John Hawkes, best supporting actor
Jennifer Lawrence, best actress
Debra Granik & Ann Roselini, best screenplay
BEST PICTURE!
Another amazing outcome. I am speechless!
John Hawkes, best supporting actor
Jennifer Lawrence, best actress
Debra Granik & Ann Roselini, best screenplay
BEST PICTURE!
Another amazing outcome. I am speechless!
Wow! This turned out well. An interview by Chris Mateer on No Depression, The Roots Music Authority.
… “The Winter’s Bone album is a starker and earthier companion to O Brother Where Art Thou?, which is often seen as the holy grail of soundtracks filled with traditional American music. What O Brother did for bluegrass, Winter’s Bone should do for the music of the Ozarks- bring it to a wider audience that will be receptive and appreciative, and in my mind- listeners who are just waiting for it, even if they do not yet know it” … read more…
… “The brilliant soundtrack album, delivers an outsider’s glimpse into the Ozarks of Winter’s Bone, and offers a wide variety of stark, subtle, uplifting, and deeply heartfelt traditional music from this rich, rural region. The collection harks back to a rich history of yesteryear, while playing as a score of inspirational tunes that we all can cherish” …
… “What is your most memorable experience regarding your involvement with Winter’s Bone?
MS: It would have to be when I saw the finished film for the first time at Sundance. Before then, in my mind it was this little hometown indie film that might have some merit. I was completely blown away by the sheer magnitude of its authenticity. Try as I might, I could not find a single frame of the film that did not depict the depths of this hardscrabble land absolutely accurately. This film does not, nor does it pretend to, depict all of the Ozarks. But it got this slice of the culture dead on” … read the full interview and film review from Chris Mateer.
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About me: My official bio says I’m a veteran journalist, teacher, author, musician, student of folklore, and creator of Elder Mountain Press, a venue for publishing stories relevant to Ozarks culture and history. It makes no mention of my absence of mind or my widely known penchant for confounding myself and others, and collecting scraps of mostly useless knowledge. I could create a paper mache Volkswagen with the paper this generates.
People who don’t know me believe I’m a storyteller. People who do say I’m just windy. But both kinds will stop for a moment to listen to my little essays on public radio, either because they’re interesting, or because they’re short. You can too, at ksmu.org, if you click on the sidebar where it says “These Ozarks Hills”
In 1986, 25 years after I started college, I received a BFA degree from Missouri State University in graphic arts and photography, with which I became a journalist (!?!) In 1995 I received an MA from Antioch University in creative writing, which enabled me to go back to my journalism job and teach English at night school, the income from which has not yet enabled me to pay off my student loans. At this rate I may make my last payment when I’m 112. On the good side, I did reap the benefits of a $5,000 grant from the International Press Institute enabling me to spend six weeks in Central America doing stories on Costa Rica and Panama and their records of natural resource management. You can find photos and story excerpts elsewhere on this site.
Right now I’m up to my ears in the fallout from the movie Winter’s Bone, in which I’m the featured singer and music consultant. Somehow it didn’t occur to me that people would a) watch the movie closely enough to notice me, b) recognize me on the street, or c) insist on knowing where they could find the music from the movie, or more just like it. Ok, I’ll confess. I made the movie without one thought that I might want to make a CD as well – and soon. Who knew? I didn’t feel so bad about my lack of preparedness after Winter’s Bone producer Jonathan Scheuer heaved a sigh over the same subject and said “We really didn’t expect this.”
The “this” he’s referring to is “Winter’s Bone,” winning best picture and best screenplay at Sundance, more honors in Berlin, and hefty distribution deals with Roadside Attractions (North American rights) and Fortissimo (overseas). Suddenly this little low-budget tale shot in the Ozarks is getting some impressive international buzz. And much to my surprise, so am I.
Now here we are as another year begins, and so much has happened it would be impossible to tell it all at once. Instead, I’ve told it in fits and starts throughout this blog, which was begun in May of 2010 and which to date has received more than 33,000 hits from folks like you, who were moved by the movie and mused by the music, and came calling, some just to drop in for a minute, others to sit a spell and visit, as we say in the Ozarks. It’s been wonderful to meet you, even if briefly, and I hope you’ll stop by again soon. In the meantime, I’m about to begin another semester teaching English, while arranging songs for another album and doing research on a story that might be a movie someday. Oh, and coming up with “big windies” for telling on my little radio show.
Life is full of wonder and surprises. Some of them way more satisfying than one might expect. The lives of us hillbillies is generally slower than this, and this hillbilly is having a time getting used to it. That will happen all in good time, I expect. In the meantime, drop me a note or send me a song if you’re so inclined. Happy Trails, you’uns. Come back when you can stay longer.

This is a not-very-well preserved photo from about 1951 in Wichita, Kansas. I'm the weasely ruffian on the right.
Next to me is, I think, Teresa Schuster and her sister, whose name I can’t recall. We were living in what had been officers’ quarters in a suburb called Plainview, that has since been absorbed into the fabric of greater Wichita. It was my first and only glimpse of early 20th century urban life, as our apartment was outfitted with a coal furnace that my dad loaded from a coal chute in the basement, an icebox filled by the iceman twice a week and milk, butter, cottage cheese, etc., delivered daily very early in the morning. I include it because of the memories, the age of the cars in the background, and our stances. At eight years old, we were already who we would be, already up to sumthin’.
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Sarah has posted a few new pictures in the photo gallery. Take a look at these photos of Torino and Alba Italy. Click here to read the posts about my trip to Italy and the Torino International Film Festival.
There are also some updates to my schedule. For a while there I was so busy neither her nor I could keep the schedule updated.
For those you truly have too much time on their hands, here are a few photos of me binding my book, These Ozark Hills.
One of the most accurate interviews I have had; they took my words and used them correctly!
Read the entire interview by Steven M. Deusner here.
First, I must apologize for it taking so long to get to this. Life intervened, as usual, with the last and largest interruption being eye surgery to remove cataracts. First surgery was Jan. 4, the second today. I’m writing one-eyed this evening, but that eye is working well without glasses for the first time since I was 10 years old. It’s a brand new world. But I digress.
On that Sunday morning, Dec. 5, Jonathan and I barely made it to breakfast (the only place in town where the supply of Cafe American never runs out), both of us hung over as well as totally stupefied. We knew for sure we’d be winning something at the awards when we were carefully seated on the middle aisle with one of our “tenders” parked alongside us to translate. But receiving four awards really bowled us over. Then, of course, after the awards we were hustled off to a banquet in one of those gloriously attired old mansion ballrooms (I have no idea where) and fed quarts of sati spumone, assorted pastas and untold tiny desserts. Total psychic and gastronomic overload.
After coffee we gradually came to our senses and attempted to plot out our one remaining day so we could find somewhere to buy delicacies of Italian origin to bring back to friends and family. In the middle of that, I heard someone mispronouncing my name, and discovered I had a phone call. Of course, since I knew barely anyone in Torino, my first thought was, My God, my dog has died!, because why would anyone otherwise pay international rates to call me?
But no, it was Elisabette, calling to offer a tour of the town courtesy of her and her New York-born husband, Vinnie. After a fruitless stroll through old town trying to find stores that were open on a Sunday, we called and accepted, and they took us to the mall.
Yes, it’s true. Although the entire city appears to be comprised of city blocks that hold just one building each, inset with shops and topped with apartments (photo), in fact there are a few places that are exempt.
For one, the old Fiat factory. (hoot). For another, the original bottling plant of Martini and Rossi vermouth. It’s a little known fact that Martini actually refers to the vermouth, and more than one Italian has thought they were being poisoned when they came to the U.S. and ordered a Martini, only to be fed this horrible concoction consisting of 99 parts gin and a small whiff of vermouth. Who knew?
At any rate, we first took in the bottling plant, which has been converted into the original Eatily super Italian food and wine store. The aroma of vermouth is very faint but is still detectable in some areas, particularly around the wine and cheese cellars. We shopped, bought cheese, hazelnut and chocolate confections, and spoons carved of olive wood. Our hosts purchased wine in a two-and-something-liter refillable bottle, and we went away happy -well, almost. Jonathan, who had been searching high and low for a suitable holiday gift for daughter Hannah, was still empty-handed. So we went next door to the larger mall, and saw what had become of the once world-famous factory. At its center is a monumental spiral of the kind that winds up the middle of American parking garages. Only this one was open, and another example of the much-maligned Italian engineer. Floors of stores spun off its exits. But its original purpose could still be divined. Once, finished little sports cars had sped up the ramp to the top of the building where, in an urban area where land was at a premium, test drivers put them through their paces on a high speed track constructed especially for such purposes atop the building. Amazing.
After the mall, we adjourned once again to the trattoria of which we had become so fond, and where Elisabette and Vinnie had never been, and dove into a last feast of homemade pasta, the local house wine, an antipasto of grilled eggplant and artichokes, all followed by a chocolate and pear tart. Unforgettable all. My sincere thanks to the Winter’s Bone team that sent me, and the Torino Festival folks who so generously hosted me. It was an adventure I will remember always.
This article seems to be from Denmark … help anyone? I seem to be quoted more than once and it links to my blog. I don’t know.
This in from The King’s Speach; “… Last year’s Best Director has taken a stand in this year’s Oscar race – and Kathryn Bigelow, the first woman ever to win that award, announced at two private screenings at the Soho House that she is a fan of Debra Granik’s “Winter’s Bone,” the evocative and chilling indie drama currently fighting for a slot in the Best Picture race…”
Richard Michael stepped into Winter’s Bone and talks about it here in The Envelope, the awards insider, Los Angeles Times, “… I wince at the squirrel-skinning scene,” he says, referring to a sequence in which Ree teaches her little brother and sister how to prepare the meat. According to Michael, the belly cut was too small, the entrails weren’t scooped properly and the skin wasn’t removed in its entirety. “Other than that, it’s great.”
And this poster on Winter’s Bone Facebook page.
Winter’s Bone, quietly screaming Oscar!
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