Dallas VideoFest Film

Devo’s Gerald Casale to Receive the Ernie Kovacs Award From Dallas Videofest September 29 @Texas Theatre

Written by Kelly Kitchens

Dallas VideoFest is proud to present the coveted Ernie Kovacs Award to musician, artist, and music video director Gerald Casale, best known for his work in DEVO, at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 29, at the Texas Theatre (231 W. Jefferson Blvd. – Oak Cliff/Dallas). A VIP meet-and-greet reception with Gerald Casale will at Top Ten Records (338 Jefferson Blvd. Dallas) before the Award ceremony, while the event and film will be downstairs at the Texas. The brand new DEVO documentary (2024), which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January this year, will play the night before, Saturday, September 28.

To purchase tickets, go to https://kovacs.eventive.org.

Additionally, a Q&A and book signing of the new “Ernie in Kovacsland” book with author Joshua Mills, son of Edie Adams and keeper of the Kovacs flame, at The Wild Detectives (314 W Eighth St. Dallas) on Monday, September 30 at 7 pm

Ernie Kovacs has been a key component of the Dallas VideoFest since the Festival began in 1987. Casale will receive the award from Dallas VideoFest’s Founder and Artistic Director, Bart Weiss. Mills will also attend.

Hmm… DEVO? Of course, DEVO!

As a primary force behind DEVO’s creative vision, Jerry Casale is also responsible for designing the band’s visually striking concert stage shows, and Dadaist costumes, including their signature red ‘Energy Dome’ hats.

Casale’s innovative approach to music videos and short films (starting in 1973) led him to direct nearly 100 music videos for notable bands such as Rush, Silverchair, and The Cars. Gerald also has the distinction of directing both the very first Foo Fighters video and the final video for Soundgarden.

It became clear that Gerald Casale specifically deserved the Ernie Kovacs Award when Mills found this Tumblr link: https://grossnational.tumblr.com/post/741964449382088704

The link contains this quote:

“Gerald Casale from DEVO has said, ‘I don’t think DEVO exists without the Nairobi Trio,’ referring to the recurring Ernie Kovacs sketch that featured a trio of (quite famous) performers in gorilla masks, trench coats and white gloves, attempting to play music as the sketch goes off the rails.”

“It completely blew my mind learning that Gerald Casale and DEVO were not only fans of Ernie Kovacs but were influenced by him as well,” said Mills. “Clearly, we are all DEVO.”

Gerald Casale upon learning he would be the recipient of the 2024 Ernie Kovacs Award:

“I remember a stern nun telling me I had reached ‘the age of reason’ when I turned 7. Luckily, it was also the year I first watched the Ernie Kovacs Show with my parents huddled close to our black and white TV. That was the best antidote to ‘reason’ a boy could hope for. I was hooked. I watched, smiling and laughing, as Kovacs and his cohorts executed a Smorgasbord of absurdist comedy, combining high and low culture seamlessly to innovative, comedic ends. I can honestly say it inspired my visual aesthetic and set me on a satiric creative path sustained for a lifetime.”

Bart Weiss, founder/artistic director of Dallas VideoFest, on the importance of Ernie Kovacs:

”The very first program of our festival in 1987 showcased Edie Adams (Ernie’s widow) expounding on the work of Ernie Kovacs. Ernie’s innovative spirit has been with us these 37 years. The Kovacs Award became the perfect way to honor those who changed how we look at TV/Video much like Kovacs did.

“Just as Ernie Kovacs set the aesthetic and for the template for late night and most TV comedy, Jerry Casale’s iconic music videos set the paradigm for how a band could define their image and tell their story through music video.”

DEVO documentary will launch a celebration of Casale

The brand new DEVO documentary currently on the Festival Circuit will play on Saturday, Sept 28, at the Texas Theatre (231 W. Jefferson Blvd. – Oak Cliff/Dallas).

In 1980, new wave band DEVO scored a hit with “Whip It” and gained mainstream success with their message of societal “de-evolution,” formed in response to the 1970 Kent State shootings.

Review in Variety magazine: ‘DEVO’ Review: Chris Smith’s Documentary About the Jump-Suited Robo-Rock Avatars of De-Evolution Is as Much Fun as Its Subject

The film traces the band’s music, its videos, its roots in the embers of the counterculture, its freak success, and its big message, which remains prophetic and often misunderstood.

About DEVO’s Gerald V. Casale

Gerald Casale is a Grammy-nominated and multi-award-winning composer, singer, musician, and music video director. He is the co-founder of DEVO and the architect of the band’s most iconic hit songs, such as ‘Whip It,’ ‘Freedom of Choice,’ and ‘Beautiful World.’

At age 76, Casale continues to push the boundaries of music and art with his latest projects, including a trio of new music videos/records since 2021 and an upcoming full-length album titled ‘Wetiko,’ which he is producing with Oingo Boingo alumni Steve Bartek and drummer Josh Freese of The Foo Fighters.

Details: GeraldVCasale.com

About the Ernie Kovacs Award

The Ernie Kovacs Award recognizes the careers and talents of some of television’s greatest visionaries. Kovacs’ work in the 1950s and early 1960s summed up the spirit of innovation and the development of the language of television as art.

The Dallas VideoFest and the Video Association of Dallas announced the first Ernie Kovacs Award at the 1997 festival. Comedian Joel Hodgson of “Mystery Science 3000” was the first recipient and subsequent honorees have included – our last recipient in 2022 – Al Franken; Terry Gilliam and John Cleese, both of “Monty Python;” Robert Smigel, writer/performer of “Saturday Night Live” and “Late Night with Conan O’Brien;” Paul “Pee-wee Herman” Reubens; Martin Mull; Mike Judge; George Schlatter, creator of “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In;” Harry Shearer, “This is Spinal Tap” and “The Simpsons;” Michael Nesmith; Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald of “The Kids in the Hall,” in 2017; and Amy Sedaris, the first woman to receive the Ernie Kovacs Award in 2018.

Actress Edie Adams (http://edieadams.com/), Kovacs’ widow, came to Dallas to host the awards program annually until her death in 2008. Today, Edie’s son, Joshua Mills, runs Ediad Productions, the video and audio archive of both Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams. As the official archivist for the Ernie Kovacs/Edie Adams (Ediad) Collection, Ben Model curated the Ernie Kovacs Collection DVD box sets for Shout! Factory, as well as the box set of “Here’s Edie” shows for MVD. The 284-page coffee table book Ernie in Kovacsland (Fantagraphics, 2023) celebrates the cockeyed genius and prolific career, life and creative output of never-before-seen material from the Ernie Kovacs archive.

About the author

Kelly Kitchens

Kelly J Kitchens (Wickersham), film publicist

As an editor and feature writer, Kelly J. Kitchens found herself engrossed in North Texas’ arts, entertainment, leisure/hospitality and fund-raising events scene in the early and mid-'90s where she was a feature writer, critic and editor for a weekly arts and entertainment magazine in Dallas called The Met. Her love of film, music, art, theater and worthy causes drove her to then pursue the publicity side of the media business in 1995. Kelly has been honored by being named a “master publicist” in the Fort Worth Business Press and an “ace media maven” in The Dallas Morning News.

For more than 25 years, Kelly has had her hand in much of the Dallas film world. For instance, she publicized Angelika Film Centers openings in Dallas and Plano and the revitalization of Houston’s Angelika. She is the director of press and publicity for several area film festivals and independent films playing at other film festivals. And in 2022, she plans to return to be the publicist for Alamo Drafthouse Cinemas in DFW.

During the pandemic, Kelly wasn’t sure where her career would take her. Fortunately, she was able to help save Thin Line Film Festival, Dallas VideoFest's DocuFest and AltFiction Fest, Pegasus Film Festival, among other film festivals as they turned to go virtual instead of canceling.

As the world emerges from the pandemic, Kelly is working on publicity for Pegasus Media Project, Who Needs Sleep Telethon, as well as several films making their ways into the festival circuit and an Amazon series nominated for a Daytime Emmy, #WASHED.

One of Kelly’s specialties is her Media Roundtables. RTs are modified press conferences that turn into conversations and virtual film schools with filmmakers, festival directors and anyone else she happens to be working with at the time. Get a feel for these media roundtables at this YouTube playlist: https://tinyurl.com/KJKPRMediaRoundtables