Booboo Stewart introducing his role on White Frog.
We can always count on Booboo-Flu for some amazing Booboo Stewart gifs.
Booboo Stewart introducing his role on White Frog.
We can always count on Booboo-Flu for some amazing Booboo Stewart gifs.
On the red carpet on March 8th, 2012 for the sold out screening of White Frog at the Castro Theater opening the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival.
Much of the cast was in attendance including Booboo Stewart, Harry Shum Jr., BD Wong, Gregg Sulkin, Tyler Posey, and festival honoree Joan Chen.
Happy New Year everyone!
Here’s a behind-the-scenes video from Popstar Magazine with in-depth interviews on set with Booboo Stewart, Gregg Sulkin, Tyler Posey, Justin Martin and Manish Dayal!
Via Popstar Magazine
It was a mini White Frog reunion today as Booboo Stewart, Harry Shum Jr., and Gregg Sulkin made room in their busy schedules to do an quick ADR session for the film with Director, Quentin Lee. These guys have been busy! Booboo came in right after an amazing $140 million opening weekend for The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1, Harry came during his break from Glee, and Gregg is starting a new ABC Family movie.
Visual Communications (Connecting Communities Through Media Arts) recently sat down with White Frog writer and producer, Ellie Wen, for an in-depth interview on how White Frog came to be.
Written by the mother/daughter team of Ellie and Fabienne Wen and Executive Produced by Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang (M. BUTTERFLY), WHITE FROG is a family tale centered around Nick (Booboo Stewart, THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE), a high school freshman with mild Asperger’s Syndrome whose life is challenged and ultimately changed when tragedy hits his family.
Visual Communications (Connecting Communities Through Media Arts) recently sat down with White Frog director, Quentin Lee, for an in-depth interview on how White Frog came to be.
In the first of two installments exclusively for Visual Communications supporters and followers, we sat down with director Quentin Lee and screenwriter/producer Ellie Wen to get their takes on creating topical, character-driven dramatic films that speak incisively to broad audiences as well as those from the various Asian Pacific American communities.