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| cookie jar |
Posted: Fri Dec 23, 2005 8:31 pm |
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Moderator: Veni, vidi, vacatum.
Joined: 02 Nov 2004
Posts: 6561
Location: Germany
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MegFL wrote: http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6544921.html
Hollywood Deals: Dave's Divorce Party and Delaney's Apprentice
-- Publishers Weekly, 3/26/2008 7:40:00 AM
Universal has optioned the rights to Laura Dave's May 2008 novel from Viking, The Divorce Party. Hollywood agent Sylvie Rabineau has brokered the deal with Echo Films, Jennifer Aniston and Kristin Hahn's new production company. Gwyn Lurie, who adapted Dave's debut novel, London Is the Best City In America for Reese Witherspoon, will again be on board as the screenwriter. Dave's literary agent is Gail Hochman at Brandt & Hochman Literary Agents, Inc.
The first article mentioning the name of the film company. Re-posted on page 7. |
Last edited by cookie jar on Wed Mar 26, 2008 5:09 pm; edited 3 times in total _________________ "Kiss his ass goodbye." |
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| Julie. |
Posted: Tue Dec 27, 2005 4:15 am |
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Omnia fert aetas
Joined: 11 Jun 2004
Posts: 3720
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that's kinda confused me!
she is not on Plan B anymore? she said she is.  |
_________________ Verba Movent, exempla trahunt |
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| cookie jar |
Posted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 12:17 pm |
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Moderator: Veni, vidi, vacatum.
Joined: 02 Nov 2004
Posts: 6561
Location: Germany
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extra1 wrote: This is from today's Daily News
New York Minute
Marion (Suge) Knight is in trouble after failing to pay a $107 million civil-court judgment from 2005. Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Ronald Sohigian has threatened to put the rap mogul's assets under the court's control, reports AllHipHop.com. Knight was shot by a mystery gun (possibly his own) at a party during last year's MTV Video Music Awards. � Jennifer Aniston is planning to produce the movie version of author Shari Goldhagen's novel "Family and Other Accidents."
Thanks for this extra! I'll start looking for some info on this novel.
The cover of the book:
Reviews for the book:
Advance Praise for Family and Other Accidents:
�This novel of brotherly love�of brothers, of their loves, of their lovers�explores the intersection of domestic urgencies and erotic requirements. The dialogue is witty, the sex is constant, and the wounded, small child inside each character is persuasively wrought. Shari Goldhagen�s writing is sympathetic and smart.�
�Frederick Busch, author of North and The Night Inspector
�Jack and Connor are by turns joyous and sad, wise and foolish, fragile and tough, kind and mean, even cruel�but they are always human, always fresh, always surprising, always lovable even when we least want to love them.�
�Bill Roorbach, author of The Smallest Color and Big Bend
�Shari Goldhagen has the sharp eye and the keen ear�not to mention the generous heart�to make these characters� stories ours.�
�Lee Abbott, author of All Things, All At Once and Love Is the Crooked Thing
�Goldhagen illuminates with some of the deftest, unchillingly ironic, emotionally complex, understated, subtly tender, winning writer I have ever read.�
�Michelle Herman, author of Dog
What's it about?
What does it mean to be a family?
Separated by a decade and 200 points on their SAT scores, Jack and Connor Reed have a life in the Cleveland suburbs held together by spit and Chinese takeout. With his self-absorbed, over-the-hill parents dead by his twenty-fifth birthday, Jack has abandoned his own plans and returned to his parents� house where he works marathon hours at his late father�s law firm, beds young paralegals, and throws money and advice at his teenage brother. Connor meanwhile wants nothing more than to leave the Midwest, start a family early, and do everything the way his parents didn�t. But over the years, through the car crashes and bad break-ups, the illnesses and illicit affairs, both realize that while circumstances are sometimes beyond control, there are always choices to be made.
Family and Other Accidents tells the story of these brothers from their viewpoints as well as from those of their girlfriends, wives, and children. It is a story of what it means to be a family, to love unconditionally in the face of confusion, anger, and regret. Shari Goldhagen�s debut is a finally nuanced, universally resonant portrait of the ties, however strange or awkward, that bind families together through the decades.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Also an interesting fact about the author: Shari Goldhagen holds an MFA from Ohio State and a journalism degree from Northwestern. A fellow of both Yaddo and MacDowell, she currently lives in New York City, where she has stalked celebrities for magazines, including The National Enquirer, Life & Style, and Celebrity Living. |
_________________ "Kiss his ass goodbye." |
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| afriendsa |
Posted: Sun Apr 09, 2006 3:22 pm |
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Jen's Loyal Friend
Joined: 22 Apr 2005
Posts: 131
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| Swiss-Jenfan |
Posted: Sun Apr 09, 2006 5:41 pm |
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Jen's Soul Mate
Joined: 06 Jan 2006
Posts: 668
Location: Switzerland
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| Thanks for the Information! I haven't seen that book in stores here in Switzerland, but I'm gonna look again:-) |
_________________ ~~~ I'll always love Jen ~~~
Jennifer's fame is stratospheric, but she's not a celebrity we look up to; she's a celebrity we connect with.-ELIZABETH WEITZMAN |
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| Kathy Bear |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 1:21 pm |
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Jen's #1 Tar Heel Friend
Joined: 08 Jan 2006
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Location: Winston-Salem,NC
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It's an article about the author and comments about Jennifer's involvement.
http://www.gothamist.com/archives/2006/04/10/shari_goldhagen_1.php |
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| Megan1224 |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 2:36 pm |
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Hey! Where's my individual title?
Joined: 23 Mar 2005
Posts: 580
Location: Ohio
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Hmmmm.....that's interesting. I wonder why she wouldn't be able to comment on it? Kind of makes you think that it might happen though.  |
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| RnR4eva |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 2:54 pm |
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Moderator: Jen's Aquarius Friend
Joined: 19 Nov 2003
Posts: 7517
Location: D.C. Metro Area
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The author seems like she had thought out who she wants in her movie lmao:
Quote: The Daily News recently reported that Jennifer Aniston is going to be producing the movie version of the book. What's the status of that, and in your dream lineup, who would play the main characters?
I can�t comment on the Jennifer Aniston thing, other than to say that I think she would make a splendid Mona. As to the rest of the cast, hmm. I think that Dermot Mulroney or Clive Owen would make a good Jack; Jake Gyllenhaal as Connor; Reece Witherspoon as his wife, Laine; and my sister, an actress who goes by the name Jackie Holland, would be perfect in the role of their daughter.
maybe she is not entirely sure if that is going to happen hence why she cant confirm it. |
_________________ ~*Kamia*~
"It�s really nice to have somebody in life have your back. That girl knows me... So, whether I go to bed alone or not, to have somebody who knows you in this world, that�s a really nice thing." |
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| Kathy Bear |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 2:56 pm |
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Jen's #1 Tar Heel Friend
Joined: 08 Jan 2006
Posts: 10331
Location: Winston-Salem,NC
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| I'd love to see Jennifer and Dermott Mulronet together again. I loved them together in Friends!!!! I love how she already had her choices to star in mind. I think that it's going to happen-certainly hope so! |
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| cookie jar |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 5:47 pm |
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Moderator: Veni, vidi, vacatum.
Joined: 02 Nov 2004
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Quote: I can�t comment on the Jennifer Aniston thing, other than to say that I think she would make a splendid Mona.
LOL. The cast that the author has in made is a dream cast, isn't it? Just wondering... what kinda part is Mona in this whole thing? |
_________________ "Kiss his ass goodbye." |
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| junglejoy |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 9:23 pm |
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Jen's Loyal Friend
Joined: 25 Jan 2004
Posts: 167
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| LauraK, this is totally off-topic but oh well. The picture of Jen in your sig looks like she is flipping someone off. Is it just me or did you notice this too? And if so, whom do you think she is flipping off? |
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| barbaralazarotto |
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2006 9:28 pm |
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Jen is the #1!
Joined: 27 Mar 2005
Posts: 4210
Location: Paradise City
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| tank you for the info |
_________________
Everyone is entitled to be stupid,but some αbuse the privilege. |
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| cookie jar |
Posted: Tue Apr 11, 2006 12:54 pm |
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Moderator: Veni, vidi, vacatum.
Joined: 02 Nov 2004
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junglejoy wrote: LauraK, this is totally off-topic but oh well. The picture of Jen in your sig looks like she is flipping someone off. Is it just me or did you notice this too? And if so, whom do you think she is flipping off?
First of all, call me Laura. lol. And to answer your question, I did notice it, too and I think, since this is a picture from a photoshoot, that she is flipping off the media. Don't ask me to explain it, though. :p |
_________________ "Kiss his ass goodbye." |
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| moopt |
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 7:28 am |
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Jen's Loyal Friend
Joined: 08 Apr 2006
Posts: 110
Location: California
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| I hope The Time Traveler's Wife gets made - the book is excellent! I'm curious to see who they would cast. |
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| magic beans |
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:55 am |
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I'm a tough cookie
Joined: 12 Jan 2004
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Here's an old article from The Globe and Mail (Canadian newspaper)
November 18, 2003
Quote: Talk about winning the literary lottery. The film rights to visual artist Audrey Niffenegger�s first novel were snapped up by Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston � before publication. Rebecca Caldwell writes
A first novel anointed by Brad and Jennifer
What do writers want from their first novel? What could possibly repay the years of toiling in obscurity, the bad pay, the neuroses?
Most are happy just to have a publisher return their phone calls, let alone sign them to a contract. Selling copies barely comes into question. And then there�s The Time Traveler�s Wife, the debut novel from Chicago-based visual artist Audrey Niffenegger. Before Niffenegger�s book was even in bookstores, it had achieved A-list celebrity status when Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt acquired the rights to make the film version with New Line Cinema.
When The Time Traveler�s Wife, all 500 plus pages of it, finally landed at the Los Angeles Book Expo, it sparked bidding that resulted in its publisher MacAdam/Cage (Knopf Canada here) paying a record, undisclosed price.
When the book arrived in bookstores in September, it debuted on The New York Times Bestseller List at number nine, and after crime-thriller writer Scott Turow (whose wife is a friend of Niffenegger�s, she says) chose it as his selection for the Today show�s book club, the initial print run of 15,000 was snapped up and an additional 100,000 were ordered. She�ll be reading with Martin Amis, just one more laurel for the debut novelist, on Nov. 25 in Toronto.
The Time Traveler�s Wife is the story of Henry DeTamble, a librarian with Chrono-Displacement disorder, a rare genetic condition that transports him through time and space, mostly to periods within his own life. It�s during one of these jaunts that the Mobius strip of cause and effect takes shape: A married, middle-aged Henry first meets his wife Clare as a six-year-old girl. The book chronicles their tortured relationshop through past, present and future.
�It�s definitely a love story, and a way to work out some of my thoughts on fate and chance�,� she says. �I�m a big believer in synchronicity and this idea of following things as best you can and taking things to their logical conclusions. I don�t believe there�s some kind of predestination, that you�re following destiny, or that people have soul mates, for example.�
Although she�s been active as a poet and short-story writer, Niffenegger, 40, has made her career as a printmaker. She shows regularly (her work can be found in Washinton�s National Museum of Women in the Arts, among others) balancing her art with her work teaching for the master of fine art program at the Center for Book and Paper Arts at Columbia College in Chicago. She has published a few books of prints that she describes as �silent films�: stylized pieces where gesture is paramount, the accompanying text economical in its narrative. �I�m always looking for the odd thing, that�s what I�m interested in,� she says in describing her work.
Niffenegger clearly remembers the first sparkle of inspiration for the book: She had been drawing at her desk, when the phrase �the time traveler�s wife� came to her. It was a unique description, she thought, since it immediately defined two people and their relationship to each other.
�Everything kind of grew out of that,� she says. �And the first thing I wrote was the very end, and the idea of Clare being old and waiting for Henry. It�s the central image of the book, but you don�t actually get it until 500 pages unto the book!�
When she had her inspiration for The Time Traveler�s Wife, she realized it would be too difficult to create in her �silent-film� prints. She had to write a novel.
�It was such a revolutionary idea for me � I can do this, I can do something that there�s already a recognized name for,� she says, laughing. �It was fun to write. When you do something visual, if you want a little girl to roller-skate down the street, you have to draw the little girl, you have to draw the roller skates and you have to draw the street and indicate movement somehow, all these technical things. In writing, you can say, �Giselle roller-skated down Pike street,� and there she goes! You see her. The reader does all that for you.�
�I�m always looking for the odd thing�
It�s not that she considers writing easy � she took 4� years to write The Time Traveler�s Wife, often working well into the middle of the night. But it felt like a form of play � in early stages of the book she�s call Henry and Clare her secret fictional friends. �There was en enormous sense of freedom after working in a very constraining medium for decades,� she says.
Perhaps it�s because she�s from an art world that resists labelling, but instead embraces and co-opts other processes into her works, that Niffenegger hesitates when asked if her book is science fiction or fantasy or straight-up literature.
�I had never thought of it as science fiction, even though it has a science-fiction premise. That�s the thing that�s going to confuse people � it�s got this science-fiction title and everyone seems to be very anxious about whether it�s science fiction or not,� she says. �I think die-hard science-fiction fans might find it to have not enough action. There isn�t some crazy amazing thing happening on every page. It�s very much about Henry and Clare�s relationship, about their marriage and how it plays out through all these rather peculiar events.�
There may be certain similarities between Niffenegger, a striking redhead and visual artist who likes punk music and lives in Chicago, and her character Clare, a striking redhead and visual artist who likes punk music and lives in Chicago. But Clare is not Niffenegger�s alter ego. �Clare�s work is not mine,� she says firmly, admitting that her own hair colour only flared into existence after she�d completed the manuscript. If anything, the characters of Henry and Clare �are somewhat informed by �Dorothy L. Sayers�s dashing detective, Lord Peter Wimsey and his sidekick Harriet Vane.
While Niffenegger can speak smartly and at great length about pop-culture references and charmingly give them the same importance as the quotes from Rilke peppered throughout the book, the most common question she�s asked in relation to The Time Traveler�s Wife is �Have you met Brad and Jennifer?� (The answer is no.)( Niffenegger takes it all in a good humour. She realizes that without the Hollywood help, her book might have had an entirely different fate.
�I�m very grateful. They were interested very early on, before the hype, even before it was published.�
At the moment, Niffenegger is philosophical about how her book might take shape on the screen. Not owning a television, Niffenegger had never seen a single episode of Friends, although the author did catch the actress who inspired a generation of women with The Rachel haircut when she starred in the indie flick The Good Girl and thought she did a �good job,� and thinks that Brad Pitt has �an energy about him.�
�I don�t think they look like Henry and Clare � they�re quite Californian-looking � but these people are professional chameleons, their job is to become other people. Both of them are talented,� she says. �It will be interesting to see what they do.�
You can say the same for Niffenegger, who hasn�t stopped teaching but seems intent on carving out a career as a novelist � she�s busy at work on her next book about a pair of twins living in London. The success hasn�t gone to her head.
�At best, I thought I was writing a small cult novel for a few librarians,� she says. �I�ve worked so long in the visual-arts world where the audience is small�. It amazes me to no end the extent to which regular people seem to be willing to take the book up and read it.� |
_________________ keeper of Rachel Green
Big deal. Done. Next. |
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