Diane Keaton Forum

Rumours and Gossip

« Older   Newer »
  Share  
Naná_"Keaton"
view post Posted on 4/7/2007, 16:43




Girlsss.
here I am again.
Just happens that I have one question (actually I think this is not exactly the right topic to post it, but I don't see anywhere else)
Have you ever seen the movie "Ellie Parker", from 2005, with Naomi Watts?
Well, I haven't...now I want to, because Diane's name is in the Thanks
see this
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0436262/fullcredits#cast

what the hell she has to do with this movie? Do you know anything about it?
I felt curious.
Anyway, tomorrow I'm watching this movie ;)
 
Top
Ilse
view post Posted on 4/7/2007, 17:44




Hi Nana,

I can only guess!David Lynch is mentioned in the credits too.Naomi Watts was in one of his movies:"Mullholland Drive".And Diane Keaton directed one episode of the Lynch "Twin Peaks" series.So maybe there is a connection?

:rolleyes:
 
Top
Vanesa Hall
view post Posted on 4/7/2007, 18:48




Hi
In the movies connection from Ellie Parker on IMDB... was quote the following:
QUOTE
Shoot the Moon (1982)
- director admitted homage to Diane Keaton scene taking bath and smoking pot

So, I can guess that is the reason they thank Diane in the movie.
Another interesting tip... the movie was starred by Keanu... hehe.. maybe there was a special thanks between them... :wub:
 
Top
paula_35
view post Posted on 4/7/2007, 21:20




QUOTE (Vanesa Hall @ 4/7/2007, 14:48)
Hi
In the movies connection from Ellie Parker on IMDB... was quote the following:
QUOTE
Shoot the Moon (1982)
- director admitted homage to Diane Keaton scene taking bath and smoking pot

So, I can guess that is the reason they thank Diane in the movie.
Another interesting tip... the movie was starred by Keanu... hehe.. maybe there was a special thanks between them... :wub:

GOOD CATCH VANE!! :D
 
Top
JuliaKeaton
view post Posted on 24/7/2007, 02:48




OH.... You can vote now, too! HERE
 
Top
Gi@d@
view post Posted on 24/7/2007, 07:09




CITAZIONE (JuliaKeaton @ 24/7/2007, 03:48)
OH.... You can vote now, too! HERE

Thanks!! I just voted!!! :B):
 
Top
Vanesa Hall
view post Posted on 15/8/2007, 13:41




Hi... here I leave a quote from a blog where a man named Marty talks about his recent days in Paris... there he made an observation about Paris 30 years ago when he spent time with Diane and Woody:

QUOTE
I'm a Left Banker, the 6th to be precise. I recall some thirty-odd years ago suggesting to Woody Allen (and Diane Keaton) that we eat at some restaurant on this side of the river. (He was filming "Love and War" then.) And he said, "I never eat on the Left Bank. I once found a cockroach in the bath at the Pont-Royal." Ah, the travails of a Manhattanite. I won't tell you about our picking him and Diane up at their hotel (Plaza Athenee, as I recall) and going to the restaurant (Vivarois, then new to three fork cohort), in a Rolls Royce (his), except that Ed Zwick, fresh out of Harvard and a summer as a TNR intern, was with us. Working with Allen was his apprenticeship.



Gee... It is only left to say what a JOY sharing time with these two brightest mind in the seventies!!!

LinK
 
Top
Olya2108
view post Posted on 27/4/2008, 13:39




I didn't know where to post it, but I found this page - would you believe that this is OUR Diane is Vice-President of this club???

http://tri-stateobedience.org/index.html
 
Top
Floppy
view post Posted on 28/4/2008, 00:16




:blink: HEY GIRLS!!!!!!!
LOOK, I DECIDED TO SEND AN E-MAIL TO THIS ORGANIZTION, TO SEE IF IT WAS REALLY OUR DIANE....AND HERE´S THE REPLY....VERY CONFUSING!!!!!!! WHAT DO YOU THINK?????

Dear Mrs VicePresident from Tri state Obedience,
my name is Florencia and I found your website really interesting. I also wanted to know if you happen to be Ms Diane Keaton the actress, or if it is just a coincidence of names.
Cordially,
Florencia.

THE REPLY:

From: [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, April 27, 2008 8:10:17 PM

Thank you for contacting Tri-State Obedience Club. Diane TSOC Vice President
 
Top
aggieam01
view post Posted on 28/4/2008, 04:32




HMMM, this seems very odd to me. It must just be a coincidence. How bizarre!
 
Top
Olya2108
view post Posted on 28/4/2008, 13:41




indeed, bizarre. I don't know what to think!!
 
Top
wowokala
view post Posted on 29/4/2008, 15:44




But Diane does love animals very much...I remember she launched an activity years ago to help those homeless dogs find shelters. It was really moving.
 
Top
Vanesa Hall
view post Posted on 14/6/2008, 02:02




Hey... look at this... This could be amazing!
Warren Beatty Feted in Hollywood Left-Fest

It was the most star-studded Hollywood lovefest in some time Thursday night as the American Film Institute honored Warren Beatty with a lifetime achievement award at the Kodak Theater.

The guest list combined Beatty's interest in movies and liberal politics, starting with the continual playing of the Communist Party anthem, "The International," which was featured in Beatty's Oscar-winning movie "Reds."


With that theme used as a processional, Beatty took the podium at the Kodak in front of 600 people including Bill Clinton, retired Sens. George McGovern and Gary Hart, Warren Christopher and former California Gov. Jerry Brown representing Beatty's lifelong political circles.

From the movie community came the heavy-hitters: Jane Fonda, Al Pacino, Dustin Hoffman, Diane Keaton, Steven Spielberg, Robert Evans, James Caan, Halle Berry, Keith Carradine, Quentin Tarantino, Brett Ratner and Hugh Hefner, as well as Art Garfunkel at the top of the list.

On the dais with Beatty sat his wife, Annette Bening, sister Shirley MacLaine and Hollywood power players Barry Diller, David Geffen, Creative Artists Agency's Richard Lovett and lawyer Bert Fields (the recent Anthony Pellicano scandal subject) with his art-dealer wife, Barbara Guggenheim.

Late to the four-hour dinner because of the Lakers-Celtics game were Jack Nicholson and Dyan Cannon, but they made it with enough time to deliver toasts.

Plenty of studio execs showed up, too, such as Ron Meyer, Tom Rothman, Jeff Zucker, Jim Gianopulos and Alan Horn. Sony's Sir Howard Stringer, who sat with Fonda, opened the evening.

Most of the reminiscing was about the movies, but eventually things turned political and left. Said McGovern in a moving toast: "Richard Nixon would have been much better off if we'd been elected" in 1972.

McGovern got a big laugh, but in all seriousness, the 86-year-old former presidential candidate had an important point to make: back in 1972, Beatty invented the celebrity political fundraiser when he staged a superstar concert at Madison Square Garden for him. He brought together Barbra Streisand, James Taylor, Simon and Garfunkel, who’d parted ways two years earlier at their height, and he also reunited the comedy team of Mike Nichols and Elaine May. All of these people at that moment could not have been bigger.

McGovern was not alone among politicians who gave thanks to Beatty. On a serious note, Gary Hart saluted him and thanked the film star, enigmatically, for “an act of personal generosity to me.” He added, on a lighter note, that “people always thought Warren wanted to be me. But in fact, I always wanted to be Warren Beatty.”

As many people noted Beatty’s long history of romantic conquests before meeting and marrying the love of his life, Bening, in 1991, Hart’s words may have been all too true considering what happened to him.

And it wasn’t just liberals — although at one point, the evening really took on the look of a Hollywood backyard Democratic fundraiser.

Among the many video tributes that were interspersed (rather skillfully, I might add) with the live speeches was one from Sen. John McCain. He and Beatty are actually quite good friends as it turns out, even though their politics — as each has pointed out — are very different.

I think the audience was a little taken aback when they saw McCain’s face pop up among those of Goldie Hawn, Julie Christie, Arthur Penn, Streisand, Paul Sorvino, Charles Grodin, Estelle Parsons, Robert Towne and Pacino (who later surprised the room by also coming to give Beatty the AFI honor). Here’s a case where politicians shouldn’t make jokes. McCain’s was something to the effect that he, the Senator, had been bombed — as in literally — in Vietnam, but Warren had once “bombed” with Miss Vietnam. Ouch!

But, as Beatty himself said when he took the stage, the AFI event was “like psychoanalysis.” Indeed, I cannot recall a tribute like this when so many famous people showed up and spoke, without Teleprompters or notes, from the heart.

All of the speeches were superb, and some were sublime. Faye Dunaway nearly stole the evening by recalling “Bonnie and Clyde” in rhyme a la her Bonnie Parker character from that landmark movie. Hoffman, whom everyone would like to speak at their lifetime achievement ceremonies, came with a sheaf of papers and held the room in thrall as he touted Beatty and tweaked Nicholson for choosing the losing Lakers over his best friend until the very end of the night.

And then there were the women. A stunning looking Fonda — noting that she and Beatty had done their first screen test together — told the audience what she’d told this column a few months ago. When they met, she thought he was gay. “He was so good-looking and all his male friends were gay. What were the odds he wasn’t?”

Perhaps the biggest serious jolt of the night came from Diane Keaton, who never speaks about her personal life. Dramatically taking the stage at the end of the night, after Clinton, Dustin, et al she presented right before her two former lovers, Pacino and Beatty himself, and just after Nicholson.

Keaton also spoke without notes. She kind of joked that she didn’t remember much about her outstanding film career except that “'The Godfather' was important, 'Sleeper' was very funny and 'The Little Drummer Girl was a bomb.'"

However: in recalling the landmark film she made with Beatty, “Reds,” for which she received an Oscar nomination, Keaton talked about the famous reunion-at-the-train-station scene near the film’s end.

“It’s my favorite few minutes of anything I’ve done on film,” Keaton said, which is saying a lot. She said of Beatty, who directed her, “I didn’t make it easy for him.” She said that she wore a Walkman (you remember — the tape kind) “blasting Bob Dylan to block out all your direction. It was take after take till I finally got it.”

Keaton continued: “It’s the memory of the kind of love I never imagined possible in the movies.” On that train station in Spain, where the scene was filmed, Keaton said, “it was the sweet anguish of love when I saw your face.”

Keaton’s moment should be quite memorable when the AFI tribute is edited for broadcast on USA Network on June 25 (it's not to be missed).
 
Top
paula_35
view post Posted on 14/6/2008, 03:40




Wow Vane! you made my day... I want to watch the ceremony so badly :D Thanks for the article :)
 
Top
_____ ________
icon1  view post Posted on 5/5/2021, 07:10




______ _________ _____-______ _____ _________ _________ (____
___ ________). ______________ ___ ______: _______ ___ __________
____________ _________ _______,
_______ __ __________ _ _______.
________ _ _____ _____ _________ ___
______ _____ _____________ __ ______ _ ________ ___
_________. ___________ ________ ______ ________ _ ___________ __________ _ _______ _______ _ _______ _______ _______, _________ ____________ ______ ________ _ ________ ____
_ _______ ______ ___________ ___ ___________ _______ ____________ _________, _ ________.
___ _________ _______________, __ ____
__________ ______ ______ ___________ _______ ________ __________ __ ________ ______ ______________.
 
Top
44 replies since 20/4/2007, 13:06   1606 views
  Share