ReportWire

Tag: Meryl Streep

  • Meryl Streep Confirms Separation From Longtime Husband Don Gummer

    Meryl Streep Confirms Separation From Longtime Husband Don Gummer

    After 45 years of marriage and four children, Meryl Streep and sculptor Don Gummer have reached the end of the road. The pair, who have been married since 1978, separated more than six years ago, a spokesperson for the actor confirmed. The duo share four children and five grandchildren.

    Streep continues to wear her wedding band, even after the parting, as first reported by Page Six. It was spotted on her finger Friday, for example, when Streep appeared at the Princesa de Asturias Awards in northwest Spain. Vanity Fair reached out to Streep for comment, but has not received a response as of publication time.

    Via statement, a representative for the Oscar winner told People, “Don Gummer and Meryl Streep have been separated for more than six years, and while they will always care for each other, they have chosen lives apart.” As of Sept. 30, the couple had been married for 45 years. 

    After decades based on the East Coast, the 74-year-old actor bought a mid-century Pasadena home in 2017. In early 2020, Streep and the 76-year-old Gummer sold their 3,950-square-foot Tribeca penthouse for $15.8 million after 14 years as owners, steeply discounting the price after struggling to sell it for over a year. 

    Streep and Gummer are parents to four children: 30-year-old Louisa Jacobson, 37-year-old actor Grace Gummer, 40-year-old Mamie Gummer (also an actor), and 43-year-old singer/songwriter Henry Wolfe. They also share five grandchildren.

    “It sure isn’t easy being married to an actress,” Streep said in an oft-quoted statement some years ago. “But if you give each other space, you also get closeness. And time is still the best thing we can give each other nowadays.” 

    Eve Batey

    Source link

  • I Don’t Like New York…Even In Small Doses: Flipping the Script on a Line From the Season 3 Finale of Only Murders in the Building

    I Don’t Like New York…Even In Small Doses: Flipping the Script on a Line From the Season 3 Finale of Only Murders in the Building

    A twice-repeated “joke” in the formulaic (for the series) season finale of Only Murders in the Building, “Opening Night,” has two of its main characters telling their current significant others, “I like LA…in small doses.” The “I like LA” said in a manner in which a person might note that they don’t mind something, but of course it wouldn’t be their first choice. As it isn’t for Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez), the former being the one to utter this “quip” first while grossly kissing his leading lady, Loretta Durkin (Meryl Streep), at the after-party for Death Rattle Dazzle!’s opening night. 

    The subject comes up because Loretta is being approached with other offers after her performance in the musical is well-received. Offers that would inevitably take her to the place where successful actors go: Hollywood. This adding another cliffhanger-y effect (along with the predictable murder of yet another person who orbits the Oliver/Mabel/Charles-Haden trio) to the finale that will allow a dragging out of events for season four.

    In another scene from the party, Mabel then repeats that exact sentiment to her cameraman boyfriend, Tobert (Jesse Williams), who is about to go to said town to work on an “indie film.” Not sure why he couldn’t just say “movie”—oh wait, it’s because he’s become a faux pretentious New York asshole who needs to make LA sound more “legit” than someone like him thinks it is. Including Mabel, who declines the offer to accompany him to said city so that they might continue their budding romance. 

    Instead, she would prefer to float around in misery in New York solving crimes. Even though, as Tobert points out, “You’re always talking about feeling stuck and lost. This could be different.” What he doesn’t take into account is that most people who live in New York get off on that feeling. Wouldn’t honestly know what to do without it. Until some fed-up residents finally reach their threshold and actually do move to LA, often the “only” other option for Americans who see themselves as “creative” and “liberal” (a.k.a. they can fit right in working for ad agencies and support the LGBTQIA+ community, but don’t really want the capitalistic status quo to alter). This despite how climate change is literally eroding away both options.

    That aside, what is most bothersome about the dig at LA isn’t just that it’s a tired trope favored by the likes of “staunch” New Yorkers. No, what’s most bothersome is the continued commitment New Yorkers have to their delusions about the city being “everything.” This still extends to one such exemplar of rigid New Yorkerism: Woody Allen (and yes, other New Yorkers should take pause to think about how the disgraced writer-director remains one of the ultimate mascots of the city). A man who (as Alvy Singer in Annie Hall) once announced, “I don’t wanna live in a city where the only cultural advantage is that you can make a right turn on a red light.” This said after his friend, Rob (Tony Roberts)—though both call each other Max—insists, “California, Max. Get the hell out of this crazy city. Forget it. We move to sunny LA. All of show business is there.”

    Such “enticements” are no match for what Carrie Bradshaw would call “Manhattan Guy” (or, in the wake of the 90s and early 00s, “Brooklyn Guy”), the mutant strain of human who refuses to ever leave the city, not even for a vacation. Convinced that “everything you need is right here.” Rats, bed bugs, self-superior cunts, the normalization of alcoholism, trust fund babies who will always succeed at “art,” shitty apartments for the price of a limb and the constant promise that it’s all worth it for the “culture.” This increasingly consisting of nothing more than the same corporate outposts one finds in any part of America. But the delusion must persist for people like Oliver and Mabel (though it’s easier for Oliver to sustain because of his Broadway “career”) as they’ve put so many years into the endeavor. 

    The only one with blatant torn loyalties is Steve Martin. Whose character, Charles-Haden Savage, pronounces of the seeming exodus, “Los Angeles. A city so nice, they named it Los Angeles.” Because yes, Steve Martin is far more LA than he has ever been New York. Ergo his 1991 love letter to the city, L.A. Story. Which, funnily enough, also stars the New York icon that is Sarah Jessica Parker. With Martin himself being raised in Inglewood and Garden Grove, then attending college in the LA area, it was no wonder he brought into existence something like L.A. Story, or the far more serious Shopgirl in 2005 (an adaptation of his own 2000 novella of the same name). Both works see the good and bad in L.A., while eventually playing up the overriding positive aspects of living there.

    In contrast, New Yorkers are far more adept at side-stepping (read: blinding themselves to) the manifold drawbacks to their prom king city. But, like the prom king, it’s well-known he’s a douchebag who ought to be dethroned by someone more complex and multi-dimensional. Despite this, LA is ironically the place that remains, even now, viewed as lacking in complexity. A “pretty face,” so to speak, with nothing to offer but metal (the cars) and plasticity (the reconstructive surgeries). It’s the city that serves everyone’s purpose in being easy to take a pot-shot at. This even occurred in the most-seen movie of the summer, Barbie, when our narrator, Helen Mirren, says, “Barbie left behind the pastels and plastics of Barbie Land for the pastels and plastics of Los Angeles.” Cue the audience laughter. Because, ha ha, “LA sucks and is so vapid” is ostensibly evergreen comedy gold. 

    But, for those willing to look beyond the stereotype and deprogram from the far shittier lifestyle available in New York, turn to the revamping of a famous quote about England in Richard II. The one that Steve Martin as Harris K. Telemacher opens L.A. Story with: “I have a favorite quote about L.A. by Shakespeare: ‘This other Eden, demi-paradise, this precious stone set in the silver sea of this earth, this ground…this Los Angeles.’” A milieu that is far more than just “likable in small doses.”

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Crafted the Ultimate Season 3 Cliffhanger

    How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Crafted the Ultimate Season 3 Cliffhanger

    This post contains spoilers about the season finale of Only Murders in the Building.

    “There are three types of people: alive, dead, and dead to me,” says Jackie Hoffman’s meddling neighbor Uma in the latest season of Only Murders in the Building.

    Her words eerily echo in the final moments of season three’s finale, in which Sazz Pataki, Charles’s former acting stand-in played by Jane Lynch, is shot within the Arconia’s walls. Murder is nothing new in this Manhattan apartment building, but given that the bullet was fired from across the courtyard, this killer might be close to home. As for Mabel (Selena Gomez), Oliver (Martin Short), and Charles (Steve Martin), whose apartment Sazz was standing in at the time of the murder—their podcasting days have landed them directly in the line of fire.

    All of that will be uncovered in the show’s fourth season, which was officially announced on Tuesday. Cocreator John Hoffman confirms to Vanity Fair that the Only Murders writers room reconvenes this upcoming Monday following the Writers Guild of America deal. Until then, we have season three to unpack.

    In the finale, it’s revealed that the death of Paul Rudd’s Ben Glenroy was orchestrated by a mother-and-son duo. But contrary to early season clues, the culprits are not leading lady Loretta (Meryl Streep) and her long-lost son, Dickie (Jeremy Shamos), with whom she reunites during the production. After obtaining an advance copy of a scathing review for Oliver’s play, Broadway producer Donna DeMeo (Linda Emond) poisons the show’s leading man in order to buy herself some time to retool. It’s her son, Cliff (Wesley Taylor), eager to prove himself as a first-time producer, who then commits the murder. Mother and son are escorted from Death Rattle Dazzle’s opening night in handcuffs, allowing our main trio only minutes to process their findings before another death blow is dealt.

    Hoffman chats with VF about the personal tragedy that inspired this season’s big reveal, and Lynch’s surprising reaction to news of her character’s demise.

    Vanity Fair: I want to start with the big reveal that Cliff killed Ben. In the second season, you worked backwards from the murderer’s identity in crafting the season. Did you take a similar approach in season 3?

    John Hoffman: Yes, we knew early. I’m a wreck of insecurity as a writer in a lot of ways. So I need the confidence to understand how to build these stories both logistically and narratively. Then we have to ask ourselves 4,000 questions: what have we done before? What’s new about it? Do we buy it? Blah, blah, blah. You go through all of these processes to land at all this.

    My mother passed away a year ago, so in the midst of writing this season, suddenly these tracks of motherhood and protection and mothers and sons became threads for the season. That felt where it was guided. So my insecurities and the confidence around that felt on the emotional level, like, oh, that’s interesting terrain for me right now to sort of process. And then the writers took over and did amazing things.

    Donna and Cliff being introduced in a fairly ridiculous way felt fun for the Broadway nature of where we were going, and then to deepen that through the season and find touchstone points where you got a little more dimension. Donna wasn’t looking to kill him. She was looking to pause for the play, and everything that followed from that she didn’t control, but then was taken up by her son. That’s all being threaded through with the Dickie and Loretta story, and the ridiculous Death Rattle Dazzle story. So all three of those weave [together] by the end of a season.

    Savannah Walsh

    Source link

  • I Want to Be Comfy This Halloween, so I Found 7 Costume Ideas With Overalls

    I Want to Be Comfy This Halloween, so I Found 7 Costume Ideas With Overalls

    I don’t think I’m alone in my appreciation for easy outfit ideas, and Halloween costumes are no exception. Whether you’re in need of a last-minute costume or you’re simply low-maintenance when it comes to planning for the celebration, there is one effortless piece that will definitely come in handy: a pair of overalls. Whether in denim or linen, full-length or shorts versions, dungarees make getting ready a cinch no matter the day.  For Halloween, in particular, the costume possibilities that incorporate overalls are endless and take little to no effort to pull off.

    With overalls, you can always go for more recognizable, basic costumes like a farmer or scarecrow. But if you’re looking for something more stylish with a nod to pop culture, I have just the inspiration. Think throwbacks to the Olsen twins movie days, Demi Moore’s iconic scene from Ghost, Meryl Streep‘s iconic character in Mamma Mia, and more. Keep scrolling to check out seven great no-fuss Halloween costume ideas with overalls. The best part is that most of these pieces can be seamlessly added to your wardrobe long after the Halloween parties are over.   

    Jennifer Camp Forbes

    Source link

  • Meryl Streep Wants to Play ‘Reincarnated’ Donna in Mamma Mia 3

    Meryl Streep Wants to Play ‘Reincarnated’ Donna in Mamma Mia 3

    Mamma Mia! and its sequel, Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again were extremely successful pretty much everywhere. They were also apparently tons of fun to make. Maybe that’s why Meryl Streep would love to come back to the franchise if it were at all possible — despite the fact that her character technically died between the first and second films. Streep’s Donna did have some scenes in the second movie, but they were essentially flashbacks.

    Streep recently spoke to Voguewho just published an entire oral history of Mamma Mia! films, the Broadway show they were based on, and the hype surrounding the series.

    “I’m up for anything,” Streep said. “I’ll have to schedule a knee scoping before we film, but if there’s an idea that excites me, I’m totally there.” And she did indeed say that if they can bring her character back to life in some way, she is totally fine with it, noting…

    I told [Mamma Mia! producer] Judy [Craymer] if she could figure out a way to reincarnate Donna, I’m into that. Or it could be like in one of those soap operas where Donna comes back and reveals it was really her twin sister that died.

     

    READ MORE: 15 Great Stage Musicals Adapted to Film

    Craymer also talked in the piece about the reaction from fans to the choice to have Donna die in between the two films:

    I was chastised on social media for killing off Meryl, but I promise I didn’t do it on purpose! She was hesitant about doing another film because she doesn’t typically do sequels. But I know she loved coming back to film her scenes for Here We Go Again! She felt the love around her and the joy of reuniting with those people, so I think that made her more open to the prospect of a third”.

    Craymer said a third film could explore “what happened to Lily James’s version of Donna in those middle years” or “what happens to Donna and Sam after the first movie.” At this point we don’t know if we’ll ever get another Mamma Mia featuring Streep. But clearly there are possibilities. And Streep can currently be seen on Hulu’s Only Murders in the Building.

    10 Actors Who Were The Second Choice For Iconic Movie Roles

    Cody Mcintosh

    Source link

  • Arconia Assembled: How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Found a Killer New Cast

    Arconia Assembled: How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Found a Killer New Cast

    Who murdered Paul Rudd’s Ben Glenroy? That’s the question at the center of Only Murders in the Building season three. The answer is a closely-guarded secret, withheld even from the people in charge of casting said killer—for awhile, anyway. As in seasons past, casting directors Tiffany Little Canfield and Destiny Lilly were tasked with assembling the Arconia around stars Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez before they’d seen all of this round’s scripts.

    So, how does one arrange the pieces of a puzzle before they’ve seen the full picture? “I’ll be honest, I think it’s really important for a casting director to know how many episodes a guest is going to recur in,” Canfield tells Vanity Fair. “Not only for the business side—you certainly don’t want to lose an actor because of availability—but also [because] when we know that a character is going to have time to unfold, you might want to do something slightly different with the casting.”

    Canfield and Lilly, who are Emmy-nominated for their work on the show’s second season, are sworn to secrecy about which actor is playing this season’s killer. But some clues can be gleaned from their casting approach. Those cast in early roles include Noma Dumezweni (a supporting presence in whodunnits like The Undoing and The Watcher) as Maxine, a theater critic reviewing Oliver’s play, and Adrian Martinez (known for comedic roles in American Hustle and Renfield) as Greg, an obsessed fan of Ben Glenroy who poses as a security guard. Both are performers who can make an immediate impact, says Canfield, which may be needed if, say, their characters won’t be factoring much into future episodes.

    Juxtapose those characters with the role of Dickie, Ben’s brother and right hand, who currently lingers in the periphery of ensemble scenes. “It is such a mysterious part,” says Canfield. “The other characters get such an intro. It’s like, ‘I’m the Broadway producer. I’m this character.’” Dickie is different. “We see how he’s put-upon, but we don’t really see much more than that. Luckily, Jeremy Shamos”—a Tony-nominated actor from Birdman and Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom—“came in and claimed that role, as he often does, because he’s absolutely brilliant.”

    With two critically-acclaimed seasons under their belt, Canfield and Lilly had no shortage of actors clamoring to be a part of the show’s current round. “People move mountains to become available,” Canfield tells me. “Everyone wants to play.” Recurring guest stars like Jane Lynch and Da’Vine Joy Randolph have full dance cards, but still managed to pop by for appearances.

    This year, the show has also welcomed two bonafide movie stars. The first is Rudd, who made his first surprise appearance in the show’s second season finale as an actor who collapses to his (presumed) death while performing in Oliver’s stage play. But that’s not the last we see of Rudd: when he took the cameo part, he also signed on for several episodes of a then-unwritten third season. “For an actor of his level to agree to be in an episode of television and commit to the following season is such an unusual ask,” says Canfield. “In fact, it’s such an ask that we thought this might be impossible.”

    Only Murders might be the only show that could have made it happen. “Steve, Marty, and Selena have created such a family, that once someone gets a taste, they want to come back,” she continues. “Paul really leaned in and was such an incredible, incredible partner in making this happen. I’m getting a little emotional, because Destiny and I got to speak to him at the wrap party. His authentic enthusiasm and excitement about working with Steve and Marty and Selena, it was palpable.”

    Then there’s the matter of Meryl Streep. Her character, Loretta—introduced onscreen by real-life casting director Lisa Kron—is cheekily introduced as a “vanilla, but capable” actor. In real life, the Oscar winner has a close relationship with her It’s Complicated co-star Steve Martin and an existing fandom for Only Murders. With the stars aligned, Streep signed on. “The way she commits is as if she’s Loretta and not Meryl Streep,” Canfield says, before words fail. “She is so…I don’t know, phenomenal in her work ethic, in her commitment, in her storytelling, in every aspect of what an actor does. She’s the pinnacle.”

    Savannah Walsh

    Source link

  • Meryl Streep, George Clooney, More A-Listers Donate Millions to SAG-AFTRA

    Meryl Streep, George Clooney, More A-Listers Donate Millions to SAG-AFTRA

    While you may not see them on the picket line, A-listers are opening up their pocketbooks to support their union during the strike. In a press release, SAG-AFTRA Foundation president Courtney B. Vance announced Wednesday that a handful of megastars including Meryl Streep, Leonardo DiCaprio, and George and Amal Clooney have made at least $1 million donations to SAG-AFTRA’s Emergency Financial Assistance Program, helping the program amass over $15 million in the past three weeks. 

    An independent charity established in 1985, SAG-AFTRA’s Emergency Financial Assistance Program provides up to $1,500 grants to union members in need and up to $6,000 to lifetime members who have health issues or are in “serious jeopardy.” The grants are issued to help actors affected by the work stoppage with basic living expenses including as rent, mortgage, utilities, groceries, and medical expenses. Last month, Dwayne Johnson donated seven figures to the program—the largest single donation in the program’s history—when Vance put out a call to the top earners in SAG to help financially support their fellow union members.

    Other A-list stars who join Johnson, Streep, DiCaprio, and the Clooneys in the million-or-more donation club include Julia Roberts, Matt and Luciana Damon, Hugh Jackman and Deborra-Lee Furness, Nicole Kidman, Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck, Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Oprah Winfrey. Earlier this week, Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane donated $1 million to another program, the Entertainment Community Fund, as well. 

    In the press release, Vance thanked Johnson for helping “kick-start this campaign” and also name-checked two Oscar winners specifically—Streep and George Clooney—for their donations, their longtime support of the SAG-AFTRA Foundation, their positions as leaders on the Actors Council, and their commitment to inspire others to give generously. 

    “I remember my days as a waiter, cleaner, typist, even my time on the unemployment line,” said Streep in the press release. “In this strike action, I am lucky to be able to support those who will struggle in a long action to sustain against Goliath. We will stand strong together against these powerful corporations who are bent on taking the humanity, the human dignity, even the human out of our profession. I am proudest of my fellow actors who have immediately offered to fund the Emergency Financial Assistance Program.”

    Clooney offered a statement of support for SAG-AFTRA as well: “We stand ready to get back to the table and make a fair deal with the AMPTP. Until then, I’m proud to be able to support the SAG-AFTRA Foundation and my fellow actors who may be struggling in this historic moment. We’ve stood on the shoulders of the likes of Bette Davis and Jimmy Cagney and it’s time for our generation to give something back. I can’t thank Courtney enough for his determination in putting this effort together by shedding light on the human toll happening right now, and how we can work together to alleviate some of the pain and suffering.”

    Although the SAG-AFTRA Foundation has surpassed its initial goal, Vance says they’re still actively fundraising to help union members during this difficult. “Our fundraising will continue in order to meet the overwhelming needs of our community now and in the future,” said Vance. That must be good news to rank-and-file union members—particularly on the heels of SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher declaring that they are prepared for the strike to last another six months.

    Chris Murphy

    Source link

  • Death Becomes Her and Beef: On Being Attracted to the Energy of a Person You Despise

    Death Becomes Her and Beef: On Being Attracted to the Energy of a Person You Despise

    In 1992’s Death Becomes Her, the long-standing “friendship” between Madeline Ashton (Meryl Streep) and Helen Sharp (Goldie Hawn) quickly reveals itself to be a frenemyship fueled by jealousies and residual beef stemming from their many years of knowing one another, all the way back to being teens in New Jersey. With the film opening on Madeline’s ill-advised performance in a Broadway adaptation of Sweet Bird of Youth called Songbird!, it gives Helen the chance to see if her fiancé, Ernest Menville (Bruce Willis), can “pass the Madeline Ashton test.” In other words, is he immune to her charms and seductions the way so many of Helen’s previous boyfriends were not? For it’s clear that Madeline makes a sport of “winning” in an unspoken competition with Helen. Using her looks and wiles to outshine Helen’s “bookishness” and “class.” To this end, the yin and yang qualities in each woman speaks to their inevitable “attraction” to one another. Seeking something in the other person that she herself does not possess.

    In Helen’s case, the obvious characteristics she yearns for in Madeline are cliché blonde beauty and the artful wielding of coquettishness. In contrast, Madeline, although less overt about it, secretly resents Helen for being from a more “pedigreed” social class and her intelligence level. Of the variety that leads her to become an author. Though this doesn’t happen until many years after her fateful meeting with Madeline backstage in 1978.

    And it is in ’78 when Madeline is informed by her lackey, Rose (Nancy Fish), that Helen has arrived with her fiancé to greet her. She immediately asks, “How’s she look?” The intense desire to hear her underling respond with something like, “Terrible” is ruined when she instead says, “I don’t know. Smart, I guess. Sorta classy.” Madeline balks, “Classy? Really? Compared to who?” This bristling over Helen’s characterization as somehow superior because she’s not “cheap” like Madeline is something that comes up over and over again throughout Death Becomes Her. And yet, because all Madeline’s got are her trashy, smarmy tactics, she sticks to them—augmenting her sleaze tenfold by deciding to steal Ernest when she realizes he’s a renowned plastic surgeon she’s read about.

    But before that, when Helen does eventually come into the dressing room with Ernest, Madeline is all “pre-posed” for her (cleavage strategically exposed), under the guise of “acting naturally.” After the encounter, it doesn’t take long before she’s “stopping by” Ernest’s operating room and inviting him out for dinner. Upon hearing about this back at home, Helen proceeds to pull viciously at the tissue she’s holding (an ongoing anger tic that she uses to cope). She then tells Ernest, “You don’t know Madeline the way I do. She wants you. She wants you because you’re mine. I’ve lost men to her before… That’s why I wanted you to meet her before we got married, because I just had to see if you could pass the Madeline Ashton test.”

    Ernest insists, “Darling, I have absolutely no interest in Madeline Ashton.” Cut to Ernest and Madeline getting married instead of Ernest and Helen. Seven years later, in 1985, we see Helen holed up alone in her apartment, having gained ample weight and residing with a number of cats—as though she’s decided to surrender fully to her enemy by admitting that she’s no match for her, and she might as well just lean into all of her weaknesses…eating included. As the door is broken down to her apartment due to not paying rent, she could care less if the walls are crumbling around her, because there’s a scene of Madeline being strangled on TV that she is practically orgasming over as it happens.

    Six months later, at the psych ward, her therapist urges, “For you to have a life—for any of us to have a life—you have got to forget about her. You have to erase her from your mind. You need to eliminate—” That’s where Helen cuts her off and decides to take the “eliminate” advice only. Someone would likely tell Beef’s Amy Lau (Ali Wong) and Danny Cho (Steven Yeun) the same thing and they, too, would abide by the selective advice Helen opted to heed instead. For Amy and Danny, their beef begins later in life than the one between Madeline and Helen. Namely, after they proceed to engage in an ongoing feud sparked by a road rage incident started in the parking lot of Forster’s, a Home Depot-type store owned by Jordan Forster (Maria Bello). Jordan also happens to be the billionaire dangling the promise of buying Amy’s successful plant “boutique,” Kōyōhaus, and absorbing it under the “Forster’s umbrella.” Toying with her psychologically in such a way as to make Amy particularly irritable.

    Danny just so happens to back out of his parking spot unthinkingly (/in a glazed-over state of depression) right at the instant when Amy’s looking for someone to take her misplaced rage out on. But, unluckily for her, she has no idea that Danny, too, is filled with rage he’s looking to unleash on an unsuspecting victim—having unintentionally tapped into “unlocking” her nemesis. As for that word, which comes from the Greek goddess of the same name, it bears noting that said goddess was in control of vengeance, “distributing” (the loose translation of “nemesis”) retribution and justice. Except her modus operandi was not to do so right away, perhaps being the inspiration for the old chestnut, “Revenge is a dish best served cold” (the riffing tagline for Beef is, “Revenge is a dish best served raw”). A.k.a. when the person deserving of it (or who one believes is deserving of it) least expects it because so much time has gone by and, surely, somebody couldn’t possibly hold on to a grudge for that long…right? Dead wrong.

    Both sets of characters, Madeline and Helen/Amy and Danny, are testaments to that notion. That “letting go” is not an option. Not just because it serves as fuel/a raison d’être, but because there’s an underlying attraction beneath the all-out contempt. Dare one say “love”—thus, the oft-recited phrase, “There’s a fine line between love and hate.” And clearly each character pair sees something of themselves reflected back in the other. Some similar wound that calls to them. In Amy and Danny’s case that wound is feeling totally placeless in a world that prizes people who “belong.” Despite Amy’s financial success, her personal life is constantly strained, as she admits to Danny in the final episode, “Figures of Light,” that she can never really tell her husband, George (Joseph Lee), much of anything. When Danny asks, “Why not?” she replies thoughtfully, “I think when nowhere feels like home, you just retreat into yourself.” Or you make a home in your nemesis, oddly enough. Being that Danny and Amy are the only ones who can really understand one another because they can speak freely without judgment or the fear of “conditions,” their attraction in “Figures of Light” transitions from one of hate to pure love, with both admitting that they’ve never been able to talk to anyone the way they can talk to each other.

    The same ultimately goes for Madeline and Helen. Even after another seven years go by in Death Becomes Her, bringing us to then-present day 1992. This time, the shoe has shifted to the other foot in terms of Madeline reposing in bed as she struggles with her own weight gain state, all Norma Desmond-ed out in various facial bandages designed to help make her look young(er). When Rose hands her an invitation to Helen’s book party, she learns that, ironically enough, the title of Helen’s novel is Forever Young. Feeling personally attacked, she goes to her med spa to get some touch-ups. But they won’t give her what she wants, forcing her to attend the party looking like herself. A big mistake, she realizes, when she sees how good and thin Helen looks at the same age as her: fifty.

    Hot with envy after the party, Madeline decides to go to Lisle von Rhuman’s (Isabella Rossellini), whose address was given to her by the spa owner, Mr. Franklin (William Frankfather), mysteriously appearing out of nowhere at the spa when Madeline declared money was no object with regard to getting her youth and beauty back. Not yet aware that Helen is already a beneficiary of what Lisle has to offer—eternal youth via a potion—she doesn’t understand that her unwitting “power play” is another form of competition as well. One that will undo Helen’s plans to “eliminate” (per the word her therapist used) Madeline for good. Because the thing about the potion that Lisle fails to mention is that it not only supplies one with eternal youth, but also eternal life. Which means that Madeline and Helen will now be adversaries forever. Just a pair of Beverly Hills ghouls haunting the streets with their immortality.

    Nonetheless, the appeal of being hated by a committed enemy is that there is no fear of losing “unconditional” love. For the conditions of burning hate dictate that you must always hate that person no matter what. So any “outrageous” or “immoral” thing they might tell you is actually a boon to that cause. In this regard, Amy has effectively found what she’s looking for in Danny, because one of the running themes in Beef is that she knows no one can love her unconditionally—not even her daughter, June (Remy Holt)—for who she truly is. Not without her plastering on that smiling veneer and providing a sugar-coated “lite” edition of her personality. Danny feels the same, though it comes across to a lesser degree. Granted, his form of securing “unconditional” love is extracted through the master manipulation of his brother, Paul (Young Mazino).

    The one-upping lengths that Amy and Danny go to in order to make the other’s life hell is similar to what Madeline and Helen do, expending all their energy on keeping the other down, and plotting her destruction. “You should learn not to compete with me, I always win!” Madeline screams after they both get over the reality that each of them is dead and forever young, equalizing the playing field a little too much for both women’s taste. Helen is the one who starts the fight (featuring that illustrious hole in her stomach) with the shovels as they proceed to go at it in yet another fierce competition, this time more literally. Helen ripostes to Madeline’s claim, “You may have always won, but you never played fair!” This is something Danny could easily say to Amy, who has the financial means and security to get at Danny with far more ease.

    Finally fathoming it’s mostly pointless to keep fighting, Madeline reminds Helen, “We can’t even inflict pain.” Helen snaps back, “I’ll tell ya about pain! Bobby O’Brien! Scott Hunter! Ernest Menville! That’s pain! I loved every one of them and they loved me… They were all I had and you took them away from me. Not because you loved them, not because you cared. But just to hurt me on purpose.” As the two delve deeper into their long-marinating beef, Madeline counters to Helen playing the sole victim, “Do you think I was blind, deaf? I couldn’t hear what you and your snotty friends were saying about me? You thought I was cheap.” Helen rebuffs, “Oh, please. You’re insane.” Madeline demands, “Then how come you never invited me to one of those parties at your parents’?” Helen shrugs, “Because we didn’t think you’d feel comfortable. It wasn’t usual for… It wasn’t usual for us to have…” “Trash in the house!” Madeline cuts in. Helen redirects, “You’re avoiding the issue. You stole my boyfriends to hurt me on purpose!” “I did not!” “Admit it!” Madeline insists, “No, you admit it. You look me in the eye and you admit you thought I was cheap.” Helen gives in, ceding, “Okay, I thought you were cheap.” As a reward for her honesty, Madeline confirms, “Well, I hurt you on purpose.” And so, like Danny with Amy, Madeline kept using the one thing she had—her “trashy wiles”—to get back at someone “classier” such as Helen.

    Having buried the hatchet with one another after an ultimate fight (which is what happens in Beef when Amy and Danny run each other off a cliff in their cars), the two now join forces to get Ernest to do their bidding and ensure that their youthful corpse bodies are kept looking fresh (Ernest is an expert in this after being forced to become a reconstructive mortician)—generally by spray-painting their skin in a flesh-colored tone. Unfortunately, their shared enthusiasm for making Ernest “one of them” so that he can be around forever to deliver the needed “maintenance” on their bodies backfires when Ernest comes to understand that living forever sounds like a nightmare. Managing to escape from their clutches after they knock him out and take him to Lisle’s house, Madeline and Helen are forced to reconcile the fact that despite being sworn enemies for all these decades, they’re the only two people on the planet who can truly understand one another. But that’s as horrifying as it is comforting, with Helen noting, “Who could have imagined? You and me…together.” Madeline returns, “Yeah, I know.” Helen continues, “Depending on each other. Painting each other’s asses. Day and night.” Madeline laughs along nervously, “Oh, yeah. Forever.” Helen repeats, “Forever” as their forced jovial laughter turns to near tears.

    Cut to thirty-seven years later in 2029, and the duo’s skin is peeling at Ernest’s funeral. Regardless of their misery, they still obviously get off on their bickering—it’s like a life-force they can use to funnel into remaining “sharp” and “with purpose.” That much can also be said for Amy and Danny as they let their feud steer both their lives completely off course…but at least they can tell they’re still alive as a result (unlike Madeline and Helen).

    In the poster for Beef, Amy and Danny are shown staring at each other with an intensity that looks as much like hate as it does love. Ergo, the aforementioned aphorism: “There’s a fine line between love and hate.” And there is something to being attracted to the energy of a person you seemingly despise, seeing a quality in them that you can relate to…or a quality you perhaps despise in yourself. No matter how outwardly “different” your nemesis might come across in relation to your own persona.

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Only Murders in the Building: THESE characters bid adieu to season 3

    Only Murders in the Building: THESE characters bid adieu to season 3

    Summer heat waves will stir a wave of laughter as season 3 of the most-awaited series ‘Only Murders in the Building’ will grace their presence with its all-new third installment. As the hype of season 3 has been taking over the audience, they just can’t stop wondering what new drama-filled season 3 has in store for the viewers.

    With its new season, there is also addition and subtraction of old details.

    Only Murder in the Buildings, which will return this summer, won’t have two of the performers who helped the ensemble cast and season become a successful unit in its first two seasons.

    For the forthcoming third season of the series, which is adding a few major names to the ensemble in place of stars Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez. Out of which actors Amy Ryan, who played Jan, and Nathan Lane, as Teddy Dimas, won’t be marking their comebacks for season 3.

    Here is why they won’t be marking their attendance for season 3.

    In a recent interview with ComicBook.com, when asked about their plans for the future season, Lane and Ryan gave fans an update.

    “Only Meryl in the Building,” Lane remarked. “Well, I’m not, no. No. I haven’t been able to participate since I’ve been working on a play, but I assume my character is currently behind bars. Perhaps in a later season?” 

    The pair said that in order to get revenge on the other characters in the series, their characters should band together. Additionally, they implied that Meryl Streep, who will join the cast for Season 3, would work with them in Season 4 as part of an intricate plan. Which gives a hint that they will be back in action from season 4.

     

    ALSO READ: Is Meghan Markle planning to throw a birthday party for Archie amid Coronation tension?

    Who is the newest addition to the cast of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ for its upcoming installment?

    “Only Murders in the Building” is presently filming its third season, and Gomez, Martin, and Short are all making their comebacks.

    Along with newcomers Jesse Williams and Paul Rudd, three-time Oscar winner Meryl Streep will also make an impactful appearance in the series.

    An overview of what Season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ will contain

    In the season finale of the previous season, Paul Rudd played Ben Glenroy, a prominent actor who unexpectedly passed away on stage after a fight with Oliver Putnam, played by Stephen Short. Now that Glenroy is the target of everyone’s suspicion, Season 3 should pick up in the wake of this tragic passing. Rudd’s character will undoubtedly be “a clear source of many upcoming questions and, as always with our show, many twists yet to come,” as co-creator John Hoffman previously hinted.

    So, we’ll have to keep an eye on how this mystery develops. Streep’s part was recently hinted at in a teaser, and her inclusion to the series, along with that of the aforementioned Rudd, has given it an extra dose of star power.

    ALSO READ: Is Kylie Jenner looking to be a mother again amidst Timothee Chalamet rumors?

    1136909

    Source link

  • Mary J. Blige Looks Back at Her Most Iconic Roles

    Mary J. Blige Looks Back at Her Most Iconic Roles

    Welcome to Look Back At It, a monthly column where some of the most iconic Black actresses in Hollywood reminisce and reflect on the roles that made them stars. For this month’s installment, Mary J. Blige breaks down her career—from Mudbound and How to Get Away With Murder to her current Starz series, Power Book II: Ghost.


    In 2018, the musician and actress Mary J. Blige became the first Black woman to be nominated in multiple categories in the same year at the Academy Awards. She earned two nominations for her work in Dee Rees’s Mudbound—one for Best Original Song and the other for Best Supporting Actress. “Those were complete surprises,” says Blige as she reflects on the moment. “I wasn’t even confident about my acting [at that time], but that let me know, ‘You can act.’”

    Throughout her career, Blige has honed her skill while playing an array of iconic women like Dr. Betty Shabazz in Betty & Coretta and Dinah Washington in Respect. She’s also guest-starred on the popular television shows Black-ish, Empire, and How to Get Away With Murder. Now, she’s Monet Tejada, the fierce matriarch at the heart of Power Book II: Ghost.

    “One thing that threads through all of my characters is that they’re all no-nonsense,” she says. “They’re all strong women. I have to play characters like that to be able to pull from a real place. Can I play a weak woman? Probably. But right now, this is what it is.”

    Now, she’s setting her sights behind the camera. Her production company, Blue Butterfly, already has two movies with Lifetime, and she says there’s more to come. “Maybe I’ll direct one day, but I don’t know if I have the patience to deal with people,” Blige adds with a laugh.

    Below, Blige takes us through her most iconic roles to share the deep friendships she’s made on set, the joys of acting with people she admires, and the ways she’s evolved onscreen.

    Tanya in I Can Do Bad All By Myself (2009)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself – trailer

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “This was the first time that I officially met Taraji [P. Henson]. We acted together and then became friends. I Can Do Bad All By Myself reminds me of her and our friendship.”

    Watch Now on Prime Video

    Dr. Betty Shabazz in Betty & Coretta (2013)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Betty & Coretta: An Extended Preview | Lifetime

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “I got to work with one of the most amazing actresses in the business and an amazing woman. I felt so proud and grateful to stand beside Angela Bassett while working on Betty & Coretta. She’s one of the best. I mean, she’s right there with Meryl Streep for me. I watched Angela transform her face and everything on this film. It was the most unbelievable thing to watch. I still go to her for inspiration.”

    Watch Now on Prime Video

    Angel in Black Nativity (2013)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    BLACK NATIVITY Official HD Trailer

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “Oh my God. I was not happy with this. Moving on.”

    Watch Now on Prime Video

    Evillene in The Wiz Live! (2015)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Take a First Look at The Wiz Live!

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “I had a ball playing that evil witch. We had a good time.”

    Watch Now on Apple TV

    Rolanda in How to Get Away With Murder (2016)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Annalise Goes to the Hair Salon – How To Get Away With Murder

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “It was an honor to do Viola Davis’s hair in How To Get Away With Murder, which was one of the biggest shows at the time. Being her hairstylist was crazy, but also amazing.”

    Watch Now on Netflix

    Florence in Mudbound (2017)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Mudbound | Official Teaser [HD] | Netflix

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “Wow, what a historical moment. This was amazing on every level. I was completely caught off guard and surprised by how much the critics and the audience loved this film. And the Oscar nominations were a big surprise. Mudbound was challenging because I was going through so much in my life and was so insecure. And for the film, I had to peel back the things that were making me feel secure. You couldn’t wear weaves and you couldn’t wear lashes and you couldn’t wear nails. You had to have on old-timey clothes. I had be that person. That was a challenge because it kind of hurt my feelings a little bit, but it also gave me confidence in just looking like that. That’s who I am.”

    Watch Now on Netflix

    Cha-Cha in The Umbrella Academy (2019)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    The Umbrella Academy | Official Trailer | Netflix

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “I had a blast. The word fun comes to mind when I think about The Umbrella Academy. We lived in Canada for five months and I met some great people. And, of course, I learned how to shoot guns and do martial arts.”

    Watch Now on Netflix

    Dinah Washington in Respect (2021)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    RESPECT | Official Trailer | MGM Studios

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “It was nice to work alongside Jennifer Hudson and be that character. Flipping the table over was just so therapeutic.”

    Watch Now on Prime Video

    Watch Now on Paramount+

    Monet in Power Book II: Ghost (2020-present)

    This content is imported from youTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Power Book II: Ghost | Official Trailer | Season 3

    Watch on

    This is an image

    “Now, I’m comfortable with just falling into [acting]. Monet has given me so much confidence and she’s one of my favorite roles that I’ve played. For this character, I have to visit dark places in my real life. I have to go back to those places and grab that stuff to get those emotions to Monet. But this show is so much fun. The cast is amazing. The writing is amazing. It’s a blessing. I’m just so grateful to Courtney [A. Kemp, the show’s creator] and 50 [Cent, the show’s producer].”

    Watch Now on Starz

    Headshot of Juliana Ukiomogbe

    Juliana Ukiomogbe is the Assistant Editor at ELLE. Her work has previously appeared in Interview, i-D, Teen Vogue, Nylon, and more.  

    Source link

  • Hollywood’s Biggest Stars Explain Why The Oscars Are Still Relevant

    Hollywood’s Biggest Stars Explain Why The Oscars Are Still Relevant

    “Listen—no time to explain, but in 2027, someone known as ‘Mr. Beast’ is nominated for Best Director for a film called Coincidentally Spearman. He must not win! If this happens, a timeline is created wherein billions will perish. I have to go—I’ve used all of my time credits on this final jump, and if I stay around any longer, the multiverse will implode.”

    Source link

  • The Surreal Oscar Campaign for ‘The Hours,’ 20 Years Later

    The Surreal Oscar Campaign for ‘The Hours,’ 20 Years Later

    Julianne Moore as Laura Brown.PARAMOUNT/EVERETT COLLECTION.

    Weinstein and Rudin had feuded across several previous projects, so some headbutting was to be expected on The Hours. Rudin developed the script with Hare for about a year, though, and had final cut. He toyed with the mercurial Weinstein by showing off the film’s bold creative decisions—prosthetic included. “Scott won most of the fights,” Cunningham says. However, according to New York magazine at the time, Weinstein nixed a premiere for The Hours at the Venice International Film Festival, which Rudin interpreted as retaliation. He sent Weinstein—a notorious chain-smoker—a crate of cigarettes, which quickly became legend. The enclosed note read “Thanks as always for your help.”

    Weinstein was coming off of getting “caught” waging a smear campaign against the real-life subject of the previous year’s best picture winner, A Beautiful Mind, says Press: “That’s the year that Harvey started to pay a price in the press—he got caught really being abusive and spreading that stuff about John Nash. The next year you would’ve seen a subtle shift because the press was focusing more on the dirty tricks.”

    Even so, the fact that Weinstein and Rudin were firmly established as bullies made for good copy—which they didn’t seem to mind. “One of the reasons filmmakers seek to work with Harvey and me is they want that combative ability,” Rudin told the Los Angeles Times weeks before the Oscars. “They don’t want you to be nice and sweet. They want you to go and kill for them. And that is the job. You are supposed to go out there and mow down the opposition.” 

    Nicole Kidman as Virginia Woolf.PARAMOUNT/PHOTOFEST.

    The true extent of the two men’s alleged misconduct hadn’t yet been reported, of course. Weinstein has since faced dozens of allegations of sexual misconduct, and he’s currently serving a 23-year prison sentence after being found guilty of a criminal sexual act and rape in New York. Allegations of abusive behavior against Rudin, first printed by The Hollywood Reporter in 2021, detailed instances of physical violence and bullying against employees. His career has since stalled.

    Back in their glory days, however, they served as their own hype machines. “You had them spending millions and millions of dollars,” Press says. Sometimes, as with Kidman, it worked; other times, not so much. “Absolutely everybody told me I was going to win,” Hare says of the best adapted screenplay category, which he lost to The Pianist’s Ronald Harwood. He spent months on the trail with victory in mind. “When I didn’t win, I was pretty pissed off for about two and a half hours.” The next day, he says, “I didn’t care anymore.” 

    Outside of Kidman’s win, The Hours slightly underperformed at the Oscars, at which Catherine Zeta-Jones won best supporting actress; both Streep and Moore went home empty-handed. A few months before, however, it won best drama picture and actress (Kidman) at the Golden Globes, which wound up being the peak of its awards run. All three Hours actors were nominated and in attendance; Streep even won the supporting actress award for Adaptation, her first win since 1982’s Sophie’s Choice, which prompted the star to begin her speech by saying, “I’ve just been nominated 789 times, and I was getting so settled over there for a long winter’s nap!”

    Cunningham attended the Globes as well. He remembers the “great party,” sitting in the same room as Kidman, Streep, Moore, and Rudin, as a validation of The Hours’ most hotly debated (facial) feature. “In some parallel dimension, the movie went down over Nicole Kidman’s plastic nose,” he says. “It didn’t happen in this dimension.” 


    Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.

    David Canfield

    Source link

  • Only Icons in the Building

    Only Icons in the Building

    If you’re not already a devoted fan of Only Murders in the Building, run — don’t walk — to Hulu to start binging your new-favorite show now. The Emmy-nominated series stars Selena alongside comedy veterans Martin Short and Steve Martin. The result: a charming, addictive comedy that only strengthens Selena’s already-massive career.


    This Selena Gomez smash-hit is the best thing the singer/actress/beauty mogul has been in since Wizards of Waverly Place — neck-and-neck with that one photo of Selena and Hailey Bieber.

    Alongside Martin and Short, Gomez plays a true-crime addict who stumbles into a murder mystery of her own. It’s the addictive, soapy, silly whodunnit for the true crime set. And after the success of the second season, I wondered if they could top it in the third season. In a new, viral TikTok, Selena reveals that they definitely can.

    These days, all great announcements happen on TikTok. So it’s only right that Selena posted a TikTok (them, of course, the Reels version) video to reveal two of her latest superstar co-stars on the hit Hulu series: Paul Rudd and Meryl Streep.

    That’s right. These two timeless icons will be running around Manhattan with the comedic trio and I am inexplicably eager to see Season 3’s shenanigans.

    “Hey guys, we’re on set. What are we shooting?” Gomez says to the camera, revealing Martin and Short. But then, the twist. “Could this honestly get any better?” she posits, knowing the answer is a resounding yes. Because next in the frame? Paul Rudd. And if that wasn’t enough? Meryl casually pops up behind them all!

    This direct, unofficial teaser got my heart rate up. So imagine what creator John Hoffman has in store for Charles, Oliver, and Mabel…and the rest of us!

    Tina Fey was one of the surprise stars of Season 2, so Rudd and Streep join a cast of icons to further this award-winning Hulu sitcom’s reign. I cannot wait for the season to wrap so I can sit at home and binge it in one long, delicious session.

    Three questions remain: who will be murdered next? Who will the murderer be? And will you be joining me on what’s sure to be an epic journey?

    LKC

    Source link

  • Meryl Streep to appear in Season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ | CNN

    Meryl Streep to appear in Season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Another legend is about to walk the halls of a certain murder-filled Manhattan apartment building.

    Meryl Streep is set to appear in the upcoming third season of “Only Murders in the Building,” Hulu confirmed to CNN on Tuesday.

    The casting news first surfaced on “Only Murders” star and executive producer Selena Gomez’s Instagram, when she shared a fun video from set alongside costars and co-executive producers Steve Martin and Martin Short.

    The lead trio were joined in the clip by cast members Jackie Hoffman and Paul Rudd, as Gomez exclaimed that “the gang is back” for Season 3.

    When she asked, “Could this honestly get any better?” Rudd replied that he thought it could, at which point Streep appeared from behind the couch where Gomez, Short and Martin were sitting.

    The three-time Oscar-winning actress then jokingly offered Martin a pillow and asked Short if he needed anything, to which he responded, “Just the tea I had asked for a half hour ago!”

    The casting move looks to be a testament to Gomez’s powers of manifestation, as last month she had listed Streep at the top of her wish list for stars to join the acclaimed show.

    “I would reach for the biggest of all … probably Meryl, or someone really amazing like that,” she told Vogue.

    Gomez’s Instagram video comes just days after she returned to social media following an absence.

    Primarily a film actress, Streep’s last major foray into television was in 2019, when she joined Season 2 of hit HBO series “Big Little Lies.”

    She earned a Primetime Emmy nomination for her work on the show. (HBO, like CNN, is part of Warner Bros. Discovery.)

    Source link

  • British novelist, screenwriter Fay Weldon dies at 91

    British novelist, screenwriter Fay Weldon dies at 91

    LONDON — British author Fay Weldon, known for her sharp wit and acerbic observations about women’s experiences and sexual politics in novels including “The Life And Loves Of A She-Devil,” has died, her family said Wednesday. She was 91.

    Weldon was a playwright, screenwriter and a prolific novelist, producing 30 novels as well as short stories and plays written for television, radio and the stage. She was one of the writers on the popular 1970s drama series “Upstairs, Downstairs,” receiving an award from the Writers Guild of America for the show’s first episode.

    “It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Fay Weldon (CBE), author, essayist and playwright. She died peacefully this morning January 4, 2023,” her family said in a statement released by her agent.

    Much of Weldon’s fiction explored issues surrounding women’s relationships with men, children, parents and each other, including the 1971 “Down Among The Women” and “Female Friends,” published in 1975.

    “I wouldn’t say my books were criticisms … I would say they were observations,” she once told The Associated Press in an interview. “Women have a terrible time, they go on having a terrible time. Women who don’t have a terrible time are young, attractive, intelligent and don’t have children.”

    “The Life and Loves Of a She-Devil” was the story of an ugly woman who alters her body and her life to seek revenge on a philandering husband. It was adapted into a TV series as well as a film starring Meryl Streep.

    Her 1978 novel, “Praxis,” was shortlisted for the prestigious Booker Prize for Fiction.

    Weldon’s books were often feminist, but she was also known for controversial comments about feminism later in life. In 1998 she came under fire for her assertion in an interview with the Radio Times magazine that rape ″isn’t the worst thing that can happen to a woman if you’re safe, alive and unmarked afterwards.” She said her comments were misinterpreted.

    Born in England in September 1931, Weldon was brought up in New Zealand and returned to the U.K. as a child. She studied economics and psychology at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, and worked briefly for the Foreign Office in London and as a journalist before moving on to be an advertising copywriter.

    She published her first novel, “The Fat Woman’s Joke,” in 1967. In 2002, at age 70, she published her memoir, titled “Auto Da Fay.” The narrative described what she called her “mildly scandalous life until my mid-thirties” and concluded in 1963, just as Weldon’s career as a novelist began.

    “The sad truth is, my theory goes, that no-one is much interested in what happens to women after they turn 35. Which is the age at which I stopped Auto da Fay: the age I stopped living and started writing instead, as a serious person,” she wrote on her website.

    Weldon was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for her services to literature in 2001.

    Source link

  • A ‘downtown’ choreographer brings her craft to the opera

    A ‘downtown’ choreographer brings her craft to the opera

    NEW YORK — It was a delicious challenge that came as a total surprise.

    As choreographer Annie-B Parson tells it, she was walking down a Brooklyn street when her phone rang. It was the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera, Peter Gelb, wondering if she’d be interested in choreographing for the Met.

    Parson, based in Brooklyn, founder of the Big Dance Theater and also known for choreographing David Byrne’s joyous “American Utopia” on Broadway, had never done an opera and acknowledges she knew little about the art form.

    But of course she was interested. It was the Met’s buzzy, commissioned production of “The Hours,” about the interior lives of three women connected — across generations and an ocean — by Virginia Woolf and her writings (one of them Woolf herself). Parson would be the only woman on the creative team.

    And so one of her first decisions when she came on board was that all dancers should be female, or female-identifying.

    “We auditioned probably 150 people,” she said in an interview, for a dance cast of 13. “And as the only female creative team member in a piece about an extremely radical feminist voice, it was very important to me to bring that feminism to the stage.”

    “That’s a personal statement on my part,” she added. “None of the men can do that … Nobody knows what it’s like to be anything unless they’re it, right?”

    The opera, by composer Kevin Puts and librettist Greg Pierce, is based on Michael Cunningham’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1998 novel (later adapted into the film starring Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore and Nicole Kidman, who won an Oscar) about three women connected specifically by Woolf’s 1925 novel “Mrs. Dalloway.”

    It stars a powerhouse trio of Renée Fleming as Clarissa Vaughan; Kelli O’Hara as Laura Brown; and Joyce DiDonato, as Woolf herself. Directed by Phelim McDermott, it runs through Dec. 15, including a Dec. 10 matinee simulcast to movie theaters worldwide.

    Gelb says he reached out to Parson because he’d been impressed by her work in “American Utopia,” and thought she’d be a great fit with McDermott: “Part of my job as general manager is to be a creative matchmaker.”

    He said in an interview that he feels Parson’s contribution has been to amplify and richen the story of “The Hours” for everyone in the vast, 3,800-seat theater, “as far back as the last row of the Family Circle.” (And on a recent evening, it looked like every one of those seats were taken.)

    The opera unfolds over one day in three different places and eras. Woolf is attempting to write, and feeling suffocated in a country home outside London in 1923; Brown is an unhappy housewife and mother in 1949 Los Angeles; and Clarissa Vaughn is an editor arranging a party — organizing flowers and food – for her dear, ailing friend Richard, a novelist who has AIDS, in late 20th-century New York.

    Parson says she was acutely aware of the challenge of illustrating the interior lives of the women, but did not set out to psychoanalyze them in movement. “I feel like if I had tried to do that, it wouldn’t have worked,” she says. She wanted to get there, but in a different way.

    So, in a process she modestly describes as more “mundane,” the choreographer focused on actions, not thoughts.

    “I don’t want to describe someone’s unconscious,” she says. “So for Virginia Woolf, I looked at, what does she DO? She writes, she reads. I worked on those actions. What does Clarissa do? She buys flowers. What does Laura do? She bakes. She takes pills.”

    Another example: When Clarissa’s ailing friend Richard’s apartment rolls onto the stage, Parson’s dancers are hanging off the platform in what looks like a chilling metaphor for illness. Parson agrees, but says her aim was actually, “there’s this platform and it’s moving, and how can I animate it?”

    The choreographer spoke from Lyon, France, where she is now working on her second opera. She said that even though “The Hours” was her first, it wasn’t as difficult as it sounds to adjust her craft.

    “I have worked so much with musicians, great musicians,” she says, like Byrne and many others. “So thinking about how a show rolls out and how to choreograph to music so it’s supportive and at the same time has its own life … it didn’t seem that different.”

    It was, however a dream to have so much time to rehearse, and to have the opera’s resources behind her. She was thrilled, for example, that when she rehearsed by herself, she had a pianist. “I mean, I’ve never had that experience before,” she said with a laugh. “I’m always listening on my iPhone to music when I’m working on my own. Everything about making dance at the Met is heightened and supported. I can’t tell you how much fun it was.”

    An added bonus for Parson, who hadn’t read Woolf since working on a play of hers more than a decade ago, was getting to read her again, especially her diaries and “A Room of One’s Own” — and especially now, in 2022.

    “Her writing is so profound,” Parson said. “And the world’s changed a lot in terms of gender and feminism. So she reads really, really well right now. It was really exciting. I actually want to cry right now, I’m so moved by thinking about her.”

    Source link