MPTF: A New Spirit Invades a Crumbling Regime

MPTF: A New Spirit Invades a Crumbling Regime

Published: February 07, 2010 @ 10:39 pm
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By Richard Stellar
On Saturday, Feb. 6, a new regime descended on the embattled MPTF that introduced a much-needed spirit of compassion and giving.
Thanks to the successful backyard auction at the home of Renee Taylor and Joe Bologna the week before, clothing donated by the entertainment industry quickly found its way directly to those in the embattled long-term care unit.
This same auction, cobbled together in only a couple of weeks by Taylor and Nancy Biederman, raised more than $30,000 for the most elderly and frail residents at the Motion Picture Home.
One image that probably is most representative of the Hollywood spirit that will ultimately save the LTC unit and the future of motion picture and television healthcare was the photo I captured with my phone (left). Amidst the clutter of designer tops, robes, track suits and wigs was actor John Schneider, on his knees, carefully selecting the perfect pair of shoes to fit resident Ava Bliss.
This wasn't a PR hack's suggested pose that, once shot, would find John tossing the shoes to some underling. There was no make-up available or publicists accompanying him. I just looked down and there he was: involved, assembling an electric wheelchair, and fitting shoes like a geeky college kid at a shopping mall shoe store.
He's our friend since day one. He gets it.
Other celebrities should aspire to be like him, or like Bill Smitrovich, Anne-Marie Johnson, Ken Howard, Jamie Farr, Trey King, Michele Santopietro, Elliott Gould, RJ Mitte, Taylor, Bologna and a growing list of others who are now beginning to stand with the residents and their families.
Symbolically, in one afternoon resulting from one backyard auction, we were able to reverse 10 years of bad karma compliments of Tillman's embittered regime.
Despite the orders barked to security by Seth Ellis on the other side of a part-time nurse's phone, we stood our ground respectfully, and  moved when asked like good boys and girls, while handing out some nice threads to those who built the industry that pays Seth Ellis' inflated and ill-deserved nearly $400,000 annual salary.
Don't be fooled by Tillman's departure. He's still there. As long as Seth Ellis walks the halls of the Pavilion (by the way, Seth, the ice machine is still broken), the specter of Dr. David Tillman still haunts the Motion Picture Home. As long as Seth Ellis is around to advance his "successful aging" program, we have not gained anything. We still have our work cut out for us.
However, I do have some news for Seth: We aren't the voiceless elderly who are either fraught with dementia or scared to speak out. We aren't the low-hanging fruit of the fund that you thought would be so easily plucked and turned into mulch. We aren't the "buff seniors" who flit about your dreams like steroid-addled sugarplum fairies. We aren't the architects and designers who accompany you around the LTC.
We don't support you. We want you out. We will see you on the unemployment line with Tillman, along with your cohorts who rub their hands in glee when discussing the eviction of our elderly. 
(Pictured right. clockwise: John Schneider, Richard Stellar, Daniel Quinn, Joe Bologna and LTC resident Larry Jennings.)
Tags: MPTF
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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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