Agent to the Stars

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by John Scalzi


  Ad in Daily Variety and Hollywood Reporter, July 10

  Lanois Productions

  and

  Century Films

  Are proud to announce the completion of principal photography on

  HARD MEMORIES

  Starring Michelle Beck and David Grunwald

  Written by Connie Reiser & Larry Card

  Directed and Produced by Roland Lanois

  LIMITED RELEASE: DECEMBER 19 IN NEW YORK

  AND LOS ANGELES

  WIDE RELEASE JANUARY 16

  Entertainment Weekly, August 8

  Stingless ‘Scorpion’

  Mindless Summer Explode-Fest Rings Hollow

  … Inquiring minds want to know: In this utter loss of a movie, does anything work? Well, the explosions are pretty. Apologists may note the presence of Michelle Beck, whose upcoming performance in Hard Memories is one of the most intensely awaited of the Oscar season. Maybe some of that alleged intensity rubs off here? No such luck. This Michelle Beck, at least, is scene decoration, hardly onscreen before her helicopter is blown out of the sky by a preposterous string of coincidences. Don’t worry, this revelation won’t ruin the plot for you: there’d have to have been a plot at all for that to happen.

  Rating: D

  Daily Variety, August 11

  ‘SCORPION’ VENOMOUS TO COMPETITION

  $49.7M takes tops BO report; ‘Gold Master’ takes

  silver at $16.2M

  Scorpion’s Tail proves that some films are critic-proof; the widely panned action flick stung the competition with a $49.7 million take, injecting a boost in the severely lagging summer box office …

  Entertainment Weekly, September 22

  OSCAR WATCH

  … Oscar-nominated director-producer Roland Lanois (The Green Fields) may have another contender on his hands with Hard Memories. Insiders at a Century Pictures rough cut screening say the film caused notoriously thick-skinned Century head Lewis Schon to cry into his trademark Goobers. Of special note is Michelle Beck’s performance, which those at the screening labeled “revelatory.” Century’s marketing department is already getting in high gear for the Award season … .

  The Arizona Republic, September 25

  Obituaries

  Sarah Rosenthal, of Scottsdale, of complications from a stroke, at 3:15 pm, September 23rd. Mrs. Rosenthal was born in Hamburg, Germany on April 3, 1922 and emigrated to the United States in December of 1945. She is survived by daughter Elaine Stein, also of Scottsdale, and grandson Thomas Stein, of La Canada, Ca.

  The Chicago Sun-Times, October 8

  Hollywood Star, Agents to Endow U of C Chair

  CHICAGO—The University of Chicago, normally the most staid of places, received a little Hollywood sparkle on Tuesday as Michelle Beck, star of the smash hit Summertime Blues, and the upcoming Hard Memories, arrived on campus to announce a $3 million gift to endow a chair in Holocaust Studies.

  Speaking in the University’s cavernous Mandel Hall, Beck alluded to her experience working on the Holocaust drama Hard Memories as a motivating factor in the gift.

  “We must not be so worried about history repeating itself as simply rubbing itself out of existence,” she said. “Each year that passes rubs off a little more of the memory. This is a way to keep the memories fresh, and to refresh the story for each generation of students that walks through these halls.”

  The chair, formally known as the Sarah Rosenthal and Daniel Stein Chair for Holocaust Studies and Jewish History, will be filled the next year, following a nationwide search. The chair is named for Sarah Rosenthal, a survivor of the Holocaust, and her son-in-law Daniel Stein, a graduate of the university.

  Besides Beck, other endowers of the chair include Carl Lupo, CEO of Lupo Associates, a talent agency in Los Angeles, and Tom and Miranda Stein, also agents at Lupo Associates. Tom Stein is the son of Daniel Stein.

  Entertainment Weekly, November 17

  WINTER MOVIE PREVIEW

  December—Hard Memories

  What a difference a year can make. Last year at this time, no one would have predicted that Michelle Beck, of all people, would be whispered as the front-runner for the Best Actress Oscar. Best Beach Bunny, maybe. Best Actress, no way.

  One year later, though, Beck’s performance in Hard Memories is the talk of the town—even with those who haven’t seen the performance yet. They talk of the protests when Beck was cast in the role. They talk of the now-mythologized reading at the Fine Arts theater which quelled all complaint. They talk about Century Pictures prez Lewis Schon blubbering uncontrollably into his snack food. Some theorize her miraculous recovery from her coma earlier this year did something unexpected—kicked her acting centers into gear, perhaps … .

  Washington Post, December 13

  Michelle Beck, Resurrected

  Michelle Beck nearly died in February when a freak accident during the ramp-up to Earth Resurrected sent her spiraling into a coma. Since then she’s been in the center of the Hollywood storm with her new film Hard Memories. Beck just doesn’t know how not to get in trouble.

  To begin, Michelle Beck sympathized with the people who hated her getting Hard Memories.

  “Who are we kidding?” she says. “The woman is an icon, Jewish, older, and intellectual. I’m not any of those things. I don’t think I would have cast me, and if I had, I’d probably have claimed temporary insanity afterwards.”

  But a funny thing happened on the way to the flogging: Michelle Beck stood up to the critics and turned them around. Now the actress, just turned 26, looks like the closest thing to a lock in the Best Actress race. All it took was one reading.

  “Arrrgh, the reading,” Beck says, and scrunches up her face. “It’s becoming like Woodstock, you know. Everybody who was actually physically in Los Angeles says they were there that night. I mean, come on! What does the Fine Arts sit? 300? 400 at most.”

  Beck leans forward as if to confide. “The fact was I was terrible that night. I was nervous as hell—I just about spotted my panties in fright. I would have been happy just to get out of there alive.”

  Instead, she got a thunderous ovation. Not bad for a woman who a month earlier was in a coma, hooked up to life support.

  “Yes, yes, yes,” Beck waves off the coma story. “You want to know what the coma was like? It was dark, mostly. That’s it. I didn’t see God when I was in my coma. I didn’t even see Elvis. And when I came out of it, nothing had changed—most people forget that I had read for Hard Memories before I went into the coma. It wasn’t like I came out of it with a gift. I was just following the plan I had set for myself long before.” …

  Daily Variety, December 16

  Review: Hard Memories

  It’s been a rumor for so long it’s become almost mythical—Michelle Beck’s transformation from beach blonde to serious actress with her role in Hard Memories. Her performance has been so built up for so long that it’s finally a relief to have seen it, and to be able to say that it’s everything it has been claimed to be—and even more, if that’s possible. Guided by Roland Lanois’ sure directorial hand, Beck hands in a performance that not only rockets her to the top of the Oscar nomination list, but perhaps also into the first rank of our nation’s actresses. Following what is sure to be a record-breaking limited engagement, this picture should do solid business in wide release, possibly flirting with the $100 million mark if public opinion gets behind it … .

  New York Times, December 20

  “Hard Memories,” “Pocket Change” Lead Golden

  Globe Nominations

  Hard Memories, the story of Jewish civil rights activist Rachel Spiegelman, led the pack at the Golden Globe nominations Friday, garnering seven nominations, including Best Picture (drama) and Best Actress. The Tom Hanks comedy Pocket Change followed, with six nominations, including Best Picture (Comedy or Musical) and Best Actor.

  The Golden Globes, given by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, are less prestigious than the Academy Awards, but are often
viewed as a bellwether for that more prestigious award. The Academy Awards are to be announced January 20th.

  NBC-TV will broadcast the Golden Globes ceremony January 18.

  Los Angeles Times, January 5

  Hard Memories Takes Top Critics Prize

  The Roland Lanois film narrowly beats Dust and the Moon;

  Beck wins second Best Actress award

  NEW YORK—After a particularly contentious voting process, Hard Memories beat the Vietnamese film Dust and the Moon to win the best film award from the National Society of Film Critics on Sunday. The award joins the Best Picture citation awarded by the Los Angeles Film Society; The New York Film Circle gave its award to Dust and the Moon.

  Michelle Beck, whose narrow loss to Eleni Natavsaya of the Russian film Wolfhounds with the Los Angeles critics precluded an expected sweep of the critics awards, nevertheless garnered her second Best Actress award from the National Critics … .

  Daily Variety, January 19

  “HARD MEMORIES” COMPLETES NEAR-SWEEP

  AT GOLDEN GLOBES

  Biopic Wins Best Picture, Actress, Supporting Actor, three others; ‘Pocket Change’ Wins Best Comedy

  Los Angeles Times, January 19

  Hard Memories Rises to the Top

  In tandem with its Best Picture and Best Actress win at the Golden Globes, Hard Memories opened strongly in its first weekend of wide release, with $21.4 million at the box office. The week’s other new release, Walt Disney’s Natty Bumppo, did poorly with its core children’s audience, grossing only $3.1 million …

  Daily Variety, January 21

  “PROMISES” MAKES GOOD WITH EIGHT

  NOMINATIONS

  Best Picture, Director, Actress and Screenplay nods; Hanks nominated for ‘Pocket Change.’

  (inset)

  Nominations for Hard Memories:

  Best Picture: Roland Lanois, Avika Spiegelman, producers

  Best Director: Roland Lanois

  Best Actress: Michelle Beck

  Best Screenplay (Adapted): Connie Reiser & Larry Card, from the book Hard Memories by Rachel Spiegelman

  Best Cinematography: Januz Kandinsky

  Best Score (Dramatic): Julian Ruiz

  Best Editing: Roland Lanois, Cynthia Peal

  Best Makeup: Nguyen Trinh

  Daily Variety, February 4

  OSCAR NOTES

  Best Actress Nominee Michelle Beck will join the Oscar broadcast as an announcer, director Lars Giles said today. Ms. Beck will introduce the fifth and final Best Picture clip, to be shown just after the Best Actress award is to be announced. The Oscars will be broadcast on ABC-TV February 23 starting at 6 pm Pacific …

  “Stop squirming,” Miranda said.

  “I can’t help myself,” I said. “Michelle’s my first client to get nominated for an Oscar. I’m nervous.”

  “Is that the only reason?” Miranda said.

  “Well, no,” I said. “But that’s the reason I’m going public with. Also, my cummerbund itches.”

  Miranda and I were at the Academy Awards.

  We weren’t in the good seats, of course. The good seats are saved for the nominees, their guests, other really big stars, and studio heads. Carl Lupo had a good seat. Michelle had a good seat. Our seats were in the back of the balcony. Miranda brought a pair of opera glasses. We needed them. At least we weren’t as bad off as Van Doren. He was stuck in the press room. “It’s like a cattle pen,” he told me, “except that instead of cows mooing next to you, you have Roger Ebert.”

  Things were going well for Hard Memories; so far it had won Best Makeup, Best Cinematography and Best Editing (the last of which greatly relieved Roland—at least he wouldn’t be going home empty-handed). Best Score got away, which I thought was fair; Julian’s score was good but not all that good.

  “It’s time for the screenplay awards,” Miranda said.

  Best Original Screenplay first. Keanu Reeves read off the nominations, which struck me as mildly ironic. The winner was Ed Fletcher, who wrote Pocket Change. Ed, hyped up on too much caffeine and nicotine, started on an extended riff about Nietzsche. The orchestra leader, clearly not impressed, cut him off after thirty seconds.

  “Good call,” Miranda said, as Ed was manhandled off the stage.

  “Well, you know,” I said. “It’s probably the only time he’ll be in front of a billion people,” I said. “You can see why he might get a little excited.”

  “All the more reason to get him off the air quickly,” Miranda said. “I’d hate to go through life with people pointing at me and saying, ‘Hey, aren’t you the idiot that made a fool of yourself on the Oscar show?’ Rob Lowe has never lived down that dance with Snow White, you know.”

  Keanu was back, mangling names for the Best Adapted Screenplay. He appeared to give himself a papercut opening the envelope. Sucking on his finger, he announced the winners: Connie Reiser & Larry Card, Hard Memories.

  “Bingo,” I said.

  “Four for five,” Miranda said. “We’re not doing too bad. I think Michelle actually has a chance.”

  “Oh, God,” I said. “I wish you hadn’t said that, Miranda. My stomach just dropped down the Mariana Trench.”

  Miranda patted my hand. “Relax, Tom,” she said. “It’s been covered, remember. Even if she doesn’t win Best Actress, she’ll be on stage right after to show the Hard Memories nomination clip. It’ll be fine.”

  “I know, I know,” I said. “But it’s not optimal, you know. It would be better if she won.”

  “Duh,” Miranda said. “But, unfortunately, we couldn’t bribe the accountants from Price Waterhouse. We’ll just have to hope the voters don’t decide to give it to Meryl Streep again.”

  “Meryl Streep,” I muttered. “She oughta be disqualified from future nominations.”

  Miranda patted my hand again. “Tom, you’re just so cute when you’re agitated.”

  Last year’s Best Actor winner stepped on the stage to announce the Best Actress award.

  “He wears a wig,” I said to Miranda. “I hear it’s one of those ones with the snap-on titanium screws.”

  “Oh, hush,” Miranda said.

  The usual lame patter, then he stared intently into the teleprompter to read names. They started with Michelle’s. They ended with Meryl’s. Alphabetical order works that way, I suppose.

  Miranda’s hand found mine again. She squeezed it so tight I thought a bone might pop. I would have complained, but I was squeezing hers just as hard. Our mutual pain was so intense that we barely heard our former Best Actor begin and the Oscar goes to …

  “Michelle Beck.”

  We heard that part.

  The room erupted into applause and a standing ovation. They loved her. It was her moment. They had no idea just how true it was.

  Michelle stood up. She was sitting next to Carl Lupo. Carl stood up with her, kissed her on the cheek. He was crying. Only four other people in the building knew exactly why.

  Michelle made her way to the podium like a queen. She was wearing a golden dress of a design that no one had ever seen before. Joan Rivers had asked her about it out on the red carpet before the show. Michelle responded that the designer was no one that anyone around here would know. Joan remarked that it fit Michelle like a second skin. Others agreed. They had no idea how true that was, either.

  Michelle accepted her award and a peck from the former Best Actor. Then she plopped the Oscar down on the podium and, beaming, waited for the applause to die down. It took a while. Then she began to speak.

  “Oh God,” Miranda said. “This is really it.”

  “Before I do anything else,” Michelle said, “I need to thank one person, my agent, Tom Stein. He’s way up there in the balcony. Hi, Tom!” She waved enthusiastically, which got a big laugh. I waved back.

  “Shut up and get to it before the orchestra cuts you off,” I muttered under my breath.

  “Tom’s probably muttering at me to get to it before the orchestra cuts me off,” Michelle sa
id. “He always did look out for me.

  “This award means more to me than you could ever know,” Michelle continued. “It’s not just my award. It’s the award of Rachel Spiegelman, who saw hatred of the demonized ‘other’ destroy her world, and dedicated the rest of her life to making sure that we saw men, all men, as brothers, regardless of their color or their creed.

  “It belongs to Avika Spiegelman, who looked beyond my physical appearance to allow me to take the role of a lifetime. It belongs to those who initially protested my getting this role, because they came and gave me a chance to perform it, and realized that while I did not match Rachel’s appearance, I would try to match her heart. Over and over again, I have seen people of all stripes look beyond the appearance, look beyond the otherness, and see what it was that truly connected us all.

  “And now I’m wondering if you, all of you, every one of the billion people worldwide who are watching this show, can take one more step.

  “You see,” Michelle said, “I am not who you think I am. I am not what you think I am. This face is a mask. This body is a pose. Who I am and what I am is something you have never experienced before.”

  At this point, people had begun to start whispering. Some of them were worried that Michelle was about to launch into some odd New Age screed about togetherness. Still others began to wonder if Michelle was going to use this worldwide podium to announce she was a lesbian or a Scientologist. But some noticed that the bottom of Michelle’s dress had suddenly gone crystal clear. And so, for that matter, had Michelle’s legs.

  “I’m wondering,” Michelle said. “This award tells me that you believe I have reached into myself and touched some fundamental humanity, some common bond that ties us all together. But could I reach into myself and find this fundamental humanity if I were not human?”

 

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