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About celebrityroadtrips

I am a published author and editor. I believe that human beings are meant to be creative. This blog site is intended to help humans along the joy-inspiring, and sometimes scary road to the heights of creativity.

Six Years Later…

206Welcome back to Celebrity Roads Trips.  I’m saying that to myself, as well as to you. I have not posted on this site for six years. Believe me,  a lot has happened during my time away.  When I tried to return to this site last week, I had some trouble accessing it. Many thanks to Sudipto at WordPress for helping me regain access to my account. I want to change slightly the focus of this blog. My original purpose was to visit physical locations that related to movie-making. However, in the meantime, TCM has covered that issue pretty well! I still want to do some of that, but I am expanding the focus of this blog to include traveling to discover all things creative.  I’ll catch you up on my recent activities in coming blog posts, and I look forward to receiving your comments. Please visit my new Amazon page at amazon.com/author/tinamurray. My Facebook page, A Chance to Say Yes, is Facebook.com/tmurray author.  It focuses on my two published novels, A Chance to Say Yes and A Wild Dream of Love. My Twitter page is Twitter.com/tmurrayauthor. If you like and follow me anywhere, let me know, and I will return the favor. Thanks, and have a lovely new day.

 

Movie-History Day Trip No. 2: Franklin, TN, and the Cool Springs Mall

 

Whose own movie refers to her as “the most popular teenager in the world?” You’re right! It’s Hannah Montana, a.k.a. Miley Cyrus. A native of the Nashville, Tennessee, area, Miley chose to film on locations in the area when making her huge hit film, Disney’s Hannah Montana: The Movie. According to Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannah_Montana_The_Movie), the historic town of Franklin, Tennessee, and the nearby Cool Springs Galleria were used for some of the location shooting.

We visited two locations used in Hannah Montana: The Movie. First is Franklin High School. This stately temple of American education is pictured here. All red brick and white columns, it’s a very photogenic place, located on Williamson Boulevard, a mile or two west of charming downtown Franklin.

 Second is the Belk Department Store, located in the Cool Springs Galleria. The shoe-fight scene between Miley Cyrus and Tyra Banks took place on the first floor of Belk’s in Ladies Shoes. A friendly salesperson assured me that I wouldn’t recognize the spot because it now looks different from the way it does in the film. She said her own daughter didn’t recognize it when she saw it. I took a photo of the spot anyway. It’s near the first-floor entrance to the mall and is pictured here.

As soon as I unearth more of the movie’s locations in Williamson County, I’ll post those, too.

 Where to eat: Franklin fairly overflows with delicious dining choices. On this trip, we lunched at Merridee’s Breadbasket (www.merridees.com), a favorite of my cousin, Gwen. Freshly baked breads and pastries, such as chocolate cake and gooey cookies are quite tempting and hard to resist. Those of you with willpower can stick to the superior sandwiches and salads with a refreshing glass of “Northern” tea (unsweet). Too funny!I confess I saw this on a sign on an urn at the Moe’s in Cool Springs, a local favorite for those who like quick Tex-Mex food. Cool Springs is loaded with tasty eating spots, too. Naturally, the Food Court at the Cool Springs Galleria is very convenient to Belk’s and offers something for everyone to enjoy.

If you go: Franklin is located at Exit 65 off the I-65 freeway. Cool Springs Galleria is just to the north. You can use Exits 68b or 67. The seasons do change in Tennessee, so plan your trip accordingly.

See more sights and sites: The recently renovated Franklin Theater (www.franklintheater.com)

Merridee's Breadbasket

has become a beloved area showcase for classic and contemporary films, as well as live acts and concerts. It’s located in downtown Franklin. Williamson County also is home to Civil War history, for those who want to include a visit to historic homes and battlefields in their trip itinerary. Williamson County is reportedly the wealthiest county in the state. Farms and ranches of rolling green hills surround its populated areas.

Movie-History Day Trip No. 1: Evansville, Indiana

 
Sonja Driving Kentucky Roads

Bosse Field, Side View

Gerst Restaurant

Frog Follies

Entrance to Bosse Field, Evansville, Indiana

Welcome! Are you a big movie fan? Me, too. Like you, I have loved movies all my life.

 I also love history. It’s filled with so many fascinating real-life characters and stories. As a novelist (www.tinamurrayauthor.com), I love stories, and when they’re true stories, all the better

So why not combine my love of movies with my love of history and blog about it? That’s the idea I had when I took a road trip recently to Evansville, Indiana. It’s how this new blog of mine came to be.

 What does Evansville have to do with movie-history, you ask? Well, that’s what I found out—and it’s what I’m going to share with you now.

As it turns out, Evansville is the home of Bosse Field, a vintage baseball stadium that was used for location scenes in the popular movie A League of Their Own. According to my friend Sonja—who was the driver on this car trip from Nashville and who’s an Evansville native–a number of lucky townspeople participated in the filming back in 1991. (No doubt they have stories of their own to share.)

In case you don’t recall the details of the movie, I’ll fill you in.

Set in the World War II era, A League of Their Own is comedy-drama about a women’s professional baseball team in the 1940’s. Directed by Penny Marshall, the film stars Tom Hanks, Geena Davis, Rosie O’Donnell, Madonna, and Lori Petty. The cast includes Bill Pullman, Gerry Marshall, Tea Leoni, and Jon Lovitz, among talented others.

Because I’m a writer—and because I believe writers should be given more credit—I must mention that the screenplay was written by Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel. Their work was based on a story by Kim Wilson and Kelly Candaele, The film itself was produced by Elliot Abbot and Robert Greenhut and released by Columbia Pictures.

According to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_League_of_Their_Own), the main baseball field used in the production of the film was actually League Stadium in Huntingburg, Indiana. Other scenes were shot at well-known Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois. In the movie, the fictional team heroes/heroines were called the Rockford Peaches, and  League Stadium served as their home field. However, a rival team, the Racine Bells, called Evansville’s Bosse Field home.

 Two other local landmarks were used in the film: the Soaper-Essex House, an historic home in the adjacent town of Henderson, Kentucky; and the Hornville Tavern in Evansville. I hope to visit both in a future trip.

Visiting Bosse Field, which is located in Evansville’s historic Garvin Park, I found a dignified, circular structure of red-brick  a broad, one still very much in use. It occupies a place of prominence in the park, a peaceful expanse of land set aside for the enjoyment of local citizens. I’m including  pictures of the stadium and the park, as well as pictures of the restaurant in which we ate lunch. 

If you make the trip to Evansville, you might wish to dine at this local favorite, the Gerst House restaurant in Evansville. This long-standing establishment serves freshly prepared German-American food, such as sauerbraten and apple streudel, in an authentic atmosphere.

 If that’s not to your liking, I’m sure you can find a meal to your taste in one of Evansville’s many eateries or on the road. If you find a place you enjoy, please post it here so readers can benefit.

As it so happens, we visited Evansville on the weekend of the The Frog Follies, an annual gathering of cars buffs and their antique automobiles. These vehicles have been lovingly restored and are well-maintained. Painted in bright colors, such as scarlet-red and sunburst-yellow, they present a gleaming spectacle when assembled outdoors by the hundreds.

Of course, to movie-history lovers, they bring to mind everything early-20th century, from A League of Their Own to Bonnie and Clyde to Public Enemies. It’s easy to envision John Dillinger–machine gun blasting from beneath one arm–hopping onto the running board of one of these babies as it careens, tires screeching, around the corner of teeming, back-lot city streets.

But that’s just in my imagination. Back in the reality of the heartland, the atmosphere is tranquil, tame, and orderly. Driving home in late summer, we traversed bridges spanning the Green and Ohio Rivers.

Evidence of the industrial heartland, past and present, can be glimpsed. Crossed by the occasional train, the countryside of western Kentucky is mostly green and rolling fields dotted by tall, stately trees. Every now and then a white fence appeared in my passenger-side window. Cows and horses grazed idly. I pondered which movie-trivia site to visit next.

The pleasantness of the air-conditioned drive home lulled me into reverie. I thought of question for you:  If you could have coffee or tea with any movie celebrity in the world–living or dead–anywhere in the world, who and where would that be–and why?

Hello world!

Welcome to Celebrity Road Trips. My name is Tina Murray, Ph.D. I am a novelist and freelance writer. I am the author of the novel A Chance to Say Yes (www.tinyurl.com/ACTSYamazon.) I hope you’ll visit often.

I don’t have a photo of my own to post, so, in the meantime, I’m posting this photo I took of Miss Green Peeps. (I like the photo.)

Onward to Celebrity Road Trips!