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PERSONAL CREDITS THE PRESS LOVES ELLIE |
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SKYLINE By Ann GerberThe Chicago Production Weekly
By Kelly Garry
Ellie Weingardt: persona grata
It all began for ElIie Weingardt when she won a trip to the Academy Awards some fifteen years ago. Looking around at the
tuxed-out crowd, she thought "I could do this!" Next came acting classes, community theater and a stint at the Steppenwolf Theatre. All along the way Weingardt pursued voiceover work.
"My first spot was for Arby's Roast Beef. I can remember it perfectly." (In fact, Weingardt's fantastic memory enables her to remember her lines from almost every spot she's voiced) "It felt like someone let me out of the cage. Since then, she has won the Windy Award for best Chicagoland female voice over talent for her work on Coca-Cola Classic. Weingardt has also sold Sears, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Ameritech over the air waves. Currently airing is a Fruitfuls
spot where she plays a Brooklyn hairdresser.
Weingardt isn't much for labels and sees voiceover work has an extension of acting. "It manifests itself physically. You assume the emotions, you have a persona. Persona is something Weingardt has plenty of. She has professionally impersonated Katherine
Hepburn, Lucille Ball and won a contest as Joan Rivers on Fox32 that got her an appearance on Rivers' late show.
Weingardt's on-camera work includes six scenes in Penny Marshall's "A League of Their Own" as a charm school teacher. In an independent,
sci-fli trilogy she plays the lead, an android/human, that had her jumping into sewers and being chased by alien space craft.
SKYLINE By Ann Gerber
Best Ad !
BEST AD we've laughed at in a long time is one for Altoids, the "curiously strong breath mints." Those little white pellets that chase bad breath have an overdressed fashion victim holding a box that she's just been given, and she moans, "I've never been so hurt!" The becurled matron is none other than our versatile model/actress Ellie Weingardt of Highland Park. You can see her in the ads in the June Vogue, July Mademoiselle and June
GQ. to name a few. Pretty redhead Ellie just completed a role as a dragon-tattooed singing barfly in the new flick "The Visitor" with Jean Reno and Christine Applegate. Reno was ruined by a wizard in the Middle Ages and in this time-warp movie comes looking for his lost love - Christine.
EIlie Weingardt's recent performance as Veta Simmons in "Harvey"
"Old Orchard County, Club Theater"
...superior performance (Chicago Tribune) Tom Sammons
... great charm and talent (Des Plaines Times) Betty Nicolai
...cut out for better things (Herald) Scott Fosdick
...shines as the neurotic. Veta Louise Simmons... (Countryside Reminder) Rick Ansorge
Her work speaks for itself!
SCREEN MAGAZINE By Claire
Weingarden
A New Role: Ellie Weingardt plays teacher
She's played all types characters from barflies to Joan Rivers, but now EIIie Weingardt, the self-toasted "Champagne of Voice-Overs" is ready for her next role - teacher.
Weingardt, who has lent her voice to hundreds of commercials and industrial films, teaches several classes at Columbia College II in Chicago. Her classes are in voice acting and copy interpretation. She, along with Audio Engineer Milt Smith, has completed the Certificate in Voice-Over program at Columbia II.
"Chuck Fuller invited me to guest lecture at Columbia for his students, and when he relocated to Florida, he recommended me for the job," she says. "It makes me feel so good to help people learn the craft. It's amazing what you know, but you don't know you know." Weingardt says she is currently in production on her class' CD demos (each class is limited to 10 students to maximize individual attention).
"I tell my students that imagination is their greatest gift," she says. "Without it, you are in a glass cubicle with a window and a microphone. Use everything at your disposal. There's no limit to what you can be through your own imagination. I've been little kids, old men, young women, you name it."
Weingardt recently compiled a new demo of her own. The CD, entitled
"L'Instant Ellie," is made up of six categories - straight announce, characters, impressions, narrations, singing and an audio clip from "A League of their Own," the movie in which Weingardt played a charm school instructor.
NORTH SHORE MAGAZINE
Four Star Rating: The Glamour Babe
She looks like a Hollywood glamour queen in her black one-piece bathing suit, shimmering gold cover-up and spiked gold heels. That's the way Ellie Weingardt greets you in her Highland Park home. We glide into the very pink tinted sun room, complete with ceiling fan. We gaze out at the pool, and then she gracefully serves up quiche. "Perhaps we can sit in the hot tub later", she
says. But now we have more pressing concerns. Let the gossip begin. We start with Ellie's close personal friend Madonna.
"We laughed when her bra was stolen from Frederick's of Hollywood. Madonna told me, 'I don't know why anyone would want that smelly old thing!' " We toss back our heads in unison and laugh.
OK, time to 'fess up. This is an act. Weingardt is playing a part. We asked and she delivered. Confession No. 2: Ellie only knows the Material Girl because of some material they have in a
common - they starred in this summer's hit, "A League of Their Own." Weingardt played the charm school teacher, the woman who tells the female baseball players to sit up straight, sip their tea and keep their legs crossed. "I say, 'Ladies, legs together always,' and then look at Madonna. Everyone on the set cracked up.
Memorable character parts. Actresses kill for those. Weingardt got a little predatory herself, going after the role with the subtlety of a lion stalking a pound of ground round. "They were having auditions in Chicago and the role was described as matronly," says Weingardt, who is anything but. "Anyway, I showed up at the auditions in a black '40s dress, slingback heels, seamed hose, my hair rolled up. And I also did Joan Crawford lips and pencil-thin brows."
Did the other women auditioning hate her? "I don't know," she says, mulling it over. "Every head did turn." Including that of "League" director Penny Marshall, who told Weingardt that she "gave great face." A few weeks later Weingardt got the proverbial call; Hollywood wanted her.
Weingardt, in her 40s, is not some Goodman grad with decades of experience. Ellie Bass grew up in Chicago. Where her father owned a haberdashery. At Lindblom High School she was the class soloist and acted in school plays. "I even wrote crazy poems,' she says as we dangle our toes in the Jacuzzi. "Want to hear a poem?" Sure. "This is called
'Lune Man and the Planet of Max.' Here we go: 'Slip me some skin said my frantic friend. Man,
this planet is the end.' You must remember that this was the '60s," she says. "That poem made me very famous in school."
A sign of things to come? Weingardt graduated and landed at CBS-TV, where she was a secretary who moonlighted by singing on "The Music Wagon" show. But that ended when she married Ron Weingardt, a manufacturer, and had five kids. They moved to Highland Park, and "I was getting a little bored. My kids were leaving the nest."
Then fate stepped in. Weingardt was doing volunteer work when she called in for a radio trivia contest and won an
all-expenses-paid trip to the Academy Awards. "I pulled up to the awards in my limo and someone said, 'Who are you?' I said, 'Nobody.' I walked up that red carpet and people were taking pictures of me. I said, 'This is it! I've got to do this!' It was the craziest thing."
Even crazier was when Weingardt and her husband followed Jack Nicholson's limo to a party at Spago. "We put on our sunglasses and got right in," she marvels. "Warren Beatty ogled me. It was my claim to fame."
There was no turning back. Weingardt took acting lessons with a neighbor, which led to voice-over work, commercials and various plays, including "Shear Madness." She landed in Hollywood again after winning a Joan Rivers look-alike contest. Yes, Ellie does
knock-'em-dead impressions. "I toured Hollywood with two busloads of Joan look-alikes. It was weird. When we went to the bathroom, I discovered most of the Joans were men in drag."
Filming a major motion picture like "League" was anything but a drag. We traipse back to the sun room, sip grapefruit juice and look at the snapshots. "Oh, here's actress Ann Ramsey. I adore her! Here's Tom Hanks. He's so funny! Here's Ann
Cusack. Annie. I love this girl." A minute passes. "Want to see the script?" Weingardt inquires. "Come with me."
We wander upstairs. "Let's go into my bathroom," says the star. "It's my favorite." This, however, is not a
bathroom - it's more like fantasy island. There's a sunken tub, television, VCR and
coffee maker in addition to the usual bathroom amenities. You half expect Robin Leach to be hiding near the sink. "I watch movies in the tub," she says as we read the script. While she waits for Hollywood to come calling again, she'll be content to watch "League" in her tub when it comes out on video.
And what did she think when she first saw herself on the big screen I thought, 'Oh, I look so thin!' "