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What Happened to All the Talk About the Oscars? Academy Ban is Hurting Traditional Press Push

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It’s January 22nd, with a little more than a month to go before the Academy Awards. The nominations for the Oscars were announced on January 10th–12 days ago– to much fanfare after weeks of campaigning and publicity. The build up and what comes after is supposed to fuel the interest in the ABC telecast on February 24th–and also help the movies and actors who were nominated.

But since January 10th, it’s been all radio silence on the subject of the Oscars. What happened? I’ll tell you: new Academy rules for this year prevent studios and producers from any more campaigning. There are no more cocktail parties, lunches, or dinners. Movies can be screened, but no food or drink can be served. All the fun involved with the Oscars– meeting the casts, chowing down, and writing about it the next day–has been elimninated.

The idea was to make it all a level playing field. There are always accusations that some studios (usually The Weinstein Company) overdo it with the socializing. And evening it out for everyone is a smart idea. But erasing all of it, for six weeks or so, is a mistake. A big one.

If this were the case in actual political campaigning, the correlation would be that prior to the conventions, you could entertain potential voters. But between the choosing of the nominees and the election–from Labor Day til November 7th or so–all talk of the candidates would cease.

The result is that no one is talking about the Academy Awards at all. And wasn’t the point of moving up the nominations announcement by a week to kick off a major marketing push? But when the Oscars finally arrive this year, there will have been a paucity of publicity surrounding the movies and the show.

And now there’s a struggle around by Hollywood publicists who are trying to cook up feature stories about the various nominees. You see, the easiest thing to do was toss these little events and put columnists and interviewers in the room. The stories that came out of that stoked the press and fired  up interest in the show consequently. The studios didn’t mind spending the money, and in fact all of them were happy to use commercial sponsors who liked the plugs they got. Everyone won.

But this way, I’m nervous everyone loses, especially ABC. Five weeks is a long time. Other movies will be released. And unless all the nominees make the talk show circuit, it could be a little weird on February 24th–almost an after-thought–when the Oscars finally arrive on ABC. I sure hope not. But it would be wise of the Academy to lift the ban on gatherings right now, and put the word Oscar back on Google News and everywhere else as soon as possible.

And this is important because so far this new adminstration of the Academy has made one good decision after another–from the host and producers of the Oscars to just about everything else. Maybe they can take this rule, which is a holdover from last year, and amend it quickly.

James Franco’s Poem for Obama (for Yahoo!)

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Yahoo! asked a few established poets and actor James Franco, who just got a degree in poetry from Warren Wilson College, to compose some lines for President Obama on the occasion of the inauguration. Franco also has a cool collection of poems out in book form called “Strongest of the Litter.” Here’s the poem, reprinted from Yahoo! I like the approach Franco took–a little Hollywood, a little name droppy, but in the end a lovely insight about Obama. You can see Franco read the poem at http://news.yahoo.com/president-obama-in-asheville-a-james-franco-poem–231846640.html

Obama in Asheville by James Franco

Asheville, North Carolina, is the birthplace of Thomas Wolfe and the sometime residence of F. Scott Fitzgerald When he visited Zelda at her institution; He stayed at the Grove Park Inn, a grand stone edifice.

On the phone once, Cormac McCarthy lamented The two added wings and the spa, and marveled At the original structure, They pulled the stones From the mountains and brought them down on mules.

Soon after his fortieth birthday, Fitzgerald attempted suicide Here, but couldn’t shoot his own head, drunk, I guess. Later, after he was actually dead, from alcohol, Zelda perished in a fire at her institution, one of nine.

*

Asheville is the place where the Black Mountain College once stood And helped birth Rauschenberg, Twombly and Johns, Cage and Cunningham; now I think it’s a Young Men’s Christian Association. On the wall of the Grove Park, they have pictures of the famous guests;

I’m not up there, but Obama is. I was asked to write something For the inauguration of his second term, but what could I write? I was in Asheville, studying writing, but not the political sort; I write confessions and characters, and that sort of thing.

I wrote my friend Frank about what I could do, but he was unresponsive. I went to class and then the little burrito place where they know me, And finally at night I got Frank’s email on my phone and pulled over On the side of Warren Wilson Road, past the school barn with the WWC —

That I couldn’t see in the dark — right before the school entrance; A little spot where there’s a path that leads to a lake called Snake Lake. First I called my class at UCLA, and told them to watch Apocalypse Now, And that it used Heart of Darkness as a model, and that we’d watch

Eleanor Coppola’s Hearts of Darkness, the making-of, the following week. Then I read Frank’s note. He said he was sleeping twenty hours a day, With no symptoms except that he desired sleep And just a little more sleep. He’s in his seventies.

Then he said that my poem was a difficult task. How to write about a man written about endlessly; A man whom everyone has some sort of experience of; How to write so that it’s not just for the converted.

*

I met Obama once, in D.C., the Correspondents’ Dinner. I was the guest of Vanity Fair, guided through D.C. by the wife Of Christopher Hitchens, when he was alive. We went to Hitch’s place, He had books from floor to ceiling, and said he had read

To Borges, when he was blind, Old Icelandic Eddas— Then we waited in a private room with the likes of Tom Cruise, And Katie Holmes, and Claire Danes. When Obama entered The crowd converged. Finally, I got to shake his hand,

He knew me from Spider-Man. I asked him for advice, I was scheduled to give the commencement speech at UCLA And there were some undergraduate knockers against me; He had been denied the usual honorary degree by Arizona State

Because he hadn’t accomplished enough, so I wondered How he dealt with detractors. He smiled his smile and said, “Humor.” Well he’s damn right, and I wonder how much That stand-up comedian is laughing in the face

Of this big country. Because he is one man and we are many, And a great servant of the people—he’s a president, not a king— And doesn’t need to face what King Charles once faced. (Frank suggested I examine Marvell’s semi-inauguration poem for Cromwell:)

That thence the Royal actor borne The tragic scaffold might adorn:      While round the armèd bands      Did clap their bloody hands.

That most famous stanza, and then:

But bow’d his comely head Down, as upon a bed.

And he was beheaded, good-bye Charles.

*

If I were to act in the film about Obama, All I would need to get down, aside from the outer stuff— And I know that’s important—is his essential kindness, I’d let the writer put in all the political crap,

And the specific things that he was up against, All that stuff on CNN and the Huffington Post, And I’d say the lines that were written, just like Obama Reads his lines, but what would really put the role over

Would be the goodness at its core. That’s what will be remembered. Yes, his race, no one will forget. But the soul too. I’d win the Academy Award if I just captured that.

Obama in Asheville

Asheville, North Carolina, is the birthplace of Thomas Wolfe and the sometime residence of F. Scott Fitzgerald When he visited Zelda at her institution; He stayed at the Grove Park Inn, a grand stone edifice.

On the phone once, Cormac McCarthy lamented The two added wings and the spa, and marveled At the original structure, They pulled the stones From the mountains and brought them down on mules.

Soon after his fortieth birthday, Fitzgerald attempted suicide Here, but couldn’t shoot his own head, drunk, I guess. Later, after he was actually dead, from alcohol, Zelda perished in a fire at her institution, one of nine.

*

Asheville is the place where the Black Mountain College once stood And helped birth Rauschenberg, Twombly and Johns, Cage and Cunningham; now I think it’s a Young Men’s Christian Association. On the wall of the Grove Park, they have pictures of the famous guests;

I’m not up there, but Obama is. I was asked to write something For the inauguration of his second term, but what could I write? I was in Asheville, studying writing, but not the political sort; I write confessions and characters, and that sort of thing.

I wrote my friend Frank about what I could do, but he was unresponsive. I went to class and then the little burrito place where they know me, And finally at night I got Frank’s email on my phone and pulled over On the side of Warren Wilson Road, past the school barn with the WWC —

That I couldn’t see in the dark — right before the school entrance; A little spot where there’s a path that leads to a lake called Snake Lake. First I called my class at UCLA, and told them to watch Apocalypse Now, And that it used Heart of Darkness as a model, and that we’d watch

Eleanor Coppola’s Hearts of Darkness, the making-of, the following week. Then I read Frank’s note. He said he was sleeping twenty hours a day, With no symptoms except that he desired sleep And just a little more sleep. He’s in his seventies.

Then he said that my poem was a difficult task. How to write about a man written about endlessly; A man whom everyone has some sort of experience of; How to write so that it’s not just for the converted.

*

I met Obama once, in D.C., the Correspondents’ Dinner. I was the guest of Vanity Fair, guided through D.C. by the wife Of Christopher Hitchens, when he was alive. We went to Hitch’s place, He had books from floor to ceiling, and said he had read

To Borges, when he was blind, Old Icelandic Eddas— Then we waited in a private room with the likes of Tom Cruise, And Katie Holmes, and Claire Danes. When Obama entered The crowd converged. Finally, I got to shake his hand,

He knew me from Spider-Man. I asked him for advice, I was scheduled to give the commencement speech at UCLA And there were some undergraduate knockers against me; He had been denied the usual honorary degree by Arizona State

Because he hadn’t accomplished enough, so I wondered How he dealt with detractors. He smiled his smile and said, “Humor.” Well he’s damn right, and I wonder how much That stand-up comedian is laughing in the face

Of this big country. Because he is one man and we are many, And a great servant of the people—he’s a president, not a king— And doesn’t need to face what King Charles once faced. (Frank suggested I examine Marvell’s semi-inauguration poem for Cromwell:)

That thence the Royal actor borne The tragic scaffold might adorn:      While round the armèd bands      Did clap their bloody hands.

That most famous stanza, and then:

But bow’d his comely head Down, as upon a bed.

And he was beheaded, good-bye Charles.

*

If I were to act in the film about Obama, All I would need to get down, aside from the outer stuff— And I know that’s important—is his essential kindness, I’d let the writer put in all the political crap,

And the specific things that he was up against, All that stuff on CNN and the Huffington Post, And I’d say the lines that were written, just like Obama Reads his lines, but what would really put the role over

Would be the goodness at its core. That’s what will be remembered. Yes, his race, no one will forget. But the soul too. I’d win the Academy Award if I just captured that.

 

 

Obama in Asheville

Asheville, North Carolina, is the birthplace of Thomas Wolfe and the sometime residence of F. Scott Fitzgerald When he visited Zelda at her institution; He stayed at the Grove Park Inn, a grand stone edifice.

On the phone once, Cormac McCarthy lamented The two added wings and the spa, and marveled At the original structure, They pulled the stones From the mountains and brought them down on mules.

Soon after his fortieth birthday, Fitzgerald attempted suicide Here, but couldn’t shoot his own head, drunk, I guess. Later, after he was actually dead, from alcohol, Zelda perished in a fire at her institution, one of nine.

*

Asheville is the place where the Black Mountain College once stood And helped birth Rauschenberg, Twombly and Johns, Cage and Cunningham; now I think it’s a Young Men’s Christian Association. On the wall of the Grove Park, they have pictures of the famous guests;

I’m not up there, but Obama is. I was asked to write something For the inauguration of his second term, but what could I write? I was in Asheville, studying writing, but not the political sort; I write confessions and characters, and that sort of thing.

I wrote my friend Frank about what I could do, but he was unresponsive. I went to class and then the little burrito place where they know me, And finally at night I got Frank’s email on my phone and pulled over On the side of Warren Wilson Road, past the school barn with the WWC —

That I couldn’t see in the dark — right before the school entrance; A little spot where there’s a path that leads to a lake called Snake Lake. First I called my class at UCLA, and told them to watch Apocalypse Now, And that it used Heart of Darkness as a model, and that we’d watch

Eleanor Coppola’s Hearts of Darkness, the making-of, the following week. Then I read Frank’s note. He said he was sleeping twenty hours a day, With no symptoms except that he desired sleep And just a little more sleep. He’s in his seventies.

Then he said that my poem was a difficult task. How to write about a man written about endlessly; A man whom everyone has some sort of experience of; How to write so that it’s not just for the converted.

*

I met Obama once, in D.C., the Correspondents’ Dinner. I was the guest of Vanity Fair, guided through D.C. by the wife Of Christopher Hitchens, when he was alive. We went to Hitch’s place, He had books from floor to ceiling, and said he had read

To Borges, when he was blind, Old Icelandic Eddas— Then we waited in a private room with the likes of Tom Cruise, And Katie Holmes, and Claire Danes. When Obama entered The crowd converged. Finally, I got to shake his hand,

He knew me from Spider-Man. I asked him for advice, I was scheduled to give the commencement speech at UCLA And there were some undergraduate knockers against me; He had been denied the usual honorary degree by Arizona State

Because he hadn’t accomplished enough, so I wondered How he dealt with detractors. He smiled his smile and said, “Humor.” Well he’s damn right, and I wonder how much That stand-up comedian is laughing in the face

Of this big country. Because he is one man and we are many, And a great servant of the people—he’s a president, not a king— And doesn’t need to face what King Charles once faced. (Frank suggested I examine Marvell’s semi-inauguration poem for Cromwell:)

That thence the Royal actor borne The tragic scaffold might adorn:      While round the armèd bands      Did clap their bloody hands.

That most famous stanza, and then:

But bow’d his comely head Down, as upon a bed.

And he was beheaded, good-bye Charles.

*

If I were to act in the film about Obama, All I would need to get down, aside from the outer stuff— And I know that’s important—is his essential kindness, I’d let the writer put in all the political crap,

And the specific things that he was up against, All that stuff on CNN and the Huffington Post, And I’d say the lines that were written, just like Obama Reads his lines, but what would really put the role over

Would be the goodness at its core. That’s what will be remembered. Yes, his race, no one will forget. But the soul too. I’d win the Academy Award if I just captured that.

Box Office: “Silver Linings” Finally Breaks Out; Arnold Rebuffed

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The holiday weekend has produced a couple of winner and losers at the box office. “Silver Linings Playbook” has finally broken out and hit its stride. After 63 days in release, “SLP” at last went “wide” and made over $11 million from Friday to Sunday.

Yes, people really, really like it. “SLP” comes into Monday morning with $56 million in the till. The David O. Russell directed comedy finished third, behind “Mama” and “Zero Dark Thirty.” With continued good word of mouth and maybe some SAG Awards love next Saturday, “SLP” could hit Oscar weekend with $75 million.

On the other hand, Arnold Schwarzenegger may have made his last stand with “The Last Stand.” The action film comeback for the former Governator made only $6.3 million over the weekend–and that’s a high estimate.

The movie hasn’t been released internationally yet, and that’s where it will make its money–in places where English isn’t necessary but audiences will get a kick out of seeing Arnold. Still, “The Last Stand” shows that Americans aren’t interested in the man who lied to and deceived Maria Shriver and her family.

Justin Bieber’s Mother Promoting Anti-Abortion Film And Offshoot Conservative Charitable Fund

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Exclusive: Justin Bieber’s mother, Patti Mallette, is promoting an anti-abortion film called “Crescendo.” She hopes to distribute it beginning February 28th.  She’s also promoting a conservative right wing offshoot charitable foundation associated with the film’s producer. Here’s the message on the Crescendo website:

“On February 28th, Crescendo, a short film that has been globally heralded and has won over 11 international awards, will be screened at 100 events and then 1,000 events total in 2013. Bring a screening to your community today by clicking below! Each screening is a terrific fundraising opportunity for you. We thank you for experiencing this groundbreaking short film by the producers of Bella, Eduardo Verastegui, Jason Jones and Leo Severino and executive producer Pattie Mallette, the mother of Justin Bieber!”

It’s interesting timing that Bieber is releasing an “Acoustic” album this week, while his mother, Mallette, is also soliciting donations to a so-called charity run by her co-producers on “Crescendo”– including Jones. The registered 501 c(3) is called Hero, Inc. and it’s run by Jones out of Green Bay, Wisconsin, and Los Angeles. Jones is also the president and founder of Movie to Movement, which ran the grassroots campaign for the right wing funded documentary “2016: Obama’s America,” according to the “Crescendo” website. Jones is passionately aligned with the Pro Life, anti-Obama movement, having written articles for Breitbart.com and other websites.

HERO has some questionable finances. According to its most recent federal tax filing Form, HERO Inc. paid exactly HALF of the $554,000 it claimed in revenue for 2011 for salaries–$270,000. They finished 2011 over $20,000 in the red, the minus column. Jones was paid $88,000 in salary.

HERO-stands for Human Rights Education and Relief Organization. Its “primary exempt purpose”: “promoting a “Whole Life” ethic that recognizes the intrinsic worth of the sanctity of human life at all stages of physical development, regardless of social standing, physical or mental abilities, or geopolitical circumstances.”

http://www.guidestar.org/FinDocuments/2011/261/209/2011-261209762-089a37f4-9.pdf

There’s more: somehow these people have taken a charming 2006 indie movie called “Bella” and bent its meaning into a pro-life crusade. Jones and Severino were two of many producers on the film. Verastegui played the male lead. But the entire meaning of “Bella” has been perverted in the name of starting “pregnancy care centers”–or places where teens are advised not to consider abortion. Mallette is fully behind this as evidenced by a video on the Crescendo website.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8kF_zlvzYuQ&feature=player_embedded

 

 

 

Arnold Terminated: First New Movie Since Hollywood Return Bombs at Box Office

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Arnold Schwarzenegger did say “I’ll be back” when he left the movies to become governor of California. But his return to film is not a celebration. His first movie since returning full time to the big screen is a bomb. “The Last Stand” made just $2 million on Friday night. It’s projected to do $6.7 million for the long weekend and finish in 10th place. Is Arnold finished? He very well may be. His autobiography, published last fall, called “Total Recall,” was a total dud, too. Schwarzenegger’s age isn’t helping at the movies. Neither is his personal behavior in public. His lack of contrition for the terrible things he inflicted on his real life family has come back to haunt him in the commercial market place.

Meantime at the box office: Jessica Chastain must feel pretty good this morning. She’s starring on Broadway in “The Heiress.” On film, she’s in the number 1 and 2 movies– “Mama” and “Zero Dark Thirty.” She has an Oscar nomination. What else could she want? Maybe– sleep!

And “Silver Linings Playbook” finally went “wide” on Friday, to over 1,700 theaters, after weeks and weeks (months!) of playing a limited run. The David O. Russell serious comedy is a serious crowd-pleaser. It also has a big number of Oscar nominations and should be the Best Ensemble film at the SAG Awards next Saturday. This movie has become the little engine that could. Now its box office is booming. Very good news indeed. It could do another $11 million this weekend.

 

Scorsese, DeNiro, Pacino Stage Reading of Mob Movie in NYC

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Well, I do feel like an idiot now. I knew about the reading in Tribeca yesterday afternoon for “The Irishman” but didn’t write about it. Someone involved asked me not to, and I said Okay. So Mike Fleming gets the “Scoop” on Deadline.com. However, the reading didn’t “just happen.” It was yesterday–Thursday–afternoon well before Al Pacino had to get back to the theater for “Glengarry Glen Ross.” Pacino, Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci all took part in the reading of the adaptation of “I Hear You Paint Houses” to be directed by Martin Scorsese. I’m told it was very exciting. Harvey Keitel will also be in the movie.

Read my original announcement from December 2010: http://www.showbiz411.com/2010/12/16/deniro-announces-scorsese-all-star-film-with-pacino-pesci-and-keitel

The reading also dragged into town a bunch of L.A. agents all of whom turned up later at Scarlett Johansson’s premiere in “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.” And Mike is right. “The Irishman” is good to go, but Scorsese wants to make “Silence” next after “Wolf of Wall Street” is all done. Too bad. We’d all like to see “The Irishman” now. And what about “Sinatra”? Scorsese may be waiting so Leonardo DiCaprio can age some more. Here’s what you do. Marty: give Leo golf lessons in Palm Springs, no hat, no sunblock, no sunglasses, just dames and Scotch.

Flashback to 2009 Huffington Post Inaugural Party in DC: No Party this Year

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Most of what I remember about the 2009 Inaugural weekend is trying to get from Sundance to Washington DC in time for the big Huffington Post gala. There is no such thing this time around. But on January 20, 2009, Delta Airlines did everything they could think of to keep me from leaving Salt Lake City. I was six hours late. Since most of these people aren’t going this time around, here’s what I wrote:

It was supposed to be an intimate affair but Arianna Huffington‘s gala last night in Washington was a wildy overbooked media bash for thousands.
They came to celebrate the inauguraiton of Barack Obama, and so they did, greeting the chiming of the clock at midnight as if it were New Years Eve. Huffington’s peeps handed out a ton of New Years Eve tchochtkes like hats and horns to make the most noise when the clock struck midnight.
At that point Sting had just finished singing “Brand New Day” and “Every Breath You Take,” as well as joining in with will.i.am on his remake of “Englishman in New York.” The Black Eyed Peas leader also performed a couple of his own hits.
Among the stars we saw were Robert DeNiro, Ben Affleck, Josh Groban, Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher, Norman Lear, Rosie Perez, Gerald Butler, Marisa Tomei, John Cusack, Kerry Washington, Leigh Taylor-Young and kind of an endless list of bold face names who must read The Huffington Post blog site, or at least just wanted to be seen. The stars had total access, and the result was a hot mix of Hollywood and politics that only Huffington could pull off.
Things were a little different this morning—Tuesday—as some stars made it in to the swearing in and some didn’t.
The crowds were so huge and the disorganization of security so massive that thousands of ticket holders were kept from seeing or hearing the Obama swearing in. I ran into actress and writer Anna Deveare Smith, an Obama supporter, who simply gave up rather than brave the bone chilling cold. Dana Delany hunkered down at a brunch where other luninaries watched ceremony in safety and warmth.
But plenty still made it, some with the Creative Coalition group, including Anne Hathaway, Tony Goldwyn, Tim Daly, Adrian Grenier, Barry Levinson, Matthew Modine, Gloria Reuben, Tamara Tunie, Lynn Whitfield, Giancarlo Esposito, and Rachel Leigh Cook.
More to come … stay tuned tonight as the A-list really rolls out the red carpet. But some are wondering why it’s Beyonce and not R&B legend Etta James who’s singing the Obamas’ favorite song, “At Last,” tonight to the First Couple. James is alive and well, and it’s her hit the Obamas have swooned to all these years.
The White House needs a director of music, I think—a new cabinet post!

Oprah-Lance Show 3.2 Mil Viewers for OWN, But Second to Oprah’s Whitney Houston Post-Death Show

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Well, Lance Armstrong’s big confession last night was only the second highest show ever on the OWN network. Oprah’s crazy show with Pat Houston and Bobbi Kristina after Whitney died remains number 1 on OWN. The Lance Show got 3.2 million viewers, which is still pretty good.  OWN just sent out a confusing press release claiming 3.2 and 4.3 mil at the same time. Then Variety sent out a blast saying it was 3.1 million.

So no one really knows. But they do know that it wasn’t as big as Pat Houston saying Whitney was “looking for love in all the wrong places” as an explanation for her death– weeks before the coroner said he found cocaine and paraphernalia in the room. But that’s another story. Anyway, tonight is Part 2 when maybe Lance will explain everything he said last night.

Oh wait I get it. You have no idea how press releases are worded from networks about their ratings. This is what they meant: 3.2 million from 9 pm to 10:30pm first showing, then another 1.2 million for the second showing at 10:30pm. So you decide. But neither number is as big as the Whitney Houston number. In that show, there was no idea that Bobbi Kristina was going to run off with some kid who Whitney had “adopted” and had been been in their house for years.

As far as Lance goes: Who else knew? When did they know it? Did Sheryl Crow not know her boyfriend was doping? Or Robin Williams, his bff? How did Lance keep it a secret? How did he look his mother, wives, and children in the eye? And why does his haircut never change? Those are things I’m interested in now.

Mariel Hemingway Says Father Sexually Abused Two Older Sisters Including Super Model Margaux

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Exclusive: In an extraordinary new documentary, actress Mariel Hemingway says she’s realized that her late father, Jack, son of writer Ernest Hemingway, sexually abused her two older sisters. One of them, the famed model Margaux Hemingway, committed suicide in 1996. The eldest sister, an artist, lives a quiet life in Idaho. The film, “Running from Crazy,” directed by Oscar winner Barbara Kopple, debuts at the Sundance Film Festival on Saturday night. It was executive produced by Oprah Winfrey for her OWN network.

It’s quite a film, actually. Mariel is now 51 years old and the mother of two beautiful daughters, one of whom–Dree–is now a model. Mariel has aged sort of miraculously on the outside. She doesn’t look much different than she did at 18 when she was nominated for an Oscar in Woody Allen’s “Manhattan.” But her

read today’s headlines at Showbiz411.com

story, the story of her family and a grandfather she didn’t know has taken its toll on her. The other miracle is that she’s survived and is able to address a number of subjects including mental health and suicide. She’s become a spokesperson for each, which is admirable considering the legacy with which she was saddled.

And that’s not to say that “Running from Crazy” is depressing because it’s not. Mariel makes the observation that the Hemingways were a little like the Kennedys, a dynastic American family always in the public eye. But there was trouble. “We were WASPS and we didn’t talk about our problems,” she said. Everyone drank. Ernest Hemingway killed himself in 1961; Mariel lives near the house where he shot himself. She didn’t know until she was in her 20s that it was not accidental.

But it’s the wrenching tragedy of her sister, Margaux, the middle daughter of Hemingway’s son Jack, that really informs this film. I knew Margaux slightly in the 1980s. She was incredibly beautiful and troubled, a lot like Lindsay Lohan and some others who appear regularly in tabloids. Kopple has found a lot of amazing archival footage of her, and of a film Margaux was trying to make about Ernest. There’s also a lot of home movies of Jack and his wife at home in Ketchum, Idaho with the girls as kids and as adults. They look like a Norman Rockwell painting. But under the surface there is a lot of pain. A particularly wrenching episode: when Margaux is in recovery at Betty Ford and none of the Hemingways come to see her on family day. It breaks your heart.

I don’t know how Mariel’s older sister, Muffet, who seems fragile, will take to the revelation of this headline. But Mariel is very definite. “When I was really small I shared a room with Margaux. My dad came in the room. I don’t recall what it was, but it wasn’t right. It’s hard to have a visual of that. I know what happened. I think my dad sexually abused the girls when they were young.”

It’s tough stuff. But Mariel comes off as brave and courageous. Kopple has made a compelling portrait of a complex American saga.

 

Lance Armstrong Tells Oprah “Not Possible” to Win Tour de France 7 Times in a Row (Video)

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Below in our homepage video player, Lance Armstrong tells Oprah Winfrey that it wouldn’t have been possible to win the Tour de France seven times without doping. The entire Oprah interview is fascinating. The bottom line is that this guy comes off like a sociopath. I do wonder what all the celebrities who gathered around him during his heyday and championed him — people like Robin Williams and Matthew McConnaughey, to say nothing of Sheryl Crow– are thinking right now. Anyway, it’s a sad story of a terrible hoax that was perpetrated on the public, on the people around Armstrong, the cyclists, etc. It’s a miserable way for people around the world to view an American athlete who was held out as a hero.