Blood, Sex and Booze- A Green Day Site

Home

About Me
My Links
Billie Joe
Billie Joe Pictures
Mike Dirnt
Mike Dirnt Pictures
Tre Cool
Tre Cool Pictures
Anti-Green Day
Band's History
Billie's Bedroom
Billie's Former Teacher Talks About Green Day
Contact Me
Email Green Day
Equipment
Facts About Green Day
Fan Fic
Green Day Guitar Tabs
Green Day Links
Green Day Pictures (Page 1)
Green Day Pictures (Page 2)
Green Day Pictures (Page 3)
Green Day Pictures (Page 4)
Interview: Lawrence Livermore- The Man Who Found Green Day
Lyrics to 'Platypus (I Hate You)'
Message Board
My Adventure With Green Day
News
Polls
Some Green Day Inspirations
The Inspiration Letter for 'Reject'
1039/Smoothed
Kerplunk!
Dookie
Insomniac
Nimrod
Warning
About Me

All the things you're dying to know...

alexalot.jpg

Ahh! Its me!! I'm not usually this dressy, I'll explain the pictures first. If you look to your left you see a picture of me before going to Citadel. What the fuck is Citadel, you ask? Well, its a theater in my city. The biggest and best I guess. My friends and I
always get season tickets, and the girls always get dressed up together, and the boys always get dressed up together, then we meet and watch some good ol' fashioned live theater. Well, on with things.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
V  i  t  a  l  s
 
 
 
Name: Chantelle Alexandria Rachel Dick (I go by Alex)
 
Age: 17
 
Birthday: Sept. 30th, 1984
 
 

alexparty.jpg

Interests: Green Day obviously, I also love music, I play guitar/bass/piano (self taught) and I am a drummer in a marching band (center snare). I also have been playing the flute for 6 years and hope to get my music degree majoring in flute. I love marching bands/drum corps. and I would kill to see DCI again. I also love doing makeup. I am part of an amature film crew and I've done stage makeup. I also love acting.
 
Future Plans: Going to get a BEd/BMusic combined degree, be a music teacher, have a band on the side, then go back to school to get a tech. theater degree. I would also like to go to school to learn about arranging/programing/producing etc. I also wanna age out of band (at 21) then become a drill choreographer/instructor for about 40 years, then after I'm done that I want to become a DCI judge.

  
 
     P   l   a   y
              

A collage I made for my school's yearplay.
midsummer.jpg

alex.jpg

Ok. I've decided to group this, or I'll just ramble about nothing over and over. Ok, the picture you see on your right is another of me getting ready for Citadel, except its at school. We (as in all my friends) were in a play this year and it took up a lot of time, so we lived at school and didnt go home to get changed for Citadel and things, so while the pictures were being taken for the cast photo thingy, I got this one done too. Anyways, here I'll talk about the play. It was a big thing for me this year. Basically I went to an academic school, so the arts had no funding, so this was our biggest production. We spent 24 hours straight building the set. Oh, by the way, it was "A Midsummer Nights Dream". What was my part? I was a fairy, I played the flute/tambourine/horn. Which is interesting cause I've never played brass before and 5 hours before the curtain opened on opening night they tell me they need a horn player. I guess I'm a fast learner. I composed/arranged almost all the music for this play, and was assisted by the other musical fairy who played the violin/pennyflute. So it was interesting. All in all, we pulled off an amazing performance, we sold out every night/matinee, and people wanted to get the media involved. Cool huh? On with things...

oberon.jpg
Oberon (Fairy King) and Entourage (Oberon is Peter M, and then theres a ton of faries)

quinceandco.jpg
Quince and Co. Practicing (L-R Will B. Kevin O, Dexter D, Tom W, Colin Y.)

lullaby.jpg
Faries practicing the lullaby (L-R, Me, Felica T, some girl I dont know)

    B  a  n  d

fairyalex.jpg
Me in my fairy costume for Midsummer

Ok, now on to the band part of me. I have been in the Edmonton Crusaders Marching Band going on to my sixth year now. I started out playing flute, but my 4th year I switched to pit (people at the front of the feild who play xylophones etc) and this year I switched to drumline. I love the activity, no one really knows what its about, but its really cool. Its very competitive and serious, but the people you are friends with in band are so cool and you're like a family as soon as you join. I want to stick with this activity until they kick you out, when you're 21, and then become an in instructor, and then a DCI judge. (Drum Corps International). My favorite Corps. would be the Blue Devils, Santa Clara Vanguard and the Crossmen. I encourage anyone to join the activity. Its fucking amazing.
 
Check out a 2 minute clip of the Crossmen's 2001 show.
Check out a 2 minute clip of the Cavaliers' 2001 show. (They are the DCI champions for 2002!)
Check out a 2 minute clip of the Madison Scouts' 2001 show.
Check out a 2 minute clip of the Cadets' 2001 show. (AWESOME drill moves!)

500.jpg
The Concord Blue Devils 1999 show, 'Rhythms'. (The people with flags are called colorguard(dancers))

Knife scene, where Ryce tries to kill Tyler
theboys.jpg
L-R: James, Tom, Piotr, Will, Daniel, Matt, Russell (bottom.)

 M o v i e
w o r k s

Now on to the last part about me I'm gonna write about, the movie part. No, I am not a movie star, despite what some may tell you. I am a makeup artist. The group of friends that I have all make up an amature film crew. The director has made 3 full length movies since the 7th grade (we're now graduated) and a million side projects. The movie I had the biggest part in was 'Pariahs', which we finished this year after 2 years of writting/filming. I was the head makeup artist. This movie is 75 minutes long, and was accepted into the Toronto Teen Film Festival this Aug., 2002. It was played on the opening night gala, which is the best of the best, and it was the last movie shown, which is a great honor. It was also the only feature length film shown twice throughout the festival. In the end, we won "Best Feature Length Film" (highest award possible) and "Best Actress" (Emma Gilbertson). So basically, we're the best writers/lighting/sound/makeup etc. artists in the world under the age of 19. Cool, huh? The movie is basically about teen violence, but it is definatly not like an after school special. The cast and crew are as follows:
 
Crew:
Director/Co-Creator: Will Beauchamp
Lighting: Tim Bouwsema
Makeup/Hair: Alex Dick
Costumes: Kathleen Pollet
                 Laura Young
Writters: Anne Privett
              Alexis Hillier
Key Grip: Shari LaPerle
Camera: James Guindon
Boom Operator: Bronwen Harvey
Storyboarding: Tom Williams
Producer: Harvy Diduch
Editors: Will Beauchamp
             Tim Bouwsema
 
Cast:
Tyler: Russell S. Bell
Mary: Emma Gilbertson
Vanessa: Constance Keaschuck
Ryce: Piotr Muras
Paul: Paul Clyburn
Ryce's Friends: Tom Williams
                        Matthew Lui
                        Daniel P.
Vanessa's Friends: Selam W.
                             Liane C.
                             Shannon Minor
                             Angelika P.
 

One of our film Shoots
bigstickthing.jpg
L-R: Bronwen, Mark (clickyboard guy), James, R-man (He wasnt really part of movieworks)

We sold out 300 tickets to the premier
ticketsales.jpg
L-R Danielle, Anne, Tom, Paul, Emma, Christian

There were many more extras and behind the scenes people, but these ones are the ones who are my main group of friends, minus a few who I dont remember at the moment cause I'm tired. Anyways, I really love doing this movie thing, I've just finished shooting a music video, along with Will, Tim and Kathleen, for a local indie artist, Deon Blyan, who did the music for 'Pariahs'. I will also be helping editing this video. One thing I take from doing this activity, I understand how hard it is to film things. You watch TV and take it for granted, theres so much work that goes into it. A 30 second shot might have taken 2 hours to film and 2 more to edit. One thing I hate is now I always watch the backgroud for continuity errors, rather than watch the movies. Oh well. Its a lot of fun, even if we film for 18 hours straight, EVERY weekend. :) So now I'll leave you with an interview Will and Russell did with the Edmonton Journal. Have fun!

interview.jpg
L-R Piotr, Emma, Will, Tim, Russell

Friday, May 24, 2002

There's a hush of excitement as the cast and crew of a new film on teen bullying, pariahs , assemble in front of a movie screen at Archbishop MacDonald Catholic high school.

The lights dim, the opening credits roll and the students stand back and watch as the result of more than two years of writing, acting, shooting and editing rolls across the screen.

This excitement will build until August, when the crew plans to enter the 75-minute movie in the feature-film category at Toronto's International Teen Movie Festival.

Many students and staff at the west Edmonton high school will see the movie for the first time at its school-only premiere tonight.

But for the three teens at the centre of the production, this is about the 300th time they've watched it.

Lighting director Tim Bouwsema, 18, grins when asked how much work he's put into pariahs since the work started.

"We could recite the whole movie for you right now, every line," he says of himself, actor Russell Bell and director Will Beauchamp.

Beauchamp remembers the day he and Bell got the idea for pariahs. It was April 20, 1999, the day of the school shooting at Columbine high school in Colorado, when two students, described as outcasts, killed 12 of their classmates and one of their teachers before taking their own lives.

"We were sitting in science class, and our student teacher came in and told us what was happening. I remember being physically sick about it," Beauchamp says. "Russell and I looked at each other, and we didn't say it, but we both knew we wanted to do something."

Beauchamp says he knew immediately that film was the medium he wanted to use to deliver his anti-bullying message to his peers. "Film is our generation's way of communication," he said. "I don't read a lot of books, but I watch a lot of movies."

In its first incarnation, the film was simply a re-telling of the Columbine shooting, but Beauchamp and his team weren't happy with that.

"We didn't want to mirror Columbine because that's exactly what (the two gunmen) wanted: fame and notoriety," says Bell. "So we took the issue of bullying and teasing and made a more general story about it."

Beauchamp, Bell and Bouwsema all say they were driven to finish the film because of the bullying they see among teens every day. "You see it. You see kids getting picked on every day in the hallway, and it just builds and builds.

"This film sort of shows some alternatives you can turn to, instead of violence, if you're being bullied."

Their teacher, Harvey Diduch, guesses it cost about $1,000, not including equipment.

And Beauchamp can't resist pumping the film up a little.

"It starts off like a campy teen movie, but it gets deeper. It really hits you hard," he said.

The premiere of pariahs coincides with the launch of a national campaign against bullying by Justice Minister Martin Cauchon on Thursday.

The campaign will feature television commercials beginning in June.

The ad campaign comes in the wake of several teen deaths in which bullying was a factor.

In 1997 British Columbia teen Reena Virk died after beatings at the hands of other teens.

In March, two B.C. teens were convicted in the death of Dawn-Marie Wesley, 14, who hanged herself in November 2000 after writing a note in which she described their bullying.

                       - Edmonton Journal, 2002.