Possible 'Moonlighting' reunion film?
Hathaway talks up possible 'Breakfast' role
|
More Articles:
Most Viewed:
'24' headed to the bigscreen(5749 views)Heigl in the 'Money'(2646 views)Valentine's Day(1535 views)Leno leaving, quietly(1316 views)Cruise to star in 'Mission: Impossible IV'(1294 views)Stars line up for Soderbergh project(1157 views) |
Cybill and Bruce ran into each other at a deli in Encino recently There were hugs, kissing, teasing; even a couple of misty moments as they reminisced. And, if a "Moonlighting" reunion gets off the ground, there is only one demand both Bruce and Cybill will make -- that Caron have creative control. Bringing David and Maddie back to life so many years later will be a daunting task. The stars feel only Caron can get it right.
"WELL, THAT would be simply divine now darling, wouldn't it?" That's Anne Hathaway commenting on the possibility that she might reprise Audrey Hepburn's Holly Golightly in a remake of "Breakfast at Tiffany's." Anne was spotted by our ubiquitous pal, Hal Lifson, at Billy Reed's Coffee Shop in Palm Springs. Hal reps the revitalized Rivera Resort and Spa, but he has a knack for star-sighting, and also for just asking the stars "What's up?" "Breakfast at Tiffany's," based on the famous Truman Capote novella has been on the sometimes fast, sometimes slow track to remake for several years. The problem has always been -- who could, who would, dare to step into Audrey's little black frock and re-do Holly, the stylish high-price call girl? (Yes, most people seem to forget that our sainted Audrey was actually a hooker in this movie!) Challenging the iconic image of Audrey H. is a problem -- I think now of the abysmal re-make of Audrey's "Sabrina." But Anne Hathaway has an unusually alert, charming way about her -- elfin, sexy, princessy, without being prissy. If anybody could be Holly Golightly in the 21st century, it's Anne. (She survived the saccharine of those "Princess Diary" movies which propelled her to fame a few years back...held her own with Meryl Streep in "The Devil Wears Prada... proved her serious acting chops in "Brokeback Mountain," and in last year's "Rachel Getting Married.")
And here's a little "Breakfast at Tiffany's" history. Despite the success of the film, author Truman Capote never thought Audrey Hepburn was right for the role of Holly, nor did he care for director Blake Edwards' softening and sentimentalizing the hard-edged story. Who did Trumam lobby for? He wanted Marilyn Monroe! But studio heads did not agree. So, instead of chic, Manhattan-based "Tiffany's," Miss Monroe went off to the blistering Nevada desert to film the fascinating-but-depressing "The Misfits," thereby ending her marriage to playwright (and "Misfits" screenwriter) Arthur Miller. If the movie gets a second life, you can be sure it will be truer to what Capote intended -- no dreamy "Moon River" warbling or cutesy skirting the issue of sex-for-cash. (And certainly no Mickey Rooney in offensive Asian make-up as Holly's crazy landlord!)







