PR 2006 Apr 22

 

Alabama Stage and Screen Hall of Fame to Honor Two in 2006

 

 (Tuscaloosa, Ala.) - The seventh presentation of the Alabama Stage and Screen Hall of Fame awards has been scheduled for Saturday, April 22, 2006 on the campus of Shelton State Community College at 9500 Old Greensboro Road in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

 

"Since 1999, Theatre Tuscaloosa, in partnership with Shelton State Community College, has hosted the Stage and Screen Hall of Fame," said Paul K. Looney, executive director of the event.  "I'm proud to announce that our honorees for 2006 are favorite native son Jim Nabors and Rick Bernstein executive producer of HBO Sports."

 

Jim Nabors is an entertainer of international status whose ability to combine the charm of a sophisticated modern country gentleman with the ingenuousness of a traditional country cousin has made him one of America's most beloved personalities. Blessed with a quick wit and a rich classical baritone, Jim's natural guest appearance on the Andy Griffith Show. "Gomer" became a series regular and his talents as a character actor were discovered when he portrayed "Gomer Pyle" and later the star of his own show "Gomer Pyle USMC". Jim later starred as the host of "The Jim Nabors Hour", and gave television audiences across the country the opportunity to learn what Las Vegas audiences had known for years that Jim Nabors is a sophisticated and multi talented entertainer in his own right.

 

Jim attended the University of Alabama to major in business administration and upon graduation, he moved to New York and worked as a typist for the United Nations. After a year, he decided to return to the south and worked as a film cutter in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

 

He moved to Los Angeles and got a job as an apprentice film cutter at NBC.

At nights, he performed at The Horn in Santa Monica, a cabaret theatre whose intimate atmosphere was bent toward the showcasing of new talent. His occasional performances became nightly appearances as he devoted increasing amounts of energy to perfecting his singing style. Bill Dana took notice of his hillbilly monologues and operatic arias and invited him to audition for The Steve Allen Show. He became a regular for the season.

 

He has recorded twenty eight albums and numerous singles and has garnered five gold and one platinum record.

 

Jim's stage debut was as Harold Hill in "The Music Man", a musical production at The Burt Reynolds Dinner Theatre with Florence Henderson. He recreated that role at Birmingham Summerfest Theatre in Alabama.

 

His movie career includes "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" with Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton. In "Stroker Ace", he was Burt's ace mechanic and Loni Anderson's confidant. He also had a cameo role in the star studded production of "The Cannonball Run II.''

 

Rick Bernstein, born in Miami but raised in Birmingham, graduated from Mountain Brook High School in 1975.  It was in Alabama, as a teenager with a love of sports, that Bernstein coincidentally found his way into sports television. As a young boy, Bernstein sold refreshments and souvenirs at Rickwood Field and Legion Field.

 

After befriending an ABC Sports technician, he learned that ABC frequently hired production assistants and runners.  In the years that followed, he drove though out the South working college football games, Wide World of Sports, Auto Racing and Golf.  By the time Bernstein reached college, he was traveling 35 weekends a year for ABC sports.

 

Following graduation from the University of Missouri, Bernstein began working in 1980 as a Production Assistant for the then fledging HBO Sports.

At the time, HBO Sports had just entered the Boxing business and had few programs to speak of, other than Inside the NFL.  Bernstein traveled to New York to work on what he thought would be a one month project.  Twenty five years later, he remains in New York, today as Executive Producer and Senior Vice President of HBO Sports.

 

He is responsible for overseeing the production of all HBO sports programming, including World Championship Boxing, Boxing After Dark, Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, Costas Now, Inside the NFL and an array of documentaries.  He works with an entire production staff as well as the best broadcasters in sports television today including James Brown, Cris Collinsworkth, Bob Costas, Bryant Gumbel, Jim Lampley and Dan Marino.

 

Throughout his career at HBO, his contributions have earned four Peabody Awards and 16 Emmy Awards.

 

Bernstein holds a BS/BA degree in Business from the University of Missouri and lives in Larchmont, New York with his wife Jane and his three children.

 

The 2006 Alabama Stage and Screen Hall of Fame Gala and Induction ceremony is held on the campus of Shelton State Community College.  Special guests for the evening will include 2004 honoree Brett Butler, who will entertain with her stand-up comedy after dinner and Ronnie Schell, who played "Duke Slater," Gomer's side-kick in "Gomer Pyle USMC."  The black-tie event begins with a cocktail party and silent auction and continues with a sit down dinner and the award presentations.

 

Tickets for the event begin at $200 per couple with a portion of the cost being tax-deductible.  Tickets for the April 22 event may be purchased by calling the Theatre Tuscaloosa box office at 205-391-2277.