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Omar Quadhafi is hunkering down in Tripoli giving press interviews
denying that rebels are taking over Eastern Libya. Oil prices are
shooting over one hundred dollars a barrel. The US government is on
the verge of a shut down. These are not the top secret opening lines
to Aaron Sorkin's new script, but the global headlines of a world
spinning out of control. I head to Los Angeles like an overdressed
lemming to attend the 83" Academy Awards and attempt to make sense of
artists thrust into combat.
For the second year nearly 6,000 Academy members have nominated 10
films and the battle is down to two. The beloved timeless classic,
"The King's Speech" marches into the arena as the front runner, but
passionate supporters of the brilliant edgier (and critics darling)
"The Social Network" have not conceded. The ballots are counted, the
party invites are out and still the feelings are raw. Filmmakers are
exhausted from campaigning.
At Bryan Lourd's famous star studded party Sony Classics' Co-President
Michael Barker announces to me he has taken a random sampling of
voters in the room. He says, "There will be a 'Social Network' upset
at the Kodak Theater." Shear panic radiates from my every pore as he
says, "I am joking." It's like color war at summer camp.
Woody Allen and George Lucas tell me they are no longer members of the
Academy because pitting artists against each other to determine the
quality of their work is insane. They are right.
My event and publicity company is considered "Switzerland" by the
studios, as we help every filmmaker to present and position his work.
This year I am somewhat emotionally sucked in.
In 2005 I meet the unknown 32-year-old English director Tom Hooper on
his first film for HBO,"Elizabeth I". The Emmy award winning movie
stars Helen Mirren, who takes credit for discovering him directing
English television. Helen later wins her Oscar for portraying Queen
Elizabeth in "The Queen". Queen Elizabeth is the daughter of King
George VI portrayed by Oscar winner Colin Firth in "The King's
Speech".
I also become Hooper's champion encouraging many to see his early work
including his herculean 10 hour HBO mini-series "John Adams" produced
by Tom Hanks.
Six years later at the Telluride Film Festival Tom Hooper is bathing
in the glory of a hysterical standing ovation with Colin Firth and
Geoffrey Rush at the very first screening of "The King's Speech."
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Surprisingly, this drama's subtle humor gets big laughs leading up to
its emotional ending.
Within two weeks, at The Toronto Film Festival, Harvey Weinstein is
now standing with his filmmakers witnessing the same reaction. The
film wins The Audience Prize. Their strategy is to say nothing. Do
nothing. They have a possible Oscar winner. Four out of five past Best
Pictures have premiered in Toronto.
Cut to New York City at the end of September. It's the opening night
at The Film Society of Lincoln Center. One of America's most
important and prolific producers Scott Rudin, along with Jesse
Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield and Aaron Sorkin are in a brightly lit box
waving down to their equally hysterical audience who have just seen
"The Social Network".
The film opens the next day to rave reviews and endless publicity.
David Fincher is off making "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo". Aaron
Sorkin becomes the face of the film and an immediate shoo-in for an
Oscar.
The Hamptons International Film Festival in October suddenly becomes a
launching pad for "127 Hours", where cool Yale/NYU student James
Franco appears and receives a heroic standing ovation. More Oscar
buzz.
"Black Swan" also unspools there in a tiny theater as Madonna, Alec
Baldwin and even Harvey Weinstein slip in the back. Darren Aronofsky,
sporting the ever present cool wool scarf around his neck is hailed a
genius. Natalie Portman is instantly the hot nominee for Best Actress.
Both films are sensational and movie goers go nuts, but it is "The
King's Speech" that edges out the competition for The Audience Prize.
Mid-November David O. Russell and Mark Wahlberg, working together for
the third time, sneak "The Fighter" in Manhattan. As their audience
erupts in cheers, I tell producer/actor Wahlberg, "Clint Eastwood is
going to kill himself for not directing this." Wahlberg says, "You are
wrong. He turned it down because he's done it. He has seen it and he
loves it." I instantly lavish my affection and praise on David O.
Russell, who becomes my new Clint Eastwood. Christian Bale and
Melissa Leo are hailed the supporting actors to beat.
"True Grit" directed by the Coen Brothers and also produced by Scott
Rudin doesn't premiere till mid-December at the Ziegfeld as the last
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serious Oscar contender for Best Picture. It gallops off to box office
gold.
This is the year many of the 78 million Baby Boomers go back to the
theaters. Five small budget independent films become surprise hits as
each exceeds $100 million.
"The Social Network" now cements its battle cry with one word;
"relevance". Mark Zuckerberg lands on the cover of Time Magazine as
The Person of the Year. A smart and extensive ad campaign positions
the film in the lead. Critics and pundits proclaim the race is over.
"The Social Network" is the clear winner. Everyone goes on holiday.
This is probably the only time in Harvey Weinstein's life that he is
caught off guard. He quickly mobilizes an inner team of 15 and
conducts strategy meetings 7 days a week, including Christmas. They
become like a Chinese Restaurant...always open.
A generational war
is in full swing. Harvey screens his film for the older voters.
Everything is done by the books. Budgets are limited. He sends
screenwriter David Seidler and Tom H000per to every corner of the
country doing q+a's till they are blue in the face from "finding their
voice." SAG voters begin seeing the film 2 and 3 times.
In January the Golden Globes voted on by about 88 foreign journalists
gives Best Drama to "The Social Network", Best Director to David
Fincher and Best Screenplay to Aaron Sorkin. Their film is still
perceived as the Oscar winner.
Team Weinstein underestimates their hard work and is in shock when
"The King's Speech" wins the PGA in L.A. Harvey doesn't even attend
and is working in Sundance. They are equally surprised when Tom Hooper
wins the DGA and the actors win the SAG Ensemble. The BAFTAs
reinforced the lead. They are now the front runner. It takes the media
a few weeks to catch on.
The Daily Mail announces Her Royal Highness, Queen Elizabeth has
enjoyed a private screening of "The King's Speech" and is "moved" by
the film. With no proof the Queen has actually seen the film, the
Weinstein Company sends out a global press release thanking her
Majesty for the endorsement. They also acknowledge Prime Minister
David Cameron's private Christmas screening.
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On Oscar night, it isn't until Hilary Swank surprisingly yells out
Hooper's name for Best Director that Harvey's gang finally realizes
they are getting the Oscar for Best Picture. The King has spoken.
Friday, February 24th
Mid-day, I arrive at The Beverly Hills Hotel, where I have stayed for
thirty years. As the housekeepers unpack my bags upstairs I peek into
the Polo Lounge and find icon Warren Beatty in a booth. He motions me
over to meet an Egyptian fashion editor from Cairo. I say, "Warren,
you are a little late to visit Cairo." I tell him I'm rooting for
Annette and love her film "The Kids Are All Right". Warren tells me
"The Social Network" will win.
This year I am two days late arriving to Oscar weekend. I am now shown
to a very very very small room, the size of a broom closet.
Uncharacteristically, I have a slight melt down. I am moved. The
housekeepers run down the hall with my clothes flying. I calm down.
The hotel is sold out. I get someone else's room. Another poor schmuck
checking in downstairs will get the broom closet.
It is cold, grey and rainy. Taffata, organdy and embroidered silk
evening clothes hang in my closet. I stay in my sweaters and fur coat
and head to Arianna Huffington's Mediterranean house in Beverly Hills
where Wendi Murdoch and Arianna are hosting a party for Tom Freston's
wife, the beautiful blond Kathy. The book is called "Veganist: Lose
Weight, Get Healthy, Change the World. A perfect book for Monks.
Arianna has just sold the Huffington Post for to AOL to $315 million
dollars and rumored to have personally landed around $20 million. She
is euphoric as she greets Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban at the door.
Other drenched power players ushered in under umbrellas include
Disney's Bob Iger and wife Willow Bay, Fox's Jim Gianopulos, Candice
Bergen and journalist daughter Chloe Malle, Google's Eric Schmidt,
Oliver Stone avoiding questions about Charlie Sheen and escorting his
daughter Tara, Moby, Jamie Niven, Brian Grazer, Vivi Nevo, Tracey
Ullman, CBS's Les Moonves and Julie Chen, Rob Reiner, Paramount's Brad
Grey and fiancé Cassandra Marc and Jeff Bezos. Hors d'oeuvres include
pigs in blankets, a food group not mentioned in Kathy's book.
The party action migrates to UTA Jim Burkus's home in the neighborhood
for "True Grit's" Ethan and Joel Coen. I pass Ron Howard on the way in
and he says, "Keep me on your list." Is he kidding? Sunrise and Mark
Ruffalo, Tim Robbins, Focus Feature's James Shamus, Nancy Meyers and
John Goldwyn mingle. Adorable Hallie Steinfeld is there with her
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parents. I am trying to fix her up with Justin Bieber. She giggles,
"Peg, I am only 14."
Hunky Josh Brolin tells me he is coming to New York in March to shoot
two new films. He is working on producing and starring in "The
Hunchback of Notre Dame" with Tim Burton as a future project.
I am now inches away, face to face with Harrison Ford and stupidly
tell him I love him in "Morning Glory". He is looking at me in utter
disbelief and I will not shut up. A gorgeous guy is also inches away
in a hat, glasses, jacket, layered sweater and scarves. I whisper to
Harrison, "That looks just like Johnny Depp." Harrison rolls his eyes
and reluctantly introduces me to his friend Johnny Depp. I babel a bit
about his great work and run for cover to a corner next to my buddy,
Jerry Bruckheimer. Jerry introduces me to the wives, Vanessa Paradis
and Calista Flockhart. I bore them with girly chit-chat and realize
it's time to get out of there.
I head over to the CAA/Bryan Lourd "Friday Night Party". Torrential
rains and horrific winds cause a traffic jam that makes it impossible
to get near the house. Cell phones do not work. The world's most
famous faces cower under black umbrellas and make a run for it.
Bryan Lourd and Bruce Bozzi receive friends at the door all night.
Inside Uma tells me she finally moved into a doorman building in New
York after being terrorized by stalkers for years. Talented, Ben
Walker talks about "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" he is about to
shoot as his fiancé Mamie Gummer looks sexy shivering in a white satin
gown. Producer Jon Kilik mentions he oversees a new cut of Julian
Schnabel's "Miral" to be released in March. Bennett Miller, standing
with Kristin Gore says Sony loves his new film "Moneyball" and Brad
Pitt is terrific. (When is Brad Pitt not terrific?) Sandy Gallin tells
me he has an actual job decorating Jeffrey Katzenberg's home and he
has never been happier. I congratulate Barry Levinson's son, Sam, a
director, for winning the writing award at Sundance for his first
film, "Another Happy Day" which is inspired by his family.
Also seen floating around are, Taylor Swift and Jake Gyllenhaal, but
not together, Sean Penn, Tom Curise and Katie Holmes, Anderson Cooper,
Hilary Swank, Kelly Ripa, Carrie Fisher, Bruce Weber, Sean Combs, Paul
Haggis, Marisa Tomei, Jay Roach, Kate Beckinsale, Demi Moore and
Ashton Kutcher, Kate Hudson, Gerard Butler, Leo DiCaprio and Bar
Refaeli, Renee Zellweger with Bradley Cooper, Biutiful director
Alejandro Gonzalez-Inarritu, Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal, Ellen
Barkin who is headed to Broadway in "The Normal Heart" this spring and
CAA's Kevin Huvane, Richard Lovett and Hylda Queally.
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Busy Bruce Cohen who is producing Sunday's awards broadcast tries to
get his car to leave. Limo lock is at a standstill. Nothing is moving
outside. Two hundred swells become party prisoners and resign to just
having an absolute ball till 5:00am. Once again, this is the most star
studded party in town.
Saturday, February 26th, 2011
The sun comes up and dries up all the land. IAC chairmen and owner of
The Newsweek/Daily Beast Barry Diller and his designer wife Diane Von
Furstenberg host their annual lunch for Graydon Carter in their
Coldwater Canyon home. Barry introduces me to his star guest, Governor
Jerry Brown, just elected to his third (nonconsecutive) term as
California Governor. Diane's children, Alex and Tatiana, along with
their children comprise three generations of guests, which makes this
party so special.
Like last year, enormous clear plastic tents are erected on the hill
near the house. Long wooden picnic tables covered with yellow flowers
sit on oriental rugs, covering the soggy ground. Terrines of hot soup,
platters of sausages, fried chicken and salads are beautifully
arranged on an endless buffet. Everyone wears winter clothes; comfy
sweaters and sensible shoes. I arrive in a fur coat.
Barry and Diane's loyal friends have been coming to this party for
over fifteen years. Everybody knows everybody and it doesn't matter if
you have a hit film or TV show this season. Oprah Winfrey kisses David
Geffen, casually chats with former Disney CEO Michael Eisner and
current Sony chief Sir Howard Stringer. Brett Ratner arrives with his
house guest Jean Pigozzi who is allowed to photograph everyone.
Graydon greets people with wife Anna and Fran Lebowitz by his side.
Ingrid Sischy and Sandy Brant, Rupert Murdoch, Ron Meyer, Bryan Lourd
Francesco Clemente with his twin boys and Tom Ford chat each other up.
People watching include the pregnant Victoria and David Beckham with
Lynn Wyatt, Liv Tyler, Vincent Gallo, Eva Longoria, Larry Gagosian and
Shala Monroque, Ben Silverman, Debbie and Allen Grubman, Tobias Meyer
and Mark Fletcher and Stephen Gaghan and Mini Mortimer wearing her
oversized cat glasses.
Bruce Cohen has invited me to the Oscar broadcast rehearsal. This is a
special honor. There are metal barricades leading up to the
credentials trailer. High-tech security includes photos and computer
background checks. The only thing they don't do is pat me down and ask
for fingerprints. Once inside the Kodak Theater's massive auditorium,
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I find a seat next to Bruce's proud parents. I watch Josh Brolin and
Javier Bardem come out in white dinner jackets and flub their lines as
they pretend to present Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Original
Screenplay. Josh later told me at The Night Before Party that their
acting methods are completely opposite. Josh says he is a quick study
and is very creative and comfortable ad-libbing. Javier, whose mother
tongue is Spanish, needs to have every syllable printed out, which he
studies with a dialect coach. Little wiggle room for jokes. Life size
photos on large cardboard plaques are taped to each nominee's chair. I
try to memorize their location, so when I return Sunday I can quickly
kiss them all.
Back at the Beverly Hills hotel, I slip into my gorgeous black tulle
Dennis Basso cocktail dress with a plunging neck line and put on my
mother's jewels. Jim Coleman takes me the Night Before Party in the
hotel. This is Jeffrey Katzenberg's, 9th Annual A-lister event
benefiting The Motion Picture 8I Television Fund where they raise $6.5
million dollars in one night. I walk right into Valentino who gives me
the once over and approves my outfit. I tell him and Giancarlo
Giammetti that Woody Allen's new film, "Midnight in Paris" is opening
the Cannes Film Festival and they must bring the yacht. Woody is also
filming all summer in Rome and I am counting on them to entertain him.
Elton John and David Furnish join our conversation and of course we
ask for intimate details about the new baby. Elton says this is the
first time they have been away from him for more than a night and they
are delirious with parenthood. I segway over to Amy Adams who mentions
she also hates leaving her baby in the hotel room. I tell her she's
acted like a lady with all the attention showered on Melissa Leo and
that someday soon she will win an Oscar because she consistently hands
in amazing performances and everybody loves her. Next stop is Kate
Capshaw in a black bowler hat chatting with Steven Spielberg's god-
daughter Gwyneth Paltrow. Kate gushes as she talks about her two
grandchildren from daughter Jessica. I have known Steven since "I
Wanna Hold Your Hand". In 1982, as a young publicist on "E.T." I moved
to California to work for him as one of his thirteen assistants. I now
tell him I'm going to Broadway opening of "War Horse" with Kathy Kennedy
and Frank Marshall and cannot wait to see his movie version. He is
wildly excited about the film. I beg him to work on it.
I meet sweet Jennifer Aniston, her new hair cut and her perfect little
body. Her date tells me her secret is a half hour on the treadmill
every day. Somehow I think that's an understatement. I tell Jesse
Eisenberg I was on his plane home from the Baftas last week. He was
hiding under his hoodie and I knew not to bother him. He said
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innocently, "You should have said `Hello'. I always cover my head
because I think my curls make me look like a girl".
The charity gives us a coupon booklet redeemable at various booths for
cheap clothing, new iPads, make-up, chocolates, shampoo and a $50
dollar Arch gift card for free McDonalds hamburgers. A bargain is a
bargain, rich people run around like lunatics, collecting gifts for
their housekeepers. Among the shoppers are Steven and Heather Mnuchin,
Viacom's Deborah and Philippe Dauman, Tamara Mellon, Christine Taylor
and Ben Stiller, Cate Blanchette, Susan and Robert Downey,Jr., and
Debra and Hugh Jackman.
Next stop is The Weinstein Company's Pre-Oscar party at the Soho
House, sponsored by MontBlanc, celebrating their new charity
partnership and $1 million dollar donation to the Princess Grace
Foundation-USA. Long gone are the funky Miramax Saturday night parties
where nominees spoofed their own films in homemade costumes and ad-
libbed hilarious skits. Grown men would dress as Anna Paquin and play
the piano in hopes of winning a Max Award.
There is social anxiety at the Soho House garage entrance. Guests
patiently wait as super stars whisk by. A four hundred pound gorilla
refuses to let me on the elevator until I spot Benny Medina. Once on,
I see the radiant Jennifer Lopez in the corner and remind her we met
on Len Blavatnik's yacht in Cannes. She graciously pretends to know
me. Her manager, Benny Medina is kicking me.
I slip into Colin Firth's booth by the front bar to have a tete-a-tete
with him and his wife Livia Giuggioli about tomorrow night. Jokingly,
I suggest when he wins to say, "I'm speechless". Colin patiently
assures me many people, far more clever than I, have already mentioned
this. He then says that others are waging bets on whether he might
subconsciously stutter. I grill him about his wardrobe, assuming he
will be wearing a new Tom Ford tuxedo. He tells me both he and Ford
will be in older models as Ford only designs classics. I tell him I
made director Charles Ferguson, front runner for the financial
documentary "Inside Job" spend $6,000 dollars last week for a new Tom
Ford tuxedo.
In the back room Jennifer Lopez is now seated with Weinstein's wife
Georgina Chapman. Nominee Helena Bonham Carter, her husband Tim Burton
and her mother Elena circulate. Celebs have now drifted over from The
Night Before Party. The star power includes Adrien Brody, Mary-Kate
and Ashley Olsen, Cameron Diaz, Camilla Belle, Chace Crawford, Claire
Danes and Hugh Dancy, Darren Aronofsky, Emma Stone, Jaime Foxx,
director John Wells, Kerry Washington, Piers Morgan, Rachel Zoe,
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Russell Simmons, Sean Parker, Sir Ben Kingsly, Zack Braff , Michelle
Williams and Leonardo Dicaprio with Bar Rafaeli. "Speech" filmmakers
are functioning on high anxiety.
Sunday, February 27th, 2011
Producer Donna Gigliotti is my date to the awards. We are both so
nervous we arrive at the Kodak Theater at 3:00pm and nobody is there.
We are driven around for an hour. When we arrive at the world's most
famous red carpet, I guide Donna through the extreme right security
check-in to make sure we mingle with the nominees and get on camera. I
teach her the red carpet hustle which is five steps forward, three
steps back and one inch behind a couture-clad nominee. We greet Bryan
Lourd as Sandra Bullock is talking to ABC-TV and a billion people see
me wearing a black Marchesa gown. Five steps forward, three steps
back, we next meet Gwyneth Paltrow. As I hook up the back of her dress
another billion people see us correcting a fashion malfunction. Once
again, five steps forward and three steps back. We are now posing for
the still cameras between Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban. Our handbags
begin buzzing. Countless friends are e-mailing us that they just saw
us on television.
James Franco and Anne Hathaway are hip and energetic hosts. The film
montages are always the best and the set looks great. This is the year
of no surprises. Sorkin, Seidler, Christian Bale, Melissa Leo, Natalie
Portman and Colin Firth are totally prepared to receive the gold. Tom
Hooper's win leads into Best Picture. Harvey is now sitting in
Spielberg's seats as Spielberg announces the win. Six months of
grueling work have finally paid off. King George VI and Harvey
Weinstein now share the journey of a single man who triumphs over
adversity.
The Governor's ball, held above the Kodak Theater, recreates the
Mocambo-Ciro's niteries of the 1930's and 40's, using a palette of
teal and white. Three bands alternate musical styles as hungry guests
wolf down Wolfgang Puck's delicious food. The winners triumphantly
sachet around the room holding their heavy eight pound gold statues.
An hour later there is a migration to the famous Vanity Fair party
hosted by Graydon Carter at the Sunset Tower Hotel owned by Jeff
Klein. One celebrity after another poses in front of the green hedge
standing in the middle of the circular Vanity Fair logo to record
their devotion and support to Graydon and the magazine.
There's a hierarchy of arrival times. The inner circle of Graydon's
150 best friends attend a seated dinner and viewing of the show at
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5pm. They include Barry Diller and Diane Von Furstenberg, Francis Ford
Coppola, Jon Hamm and Jennifer Westfeldt, Betsey Bloomingdale, Tory
Burch and Lyor Cohen, Tom Ford, Sandy Gallin, Mitch Glazer and Kelly
Lynch, Carolina and Reinaldo Herrera, L'Wren Scott and Sir Mick
Jagger, Naomi Watts and Live Schreiber, Wendi Stark, Judd Apatow,
Jackie and Joan Collins, George Hammilton, Donna Karan and Steve
Martin.
The best and the brightest talent in town arrive at 9pm. They are
Justin Bieber and his date Selena Gomez, Andrew Garfield, Jude Law,
Vera Farmiga, Armie Hammer, Jennifer Lawrence, Kevin Spacey, Charlize
Theron, Anne Hathaway, Hailee Steinfield,Taylor Hackford and Helen
Mirren, Scarlett Johansson, Michelle Williams, Isla Fischer and Sasha
Baron Cohen, Jane Fonda after her play, "33 Variations", Melania and
Donald Trump whom I introduce to David O. Russell as The Trumpster
gushes about "The Fighter". Donald offers me a ride home on his plane.
He is leaving in ten minutes. Too bad James Franco didn't know because
he is presently sitting on a commercial flight back to school,
skipping his own after party. Social standings of the rest of the
guests are determined by half hour increments. Every other person
previously mentioned in the story is here. VF's Beth Kseniak and Matt
Ullian tell me the list is cut down to 800 this year.
At 11:30pm there is another celebrity migration up the hill to Madonna
manager Guy Oseary's house. One should note that earlier in the
evening Madonna came down the hill to pose in a risque outfit with
daughter Lourdes in front of the green hedge. Madonna and co-host Demi
Moore are able to lure the creme de la creme with the promise of
fabulous music, dancing and no cameras. Those reported on their dance
floor include Ryan Phillippe with Amanda Syedfried, who were making
out all night and Phillippe's ex-wife Reese Witherspoon and new fiancé
Jim Toth. They pregnant Natalie Portman and choreographer Benjamin
Millepied, Mick Jagger, Tom Hanks, Sean Penn, Ralph Feinnes, Mila
Kunis, Cameron Diaz, Gwyneth Paltrow and Renee Zellweger and Bradley
Cooper boogie til dawn.
A winner's work is never done. Colin Firth, Tom Hooper and David
Seidler show up at 4:30am at The Four Seasons Hotel for a live
broadcast on The Today Show with Meredith Vieira. Functioning on an
adrenalin rush, they are back at the Kodak Theater with Geoffrey Rush
to appear on Oprah's live broadcast. Leave it to 0prah to get the
king's last words.
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