support the crowd funding idea to use the internet to garnish support for their project, usually on a smaller scale.  Then there are the advocates for investor capital and reaching financial goals on sub-Hollywood or Hollywood level budgets, most often in the millions.

I have learned that all of those have their place.  I believe that if you love to create things and you love to make movies that you should do whatever you can to bring those stories to life.  You keep trying and trying and trying until things work out.  I'm a 'huge' fan and advocate of film pioneer, Robert Rodriguez who made his first film El Mariachi for $7,000 and launched his film career as a result.  Morgan Freeman is another person who inspires me.  He spent many long years working his way up in the film and television industry and finally received some of his biggest roles after age 50.   Their passion and desire to succeed has inspired me beyond words.

So that brings me back to the present.  Since January I have connected and reconnected with some incredible people in the film industry and the quest to make these films is on!  Investment financing will be my greatest challenge, but a welcomed one.  People are always going to tell you how hard things are and how difficult it is to do this or do that, and you cannot let it discourage you.  Persistence will pay off and what a great feeling it will be to know that I never gave up and believed in the successes.  As I said earlier with the opening of the gallery and now with the movies - I just have to keep believing it 'will' happen and trust in the process.

Until next time...

Tuesday, February 05, 2013

A Tale of Two Movies

A Tale of Two Movies

Well, it's hard to believe it is already February. Time flies when you're having fun, right?!  January saw my original screenplay of Bipolar get before the eyes of two film industry professionals who gave honest and constructive feedback.  The final determination is that it needed some rewrites and revision, so back to the drawing board I went.
I am currently in those revisions and really like what it is becoming.

Whenever you have a project of your own, you are always bias as to the quality and promise for your screenplay and film, but you have to be open to the reality that others may not share your same thoughts and opinions...and that's okay.  I think it is very important to 'agree to disagree'.

The film industry, business is highly layered in rejection and the competition is fierce in all aspects.  Nonetheless, another reality is that the film industry is also one which is very subjective, which in turn brings back the optimism that one person's likes or dislikes of a film, project or screenplay, doesn't necessarily reflect on everyone else's opinion of that same project.  You have to stay positive, stay focused and believe that what you are doing is going to appeal to many and will be successful.

I was a little saddened at first when I saw Silver Linings Playbook in theaters.  It was based upon an individual with Bipolar Disorder and how his life and those around him, was affected by the illness.  In essence, it was the storyline I have been trying to write and make into a film for the last twelve years.  My first draft of my screenplay entitled Bipolar, was first written back in 2002 and has seen many revisions in those years.  I had always hoped to be the first to bring that kind of story to a larger audience, in a theatrical release.  With that said, I was absolutely blown away at the quality of the story and the performances of the actors as they did an incredible job to show the illness in an enlightening and entertaining fashion.

Which brings me back to my own screenplay, Bipolar and its future.  I have every intention of finishing the screenplay revision and bringing a 'different', but enlightening story to the big screen as well.  There is always a story to tell and if you look at the history of movies, there are always new ways to tell a story and make it unique.  So stay tuned...it's coming!

That brings me to my second project in the tale of two movies.  I am currently working on a second project that is very different than the drama of Bipolar.  It is a suspense, thriller that I am very excited about.  I am in the final stages of the screenplay and early preproduction.  Less is more right now, so I will keep you up to date as things progress.

Financing will continue for both films and will be ongoing.  Financing in and of itself, is a long and arduous process, but done the right way has long standing benefits for a film project.  Seeking investors is always a challenge, but there are people out there who are looking to be a part of something creative and it is possible.

In the meantime, my independent film and commercial acting continues and each new day is a new adventure.  I've always liked the quote from Tom Hanks in the movie Castaway, "Tomorrow the sun will rise, and who knows what the tide will bring in."  Stay positive.  Stay optimistic.  Always!


Tuesday, December 18, 2012

At The End Of The Day...

Progress continues in many ways.  Bipolar the movie will see its start of equity financing beginning in January 2013.  It's the challenging, but exciting and rewarding task of seeking equity investors to finance a film. In the last few months I have met people who run from it - from simple fear of the process, some who adamantly believe in its value and the respect it brings to your project, and some who would never venture it - but are 100 percent supportive, respectful and encouraging of taking the risks and accomplishing a dream that many will never pursue.

Acting gigs, commercials and a variety of auditions will also continue on a regular basis in 2013.  There is never a lack for television commercials and catalog photo shoots.  I have come to be cast or most requested as the father, farmer, businessman, and police officer/detective.  2013 will no doubt prove to be fruitful in those venues as well.  I welcome them with every ring of the phone.  Maybe the new year will bring some new roles or personalities for me to portray.  That's the fun of being an actor.  Having the fun opportunities to pretend you're someone you're not, and bring that new 'character' to life.
  
2013 will also see the renewal of Polarity Media Productions, LLC.  Polarity Media Productions is a multi-faceted company made up of film, literature and art production. There are currently five divisions to Polarity Media Productions; film and television production, actor representation, public speaking, fundraising sales and art creation and sales.  The major source of funding comes from a fundraising business and its sales to organizations, groups and teams.  The second major source of funding comes from personal appearances in film, television and print.  Supplemental revenues come from a variety of book and art sales, as well as public speaking appearances.  As mentioned, 2013 will be the start of equity financing for a variety of film projects as well. 

Polarity Media Productions’ mission is to develop and produce film projects and products, presentations, literature, and art that will inspire, encourage, entertain, and reflect on the human spirit.  It is committed to the creation of unique ideas, thoughts, and the endless possibilities of helping others through the lives, dreams, and stories of everyday people.

I am currently seeking the new office and hope to be settled by January 1st of 2013, in our new space.  Details to come soon.  Until then I will continue working on tightening up and making revisions to the script for Bipolar the movie, and am working on several other concepts for upcoming screenplays.

But for now...at the end of the day...I am just a guy trying to tell a story in hopes, that it enlightens, encourages, inspires or entertains people - in their own, unique way.
 


Thursday, October 11, 2012

Bipolar the Movie - Updates

Bipolar the Movie continues to make progress in its pre-production.  Key steps toward financing have been put into place and the challenging, but exciting process is in motion.  The financing of Bipolar is obviously a key factor as it drives the entire process from pre-production, to principal shooting, to post-production. Overall, we are very excited and pleased with the progress the film is making.  If you are interested in investing or have questions about the financing of Bipolar, please contact Matthew Nichols at mnicholswi@yahoo.com.  I have had the pleasure to be working with Terry Green, the writer and director of the feature film, 'No God No Master'.  Terry is a 20 year veteran in the film industry and is an outstanding resource for financing films.  He has his own blog which focuses on a variety of topics surrounding film, specifically the financing process.  I highly recommend visiting his site, www.filmnotes.net. 

Bipolar (2013)

A psychological, inspirational drama based on the true story of Matthew Nichols and his journey to manage his life with bipolar disorder.



36-year-old teacher and single-father, Garrett Brooks is enlightened by the discovery of a way to overcome the destructive tenacity of a mental illness, but not without cost.  His consistent struggles with his illness and inability to cope with overwhelming circumstances, Garrett’s once managed bipolar disorder resurfaces with debilitating stealth causing an even greater traumatic event, and new personal struggles.  He is faced with both the destructive power of a mental illness, and the foundational power of love and fatherhood with his son Jack Brooks, and friend and ex-wife Leah Brooks.  Through a personal window into the world of bipolar disorder, Garrett searches for answers to win the war, over the adversaries of mental illness, failure and suicide.  His relationships with Leah and Jack encourage and give new hope to his future as a father, friend and teacher.  Garrett's heartwarming and dramatic journey will bring viewers into the world of mental illness, and inspire others to ‘never’ give up hope.  Bipolar captures the interest of all as Garrett’s story enters the depths of the mind, the heart, and unconditional love.


Friday, September 21, 2012

Reality Check

I wanted to give a contrasting post to my blog for once.  If you look back at the previous posts, you find that most everything written is about projects or something with a positive light to it.  I have to keep the reality check alive and for once give a perspective that is not so warm and fuzzy.  And probably for the people who actually read this blog, it will be a good snapshot into the tougher and darker side of this new road I am traveling.

When I took the leap of faith from retiring from teaching and delving into the mysterious world of acting and modeling, I knew their would be risks.  Financial risks, risks to my relationships with family and friends and equally important, emotional risks that were going to test my character and challenge my illness to even greater extremes.  I continue to share my successes, because not only do I want to feel I made the right choices, but that I am also creating inspiration and hope for others.

What you don't always know and hear is that for each of those successes in this business, there are two, three or more failures, rejections and disappointments that follow suit when auditions and opportunities come and fall away.  I had been doing really well creating that thick skin and mental toughness that goes with the consistent rejection that this career foreshadows.

Today however, I had one of those unfortunate days and for whatever reason, for the first time in a while it really sucked the life out of me and sent me down some dark emotional roads.  I spent one of my normal five-hour, round-trip drives to Chicago from Milwaukee and back for what amounts to a 3-minute audition.  You leave most of these auditions feeling either that you nailed it and gave them your best performance and personality, or you leave like I did today.  In contrast, I left with my tail between my legs, in an emotional fog, wondering what the hell just happened from the time I walked into the audition room to the time I closed the door on the way out.  You may have presented your lines okay, but you have this gut-wrenching feeling that you tanked, sucked or fell flat on your face in front of the client.

Then amazingly you get into the elevator and in perfect time, you recite the script perfectly and with flawless delivery, over and over and over.  That flawless delivery continues on the walk to your car, in your car and for hours to follow.  Your gestures get sharper and more dramatically supportive, but it's over and 'never' happened that way.  And at the end of re-reciting my monologue each time I curse myself for f@#king it up just moments and minutes before.  Five hours for three minutes.  Five...hours...for...three...minutes of audition time!

Then...then...I go through the incredible mental strain of questioning my career choices, assessing where I have to get to, where I need to be to survive emotionally and financially and how will I continue to support myself and my family.  You feel the eyes and opinions of the naysayers screaming I told you so, or even worse, those who doubt and observe silently from afar, waiting for you to fail, only to appease their original skepticism.  My irrational thoughts tell me to quit, give up.

Only then...in a split-second of self-pity do I wake up and realize that I don't worry about what other people think anymore, and I'm back to rationalizing what this really was - another chance to grow as a person and become emotionally stronger.  I couldn't have found a hole deep enough to crawl into after the audition was over, but as the miles get put behind you and the hours grow new thoughts and ideals - hope and faith return.  I'm not valued by the failures in my life, but by how I react to those failures and setbacks and how I grow as a person when they come along.

I guess if I had to use an analogy of what this business is like, it's a lot like hitting a baseball.  The greatest and the best professional baseball players get a hit consistently 3 out of 10 times, giving them a .300 average.  Meaning, they fail consistently 7 out of 10 times.  Acting is very similar.  For every 2 or 3 commercials you get out of 10 auditions, you miss or don't get 7 or 8 out of those.  Obviously it varies with skill and experience, but it is the same principle.  Go, try, fail, recover, succeed and do it again and again.  You learn to toughen up and not take things personally.  You learn from the experience.

Some may view it as sappy, but I love the line from the movie Castaway where Tom Hanks says, "So now I know what I have to do. I have to keep breathing. And tomorrow the sun will rise, and who knows what the tide will bring in."  

That is exactly what this career means to me and what I do every day. 




Friday, August 17, 2012

Going For Gold - The Process

I wanted to explain what it was like, in a nutshell, to do what I am doing for a career now.  Succinctly speaking, my job as an actor or model is to market my look, voice and acting abilities.  Through pictures, voice demos and acting reels you approach an agent (person), or an agent (talent agency).  If they like your look, feel you have potential and are marketable, and actually have talent, they will sign you on with their agency.

From there the agency is contacted by clients for any variety of jobs including but not limited to; television commercials, radio commercials, print advertising, web advertising, a product industrial, trade shows, fashion shows, theater, television pilots and film roles.  The client asks the agency for specific characteristics they are looking for and the agency provides a pool of actors or actresses (talent) that fit those characteristics.  Then from the pool of talent submitted, sometimes as many as fifty, the client makes its choices.  Now depending on the product, the client will select a talent for that job and fees are negotiated by the agency.  These assignments are cool to me, because it means you 'have been chosen' for a job and barring weather or cancellations, you 'will' have the work and 'will' get paid for it.  While anything is possible, there is a comforting feeling of security in those jobs.

Then there are the intangible selections.  A client may like your characteristics, your look, your demo and you are requested for an audition.  There are no guarantees with auditions and it is up to me as the talent to impress when my opportunity arises.  If...you are fortunate enough to make a positive impression, you can then receive a call-back.  This means the client liked your initial audition and wants a second look or listen to make a final decision.  Therefore, out of a large pool of talent you are now in a pool of talent (competition) with maybe three to five others.  It is now my job again to impress, stand out, knock their socks off so-to-speak, in front of the client.  I try with all I've got to bring my best performance, so they remember me and want to hire me.

Here is where the intangible becomes your adversary.  You can have your best performance or audition, do everything you wanted to do, do every gesture, every mannerism you rehearsed...and it may not be the right fit for the client.  You just don't know.  Then there are the times when an audition may not have gone as you hoped and suddenly you get a call that a client wants you to come for a call-back.  You try 'not' to understand and just go back to relying on a tremendous amount of faith and confidence that you did your best.

But wait, the emotional roller coaster gets even better.  Sometimes there are more 'unexplainable circumstances' that can happen.  Something unusual like that happened to me earlier in the year.  I auditioned for a client and got a call-back.  The call-back also went very well.  I was even told by one of the other talents auditioning, "They really liked you."  Of course I felt great about that, and upon receiving a call from my agent twenty minutes later, that the client offered me first right of refusal, I was euphoric to say the least. 

First right of refusal means that the client has 'iced' you, is holding you for a select number of days, and has chosen you and usually two other actors for the spot.  It was to be my first national commercial.  A very lucrative one.  Well...don't get too happy for me, because the next day I was released.  That simply means they decided to go with another talent, i.e. not me.  I was disheartened, but knew I needed to check my ego at the door and remembered it is how this business operates.  You can always be sure of a few things, risk - rejection - and a lot of subjectivity.  I knew it going in and I recognize that challenge everyday.   The auditions can go well, the call-backs go well and then...no further news or contact from my agents.  Translation, I got the silver or the bronze.  Compound the unknown with countless, round trip, two-hour-plus drives to auditions in a variety of cities that last no more than five minutes.  Unfortunately in this business, no news is bad news, so you want your phone to ring and ring often.

What does this have to do with the price of eggs or...going for gold?  I've now had several big opportunities similar to that above and just recently - got my first two golds.  Two national commercials filmed in Appleton, Wisconsin and another in Green Bay, Wisconsin.  Patience and persistence are two must-have virtues.  It's an incredible feeling that is hard to put into words.  However, there are no proverbial podiums you get up on for a gold in this business and you 'always' have to keep your humility. Just getting the job and opportunity is reward enough for me, but the greatest reward comes when a friend or family member tells you that they saw you in a commercial.  That's pretty cool!

The risks are big and the payoffs are equally as big, and sometimes a simple job can lead to a bigger opportunity, so I'm always hopeful.  You meet new people each time - producers, directors, crew and other actors who you talk to, get to know, and network with.  I simply take each experience, write down how things went and what I can do to improve, and give my very best with each new opportunity that comes my way.  You have to dig deep, believe in and love what you're doing...and I do!  So I am going for gold.  Every time I audition...I'm going for gold.  Silver and bronze are just reminders to keep trying, make myself better and never, ever give up!

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Feature Film - Bipolar the Movie - Updates

Progress continues in pursuit of the independent, feature film - Bipolar.  The screenplay was revised for a director's viewing, and sent on to be reviewed by potential producers of the project.  

Attempts to receive financing from the drug companies remains unlikely, but we remain optimistic that some support is possible.  Initial contacts were made with NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) to receive their support and endorsement.  That is pending and will be for some time, until more concrete contact is made on state and national levels.  

The overall goal is to get national exposure, hopefully worldwide, and to follow up screenings with a public speaking tour.  Overall we hope to portray a positive story that will encourage and inspire others, helping to eliminate the stigma and discrimination surrounding mental illness.  

Over fifty-seven million Americans, approximately one-fourth of the country, live with a diagnosable mental illness in any given year.  So imagine the impact a positive film about bipolar disorder could have on millions of people around the country and possibly the world. 

Stay tuned for more...

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Vision

Going to make a strong, second run at bringing the film Bipolar to fruition.  The latest version of the screenplay was finished on June 4th, my son's birthday.  Ironic and inspiring at the same time.  Five or six years ago, the concept was a good idea, but all of the necessary pieces to make it work may not have been in place at the right time.  I truly believe that they are now.  I won't go as far as to say that planets are aligning, but with recent film connections and networking, there are some very concrete components and people who can make it a reality.  I'll look to this entry to be the start of the process and watching the development, regardless of its pace...it will be exciting.  A week ago Saturday, I sent out a letter of request and interest, to a Hollywood actress whose sister has bipolar disorder.  The response was saddening, but understandable upon receipt.  Her spokesperson politely explained that due to the overwhelming number of requests for her speak publicly and be a part of related projects, it was just not a possibility.  They respectfully declined for her and wished me luck in my endeavor.  Dr. Suess was rejected 27-times before someone found value in his first book.  I'm no Dr. Suess...I get that.  It simply inspires me.  I have to believe that there is someone, some group of people, some entity that will see value in this project and what it offers in its story of inspiration...and that it will come to fruition...very soon.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Well...it's a little over five years later and so much has changed since this blog began.  The last post left off on a journey to raise money for the film Bipolar.  While a successful fundraiser ensued and much progress was made, the money raised covered the fundraiser itself, as well as the initial stages of pre-production to move the project forward.  With great sadness, it proved to not be the right time for the film to come to fruition and the project was put on hold.

My career in teaching and raising my son remained my focus and I redirected my time and energy fully, back into teaching and being a good father.  So for the last five years I did just that.  While I continued to enjoy my job as a teacher, the students, their families and the people I worked with, something was missing, lacking.  Deep inside I knew there was something else I needed and wanted to pursue.  Over the course of the last year, with a great amount of thought, research and reflection, I felt it was time to follow my instincts and my heart.

For a number of years now I have been doing acting, print modeling and voice over work during my summers off.  18 years ago I wanted to pursue those things as a full-time career, but sadly, I followed the advice of others and not what I passionately wanted to do.  I think we all have things that we 'dream' of doing, but security and simplicity most often take over our decisions to chose our lot in life no matter how bad we want it. 

I was at a point where I didn't want to make the same mistake twice.  My first mistake...not pursuing professional baseball with the vigor and commitment that I could have, with the talents I was blessed with.  I allowed my illness of Bipolar to stand in the way of my abilities to perform and cope emotionally with the challenges I needed to overcome, to reach the next level.  How badly we all want to turn back the clock on our lives so often and in so many ways.  I know I have reflected on that far too often in my life.   I don't want to look back with regret...anymore.  My saving grace and reassurance that I stayed on the right path, is the simple fact that I was blessed with a beautiful, intelligent and wonderful child, thirteen years ago.  I wouldn't change that for anything in the world.

Which brings me to the present.  I didn't want similar regrets of looking back and second-guessing my life all over again.  I didn't want to be 57 years old, retiring and wishing I would have done...something different.  So that time is now.  No more wondering.  No more wishing.  We can sit and dream all we want and the more time we sit and think about it, the more time we have to question our decisions and give others time to talk us out of it.

This is the start of that dream, pursuing it with every ounce of energy I have to give.  No turning back and no regrets. No more wondering, wishing or second guessing.  I know it is an incredible leap of faith and I am willing and ready to take it.  I have to say, it is a feeling that is almost indescribable.  A tremendous, emotional weight has been lifted from my shoulders.  I wake up everyday now excited about what I am going to do, to accomplish and experience.  I know there will be challenges like any other job I have ever had, and I know there will always be people who doubt, criticize, have opinions and will question my decisions.  So be it!  My days of worrying about what other people think are behind me.  They have to be or I will never move forward to where I want to be.

All I know is that I am going to enjoy every possible moment I can...make a difference or positive impact in the lives of those I meet and share my experiences with...and most importantly...live each day with no regrets.

.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Article - Milwaukee M-Magazine



Milwaukee M-Magazine – Milwaukee, Wisconsin
February Issue 2007

Short Takes – Head Games
Story by Martin Hintz/Photography by Corey Hengen

Matthew Nichols is finding his voice, and helping others as he does. Challenged for the past two decades with bipolar disorder, a long-term illness illustrated by wild mood swings, the 37-year-old Waukesha teacher is producing a feature movie in Milwaukee, "Bipolar," whose main character also has the disorder, and has written a book, "15-Minutes At A Time," a 15-piece collection of poems, stories, and sketches focusing on his self-discovery and how he deals with his disorder.

He's also speaking out about the disease, willing to talk with anyone, anywhere. Bipolar disorder affects 5 million people in the United States and usually hits young people between 15 and 24 years old. Nichols was affected most seriously as a freshman at UW-Oshkosh; he tried to kill himself at age 18, but a group of upperclassmen found and helped him. Another meltdown occurred after transferring to UW-Whitewater, which caused him to leave school for a short time. Despite this setback, he returned and earned a degree in elementary education.

Through the support of his 7-year-old son, friends and parents, Bob and Carol Nichols –whom he calls his "best friends" – as well as medicine and counseling, Nichols has been successfully coping with his health situation and succeeding in his career. He has been teaching second grade at Hadfield Elementary School in Waukesha for the past two years. He can now recognize what triggers the extreme highs and lows that are part of the disease, and take steps to deal with them. "It's not a handicap, it's what you make of it," he says.

Nichols launched Polarity Media Productions on New Year's Day 2006, but the gist of the film had been around since 2002. Wanting to bring the story of bipolar disorder to a wider audience, he began writing a screenplay. Nichols researched the independent film market for opportunities to bring the story the big screen and found Dan Kattman and Drew Maxwell of Lightning Rod Studios, who are shooting and editing the movie. Nichols is playing the lead because, "I'm comfortable with the story and I know the lines", he laughs.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Book - 15 Minutes At A Time


Biography - Choice/Life

Fifteen minutes. That is exactly what this is. Fifteen minutes at a time in the day and life of another bipolar. Oh no, you might say. Do I have to listen to someone depress me to death before I even turn a few pages? No, you don't. It is simply a unique, insightful, and creative view into life, from a different looking glass.

Over two and a half million and growing are the number of people from young to old in the United States, who are being diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Then there are the eighty million plus who suffer from some form of depression. Approximately one in six adults, and one in five children, obtain mental health services in a given year alone. What does this have to do with the price of eggs? Absolutely nothing!

The reality is that I am one very small percentage point of a growing population that is living with a particular form of mental illness, bipolar disorder, formerly known as manic-depression. I have also been diagnosed with ADD (attention deficit disorder), OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder), SAD (social anxiety disorder), SMD (seasonal mood disorder), and if you throw in a few more letters I'd be 3-D (three-dimensional).

To put my worry and significance into perspective, throw that percentage point in the mix with the millions of people in the United States and around the world who: have cancer, are terminally ill, have diabetes, heart disease, failing organs, birth defects, addictions, learning disabilities, physical disabilities, cognitive disabilities, rare diseases, experience famine, are homeless, killed in combat, are murdered, disappear, die in accidents, are impoverished, or who take their lives...to name a few.

My place in this world and life with mental illness is put into perspective very simply, when I stop to think about what so many others are struggling through or have to deal with in their own worlds and lives.

It is my situation nonetheless and one which has been a struggle and a blessing at the same time. The symptoms can be many, the struggles horrific at times, and the answers for a cure are nonexistent to date. Yet again I have to breathe in and out, I have to get up each day, and I have to function and live day to day like the hundreds of millions, and essentially billions of others in the world. To me that means being a wonderful father, son, brother, nephew, grandson, elementary teacher, neighbor, friend, and whatever other hats I live with and wear.

I was born in a good family, the youngest of five boys and with two very loving parents. We were all actively involved in sports and my parents could very likely have seen every sporting event each one of us ever had.

We fought and argued as most siblings do. Some fists were thrown, but at the end of the day we were family and would do anything for one another. We had enough variety in personalities to develop a conservative, comical, athletic, and creative team.

My mother was a quiet homemaker who nurtured, sacrificed, and cooked until we fell asleep from exhaustion. She threw in an occasional, humble opinion, but made sure we always had enough and were well taken care of, despite a modest salary that my father worked very hard to provide.

My father was a hardworking, committed family man who was very involved and respected in church, the community, and in our family. If he wasn't spending time with us, or being a devoted husband, he was fixing or building something.

Both my parents believed in a strong family bond, church on Sundays, good manners, and respect of adults and others. If we ever heard my mother swear it would have made the national news, because it just never happened. My father was a lot of fun and easy going, but to get out of line was to face a once broken, pointing finger that curved to the side and subtly warned us to get our act together. Despite being a humble 5'8", he always demanded, expected, and taught respect. We learned many wonderful qualities from both of them.

My brothers and I had our share of issues, got into our share of troubles, and made many life-learning mistakes. In retrospect we were a normal dysfunctional family. As time went on the difference in age between my brothers and I became more apparent, as being on my own became more difficult. From the oldest to myself, we were eleven, ten, five, and four years apart respectfully.

My concern over consistent issues became more apparent in my freshman year in high school. Through extensive journaling I began to see a pattern with thoughts of suicide as an answer to each of my difficult problems. With my brothers gone, a fear of disappointing them, and not being strong enough to handle everything, I fell into a dangerous place of self-destruction.

Emotional failure grew as a part of my personality and I hid behind an obsessive desire to be successful in athletics. Over the course of the next three years of high school I think I matured at a catastrophically slow rate and in essence, continued to deteriorate any self-esteem I had left.

Then when I was eighteen and in my first year of college, I sat in my college dorm bathroom tucked in the corner of the showers, sobbing, with a razor blade to my wrist. Deep within the darkest places of my mind I was alone, feeling insignificant, expendable, and a failure beyond imagination. I desired death and closure. What I didn't recognize at the time was in essence a desire to cry out for help. A place where countless others fall silent, eventually following through on a suicidal path of an irreparable choice.

The following morning I packed a bag and headed home to do one of the most difficult things I would ever do, and that was to share this with my parents. Undoubtedly it was one of the best decisions I have ever made. This marked the official transfer into the manic-depressive world now known as bipolar disorder.

What many people don't understand however is that it doesn't just go away. It can be years of continued struggles, adjustments, and reconditioning of your previous thoughts. I tried for so long to describe to people what was going on in my mind. I could only describe it by saying, "In my mind lie a box and a silent world, that I try desperately to escape from, every moment of everyday." It finally came to me to draw fifteen pictures of a faceless figure in a clear box and the fifteen different emotions that I would go through over the course of one day. Some emotions were less frequent than others, but there were usually more of the severe highs and lows. It put my thoughts into perspective and helped me to understand where I was each day.

Then there is the unavoidable and always present debate over medication. The questions are raised: is it really necessary? Are there alternatives? If so, what is the best medication? What works? What doesn't? Are you taking it regularly? And the list goes on.

One of the greatest challenges of being on a medication is being consistent in taking it. The reality for many bipolar people, and myself is that the medication which brings normalcy to heightened emotions, takes away the much-needed manic and euphoric highs that are so often sought to keep going. Thus, a brutal pattern begins. The act of purposefully going off medication to get the desired manic and euphoric highs until the inevitable crash into depression, and the overwhelming circumstances return.

In nineteen years of rediscovering and relearning I had embarked on a path of how to quietly survive my dysfunction and create a world that I could safely live with. Through seventeen counselors, six different medications, and thousands of pages of journals, writings, and poems later, I now live with a silent lucidity and greater piece of mind.

It was only through a strong faith, unconditional patience, and incredible support from family and friends that I am here to share my experiences. The significance of this is evident in much of my writing, and becomes more obvious as the subject of each poem speaks to the emotions and situations at that particular time of my life. There are so many things, so many events, so many chapters I could write about, but don't need to. There are many great books and stories of people out there with bipolar and mental illness who have succeeded through adversity. I wanted to tell my story through a different view - from inside the box.

We all face our own demons, our own struggles, our own trials and tribulations, and we all handle them in the best way we are capable. Outside of that, that is the beauty of friends, family, professional help, and faith in a higher power. Again, to each person those variables will differ slightly.

Nonetheless, our lives and experiences make us what we are and who we are. I use writing as my way to vent, explain, heal, cope, live, and grow as a person. The following poems or writings were written over the last sixteen years and are the real-life growth that I have experienced in the last thirty-seven years. The poems have matured over time and have become more personal as I have grown and continue to grow as a person. They are not right or wrong, just another view into the world through another's eyes. I have tried to express my view of life as it manifests itself inside my head, heart, and soul, as the experiences became a part of my everyday world.

I hope at the very least it may open some eyes to similar experiences, empathetic thoughts, new understandings, the possibility of helping others to question themselves, or to give help, guidance, and hope to those who may need it.



Choice - Life


I am to live
I wonder all the wonderful things that lay ahead for me
I hear praises, encouragement, hope, and love
I see the flattened walls that used to bind me - as a path to new beginnings
I want to help thousands...no millions how to see life from outside the box
I am to live


I pretend that polarity is a gift and not an impediment
I feel hope and faith that moves mountains
I touch hearts that have screamed and longed for a voice that could
bring vision to their unexplained worlds
I worry that there are many who have yet to reach for help
I cry purely in happiness for freedom from the box
I am to live


I understand that people find themselves inside the box at some time, as 'none' are immune
I say it's all right to be in the box, but recognize when it's time to get out or reach out
I dream that people will learn to see polarity's box in others, so that fewer and fewer fall to the darkest places
I try...every second of every day to do the best I can in this world...the least we can ask of ourselves
I hope that people will have learned that emotions are three-dimensional
I am to live


(Written: 1-19-01)


CHOICE (LIFE) LEVEL 15

Choice to live represents a healthy step toward living life outside of the box. It illustrates a person looking at their life positively and with new choices that are healthy and productive.

Personal Update - Bipolar the Movie

Biography - Book - Hope For Others

I am writing today to share as honestly as possible, my need to share my story and place in life right now. I have spent the last four years pursuing a dream of finding a positive way to share my experiences with bipolar disorder. In 2002 I wrote a screenplay based upon different aspects of the illness and how it has affected my personal well-being, my career, my former and current relationship with my son's mom, and my relationship with my son. I researched and networked with the independent and professional film industry to find a way to bring the story to a feature film level. I am now at the pinnacle of its fruition, trying to raise the $350,000 to make it happen. Currently I am in process of seeking grants, private funding, and the establishment of non-profit status - sponsorship. In a personal update blog several weeks ago, I put into place some goals that were to inspire me to make some incredible things happen. I continue to remain completely optimistic and encouraged by possibility. However...I will openly admit that I am experiencing the most severe and difficult fall season (S.A.D. - Seasonal Affective Disorder) that I have ever experienced in my life. Short of making every effort humanly possible to make it to work everyday, perform as a good teacher - putting on a happy face for 8 1/2 hours, pretending to be happy and enthusiastic, and trying to be the very best father for my son I can be...I have for the most part slept through the months of October and November. Medications suck the life and energy out of me, and I have made food my comfort, ally, and adversary...putting on 35 pounds in a month and a half. Prior to October, I had lost 45 pounds from August through September. I was lucky if I answered the phone for anyone and if I did, it was some of the best acting and repressing of feelings I have ever done. My house had become the world of the box that I describe to others as what the illness is like. I made the horrific mistake 'again' to go off of my medication to try to find the mania that has eluded me for so long and that which gives me the power to accomplish pletheras of work and move mountains. Unfortunately my risks have taken me to some of the deepest, most consistent, and darkest depressions in years. I do...in every sense of the expression and words...live day to day right now...15 minutes at a time.

Now..."why in the hell" is he telling everyone this you might ask. Or not?! The heartfelt truth is that people 'need' to know how this illness works and not turn and run or ignore it when people who have it, stuggle with it. I will go as far to say that suicide crosses my mind on a regular basis, however it is the same thing I share with every group I speak to as well. The reality is that I have the greatest gift ever given to me in my little boy and I realize my unselfish and priceless responsibility to be there for him as he deserves. Secondly, I believe as deep as a heart and soul can reach, that there is an ocean of hope, inspiration, and gifts I have to give to others - yet to be tapped. It is my son and those 'hopeful' gifts that breathe life into me each day and every fifteen minutes if necessary. If worry were people, I would be China...but I rest comforted in the fact that I have numbed myself to the negative thoughts, feelings, and criticisms of others regarding my illness. I have a gift within this illness to help break the negative stigma that surrounds it and is sadly unknown and misunderstood by so many others.

I have to believe that for the thousands...no...millions of dollars that are spent on so many, poor quality - horseshit films every year, that there are funds available to make something artistic and realistic that will have the potential to educate and help countless people. It has just been very frustrating not being able to find it 'yet'. I realize patient-persistence is of the essence, yet I will hold out or die trying to make this work as long as I absolutely have to.

Until then, I will continue to pursue the dream passionately as it has manifested itself in me four-plus years ago. I decided this week to begin sharing my book with as many people as I can. Some people will pass over what I write, but it is with unconditional hope that it may touch, move, or inspire 'someone' else who may be in a bad place or feeling less than what they are truly capable of becoming as I have experienced so many times.

That is my latest update. Obviously more sad than the previous entries, but riddled with hope, optimism, and undying patience.

The following blog/update will begin the book 15 Minutes At A Time with a condensed version of my biography and the first of the fifteen Polarity Poems. Thank you for your patience and for reading.

Warmest wishes,

Matthew Nichols

Thursday, November 09, 2006

New Music Artists - Funding - Appearance



NEW MUSIC ARTISTS

We are very excited to announce two new artists offering their songs for consideration to the Bipolar soundtrack. The first artist is Kyler England and her song "No More Sad Songs". With Los Angeles as a home base, Kyler is touring extensively across the US, playing more than a hundred shows each year from 2003-2006, and has shared the stage with Sting, Melissa Etheridge, Gavin DeGraw and Annie Lennox among many others. Those in the know in the independent music world are well acquainted with Kyler's tremendous talent, and know it's only a matter of time before she bursts onto the mainstream scene. Kyler won 1st Place in the 2004 Unisong International Songwriting Contest, 1st Place in the 2004 Mid-Atlantic Songwriting Contest, was winner of the 2002 North Carolina Songwriters Competition, and her studio record "A Flower Grows In Stone" won "Best Alternative Rock CD of 2004" in the Indie Acoustic Project's Best CDs of 2004. "No More Sad Songs" from her latest EP The Green Room Sessions was featured in a two-minute montage at the end of Guiding Light's episode on Tuesday 10/31/06. It was a beautiful and emotional union of the song with the story and picture. Asheville Citizen Times says, "Kyler England writes and sings of live wires and brushfires, things that are fast to ignite and faster still to burn out. Rife with complex melodies and emotional honesty, her songs crackle to life with her sultry, magnetic delivery." And Performing Songwriter Magazine recently said: "A Flower Grows in Stone' contains 14 compassionate and introspective songs, all performed with confidence and intimacy." You can find Kyler's touring schedule, biography, and 4 new songs plus a live unplugged video at www.kylerengland.com and www.myspace.com/kylerengland. I am really excited to have Kyler's song considered for the soundtrack. She is an incredibly talented, humble, and very kind person. (Matthew Nichols)

The second artist is Kelly Buchanan and her song "I'm Okay". While marching her energetic rock shows across the country, touring on her own and and supporting artists including Martha Wainwright and former Soul Coughing frontman Mike Doughty, Kelly has earned an army of fans that ultimately financed the making of Bastard Daughter. "Kelly Buchanan's voice is the bulldozer rampaging down the center aisle of the health food store," writes Rolling Stone's Rob Sheffield. "It's simple: get out of the way or get run over." Indeed, this audacious singer-guitarist, a product of the fertile Boston rock scene who now lives in New York, has a tendency to lure you to the X on the sidewalk with a bright melody and a perfect hook before dropping a piano on your head. And when it happens, it's the most welcome collision you've ever experienced. The Boston Globe says, "Kelly Buchanan is just what we need: A homegrown singer-songwriter of the hell-hath-no-fury-like-a-woman-scorned school…. Be careful not to get too close, though—these lyrics could rip you to shreds." In exchange for CDs of demos, autographed advance copies of the finished record, liner note thank-yous and other goodies, fans donated to the making of the album from before the start of recording all the way through mixing, mastering and manufacturing. It's an innovative strategy and one that demonstrates how Kelly Buchanan touches lives and inspires loyalty from her listeners. You can find Kelly's touring schedule, biography, and songs at www.kellybuchanan.com and www.myspace.com/kellybuchanan. I am also very excited to have Kelly's song considered for the soundtrack. She too is an incredibly talented, humble, and very kind person. (Matthew Nichols)

FUNDING

(Matthew Nichols) Funding for the film continues and we have some very good prospects on the horizon. Too early to tell who is going to commit and support the project just yet, but in early talks with several parties - the interest is definately there. This has grown into something much more than just a film. It has become a project that many people are rallying behind whether interested in film, part of the mental health community, or knowing someone who has the illness. I set a pretty lofty goal to have all of the funds by the end of December...but absolutely believe it's possible, and will do everything humanly - possible to make it come to fruition. Stay tuned...

APPEARANCES

Matthew Nichols will appear this Saturday, November 11 - 10:30 a.m. at
Fireside Books, 1331 West Paradise Drive - West Bend, WI 53035.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Radio Interview - Bipolar/Bipolar the Movie


Radio Interview - 89.7 Milwaukee Public Radio
INTERVIEW - BIPOLAR/BIPOLAR THE MOVIE

89.7 WUWM Art Producer - Bonnie North - Speaks With Milwaukee Teacher, Writer, Filmmaker - Matthew Nichols

Tuesday morning was a time for Bonnie North, WUWM Art Producer and host of the daily program Lake Effect, to sit down and talk with Milwaukee's Matthew Nichols about his life with bipolar disorder, and his upcoming feature film - Bipolar.

In an enlightening and intriguing interview, North and Nichols discuss a variety of topics surrounding the illness. Nichols shared candidly how bipolar disorder has affected his life and relationships, its influence on his passion for writing and helping others, and how it has given him the inspiration to produce a feature length film entitled Bipolar.

Hear the interview and Nichols' story at http://www.wuwm.com/view_le.php?articleid=29

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Milwaukee - Community Newspapers Inc.


FROM THE BRINK

Beloved teacher, coach battles back from mental illness with book, movie

By Mary Buckley - Staff Writer

NORTH SHORE - Most likely to succeed, Brown Deer High School, Class of 1987, Matthew Nichols finds a certain irony when he looks back at his high school yearbook and finds that title attached to him. In that year, Nichols set off for college at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh determined to become a professional baseball player. Success would be playing in the pros. Years later, Nichols, 37, is an elementary school teacher, father and soon-to-be movie actor and co-producer of a semiautobiographical film called "Bipolar". He has struggled mightily to get where he is today, subduing the terrors of mental illness so he can do the ordinary - and the extraordinary. It's not that the illness is gone.

EVERYDAY STRUGGLES - "I would be lying to you if I said I don't struggle with it everyday," he said. But with medication and counseling, he has learned to cope. He wrote a book - "15 Minutes At A Time" - based on the ups and downs of his bipolar disorder, diagnosed in his freshman year of college. The book, however, is not enough. Nichols has started to speak to groups about living with mental illness and has written a script based on his experiences. He is working with Whitefish Bay's Dan Kattman and Drew Maxwell of Lightning Rod Studios to bring the script, called "Bipolar", to the screen. The script focuses on the early stages of a marriage, the realization of the main character's bipolar disorder and its effect on his relationships. "It leads into the epiphany of how to manage it and heal those relationships," Nichols said. "I want people to understand and see what people with bipolar disorder go through."

PUSHED TO THE EDGE - The youngest of five boys, he left for Oshkosh to pursue his dream of playing college baseball and becoming a professional baseball player. "I wasn't prepared for the changes at college," he said. "I didn't know how to handle it." He sat one night in the shower with a razor next to his writst, but found the strength to beat back his demons, pack his bags and go home to talk to his parents and find some help. Bipolar Disorder, also known as manic-depression, is believed to be both genetic and environmental. There is no cure, but with medication and counseling, patients can live normal lives. "I want people to know you can be a good father, a good parent, a good teacher (with mental illness)," Nichols said.

HIGH HIGHS, LOW LOWS - Bipolar disorder is all about emotional ups and downs, highs that are way too high and lows that scrape the bottom. "Unmanaged, mania leads to all kinds of bad things," Nichols said. "You think you can take on the world. It can lead to free spending or being up hours on end." The down is completely down. "You just shut down," he said. Nichols went back to college, but not to Oshkosh, instead to UW-Whitewater. "I needed a change of atmosphere," he said. "At Whitewater, I volunteered at a Children's Center and learned I wanted to teach."

TAUGHT IN BROWN DEER - Graduating in 1994, he landed a job teaching and coaching in Brown Deer, where he stayed for six years. Along the way he got married and had a son, Seth, who is now 7. Although the marriage has ended, partially from stress caused by his illness, Nichols and his ex-wife remain friends, sharing custody of their son. "He is the reason I am here," Nichols said. "He was my saving grace." Nichols left teaching in 2000 to pursue a family business called GlowRange, based in New Mexico and Arizona. He returned home after nine months when his parents became ill. "I realized after I got back I needed to be in teaching," he said. "Teaching is one place I can go and forget about myself." He started to substitute teach, returning to full-time teaching at Hadfield Elementary School in Waukesha in 2005.

WRITING ABOUT HIS LIFE - While working his way back into full-time teaching, Nichols decided to share some of his insights about mental illness. "People have such a stigma about this, especially when I started teaching," he said. "It's not well received." Being bipolar is like living in a transparent box where you can be seen, but it's a place you cannot leave, he said. Nichols learned to live 15 minutes at a time. "That was the length of time I could manage," he said. "I would sometimes need to stop, step back and figure out how to get out of mania or depression." He also wrote the screenplay for "Bipolar", took acting lessons and started fundraising for the film. He plans to play himself in the film. "I know the role very well," he said wryly.

PRODUCERS FROM BAY - He researched independent filmmaking, finding Kattman and Maxwell in the process. Kattman, an entertainment attorney with Reinhart Boerner Van Deuren SC, formed Lightning Rod Studios with Maxwell about three years ago, but they have worked together for a number of years. They enjoy science fiction movies because they like creating special effects, but they do other types of films as well. "We specialize in getting projects off the ground," Kattman said. They have been successful, he said, because they are business-oriented and have a distribution plan in place before production begins. "Matt's is a great project," he said. "We're really excited about it and hope to get it off the ground within the next year." Kattman said they hope to convince some drug manufacturers to invest in the film. "It's a positive film," he said. "There are not too many out there where pharmaceutical companies are represented in a positive way." Nichols hopes the movie will educate people about bipolar disorder, making them understand that it is a lifelong struggle, but it can be managed. "It took six medications and 17 counselors until we found the combinations that fit," he said. "People sometimes give up too quick." Fortunately he did not. Now he realizes that success comes in many packages, one of them being good parent, teacher and advocate for those with mental illness.