Arts & Entertainment

Ed Burns Stopping in Malverne to Showcase Film Shot in Lynbrook

The writer-director will appear at Malverne Cinema 4 on Sunday.

Filmmaker and actor Ed Burns will be on Long Island this weekend to showcase his latest movie, which was shot in Lynbrook, and he's scheduled a stop in Malverne.

Burns is holding three screenings of "The Fitzgerald Family Christmas" followed by Q&A sessions including one that will take place Sunday, Dec. 9, at 2 p.m. at the Malverne Cinema 4. (The other screenings will be held on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Cinema Arts Centre in Huntington, and on Sunday at 3:50 p.m. at the Squire Cinemas in Great Neck.)

A very personable Ed Burns fielded questions at the U.S. – and perhaps more notably, Long Island – premiere of his new film in late October at Clearview Cinemas in Port Washington.

Find out what's happening in Malverne-Lynbrookwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

“He is something of a Long Island hero ­and a very modest man,” Gold Coast International Film Festival Executive Director Regina Gil said at the premiere event when introducing Burns. “He’s a writer, director, producer, actor – and a hell of a nice guy.”

Audience members of the sold-out premiere seemed to agree.

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The indie film tells the touching story of a large Irish family, where the adult siblings must cope with their scars of childhood and their loyalties when, after 20 years, their estranged father shows up for Christmas.

Burns plays one of the brothers. The film also features Friday Night Lights' and Nashville’s Connie Britton, along with notable New Yorkers such as Joyce Van Patton and Malachy McCourt, as well as Long Beach actor Ed Lauter. Most everyone in the film had acted in Burns’ earlier pictures.

Honoring Burn’s roots, the film was largely shot in Valley Stream, including a section of that community known as Gibson, as well as Rockville Centre and a bar in Lynbrook.

During the Q&A portion of the October premiere, many expressed how relatable they found the film, and how accurate the relationships in the film seemed.

“You do the Irish alcoholic family very well from a therapist’s perspective,” one woman told Burns.

“You have the dysfunctional family down pat,” said another. “Do you have a background in psychology?”

Burns said that he’s always “been interested in people. I called my friends from big families to pick their brains” and ask, “does this ring true?”

Burns’ own family seems very supportive, with his relatives, including his parents, and close friends in the audience.

And while the film is a Long Island one through and through, audiences everywhere can connect with family dynamics that emerge around Christmas.

The holidays, he said, are about “celebrating your family” and often about avoiding uncomfortable issues. “Sometimes you have to have those conversations and you have to cover the tough stuff.”

At a private after-party, Burns received the festival's Artist of Distinction award at Haute Durvó in Roslyn.

The film will be released in some Manhattan and Long Island theaters on Dec. 7, and is available on iTunes.


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