Elders Shock the Annual MPTF Board Meeting

Elders Shock the Annual MPTF Board Meeting

Published: May 29, 2009 @ 1:31 pm
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By Richard Stellar

Had they been able to stand, Mary Stellar and Rosemary Quinn would have been more active and able to properly protest the planned closing of the Motion Picture Home's Long Term Care Facility at Tuesday's poorly attended Board Meeting at the luxurious Saban Center.

As it was, the ladies were enjoying the beautiful weather with their two sons Daniel and myself as we sat in the shade of the Saban Center entryway -- as a visual reminder to the 31 or so board members whose apathy didn't keep them from the luncheon meeting.

Had this been a hastily prepared and informal get-together of power-brokers and industry moguls, Daniel and I might have not cared to escort our ladies to it. However, this was the BIG Annual MPTF Board of Trustees meeting.

You wouldn't know it by the attendance, as it seems that most were “catching on” to the buffoonery and embarrassing escapades of the executive staff. Yet about 31 out of 45 did make it to dine resplendently on the spoils of their indifference.

As the MPTF’s chief executive Dr. David Tillman droned on, disappointed at the lack of real celebrities to later mock, we stood sentry outside with two women who were about to be sent packing.

This intimate gathering of two sons and their mothers was deliberately small -- in order to avoid previous threats of expulsion when groups as small as five were touring the campus, and were told to leave by MPTF security.

Imagine the day Elliott Gould toured the campus with us, and how disheartened he became when our group was asked to disperse and leave. The follow-up letter from MPTF legal counsel Sharon Siefert denouncing our visit included accusations about Mr. Gould's party that included “entering resident rooms without permission, disrupting resident gatherings,” etc.

As someone who was there, the only disruption I saw were tears of joy from those who had worked with Elliott and were able to share hugs and handshakes as he spoke with each and every resident that reached out to him. The only rooms that we entered were the ones where residents saw our entourage pass in the halls, and happily called out to Elliott to visit for a while.

So we weren't going anywhere that early afternoon on Tuesday. We weren't going to remove our signs that punctuated the dire situation. We were, on that sunny day, the moral conscience of the entire motion-picture industry.

Munching on cookies and enjoying bottled water, both Mary and Rosemary captured the smiles of the board members on their way in. How could they not? Only a few with hearts of steel had the strength to look away.

As is their wont, MPTF security again found it necessary to warn the bemused sons about the signs adorning their mother's garments. Denying that this was a protest, Daniel and Richard refused to alter their mother's signage -- instead adjusting them for better visibility.

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Winner of the Los Angeles Press Club's Best Blog Award for his Hollyblogs, and as one of the voices of the grassroots coalition that saved long-term care for the motion picture and television industry, Stellar's "vituperative blog on TheWrap'" (Vanity Fair) has caused great discomfort to the Motion Picture and Television Fund Board and Management, and seemingly added to the weight of the "refrigerator that Jeffrey Katzenberg carried on his back" during the struggle for the Motion Picture Home's Long Term Care.

As Katzenberg remarked to a journalist regarding Stellar, "He's annoying as hell, but I get it." On the other hand, a major donor to the Motion Picture Home remarked "we may not always agree with Richard, but we ignore him at our peril."

Stellar lives in Woodland Hills, a stone's throw from the Motion Picture Home with his wife of 27 years, two dogs and a 1965 Epiphone Casino.

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