Category: Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams (2012)

  • MOVIE REVIEW: In Your Dreams

    Stevie Nicks In Your DreamsFilm about Stevie Nicks is less a documentary, more a love-in

    Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams

    • Two and a half stars out of five
    • Documentary
    • Starring: Stevie Nicks, Dave Stewart
    • Directed by Stevie Nicks and Dave Stewart
    • Running time: 100 minutes
    • Parental guidance: language
    • Playing at: Cinéma du Parc, Friday to Monday

    MONTREAL — The Fleetwood Mac concert scheduled for Tuesday at the Bell Centre has been cancelled. So, about the only way local fans will now be able to catch Mac member Stevie Nicks, the raspy, enigmatic, Grammy Award-winning singer, is through the magic of celluloid: the documentary In Your Dreams: Stevie Nicks, opening Friday and running only until Monday at Cinéma du Parc.

    But Mac fans be warned: this doc doesn’t focus on the fab foursome, but rather on the collaboration between Nicks and former Eurythmics frontman Dave Stewart in the production of Nicks’s solo disc In Your Dreams — released to mostly glowing reviews two years ago.

    Nicks and Stewart are also credited as co-directors and co-executive producers of this film. Which means that they let viewers in on the pop-music world they wish them to see, and not necessarily the warts-and-all pop-music world that an outside director might have depicted.

    As such, the doc begins with gushing testimony from a gaggle of Nicks fans who declare, among other things, that she is one of the greatest voices of our times. No doubt. Certainly, her distinctive vocal stylings helped elevate such Mac tunes as Gypsy, Landslide and Rhiannon to iconic status. And certainly several cuts on In Your Dreams will probably stand the test of time, too.

    Point is, Nicks’s vocals speak for themselves. There is no need for gratuitous aggrandizement and grandstanding here.

    But it seems that Nicks adores herself as much as her fans do. Which means that those not as intensely fanatic about Nicks could have difficulty with aspects of this documentary love-in.

    This same group of observers could also have difficulty with a level of Nicks’s pomposity, particularly when it comes to her comparing herself to Bob Dylan as a writer. She also has the gall to inform management at the hotel in Italy where she is staying that the poem she penned while there and is presenting them will have immeasurable cultural value down the road.

    Nicks has much to be proud of without having to hammer us over the head about her ability as a singer and songwriter. At 65, she remains a vital force and can compose and croon with the best of them. Probably because she is one of the very few women of her epoch still cranking it out, she feels compelled to blow her own horn — particularly when it is the senior Jaggers and McCartneys of the pop world who seem to get most of the press for their ability to endure and to continue to pack the big rooms.

    Maybe there is an element of truth when Nicks proclaims at the beginning of the doc that she and Stewart have decided to “defy” the recording industry, to bring out a disc, “from our tribe to yours,” that will remind people of the grand old ways of the business — evidently a more pure and noble period in the last century when those in the biz were all saints.

    But this rant really starts to veer off the deep end. This is the kind of poppycock rock talk that could induce projectile hurling among the squeamish.

    Sure, between Nicks’s solo and group efforts with Fleetwood Mac in that period, more than 140 million albums were sold. But lest we forget: those hazy, crazy years were fairly turbulent for Nicks, who had to overcome major drug-dependency issues and who, rumour had it, had been associated with witchcraft.

    Stewart, for his part, talks of the obvious pairing between him and Nicks. They have both recovered from relationships, romantic and musical. In his case, it was his Eurythmics mate Annie Lennox. In her case, it was Lindsey Buckingham, with whom she split romantically but with whom she still works both on the solo and Fleetwood Mac fronts.

    Stewart rhapsodizes how he stumbled into this “labyrinth cave” that is Stevie Nicks. It’s actually quite the palatial estate “somewhere in Southern California” — as pointed out in the film. Evidently, Stewart has been into filming stuff ever since finding a gold chain on the street and exchanging it for a video camera at an Australian pawnshop.

    So when Nicks gave Stewart some of her poetic musings, it was decided they transform them to music and that he capture it all on film.

    Nicks takes a back seat to no one. The camera picks up occasional sniping when a producer has the temerity to tell her a lyric isn’t working for him. “Would you tell Bob Dylan what to write?” she asks, almost incredulously.

    Nicks also makes it abundantly clear that Edgar Allan Poe is a big influence. In fact, she brings an adaptation of Poe’s 1839 poem Annabel Lee (about eternal love beyond the grave) — which she wrote when she was 17 — out of the vault to bring to musical life in In Your Dreams. Her hope is that it will turn kids on to the mystical poetry of Poe. Nice thought, even though it comes off as a tad too pretentious.

    On the other hand, credit Nicks for coming to the aid of wounded U.S. soldiers and contributing to Hurricane Katrina relief. She does have heart.

    What this doc doesn’t and should reveal is what drove her from the beginning. All we really learn in one small tidbit is that her grandfather, a struggling country singer, played a role in her musical life.

    There is probably much more and much less to the life and times of Stevie Nicks than what is presented in this picture. But it will take someone else to bring that story to the screen.

    Bill Brownstein, bb*********@*************te.com / Montreal Gazette / Thursday, June 13, 2013

  • MOVIE REVIEW: Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams

    Stevie Nicks In Your DreamsBy Stoogeypedia  / Geeks of Doom
    Friday May 17th, 2013

    Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams

    • Directed by Stevie Nicks & Dave Stewart
    • Starring Stevie Nicks, Dave Stewart, Glen Ballard, Lindsey Buckingham, Mick Fleetwood, Ann Marie Calhoun
    • Virgil Films
    • Release date: May 14, 2013 (VOD)

    Stevie Nicks, the singer/songwriter who has thrilled and delighted legions of fans for over 40 years now by way of her stint in Fleetwood Mac and her also successful solo career, now has a documentary on the process of making her album, entitled Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams, available now for instant digital download on iTunes and through On Demand.

    The Grammy-winning and legendary artist, responsible for so many chart successes and radio hits with Fleetwood Mac like “Rhiannon,” “Go Your Own Way,” “Gypsy,” “Landslide,” and songs like “Stop Dragging My Heart Around” as a solo act, still tours and is still regarded as one of the top-shelf musicians of that genre of all time. Her fan base still boils over today with a passion and fervor for her, she gives off the kind of heat and adoration which many of her audience (especially women), still absorb. She’s kind of a hero, muse, and inspiration all at once to them, in her style, her slapdash, post-hippie, post-Janis Joplin kind of fashion sense, and her art.

    Now comes the film, which had premiered in LA on March 30th and played to almost 100 markets since then, to positive success. Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams, directed by Nicks and ex-Eurythmics steam engine/musician Dave Stewart, shows the making of an album between the two of them, titled In Your Dreams, and it does so in a rather rich visual manner. Eschewing the standardized kind of low-rent, slap it together visual accoutrements which are usually the procedure when these “making of” documentaries are presented, there’s a lush, cinematic tone which hovers over the proceedings.

    Stewart mentions at the beginning of the doc that he has a penchant for filmmaking and it shows here, at times the star is the work of the cinematographer as we see beauty visuals surrounding the making of this record, punctuated by the music created by the two. With co-producer Glen Ballard in tow, best known for his production of Alanis Morrisette’s mid 1990s ode to irony and twisted love and anguish, Jagged Little Pill, the triad collaborates and we see the process from the songs from embryonic state to somewhat fruition, with Nicks charting the ship, steering it, tightening the screws and gently giving her opinions.

    There’s also lots of back slapping and metaphoric gushing and hugging and all that, and Fleetwood Mac members (and former lovers of Nicks) Lindsay Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood making the expected appearances, as does actress Reese Witherspoon, which at times takes away from the proceedings and puts it more in the vanity project department, which no doubt this also is. After all, Nicks has a hand in not only the direction, but the production, obviously she’s the star, the focus, the focal point, and the musician and axis the entire thing is rotating around. But this kind of iron-clad control is something Nicks has always aspired to in her lengthy career; it’s the stuff of legend actually.

    Nicks is a true diva who lives like one and is not ashamed or afraid to show it. In fact she celebrates it. In a way, she seems to enjoy the fact that she’s a larger than life public and artistic figure who waves her magic wand over the massive contingent of loyal fans who will go lengths to gush and cry for her or at least her image (as a quickly edited montage of them do in the very beginning of this doc, championing and singing the praises of this “gypsy”). It’s that adoration and control that seems to be the metaphoric oil and petrol that gives her the massive ilk to chug her way along in her career, especially now, in her sixties, still looking the same in a way physically, but in true essence, light years away from the real glory days of her first and arguable best success during the 1970s with Fleetwood Mac.

    Nowadays, the trip for her is still successful, as she still tours incessantly with Mac and on her own, but it’s more like a revival in a sense and not a fresh approach at what she’s capable of. The fans don’t care or even see it this way of course, they are just happy to have Nicks around, and a Nicks product, regardless of what’s underneath when one looks beneath the floorboards.

    The bottom line with this production is that it’s going to please Stevie Nicks fans no doubt, but it’s kind of strange to put together a making of a record that really in a way arguably isn’t deserving of this kind of filmic treatment. It’s a lot of hullabaloo about the nothing that remains much ado. But again, it’s going to be fun for Nicks fans, who will emote from every shred and utterance, be it musically, vocally, or spiritual that emanates from this woman. She, like Fleetwood Mac, although they achieved monumental success, are still an acquired taste arguably, but the loyal faithful (and there are a lot of them) will enjoy the early anecdotes and the pictures of Nicks in her heyday and younger no doubt, and there’s enough fans to make sure that this project will have enough of an eye above the radar to make it all the worthwhile and strengthen the legend of Stevie Nicks. And ultimately, isn’t that what one wants to get out of hero worship anyhow?

  • Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams documentary to be screened at the Rio Theatre (Vancouver)

    (Weapons of Mass Entertainment)
    (Weapons of Mass Entertainment)

    Monday, June 10
    7 + 9:30 pm
    Tickets $8 advance/$10 at the door
    19+ w/ bar service
    www.riotheatretickets.ca

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams is an intimate portrait of Stevie Nicks, the Grammy-winning artist and member of legendary rock band Fleetwood Mac, as she creates an album with Dave Stewart of Eurythmics fame. Co-produced and co-directed by Nicks and Stewart, the film goes behind the scenes as Nicks and Stewart embark on a musical journey to write and record the critically acclaimed album In Your Dreams

    Nicks, who is presently on a world tour with Fleetwood Mac, called this adventure “the greatest year of my life” and felt compelled to share the joyful experience that she terms “the day the circus came to town” with her fans. The album was written by Nicks and Stewart and produced by Stewart and Glen Ballard, the famed producer of Alanis Morissette’s landmark album Jagged Little Pill. Ballard also appears in Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams, along with Nicks’ Fleetwood Mac band mates Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood, and actress Reese Witherspoon.

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams premiered at The Landmark Theatre in Los Angeles on March 31, 2013, with Stevie Nicks introducing it and taking part in a Q&A. The film then had exclusive showings on April 2nd at theaters in more than 75 cities across the U.S. and Canada.

    Virgil Films’ Joe Amodei, who was recently named Film Festival Director of the music-focused CBGB Festival, said: “Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams is that rarest of music documentaries, one that shows the artist actually in the process of creating new music as we watch and listen. To be working with a musical icon like Stevie Nicks is indeed a dream.”

    “Nicks is like a USB thumb drive in lace, a small package containing a variety of pop-culture personality tropes. She has been the regulator of weight; the titrator of substances; the veteran of a love triangle; the female artist who escaped the long shadow of a male collaborator; the commercial artist who passed through wildly different stations of commerce; and the canny performer whose utilitarian decisions and whimsical tastes became the totems and scripture of a tribe. She survived both the corrosive lift of cocaine and the lead apron of Klonopin.” — The New Yorker

    www.riotheatre.ca
    www.riotheatretickets.ca

    Jun 10th, 2013
    7:00 and 9:30
    The Rio Theatre, Vancouver

  • Virgil Films presents the exclusive iTunes release of Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams documentary on May 14.

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams film posterNEW YORK, May 7, 2013 – Virgil Films announces the exclusive iTunes release of the musical cinematiic event of the season, Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams. Being released on the heels of the film’s recent successful theatrical run, fans will be able to purchase the film exclusively on iTunes in the U.S. and Canada beginning May 14, 2013.

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams is an intimate portrait of Stevie Nicks, the Grammy-winning artist and member of legendary rock band Fleetwood Mac, as she creates an album with Dave Stewart of Eurythmics fame. Co-produced and co-directed by Nicks and Stewart, the film goes behind the scenes as Nicks and Stewart embark on a musical journey to write and record the critically acclaimed album In Your Dreams.

    Nicks, who is presently on a world tour with Fleetwood Mac, called this adventure “the greatest year of my life” and felt compelled to share the joyful experience that she terms “the day the circus came to town” with her fans. The album was written by Nicks and Stewart and produced by Stewart and Glen Ballard, the famed producer of Alanis Morissette’s landmark album Jagged Little Pill. Ballard also appears in Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams, along with Nicks’ Fleetwood Mac band mates Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood, and actress Reese Witherspoon.

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams premiered at The Landmark Theatre in Los Angeles on March 31, 2013, with Stevie Nicks introducing it and taking part in a Q&A. The film then had exclusive showings on April 2nd at theaters in more than 75 cities across the U.S. and Canada.

    Virgil’s Joe Amodei, who was recently named Film Festival Director of the music-focused CBGB Festival, said: “Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams is that rarest of music documentaries, one that shows the artist actually in the process of creating new music as we watch and listen. To be working with a musical icon like Stevie Nicks is indeed a dream.”

    About Virgil Films

    Virgil Films & Entertainment was founded in 2003 by Joe Amodei to acquire, market and distribute DVD, TV and Digital product in the theatrical feature film, documentaries, special interest and sports categories. The company has built partnerships with OWN, Sundance Channel Home Entertainment, National Geographic Cinema Ventures, ESPN, MLB Productions, Morgan Spurlock’s Warrior Poets and other high-profile entertainment brands since their inception.

    Recent releases from Virgil Films & Entertainment include the documentary, Ayn Rand and the Prophecy of Atlas Shrugged; the award winning My Run, The Last Lions and the hit documentary Forks Over Knives. They have also successfully released Oscar® nominated documentary Restrepo. www.VirgilFilmsEnt.com

  • Virgil Films & Entertainment presents In Your Dreams for exclusive release on iTunes May 14

    In Your Dreams Film Poster

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams will be available for download on iTunes on Tuesday, May 14, through Virgil Films & Entertainment. The documentary can be pre-ordered now for $12.99.

    IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT DOWNLOADING: To preorder the full, high definition edition of In Your Dreams, change your settings from 720p to 1080p in iTunes. You can do this by going to EDIT —> PREFERENCES —> STORE in your iTunes playlist.

    Plot summary (from iTunes)

    Decadent rock star, ’70s survivor, gypsy songbird, and white-winged dove, the inimitable Stevie Nicks has entranced millions of fans worldwide with her poetic lyrics, sultry singing and feather-and-lace style. In 2010 Nicks embarked on the recording of a new solo album, In Your Dreams, produced by former Eurythmics mastermind Dave Stewart. With cameras in tow, documentarian Stewart and diva Nicks set up shop in her home studio and reveal their collaborative creative process. Shifting dynamically among video formats, painstaking recording sessions and revealing interviews, this magic-tinged musical journey is a loving and tuneful portrait of the eternally bewitching Gold Dust Woman.

    Virgil Films

    Virgil Films & Entertainment is the official distributor of Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams.

    Virgil’s Joe Amodei, who was recently named Film Festival Director of the music-focused CBGB Festival, said: “Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams is that rarest of music documentaries, one that shows the artist actually in the process of creating new music as we watch and listen. To be working with a musical icon like Stevie Nicks is indeed a dream.”

    About Virgil Films

    Virgil Films & Entertainment was founded in 2003 by Joe Amodei to acquire, market and distribute DVD, TV and Digital product in the theatrical feature film, documentaries, special interest and sports categories. The company has built partnerships with OWN, Sundance Channel Home Entertainment, National Geographic Cinema Ventures, ESPN, MLB Productions, Morgan Spurlock’s Warrior Poets and other high-profile entertainment brands since their inception. Recent releases from Virgil Films & Entertainment include the documentary, Ayn Rand and the Prophecy of Atlas Shrugged; the award winning My Run, The Last Lions and the hit documentary Forks Over Knives. They have also successfully released Oscar® nominated documentary Restrepo. www.VirgilFilmsEnt.com

  • In Your Dreams screening at Ector Theatre in Odessa, Texas Thursday night

    Stevie Nicks In Your DreamsOA Online
    Wednesday, May 1, 2013

    The Odessa Council for Arts and Humanities will be having a one-night only screening of Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Ector Theatre, 500 N. Texas Ave.

    Named after the artists’ 2011 solo album, the film follows Nicks as she recorded her first album in 10 years, and shows numerous movie stars and musicians who helped contribute to the making of the music.

    Tickets for the event are $10 and can be purchased at the Odessa Council for Arts and Humanities offices, 119 W. Fourth St. For more information, call 432-337-1492.

  • MOVIE REVIEW: Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams

    (Weapons of Mass Entertainment)
    (Weapons of Mass Entertainment)

    By Jay Stone
    O Canada
    Thursday, April 18, 2013

    Stevie Nicks In Your Dreams
    **½ (2½ stars out of 5)

    • Starring: Stevie Nicks, Dave Stewart
    • Directed by: Dave Stewart and Stevie Nicks
    • Running time: 100 minutes
    • Parental guidance: No problems

    Fans of the singer Stevie Nicks — none of whom could possibly be bigger fans than Stevie Nicks herself, it appears — will be in heaven with In Your Dreams, a documentary about the yearlong project to record her 2011 solo album. It’s all there: the inspirations, the moments of musical serendipity, the day Reese Witherspoon dropped by and gave her a title for one of the tunes, the many, many scenes of Nicks writing or singing or talking or just hanging out in her lush California home, being artistic.

    Other, lesser fans will have to make do with serendipitous moments of our own: the voice-over when Nicks expresses the wish that In Your Dreams will inspire younger audiences “to go back to the old ways and start over. This is our prayer.” Or the magical moment when, after writing the lyrics to “Italian Summer” at a hotel in Italy, she gives the hand-written manuscript to the front desk clerk and tells him, “Some day this is going to be very important.”

    In fact, “Italian Summer” is a good song, one of many we get to enjoy in excerpts from the music videos that also festoon this vanity project. The film, like the album, is produced by Nicks and Dave Stewart, the Eurythmics guitarist, who joins Nicks and several other top-notch musicians. These include Mick Fleetwood and Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac, the alma mater for Nicks, plus her longtime backup singers, in whom, she speculates, the public finds “comfort in that love that we have as three very strong women.”

    And maybe they do. In Your Dreams features endorsements from members of the public, including an American sailor whose life was altered by “Soldier’s Angel.” Nicks wrote that song after touring Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and seeing the wounded warriors, one of a few genuine moments of emotion in the film. In Your Dreams would be impossible if it wasn’t for the fact that Nicks — whose throaty growl hasn’t lost much of its power — is a talented rock singer and Stewart is, as she informs us, “one of the greatest and grandest guitar players.”

    The film only touches on her childhood and early career: this isn’t a portrait of the artist, it’s a diary of the art, including the volumes of her writings that she gave to Stewart as possible lyrics (at one point she compares herself to Bob Dylan). There’s a touching reminiscence surrounding the song “New Orleans,” written six days after Hurricane Katrina and inspired by TV clips of a young boy who looks at the camera and — with shocking and moving frankness — says, “We just need some help sent here. And it’s just pitiful.”

    The Witherspoon song comes when the actress tells Stewart he can stay at her condo in Nashville. “It’s cheaper than free,” she says, and the next thing you know, Stewart and Nicks have turned that idea into a love song. Another factoid: “Lady From the Mountains” was inspired by the Twilight movie New Moon, in particular the part where Bella is abandoned by the love of her life, which also happened to Nicks. Hopefully, she says, someone will hear that song and think, “The same thing happened to Stevie Nicks and she’s still alive.”

    In your dreams. OK, OK. But she started it.

  • IN YOUR DREAMS: Stevie Nicks gives a live chat with fans at TIFF Bell Lightbox

    (Rene Johnston / Toronto Star)
    (Rene Johnston / Toronto Star)

    In advance of Fleetwood Mac’s Tuesday concert, singer Stevie Nicks stopped by a screening of her new documentary for a Q&A.

    By Linda Barnard
    Toronto Star
    Tuesday, April 16, 2013

    Stevie Nicks says it was a “million-to-one” serendipitous event that allowed her to present In Your Dreams, the documentary she co-directed with Dave Stewart of Eurythmics fame, at two sold-out screenings at TIFF Bell Lightbox Monday night.

    “Really, seriously, what are the chances that Toronto would ask us to show this film? They didn’t know that Fleetwood Mac would have one day off here and I would be able to come to this showing,” said Nicks during the first of two post-screening Q&A sessions for the film, about the making of her 2011 solo album. “What are the chances of that?”

    Fleetwood Mac plays the Air Canada Centre Tuesday night. With bandmates Mick Fleetwood and John McVie in the house to cheer her on, singer-songwriter Nicks shared insight into her art and her life with appreciative fans. They brought albums, photos and even paid tribute by imitation, like Nicks female impersonator Crystal Visions, who was outfitted in a blonde wig, flowing black dress with a sparkling shawl and a scarf-ringed tambourine.

    Nicks took her time on a red carpet leading into the theatre, stopping for photos and interviews. Slim and looking younger than her 62 years, Nicks was dressed all in black with her trademark high-heeled boots, fingerless gloves and a shimmering half-moon necklace at her throat.

    The film is an up-close look at Nicks’ songwriting process and, since the album was recorded in her California home, a rare look inside her life.

    Working with Stewart and the added pressure of shooting a film while writing and recording an album took some getting used to, Nicks admitted. He showed up daily to start work at 2 p.m., “which was ridiculous because I don’t get up until 1 o’clock,” Nicks laughed.

    So she simplified. “I wore exactly the same thing every day. It was a different top, but it was a closetful of these black tops made by (New York designer) Morgane Le Fay. I didn’t want to think about what I was wearing.”

    Nicks made several jokes at her own expense during the brief Q&A session. She said that what’s onscreen, the portrait of an uncompromising artist who has a stellar ear, a silly side and a stubborn streak, is true to who she is. “If you know me, if you had known me for the last 35 years, you would say, ‘That’s really her. That’s the way she really is.’”

    But she became quiet and her voice quavered when Nicks talked about her mother, Barbara Nicks, who died at age 84 in December 2011.

    “Ever since I lost my mother, I really realized how important what you do is and that your journeys are much, much more important than what you come out with,” she said, adding her mom often reminded her during the making of In Your Dreams to enjoy the moment when creating the album.

    “It’s a journey,” said Nicks. “You’re just making memories. That’s all you’re doing.”

    In Your Dreams screenings continue until Thursday at TIFF Bell Lightbox.

    The songs to be played at Tuesday’s Fleetwood Mac concert at the ACC are under wraps, but here’s what the band performed at its most recent show, on Saturday in Chicago, according to setlist.fm:

    1. Second Hand News

    2. The Chain

    3. Dreams

    4. Sad Angel

    5. Rhiannon

    6. Not That Funny

    7. Tusk

    8. Sisters of the Moon

    9. Sara

    10. Big Love

    11. Landslide

    12. Never Going Back Again

    13. Without You

    14. Gypsy

    15. Eyes of the World

    16. Gold Dust Woman

    17. I’m So Afraid

    18. Stand Back

    19. Go Your Own Way

    (Encore)

    20. World Turning

    21. Don’t Stop

    (Second encore)

    22. Silver Springs

    23. Say Goodbye

  • Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks recounts dark days of Rumours

    Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks recounts dark days of Rumours

    TORONTO – Fleetwood Mac songstress Stevie Nicks is tantalizing fans with a bold idea: a one-woman show.

    Could something along the lines of “My Name is Stevie” (in the vein of Barbra Streisand’s “My Name is Barbra”) or “Stevie With an I-E” (in the spirit of Liza Minnelli’s “Liza With a Z”) be in the tarot cards?

    The raspy-voiced veteran says it’s an idea her pal Dave Stewart has been trying to get her to embrace.

    Nicks made the comments while appearing at the Canadian premiere of her documentary “In Your Dreams,” which follows her and the Eurythmics hitmaker as they write and record her 2011 album of the same name.

    She says Stewart’s plan would involve massive video screens revealing images from Nicks’ storied life. But the “Landslide” crooner is laughing off the idea, noting: “I’m not Barbra Streisand.”

    I probably sold 300,000 records [of In Your Dreams]. It’s awesome if you’re an unknown artist, but it’s not really that awesome if you’re Stevie Nicks.

    Nicks’ creative bond with Stewart is traced in an affectionate documentary that reveals the veteran rockers nit-picking over melodies and brainstorming lyrics at her home recording studio in California. The film plays in Toronto through Thursday before heading to other cities.

    After the film, Nicks told a movie theatre full of fans that Stewart sees a new chapter in her career.

    “He wants me to have video screens, like a big room of video screens where it’s all my whole life (up there). And I (said): ‘Dave, I’m not Barbra Streisand’,” Nicks said smiling. “But maybe. Maybe someday.”

    She notes that her solo shows already feature a lot of talking, as opposed to the hit-laden concerts with her band Fleetwood Mac.

    “It’s very different. Fleetwood Mac’s much more sophisticated and grownup and my show is just like a big slumber party in an auditorium. And I tell everybody the meanings of all these new songs. Because that’s how I draw people in,” says Nicks, who turns 65 on May 26.

    After the movie, Nicks took questions from audience members, recounting the origins of her steadfast determination to be a star and dark days surrounding the recording of “Rumours.”

    “It wasn’t really a pleasant experience,” she says.

    “Lindsey (Buckingham) and I had pretty much just really broken up, and we’d kind of broken up off and on for a year before that. So this is 1977. None of the couples were happy… which, on one hand, really lends to the creative process.”

    The film includes interviews with Nicks about Fleetwood Mac’s rise to fame, current sources of inspiration, childhood memories and her surprising passion for the Twilight franchise.

    She notes that promoting the album In Your Dreams involved a grueling two years of touring and promotion. In the end, it didn’t amount to much.

    “I didn’t sell a lot of records, you guys. For me, for a big act like moi, I didn’t. Worldwide I probably sold 300,000 records. It’s awesome if you’re an unknown artist and you have a hit single but it’s not really that awesome if you’re Stevie Nicks,” she said.

    “It’s such a different age now.”

    “In Your Dreams” heads to Ottawa on Friday and Saturday. It reaches Winnipeg on May 2, May 3 and May 5; Saskatoon on May 13; Edmonton on May 14; Calgary on May 16; Vancouver on May 18 and 23; and Montreal from June 14 to 17.

    Fleetwood Mac performs at the Air Canada Centre on Tuesday. They head to Ottawa on April 23, Winnipeg on May 12, Saskatoon on May 14, Edmonton on May 15, Calgary on May 17 and Vancouver on May 19.

    Cassandra Szklarski / The Canadian Press / Monday, April 15, 2013 10:37 PM

  • Fleetwood Mac plays Toronto

    By Erin Criger
    City News Toronto
    April 16, 2013 8:32 AM

    Stevie Nicks was in Toronto this week ahead of Fleetwood Mac’s show Tuesday night at the Air Canada Centre.

    The singer was promoting her new documentary In Your Dreams. The movie, filmed with Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart, follows Nicks as she makes her 2011 album, also called In Your Dreams.

    The Canadian premiere was held at the TIFF Bell Lightbox on Monday night.

    “We got stuff that nobody ever gets. We got the actual writing of the songs – nobody ever gets that, because you usually don’t let anybody in while you’re doing it,” Nicks told CityNews at the Lightbox.

    “Everybody got a camera. There were like 12 people there with a camera,” Nicks said.

    Nicks said Stewart persuaded her to make the documentary and to film it in her house. At first, she said, they were only going to record the album at her home.

    When he proposed the idea, she said, “Are you serious? Are you kidding? You mean I have to put makeup on every day?”

    She said Stewart promised that if she didn’t like the footage, they wouldn’t use it.

    “It was a promise made between the caterpillar and Alice. And I knew it was true,” Nicks said.

    In Your Dreams will play at the Lightbox until April 18.