Faye Dunaway struggled to film the iconic "no more wire hangers" scene in "Mommie Dearest" ...but not for the reasons you might think. “No wire hangers, ever!” There may be no more iconic utterance in ...
The Cannes Film Festival’s Classics sidebar celebrates 20 years this year with a lineup of films including a 4K restoration of Wim Wenders’s Palme d’Or winning Paris, Texas, and a debut screening of ...
Faye Dunaway, 83, made her first public appearance in four years at the Cannes Film Festival in France on Wednesday. The “Mommie Dearest” actress walked the red carpet at the premiere of the action ...
Liam Gaughan is a film and TV writer at Collider. He has been writing film reviews and news coverage for ten years. Between relentlessly adding new titles to his watchlist and attending as many ...
Celebrity documentaries are a dime a dozen these days. But celebrity docus that don’t serve as an infomercial for a star are rare. Laurent Bouzereau‘s HBO documentary “Faye,” about Faye Dunaway, is ...
Faye Dunaway, here with director Laurent Bouzereau and her son, Liam, talks about her bipolar disorder in a new HBO doc, “Faye.”REUTERS “Bonnie and Clyde” star Faye Dunaway opens up about being ...
The HBO Original documentary Faye, directed and produced by Laurent Bouzereau, will debut on HBO and will be available to stream on Max later this year. The film will have its world premiere at the ...
Cannes Classics, the festival’s selection for tributes and retrospectives, has announced the rest of its program after the previously-announced opening night film “Napoleon Par Abel Gance.” Among the ...
Dunaway was more of a force to be reckoned with during the 1974 awards season, as her turn as Evelyn Mulwray in Roman Polanski’s “Chinatown” (1974) caught the attention of critics and audiences alike.
It’s described as maybe the greatest Hollywood photo ever taken. There is Faye Dunaway sprawled on a chair next to the Beverly Hills Hotel swimming pool the morning after her Oscar win. Newspapers ...
A new Faye Dunaway documentary wants to turn us from gossips into cheerleaders. By Dina Gachman The Method taught actors to channel the complexity and messiness of human emotion into a performance.
Emotion is a strength, not a weakness,” Faye Dunaway declares, as if it’s her pet mantra. The Oscar-winning star of Bonnie and Clyde and Network is sitting in a hotel in Cannes. Across the room is ...