Friday, November 20, 2009 East Central Illinois

11th Annual Roger Ebert's Film Festival 2009

Die-hard Ebertfest fans not deterred by obstacles for tickets

By: Paul Wood
Saturday, April 05, 2008
Story Photo

Photo by: Heather Coit

Friends Jeff Smith, far right, of Champaign, and Tony Ferguson, of Urbana, wait in line to buy tickets to Roger Ebert's Film Festival at the Virginia Theatre in Champaign on Friday. The friends were the second pair to show up for tickets, following friends Jeanette Lewin and Jo Ellen Brown, of Champaign, who showed up first at 7:10 a.m.

CHAMPAIGN – It's 7:10 a.m., it's dark, 39 degrees out – isn't this supposed to be spring? – and two friends are the first in line for individual tickets at Roger Ebert's Film Festival.

Jo Ellen Brown and Jeannette Lewin, Champaign friends for 21 years, have barely slept. Lewin had just gotten back Thursday night from Florida, her tan glowing in the morning chill as evidence.

To serve as her certificate of masochism, Brown already has a series pass for the festival.

"I'm here for moral support," she said – and also as a taskmaster.

Around 6 this morning, Brown called her friend, who had hit the sack around 2.

"I've got another hour!" Lewin complained.

"No you don't," her "friend" responded.

Number 3 in line hadn't had much sleep, either. Jeff Smith of Champaign – "39 and single," he stressed – got off work at The Pavilion at 3:30 a.m.

"I'm on a couple of hours of sleep and two lattes," he explained.

He was joined by Number 4, Tony Ferguson of Urbana, who especially wants to see the obscure "Mishima" about the Japanese ultra-nationalist author.

All four agreed that this year is something special, what with the famous critic's health problems and a heroic promise to appear, despite not being able to speak because of surgery aftereffects.

Brown said a favorite moment in her nine series was when the star and creator of "Stone Reader," about a fan's elusive quest to meet a beloved author, came to not one but two festivals.

For Smith, it was last year's "Beyond The Valley of The Dolls," which Ebert wrote for schlockmeister Russ Meyer.

"It's the only script Ebert wrote, and (1960s band) Strawberry Alarm Clock played at the festival," he said.

Despite Ebert's non-speaking role, Brown said he was excited that well-known critics Richard Roeper, Michael Phillips and Richard Corliss would serve as moderators.

"That's a pretty great lineup,' he said, no pun intended.

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