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Tag: Sofia Coppola

  • Sofia Coppola’s ‘Priscilla’ Trailer Aims To Tell Priscilla Presley’s Side Of The Story

    Sofia Coppola’s ‘Priscilla’ Trailer Aims To Tell Priscilla Presley’s Side Of The Story

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    Priscilla Presley, the former wife of the legendary musician Elvis Presley, is set to have her side of the couple’s love story depicted in Sofia Coppola’s upcoming biopic “Priscilla.”

    The A24 film is based on Presley’s 1985 memoir “Elvis and Me,” per Variety — and from the looks of its first official trailer, released Wednesday, the movie intends to go beyond heavy eye makeup and Aqua Net.

    Cailee Spaeny (“Mare of Easttown,” “Bad Times at the El Royale”) stars as Priscilla, who met the King of Rock and Roll at a party in a West Germany Air Force base in 1959 at age 14. Jacob Elordi (“Euphoria,” “The Kissing Booth”) will play Elvis, who was 24 when he first laid eyes on his bride-to-be.

    “When teenage Priscilla Beaulieu meets Elvis Presley at a party, the man who is already a meteoric rock-and-roll superstar becomes someone entirely unexpected in private moments: a thrilling crush, an ally in loneliness, a vulnerable best friend,” reads A24’s synopsis for the movie. “Through Priscilla’s eyes, Sofia Coppola tells the unseen side of a great American myth in Elvis and Priscilla’s long courtship and turbulent marriage.”

    Presley, now 78, was in the news earlier this year following the death of her daughter, Lisa Marie Presley, and a subsequent estate dispute with her granddaughter, the actor Riley Keough.

    Elvis Presley sits cheek to cheek with his bride, the former Priscilla Ann Beaulieu, May 1, 1967.

    Bettmann via Getty Images

    In a 1985 essay for People, Presley wrote that she was often told as an adolescent and a teenager that she “was the prettiest girl in school, but I never felt that way.”

    “I had gotten looks from boys, and once a picture of me in a tight sweater was stolen from the school bulletin board,” she wrote. “Yet I was still a child, embarrassed about my own sexuality.”

    Presley also described the dynamic between herself and her much older flame.

    “In 1959, after my father was assigned to Wiesbaden, West Germany [headquarters of the U.S. Air Force in Europe], I found myself deeply involved with Elvis,” she wrote. “Something in his Southern upbringing had taught him that the ‘right’ girl was to be saved for marriage. I was that girl. At the same time, he molded me into his woman. I wore the clothes, hairstyle and makeup of his careful choosing.”

    She emphasized that she was still very much a child at the time of their courtship.

    “My parents became confused and bewildered by our relationship. We tried to make them believe that it was proper and platonic, and they wanted to believe me,” Presley wrote. “Whenever they tried to stop us from seeing each other, I pleaded and cried and made them and myself miserable. In retrospect, I don’t think anything could have stopped me from seeing Elvis.”

    Elvis and Priscilla Presley divorced in 1973. Elvis died in 1977.

    Coppola has said “Priscilla” will be very different from “Elvis,” last year’s biopic of the singer from director Baz Luhrmann.

    “I loved how Baz approached his story in a very collage-y way, but I’m glad it didn’t go into much of Priscilla’s story because now I can really dive deep,” Coppola told Collider.

    “I love that people were so into his film about Elvis, and now in a few years there’ll be another film about Priscilla,” she added. “I think it’ll be interesting to have two completely different interpretations of the same events and time period.”

    “Priscilla” is set to open in theaters this October.

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  • Sofia Coppola on Joan Didion, ‘I’m Glad My Mom Died,’ and the Book That Broke Her Heart

    Sofia Coppola on Joan Didion, ‘I’m Glad My Mom Died,’ and the Book That Broke Her Heart

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    Until Sofia Coppola directs her five-part adaptation for Apple TV+, we have the reissue of Edith Wharton’s The Custom of the Country (Penguin Classics), for which she wrote the foreword. For now, she’s currently directing her next film, Priscilla, based on Priscilla Presley’s book, Elvis and Me (Coppola’s on-set playlist here). Her other movies include: The Virgin Suicides, Lost in Translation, for which she won the 2004 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, Marie Antoinette, Somewhere, which won the 2010 Golden Lion in Venice, The Bling Ring, The Beguiled, for which she won 2017 Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival, and On the Rocks.

    The Napa Valley-raised New Yorker has lended her talents to fashion (collaborates with Chanel, designed the SC bag for Louis Vuitton; directed projects for Christian Dior); the arts (directed shorts for the New York City Ballet and staged La Traviata for the Rome Opera with costumes designed by Valentino), and photography (including shooting Paris Hilton for Elle).

    She interned at Chanel at 15; would be a teacher if she weren’t a filmmaker; is on the board of the Martin Scorsese’s Film Foundation; bought herself a Cartier watch after filming Marie Antoinette; had cameos in Star Wars: Episode I–the Phantom Menace and What We Do in the Shadows; and has her own wine.

    Loves: revival houses, late ’60s style and the Richard Avedon Foundation IG feed, hotels. Here, the reads that have stayed with her.

    The book that…

    …I recommend over and over again:

    Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima—a beautiful tragic love story set in the Taishō period in Japan.

    …I swear I’ll finish one day:

    On the Shortness of Life by Seneca, by my bed and is very short, but I can only get through a few pages at a time, but great insights and reminders on how to live and the value your time.

    …currently sits on my nightstand:

    David Sedaris’s Happy-Go-Lucky. Love reading this right now while I’m working and it’s a break and a companion I look forward to while away from home. So funny and touching and makes me feel connected.

    …I’d pass on to my kid:

    All About Love by bell hooks. I love her thoughtfulness on this topic

    …I’d give to a new graduate:

    Let Me Tell You What I Mean by Joan Didion. I love [the essay] ‘On Being Unchosen By the College of One’s Choice’ and the line in the introduction by Hilton Als: ‘…Part of the remarkable character of Didion’s work has to do with her refusal to pretend that she doesn’t exist.’

    …I’d like turned into a Netflix show:

    Sorrow and Bliss by Meg Mason. I’d like to see the movie directed by Emerald Fennell and starring Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Riz Ahmed. [Ed. note: New Regency owns the film and television rights to this book.]

    …I first bought:

    Bright Lights, Big City by Jay McInerney. As a teenager, I thought it was the coolest and led me to NYC.

    …I last bought:

    I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy. I couldn’t put it down. It was so moving and funny and hopeful how someone can emerge from that trauma and chaos and find themselves as an artist.

    …has the best title:

    Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham. I loved that book in my youth, I love a tragic romance, that is the ultimate for unrequited love.

    …has the greatest ending:

    The Custom of the Country! I love the ending—the last paragraph is so good! I remember where I was that moment finishing it and the impact it had.

    …broke my heart:

    The Copenhagen Trilogy by Tove Ditlevsen. I was walking around in a daze the day I finished it.

    …grew on me:

    Mouth to Mouth by Antoine Wilson. Vendela Vida told me about it, and it was hard for me to get into (I’m a challenged reader) and takes a while to get into, but when you do, it’s hard to put down.

    …I’ve re-read the most:

    Anna Karenina. I love a tragic love story and torn woman.

    …that holds the recipe to a favorite dish:

    Via Carota by Jody Williams and Rita Sodi—their famous green salad.

    Bonus question: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be:

    Three Lives in the West Village, New York.

    Happy-Go-Lucky

    Happy-Go-Lucky

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    All About Love

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    Let Me Tell You What I Mean

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    Sorrow and Bliss

    Sorrow and Bliss

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    I'm Glad My Mom Died

    I’m Glad My Mom Died

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    The Copenhagen Trilogy

    The Copenhagen Trilogy

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    Mouth to Mouth

    Mouth to Mouth

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