With so much in this country at stake, now is the
time to forget partisan differences and reach across party lines to make a
difference during the next four years, Hollywood entertainers appearing in
Washington, D.C., counseled Thursday night.
"I just think this has been a wonderful
last couple of days and that's important, that people really do get to make
change if they don't like things ... we have winners and losers and that's what
democracy is all about," actor Joe Pantoliano co-director of the Creative
Coalition said.
Pantoliano spoke with reporters at the
organization's "The Ball After the Ball" event at the Reagan Building
in downtown Washington, D.C.
But one thing the actor and director said he
does hope to see during
President Bush's second term in the White House is positive change in Iraq.
"I just hope that this administration
makes some serious changes and that the elections at the end of the month make a
difference," he said, referring to the Jan. 30 Iraqi elections.
The Creative Coalition is a nonprofit,
nonpartisan, social and political advocacy organization comprised of
entertainment names and faces. Founded in 1989 by actor Ron Silver, the group is
working to educate and mobilizes leaders in the arts community on issues such as
First Amendment rights, arts advocacy and public education.
"We work from the center of the aisle and
it's really important to what we do," actor, director and Creative
Coalition co-director Tony Goldwyn told party guests before singer Macy Gray
took the stage to perform songs of her own as well as The Beatles' 'Come
Together'.
"This is a great platform for us to
celebrate the arts and talk about things like funding for the arts, First
Amendment rights; things we really care about [with] Republicans, as well as
Democrats," Goldwyn said earlier in the night.
While many of the galas and balls in Washington
this week heralded Bush's election victory and celebrated four more years of him
in the Oval Office, the Hollywood elite, many of whom actively criticized Bush's
policies, may not have seemed a likely crowd to descend upon the nation's
capital for the week's events. But there they were, capturing imaginations with
bright lights and red-carpeted runways.
Many of the Creative Coalition's famous
party-goers acknowledged that they didn't vote for Bush on Nov. 2. But, they
said, they're not sitting around licking their wounds.
"Like it or not, [Bush] is the president
of the United States and you can [complain for] the next four years or you can
sit back" and be active, said actor Matthew Modine, who's been featured in
movies such as Full Metal Jacket.
Entertainers who passed through the media line
reiterated that their involvement in the coalition isn't because of political
ambitions but because of a strong desire to work on issues.
"I think it's more of a neo-conservative
thing to be angry and bitter ... progressives tend to be more inclusive,"
Hill Harper, known for his role as Dr. Sheldon Hawkes on CBS' CSI: NY, said.
"That's what the Creative Coalition stands
for ... I would like to focus on what can be done," he said.
Goldwyn, who played the dark character, Carl
Bruner, in the 1990 smash-hit, Ghost and more recently co-starred in
The Last Samurai added: "We purposefully don't take on issues
that are specifically partisan issues. Joey [Pantoliano] and I are here to say,
'Hey, let's work together.'"
One issue of paramount importance to the
coalition is keeping entertainment-related jobs in the United States and not
outsourcing them to other countries where production costs may be lower. Among
other things, the group is lobbying various state governments to encourage tax
credits or similar incentives to ensure American television shows and movies are
still predominantly made in America.
"It's not just that actors have to travel
but when we got to Romania, we're not taking American workers over there, we
leave a 60-some person crew behind," said Modine.
He noted that in the New York City area alone,
there are about 75,000 people active in the movie and television industry.
"If those productions go away, that's a
lot of people out of jobs," he said.
Jonathan Lipnicki, who became famous portraying
little Ray Boyd in Jerry Maguire added: "A lot of people think
it's the rich directors and actors that are hurt but it's not just them ... it's
also people with families to support that get hurt when production work is
outsourced."
While the 14-year-old Lipnicki considers
himself "nonpartisan," he said one issue in which he is particularly
interested is stem-cell research; Lipnicki has testified before Congress on
behalf of juvenile diabetes research.
"I feel it's very important; it really is
key to lots of success with diabetes and a lot of other diseases," he said.
And it's no secret that when a celebrity speaks
up for or against a certain cause, it tends to get more attention in Washington
than do their pedestrian counterparts.
"Now that I've got a little bit of a
profile — it only lasts five minutes anyway," Mario Van Peebles, who is
currently filming Carlitos Way: The Beginning said. "If I can
lend it to anything to mean something, I would do that," he said.