![]() ![]() We filmed it over the course of a couple of days. What was the filming process like for that? One of the most memorable moments in the film is the car chase scene when the schoolmates chase Tobin, Angie and JP up a hill. Later in the film there is a bigger confrontation, and you hear everything for what it really is. The fight sort of brings up all of the feelings for her, and she realizes what everything means. She’ll look at him or their eyes will meet in a certain way, and it sort of slow builds to all of a sudden Tobin and Angie have this one-on-one fight. There are moments in the film when she is realizing it and we do see her on that journey with little moments peppered in here and there. ![]() The fact of the matter is that I think she has had a love for Tobin for a long time and it just took a while for her to realize it. Whether or not they were being harbored or not, I wanted it to be clear for me so that it made sense for the viewers. When I developed her character and was doing work on it before I started filming, I wanted to make sure that I had a clear understanding of Angie’s feelings for Tobin the entire time. The way they talk together is super comfortable and they could be stuck together for hours without talking, although I don’t think that would happen because they just can’t stop talking to each other. They have been best friends for as long as they can remember, since they’ve been little kids, and they’ve got a million inside jokes. They have a best-friend dialogue that no one can keep up with. How would you describe the dynamic between Angie and Tobin? There’s basically this unresolved tension between the two of them because even though she’s a very confident young woman, I think she’s scared of what being honest and taking that leap could mean and that’s basically the arc of her story in the movie. The heart of her story is her relationship with Tobin, who is her best friend and he’s been in love with her forever, but she’s been harboring feelings for him, too. Her storyline centers around her, her best friend and a potential love interest named JP. I play Angie, who’s more commonly referred to as The Duke in Let It Snow. ![]() Shipka spoke to THR about Angie’s friendship with Tobin, the musical number in the film and the message she hopes viewers take from the movie.Ĭan you tell me a little bit about your character Angie? The ensemble cast includes Isabela Merced, Shameik Moore, Jacob Batalon, Odeya Rush, Liv Hewson, Miles Robbins, Anna Akana and Joan Cusack. John's highest honor came in 1988 when he was awarded the prestigious Rungius Medal from the Wildlife of American West Art.Based on the best-selling novel by John Green, Maureen Johnson and Lauren Myracle, Let It Snow features a number of interconnecting storylines about high school students that live in a small town hit by a snowstorm. Other great achievements included both gold and silver metals for his oils and charcoal drawings from the Cowboy Artists of America, "Western Artist of the Year" from the National Wildlife Art Collectors Society, and both John and Doris were honored at the Ellensburg National Art Show and Auction for their contributions to western heritage. Over the years John Clymer received numerous awards and honors including the revered Prix de West in 1976, from the national Academy of Western Art. It was there that he developed an enthusiasm for the world around him and an abiding respect for historical accuracy. John Ford Clymer's success as an artist can be traced to his boyhood in the Kittitas Valley located in the central regions of Washington state. All of which, thanks to highway crews who blow off the blizzards, is a very felicitous geographic arrangement." Indeed, when seasons overlap, a downlander might conceivably pick a rose and go skiing with it in his buttonhole. Thus residents of places like Seattle living in a relatively balmy clime beside the Pacific's mild Japan current, can drive in an hour or two up to where skiing material is sometimes twenty feet thick if it's an inch. Up there the moist westerly winds bump against sky-reaching peaks of the Cascade Range, with the result that the winds spill their contents before whistling dryly on down across the eastern slopes. Cover of The Saturday Evening Post Magazine, February 6, 1960Ĭaption: "The Cover: Artist John Clymer takes you to the summit of Washington state's Snoqualimie Pass, where they seem to have had a few snow flurries lately. ![]()
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