Maid in Manhattan
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In Revolution Studios' charming romantic
comedy Maid in Manhattan, Jennifer Lopez stars as a hard-working, intelligent and determined single mother who dreams of a better life. While struggling as a housekeeper at Manhattan's first-class Beresford Hotel, she falls for a rising politician, who mistakenly assumes she's a socialite guest at the hotel. Will a hotel worker from the Bronx and a
well-heeled gentleman from midtown Manhattan risk it all for a
chance at romance? Marisa Ventura has made a good life for herself and her ten-year-old son, Ty (Tyler Garcia Posey), even if they don't have a lot of money. One Saturday morning Marisa brings Ty to the Beresford. She asks a co-worker to keep an eye on him for her while she and another maid, Stephanie (Marissa Matrone), attend to their chores. One of the hotel guests, a spoiled socialite, Caroline Lane (Natasha Richardson), asks Marisa to return some designer clothes for her. After Caroline leaves, Stephanie coaxes Marisa into trying them on before taking them back to the store. In an uncharacteristically frivolous moment, Marisa slips into the chic, expensive outfits. Despite the obvious sparks between them,
Marisa is reluctant to encourage Christopher, fearing she'll lose
all that she's worked so hard to build. But he pursues her, even
though it could compromise his political career. As romance, mistaken identity and front-page
gossip collide, Marisa and Christopher learn that the bigger your
dreams, the better the chance they might come true. Maid in Manhattan
will be distributed nationwide by Columbia Pictures. The film
has been rated PG-13 by the MPAA for some sexual language/sexual
references. "Marisa's journey in this film is finding
a balance in her life, between doing what's good for her and her
son, and realizing that it's okay to want more and to go after
it." That's how Jennifer Lopez sums up her role
as the hotel worker who risks it all for a chance at romance in
Maid in Manhattan. "Marisa's a strong woman who has
made her own way in the world, while still managing to hang on
to her family and friends," observes Lopez. "Then she
finds the kind of love that doesn't come around every day and
it throws her into a tailspin. It's very funny and real at the
same time." The project began as a script by Edmond
Dantes that was submitted to Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas, then a top
agent at International Creative Management's New York office,
by Joe Roth, for Julia Roberts' consideration. "At the time,
it was about a maid and a British prince who fall in love,"
Thomas recalls. "It was much more of a fairy tale with broad
characters, and a strong resemblance to Cinderella." Roberts' passed, but Thomas couldn't stop
thinking about the kind of script she thought it could be. "It
had elements of such classic romantic comedies as Roman Holiday,
Working Girl and Pretty Woman," she says. "But
it needed to be based more in reality." Once she became
a partner in Roth's Revolution Studios and head of the company's
east coast operations, he asked her if she'd like to develop the
script further. She readily accepted, and began working on an
outline for the new direction the project would need to take. Thomas discussed the project with her producing
partner Deborah Schindler (How Stella Got Her Groove Back,
Waiting to Exhale). "This was a timeless story with contemporary
appeal," says Schindler. For the central role of Marisa Ventura,
Thomas spoke to her friend Jennifer Lopez. They discussed the
uniqueness of New York, what it was like growing up on the outside
of "Oz," with your nose pressed to the glass and wanting
in. "Being from the San Fernando Valley, my aspirations were
limited to living closer to Ventura Blvd," says Thomas. "My
vision, I'm afraid, wasn't quite so broad. But Hollywood was just
over the hill, and like Jennifer, I wanted to get there too.
Maybe we recognized the drive we both had to find a way in. Then,
in the mid-90's, I moved to New York City. And it was instant
culture shock. The lifestyle was fast. The people were smart,
tough. But I liked them, especially the bridge-and-tunnel crowd.
I understood them. They were on the outside, blue collar people
who prefer 'Fridays' to '21.' People who couldn't afford to live
in the city they served." "Jennifer stayed at my house one weekend,
and we talked about the story into the night," Thomas continues.
"She knew this character in a way I never could. She talked
about the kind of person Marisa Ventura would be, the kind of
life she would lead, the kind of pride she would have. Through
Jennifer, we were able to discover the nuances that would make
this character real." "We loved that his films were antithetical
to the genre," adds Thomas. "We needed an edge of reality,
and, as long as we promised to keep the story grounded, Wayne
agreed to direct." Wang was drawn to the project because "it
wasn't just filled with easy gags and an implausible romance,"
he says. "The humor resonates and the love story builds in
a completely believable way." Another element that appealed to the director
was the "upstairs-downstairs" aspect of the story and
the commingling of two different worlds, the well-heeled patrons
at a Manhattan luxury hotel and the people who work there, behind
the scenes. "It's more than just a romance about two people
from different worlds. That they instinctively fall for one another
is the easy part," says Wang. "But developing understanding
and respect for one another. That's what makes it work."
Next stop was the man who wrote Working
Girl, Kevin Wade. "Kevin was a wonderful collaborator,"
says Thomas. "He heard our ideas and scripted a beautiful
story." Says Wade: "I consciously stuck to
the bones of the original idea, which was about a hard-working
woman who gets a chance to go to the dance," says Wade. "The
twist for me is that she's not at all eager to pursue her prince,
because she's afraid of jeopardizing the security she has worked
so hard to achieve for herself and for her son. That created the
opportunity for a great deal of tension, both comedic and dramatic."
Like Lopez, the character of Marisa Ventura
is a Bronx-born Puerto Rican woman from a working class background.
"I knew this girl better than any character I had ever come
across," says Lopez. "I understood the feeling of being
on the outside looking in and not allowing herself to dream of
a better life for herself." The Oscar®-nominated actor had made
audiences, and his leading lady Kristin Scott-Thomas, swoon in
The English Patient. "Ralph was affable, sweet, and
open to exploring his gentler side," says Thomas. What brought Fiennes to Maid in Manhattan
was its "charm," he says. "It deals with people's
aspirations and fantasies. The real comedy grows out of people
who find themselves in realistic situations." Also, having Lopez at the center of the
film, says Fiennes, "made it very attractive for me personally,
as well as for the character of Christopher. She has great magnetism
and an iconic quality." Wang saw Fiennes' well-bred manner as the
perfect complement to Lopez's streetwise, candid pragmatism. "And
because of Ralph's insistence on his character being real, he
wanted to work in a way so that the comedy was believable,"
Wang says. "I tried to give him the context he needed to
work organically, so that the comedy came out of that character's
particular situation. With Jennifer it was more a matter of letting
her go, letting her explore. She'd do something different on every
take and it'd be funny in a different way." Beneath the surface, however, Fiennes' and
Lopez's characters also have something in common. "Both
of them are uncomfortable because of the changes taking place
in their lives," observes Schindler. "Christopher's
character is having trouble adjusting to the demands of being
a Senatorial candidate and following in his famous father's footsteps.
Marisa is up for a management position and because her mother
has always discouraged her, it plays into her insecurities --
though both characters are clearly up to the task." At a crossroads in their lives, both professionally
and personally, the attraction between the politician and the
maid takes on an air of kismet, according to Fiennes. "He
learns from Marisa how to be true to himself," says Fiennes.
"She gives him a sense of direction. He in turn, gives her
confidence, allowing her to believe in herself. So, in a way,
they have met at just the right moment." For her part, Lopez spent time with single
mothers, interviewed real-life housekeepers and drew from her
experiences growing up in the Bronx. "Jennifer is a girl
who slept in the same bed with two of her sisters until she was
fifteen-years old," mentions Thomas, "you can't get
much closer than that to the character of Marisa." More than a thousand young actors in New
York, Los Angeles and Miami, were auditioned for the pivotal role
of Ty, Marisa's 10-year-old son. From the moment he read opposite
Lopez, it was clear that Tyler Garcia Posey (who currently appears
on PAX-TV's "Doc") was the ideal choice. "Our brilliant
casting director, Todd Thaler, found Ty and worked with him,"
Thomas relates. "If Jennifer and Ralph are the love in the
movie, then Ty is the heart." The role of Caroline, the spoiled socialite
for whom Lopez is mistaken, is portrayed by acclaimed actress
Natasha Richardson, who jumped at the chance to play a bubble-headed,
vain, frivolous character. "I'm so used to playing people
who splash around in the dark places of the soul, that it was
a joy to jump into something so frothy and light," says Richardson.
"Caroline is so entitled that she's not even aware of how
abysmally she treats other people," she continues. "That
could have come across as arch, but thanks to Kevin's astute writing,
you actually feel for her desperation as she chases, in vain,
after Christopher." Joining his fellow Brits Fiennes and Richardson,
was Bob Hoskins, who is no stranger to comedy, having impressed
audiences with his memorable turns in films such as Who Framed
Roger Rabbit, Hook and Sweet Liberty. In Maid in
Manhattan he portrays Lionel, the Beresford Hotel's fastidious
English butler, who is quietly protective of Marisa, especially
after he learns about her secret romance. "English butlers
are the best in the world," says Hoskins, making no apologies
for his delightful chauvinism. To ensure that he was letter perfect,
Hoskins carefully studied the Butler's Manual. The research paid
off, according to Schindler. "Bob brought such wit and humanity
to the part, that we just kept adding scenes for him. We just
couldn't get enough of Lionel." When you add such notable performers as
Frances Conroy ("Six Feet Under"), Amy Sedaris ("Sex
and the City," "Strangers with Candy"), Chris Eigeman
(Metropolitan, Barcelona) and Priscilla Lopez ("A
Chorus Line"), "you have the kind of acting ensemble
you can only find in a city like New York," says Schiff.
"The logistics of shooting in Manhattan
can be complicated," says producer Paul Schiff, "but
the energy of the city, its pulse and the faces of the extras,
more than justify that." Before filming on Maid in Manhattan
began, the crew scouted dozens of luxury hotels in Manhattan to
find the stately quality required for the Beresford Hotel. The
hotel scenes could have been shot on a sound stage, but Wayne
insisted on an actual location, "so that when you shot the
underbelly of the place it had an unmistakable reality about it."
Oscar®-winning costume designer Albert
Wolsky brought his usual exacting standards to the creation of
the hotel workers' uniforms, particularly those of the maids.
After examining the attire worn by workers at such hotels as the
St. Regis, The Waldorf and The Plaza, he came up with the primary
housekeepers' uniform, a simple, fitted outfit. But don't let
its simplicity fool you, he says. "I think the uniform is
the most important costume in the movie. And it's where Jennifer
does her best work. She looks wonderful in it." The preparation scene for the ball, in which
Marisa's co-workers transform her from a maid into a princess,
was also meticulously planned. All the scenes in which Marisa
is out of uniform, and especially the party scene where she wears
a peach-chiffon gown designed by Bob Mackie, and adorned with
a Harry Winston necklace, are meant to reflect how differently
she is perceived by the outside world, according to Wolsky. "Christopher
has seen her before, but only in uniform, and he didn't even notice
her. When he walks into the hotel suite and she's wearing Dolce
and Gabanna, it's the same woman, but she's no longer invisible."
Interestingly, while shooting at the Waldorf
Astoria hotel, Lopez often attracted large crowds of fans and
onlookers, but she was barely noticed on the days when she was
working in her housekeeping costume. Acclaimed cinematographer Karl Walter Lindenlaub
and director Wayne Wang, collaborated to heighten the visual contrast
between the two separate worlds that exist within the Beresford
Hotel. The submarine-like "downstairs" of the hotel
is shot at the underbelly of the real Waldorf Astoria Hotel. It
is gritty, has artificial lighting, cramped spaces and exposed
pipes. The "upstairs" luxury suites were built on a
set and decorated to make them look even more opulent and inviting.
"We gave the upstairs this beautiful, warm light," says
Wang. "It was quiet and spacious, in sharp contrast to the
downstairs areas, where it's always noisy, all the ceilings are
low and the spaces are constricting." The exterior of Marisa's home was shot on
Clifford Place, a short street that ends at several flights of
steep stairs leading up to the Grand Concourse. "We settled
on that location because it served a dual purpose. It showed that
Marisa and her son had to climb those stairs to work every morning,
which conveys that everything in her life is a struggle,"
says Musky. "At the same time she lives in this nice little
two-family house that is an oasis for Marisa and a proper environment
for her son." The interiors were filmed in a slightly
larger house around the corner on Townsend Avenue, which the filmmakers
altered, giving Ty the bedroom while Marisa slept in the living
room, which, according to Musky, was in line with her research
that found this a common practice among single mothers. The production moved to Brooklyn's Borough
Hall, which provided the interiors for Christopher Marshall's
office in Albany. Other New York landmarks used in the production
include The New York Public Library on Fifth Avenue and the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, where the gala ball, a magical evening of romance
between Marisa and Christopher, was filmed. The neutral ground in which the "upstairs"
and "downstairs" characters come together and romance
blooms, were shot in New York public spaces, where such class
distinctions melt away. One prominent location was Central Park
(and its zoo) using the Manhattan skyline as a backdrop. "The
skyline was important for Wayne," says Musky. "By framing
them against such a vast backdrop, he brought an intimacy to the
encounter." When asked if there's a message to the film,
Thomas pauses. "Not really. Maybe. I guess. Yeah. Now that
you mention it...the message is: If you want something, if you
really want it, you have to be willing to risk everything you
have in order to get it. In our film, each main character risks
it all, to get to the next level. But, I never really thought
about it until you asked." And finally for the dog owners out there
who want to know how the beautiful gray Weimaraner, Rufus, was
cast, Thomas confesses, "He slept with one of the producers."
And that's all she'll say about it. Soon after, she starred in the psychological
thriller The Cell, playing the role of a gifted psychotherapist
who must journey inside the mind of a comatose serial killer in
the hope of saving his latest victim. The film opened #1 at the
box office in August 2000, grossing $17.5 million, and eventually
reaching $60 million. Last year Lopez made history by being the
first woman to have the #1 movie and #1 album in the same week.
The romantic comedy The Wedding Planner co-starring Matthew
McConaughey and released by Columbia Pictures, was the nation's
top grossing movie. Her sophomore recording release "J.Lo"
debuted at the top of the Billboard Top 200 Chart. Later that
year Lopez starred in Angel Eyes co-starring Jim Caviezel,
and directed by Luis Mandoki. She played a police officer working
through a history of sexual abuse by befriending a man who is
coming to grips with the death of his wife and son. Earlier this year, Lopez was honored at
ShoWest as the "ShoWest Female Star of the Year," as
well as being named Entertainer of the Year by the National Council
of La Raza, the largest Latino advocacy group in the nation, presented
at the American Latino Media Arts Awards for TV and film. Lopez made her feature film debut in the
highly acclaimed feature My Family/Mi Familia, garnering
an Independent Spirit Award nomination for her role as the young
mother Maria Sanchez. Her other film credits include Oliver Stone's
U-Turn, Money Train with Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes,
Francis Ford Coppola's Jack with Robin Williams, Blood
and Wine opposite Jack Nicholson, Michael Apted's thriller
Enough, and Anaconda with Jon Voight, Eric Stoltz
and Ice Cube. She can also be heard in the animated feature Antz,
voicing the character "Azteca," alongside Woody Allen
and Sylvester Stallone. Most recently, she completed production
on Revolution Studios' Gigli co-starring Ben Affleck, and
directed by Martin Brest, which will be released by Columbia Pictures
in summer 2003. She will also co-star with Affleck in Kevin Smith's
new film Jersey Girl. As a recording artist, Lopez's 1999 debut
album, "On the 6," sold more than eight million copies
worldwide and earned her two Grammy nominations. Her smash single,
"If You Had My Love," spent five weeks at No. 1 on the
Billboard charts, and the accompanying video earned four MTV Video
Music Award nominations. In 2000 she won an MTV Award, and the
best R&B Award at the MTV European Music Awards. "J.Lo," her sophomore album, was
executive produced by Lopez. "J.Lo" debuted at #1 on
the Billboard Charts, and has sold over eight million units worldwide.
The first three singles "Love Don't Cost A Thing,"
"Play," and "I'm Real" all went to #1. In
2001, she was nominated for an American Music Award as "Best
Female Artist." Jennifer's third album "J To Tha L-O!
THE REMIXES" is the first remix album to enter the Billboard
Top 200 chart at #1 and has spawned two #1 hit singles. The track
"Alive," written by Lopez, was featured in her film
Enough. He then landed the role of Charles van Doren
in Robert Redford's critically acclaimed film, Quiz Show.
In 1995, Fiennes starred in Katherine Bigelow's futuristic thriller,
Strange Days, after which he returned to the stage for
a much-lauded production of "Hamlet," directed by Jonathan
Kent for London's Almeida Theatre. A subsequent special Broadway
engagement won him Broadway's 1995 Tony Award as Best Actor. In 1996 he starred as the mortally wounded
pilot in Anthony Minghella's brilliant and moving adaptation of
Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient. The film garnered
acclaim around the world, won the Academy Award® for Best
Picture and garnered Fiennes his second Oscar® nomination,
this time as Best Actor. In the summer of 2000, Fiennes played, in
rotating repertory, the title roles of "Richard II"
and "Coriolanus" for the Almeida Theatre Company in
London. Both Shakespeare plays were directed by Jonathan Kent
and garnered rave reviews for Fiennes. He took the plays to the
Brooklyn Academy of Music that fall for a limited run. Upcoming for Fiennes is Neil Jordan's drama
The Good Thief. He will also return to the stage in the
London production of "The Talking Cure" directed by
Howard Davies and written by Christopher Hampton. NATASHA RICHARDSON's (Caroline Lane) first feature film, playing Mary
Shelley in Ken Russell's Gothic, brought her to the attention
of Paul Schrader, who then cast her in the highly acclaimed title
role of Patty Hearst. Since then, she has achieved notable
success in a number of feature films including A Month in the
Country directed by Pat O'Connor, Roland Joffe's Fat Man
and Little Boy starring Paul Newman and John Cusack, The
Favour, the Watch and the Very Big Fish with Bob Hoskins and
Jeff Goldblum, and Volker Schlondorf's The Handmaid's Tale
co-starring Robert Duvall, Aidan Quinn and Faye Dunaway. She worked
for Schrader again in The Comfort of Strangers alongside
Rupert Richardson trained in London at the Central
School of Speech and Drama. Her classical experience began with
the roles of Helena in "A Midsummer's Night's Dream,"
Ophelia in "Hamlet" at the Young Vic, and Nina in "The
Seagull," opposite her mother, Vanessa Redgrave, and Jonathan
Pryce, (London Drama Critics: Most promising newcomer). Her other
highly acclaimed stage performances include Tracey Lord in Richard
Eyre's musical "High Society," and the title role in
"Anna Christie," first in London (London Drama Critics'
Best Actress) and then on Broadway, co-starring her future husband
Liam Neeson (Tony nomination Best Actress in a Play, Theatre World
Award for Outstanding Debut, Outer Critics Circle Outstanding
debut of an Actress, and Drama Desk nomination for Best Actress).
In 1998, she starred on Broadway as Sally Bowles in Sam Mendes'
production of "Cabaret" (Tony Award, Drama Desk, Drama
League and Outer Critics Awards for Best Actress in a Musical).
A year later she portrayed Anna in the Broadway production of
Patrick Marber's Tony nominated drama "Closer." Richardson's television credits include
Ibsen's "Ghosts" with Judi Dench, Michael Gambon and
Kenneth Branagh, "Hostages," for HBO, the TV film of
Tennessee Williams' "Suddenly Last Summer" for the
BBC, with Maggie Smith and Rob Lowe. She starred as Zelda Fitzgerald
in the TNT movie, "Zelda" co-starring Timothy Hutton
and directed by Pat O'Connor (Cable Ace nomination for Best Actress).
She also starred as Ruth Gruber in the CBS miniseries "Haven,"
based on Ms. Gruber's autobiography. Tucci earned both an Emmy and Golden Globe
Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Made-for-TV-Movie or Miniseries
in the highly acclaimed HBO drama, Conspiracy, in which
he appeared alongside Kenneth Branagh and Colin Firth. He had
previously won a Best Actor Emmy and Golden Globe for his portrayal
of Walter Winchell in the HBO original film "Winchell."
Not only is Tucci an accomplished and gifted
actor, he is a writer, director, and producer as well. His most
recent directorial effort was Joe Gould's Secret starring
Ian Holm as bohemian writer Joe Gould, and Tucci as Joseph Mitchell,
the famed writer for The New Yorker. Big Night,
Tucci's first effort as co-director, co-screenwriter and actor,
earned him numerous accolades, including the Waldo Salt Screenwriting
Award at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival, a Recognition of Excellence
by the National Board of Review, an Independent Spirit Award,
the Critics Prize at the 1996 Deauville Film Festival, as well
as honors from the New York Film Critics and the Boston Society
of Film Critics. Tucci's work on television includes a recurring
guest starring role on TNT's "Bull," as well as appearances
on "Equal Justice," "Wiseguy," "The Equalizer,"
"Thirtysomething" and "The Street." Tucci
also starred as Richard Cross in the Steven Bochco drama "Murder
One," a performance that earned him an Emmy nomination. Tucci recently finished work on The Core
opposite Aaron Eckhart, Hilary Swank and Delroy Lindo, BOB HOSKINS
(Lionel) is internationally recognized for his roles in a wide
range of critically and commercially successful films. His role
in Mona Lisa brought him an Academy Award® nomination
and Golden Globe and BAFTA Awards for Best Actor. The role also
earned Hoskins Best Acting awards from the Cannes Film Festival,
the New York Film Critics Circle, The Los Angeles Film Critics
Association, and the National Society of Film Critics. Early in his career, Hoskins made two highly
regarded films for director John Mackenzie, The Long Good Friday
(1980) with Helen Mirren, which earned him a BAFTA nomination
for Best Actor, and Beyond the Limit (1983) with Michael
Caine, which brought him another BAFTA nomination for Best Supporting
Actor. His other films include Francis Ford Coppola's
The Cotton Club, Terry Gilliam's Brazil, Alan Parker's
Pink Floyd The Wall, Sweet Liberty starring Alan
Alda and Michael Caine, Robert Zemeckis' Who Framed Roger
Rabbit, which earned him a Golden Globe nomination, Richard
Benjamin's Mermaids, Wolfgang Peterson's Shattered,
Steven Spielberg's Hook, Nora Ephron's Michael,
and Atom Egoyan's Felicia's Journey. Hoskins also received
a BAFTA nomination for his work in the groundbreaking television
miniseries "Pennies From Heaven" in 1978. Throughout his career, Hoskins has also
played a wide variety of world figures. On television he starred
as Benito Mussolini in "Mussolini: The Decline and Fall of
IL Duce," Winston Churchill in "World War II: When
Lions Roared" and Manuel Noriega in "Noriega: God's
Favorite." On film he appeared as J. Edgar Hoover in Oliver
Stone's Nixon and most recently as Nikita Khrushchev in
Jean-Jacques Annaud's Enemy at the Gates. After working with British director Shane
Meadows in A Room For Romeo Brass, Hoskins helped Meadows
get his critically acclaimed Twentyfourseven off the ground.
Hoskins subsequently won the Best Actor Award at the European
Film Awards. He was recently seen as Sancho Panza in
the Hallmark TV production of "Don Quixote," and in
Fred Schepisi's Last Orders opposite Michael Caine, Tom
Courtenay, Ray Winstone, and David Hemmings. Upcoming films include
Guy Jenkins' Sleeping Dictionary and Den of Lions.
Ten year-old TYLER GARCIA POSEY ("Ty")
was born in Santa Monica, California, and has performed on stage
and in film, television, commercials, and music videos since the
age of five. Tyler currently plays Raul on the hit television
show "Doc," which airs on PAX network, and stars Billy
Ray Cyrus. Tyler appeared in the films Men of Honor with
Robert DeNiro, and Collateral Damage starring Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Tyler lives with his parents, John and Cyndi,
and two brothers Derek and Jessie. Tyler loves punk rock, singing,
writing music and lyrics, skateboarding, roller blading, playing
most sports and watching movies. FRANCES CONROY
(Paula Burns) plays Marisa's boss at the Beresford Hotel. Ms.
Conroy has originated roles in new plays by Arthur Miller ("The
Last Yankee," "Ride Down Mount Morgan," "Broken
Glass"), Edward Albee ("The Lady from Dubuque"),
David Hare ("The Secret Rapture"), and Neil Simon ("The
Dinner Party"), to name but a few of the playwrights with
whom she has collaborated. She also appeared in Albee's "Three
Tall Women." She attended the Julliard School's Drama
Division and, afterwards, toured with The Acting Company, founded
by John Houseman, before embarking on an extensive theatre career,
on and off-Broadway, with companies such as Lincoln Center and
Joseph Papp's Public Theatre. She has had the honor of sharing
the stage with Irene Worth and other greats of the American theater.
Along the way she garnered a Tony nomination for her performance
in "The Ride Down Mount Morgan" and Drama Desk nominations
for "In The Summer House," "Othello" and "The
Rehearsal." She received the Drama Desk Award for her performance
in "The Secret Rapture" and an Obie Award for Miller's
"The Last Yankee". Independent film work includes Terence Davies'
Neon Bible, Tina Rathborne's The Joy That Kills,
Gene Wilder's Murder In a Small Town, Perry Miller-Adato's
Eugene O'Neill and Carl Sandburg, Charles Busch's
Die Mommy, Die, Rebecca Miller's Angela, and Marya
Cohen's Developing. CHRIS EIGEMAN
plays the self-important hotel manager (John Bextrum). Eigeman
made an impressive debut in writer/director Whit Stillman's satire
Metropolitan and followed it with equally acclaimed performances
in two other Stillman films, Barcelona and The Last
Days of Disco. Eigemen has also starred opposite Eric Stoltz
and Parker Posey in Noah Baumbach's critically acclaimed comedy
Kicking and Screaming, as well as Baumbach's Mr. Jealousy
and Highball. On the stage, Eigeman has starred in the
Off-Broadway production of John Kolvenbach's comedy "The
Gravity of Means." Other theater credits include productions
of "Henry IV" and Wendy McCleod's "The House of
Yes." AMY SEDARIS
(Rachel Hoffberg) plays Caroline's friend and Marisa's nemesis.
Sedaris first felt the tug of the stage when she moved from her
native North Carolina to join her brother David in Chicago, where
she took classes at the famed "Second City," and was
soon on their "Main Stage." She then moved to New York,
where she teamed up with fellow "Second City" alums
Stephanie Colbert and Paul Dinello, and others, to develop a half-hour
sketch-comedy series called "Exit 57," for HBO Downtown
Productions. The series, which ran for two seasons on Comedy
Central, received five Cable ACE nominations for Best Writing,
Best Performance and Best Comedy Series. Sedaris once again teamed
up with Dinello and Colbert to create Comedy Central's first live-action
comedy series, "Strangers with Candy," a twisted take
on the classic and typically moralistic after-school specials.
A favorite guest of Conan O'Brien, Sedaris
starred in "When I Grow Up," a pilot from Glenn Gordon
Caron, the creator of "Moonlighting," and was recently
seen on NBC's hit comedy "Just Shoot Me," as well as
three episodes of HBO's hit "Sex and the City." In addition to many plays she and her brother
have written and produced, including the 1996 Obie Award-winning
"One-Woman Shoe," Sedaris has added Paul Rudnick's "The
Most Fabulous Story Ever Told" and Douglas Carter Beane's
"Country Club" to her ever-expanding resume. Sedaris
and her brother staged their 1997 critically acclaimed collaboration,
"The Little Frieda Mysteries" in Seattle. In 2001 they
staged "The Book of Liz," and this past fall Sedaris
shared the stage with Sarah Jessica Parker in "The Wonders
of the World," at the Manhattan Theater Club. MARISSA MATRONE
(Stephanie Kehoe) is making her feature film debut as Marisa's
fellow maid and biggest supporter. A graduate of New York University's
Graduate Acting Program, Matrone has been seen in featured roles
on HBO's "The Sopranos," ABC's "Wonderland,"
NBC's "Law & Order," "Third Watch" and
"As the World Turns." She made her Broadway debut in
the Roundabout Theater's production of "Side Man," directed
by Michael Mayer. WAYNE WANG (Director) has spent a career
alternating between major Hollywood studio films such as The
Joy Luck Club and smaller, independent works like Smoke.
He most recently directed The Center of the World,
with Molly Parker and Peter Sarsgaard, a digitally shot independent
film. Wang was born in Hong Kong after his family
fled from China following the Communist takeover in 1947. He graduated
from Wah Yan Jesuit High School and came to the United States
at the age of 18 to study film at California College of the Arts
and Crafts in Oakland. Wang's first feature film was his graduate
student project, A Man, A Woman, A Killer, co-directed
with Rick Schmidt. He returned to Hong Kong with a Masters degree
and went to work at the public broadcasting outlet R.T.H. (Radio
and Television Hong Kong), which had become a launching pad for
young film school trained directors who became known as the "Hong
Kong New Wave." While there, Wang directed several episodes
of the landmark realistic drama series "Below the Lion Rock,"
about the daily lives of ordinary Hong Kong citizens. He returned to the U.S. and moved to San
Francisco, where he worked for a time with new immigrants from
Asia. The experience inspired Wang's second feature film, the
critically acclaimed Chan is Missing, in which he used
a thriller plot as a vehicle to explore social conflicts and political
divisions in Chinatown. Made in 16mm black & white for just
$27,000, Chan is Missing was a decade ahead of the recent
wave of "micro-budget" successes such as El Mariachi
and Clerks. Wang's third feature, Dim Sum: A Little
Bit of Heart, had its world premiere in the Director's Fortnight
at the Cannes Film Festival and received a British Academy Award
nomination as Best Foreign Film. He next directed the thriller
Slamdance starring Tom Hulce, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
and Virginia Madsen. New York's Chinatown was the setting and
the subject of Wang's subsequent Eat a Bowl of Tea, a period
drama set in the 1940s and starring Wang's wife Cora Miao and
Russell Wong. This was followed by Life is Cheap...But Toilet
Paper is Expensive, a gangster comedy filmed in Hong Kong.
Wang's first studio film was The Joy
Luck Club, based on the best-selling novel by Amy Tan. Smoke
was based on novelist Paul Auster's original screenplay, and starred
Harvey Keitel, William Hurt and Forrest Whitaker. The film won
the Silver Bear Award at the Berlin Film Festival and was nominated
for France's Cesar Award for Best Foreign Film. It was an enormous
box-office success in Europe and Asia. Wang and Auster also co-directed
Blue in the Face, a second story employing many of the
same actors and settings as Smoke. More recently, Wang directed Chinese
Box, a romance set in Hong Kong, starring Jeremy Irons and
Gong Li, and Anywhere But Here starring Susan Sarandon
and Natalie Portman. As a screenwriter, Wade made his debut with
Working Girl directed by Mike Nichols and starring Melanie
Griffith, Sigourney Weaver, and Harrison Ford. The romantic comedy
brought him a Golden Globe nomination and a Writer's Guild Award
nomination. Other screenplay credits include True
Colors directed by Herbert Ross and starring John Cusack and
James Spader, Junior with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny
DeVito, Mr. Baseball starring Tom Selleck and directed
by Fred Schepisi, and Meet Joe Black starring Anthony Hopkins
and Brad Pitt. In the two years Revolution Studios East
has been in existence, Thomas has developed an impressive slate
of films, many in partnership with Schindler. While Maid in
Manhattan was in post-production, Thomas and Schindler began
principal photography on Mona Lisa Smile directed by Mike
Newell and starring Julia Roberts, Kirsten Dunst, Julia Stiles,
Maggie Gyllenhaal and Marcia Gay Harden. As with Maid in Manhattan,
Mona Lisa Smile is being shot in and around the New York area.
A third New York-based project, "Queens Supreme," rounds
out Thomas' 2002 production schedule. Thomas and Schindler are
Executive Producers on "Queens Supreme," an original
television series created by Kevin Fox for CBS, and based on an
idea pitched to Thomas by her husband, Daniel, the son of a State
Supreme Court Judge. "Queens Supreme" is a one-hour
drama centered on the behind the scenes politics in State Supreme
Court. "We never intended to get involved in series television,
but we couldn't pass up a great idea either," says Thomas.
In just one year, Thomas and Schindler were
able to bring three new productions to New York, and hope to continue
that pattern into 2003. "Our goal is simple", states
Thomas. "We develop the scripts until we love them. Until
we see them so clearly in our heads, that we are driven to find
the right filmmakers and stars to bring that vision to life."
Schindler seconds, "Both Elaine and I feel committed to
story, plot, and dialogue. We have the utmost respect for writers,
and therefore, try to give them the room to allow their projects
to grow." "However long it takes," adds
Thomas, "we're not in a race." Prior to joining Revolution Studios, Thomas
was a Senior Vice President at International Creative Management,
a position she held since joining the company in 1991. In addition
to Julia Roberts, she has represented such talents as Jennifer
Lopez, Jennifer Connelly, Tim Robbins, Susan Sarandon, Darren
Star, Rupert Everett, Matt Dillon, Spike Lee, Roger Michell and
Jonathan Lynn. She began her career as a secretary at the William
Morris Agency, where she was promoted to agent in 1985. DEBORAH SCHINDLER
(Producer) is head of the New York-based Red Om Films and Julia
Roberts' producing partner. Red Om Films is based at Revolution
Studios East, where Roberts and Schindler work in association
with Revolution Studios partner Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas. Previously, Schindler produced How Stella
Got Her Groove Back starring Angela Bassett, Whoopi Goldberg
and Taye Diggs, and Waiting to Exhale starring Whitney
Houston, Angela Bassett, Loretta Devine, Lela Rochon, Wesley Snipes,
and directed by Forest Whitaker. Both films were adapted from
best selling novels by Terry McMillan. Prior to joining Red Om Films, Schindler
enjoyed a ten-year relationship with 20th Century Fox that began
in 1990, when Joe Roth, then president of the studio, made an
overall deal with her. Schindler's filmmaking experience has been
extensive and varied. She served as Vice President of Creative
Affairs, East Coast, for Columbia Pictures, under David Puttnam.
She was also Associate Producer on Prelude to a Kiss starring
Alec Baldwin and Meg Ryan. PAUL SCHIFF
(Producer) began his career as a documentary cameraman in New
York City. He segued to directing for MTV, where he was on staff
for four years during the groundbreaking early days of the cable
channel. Schiff moved to feature films as an associate producer
of Streets of Gold, beginning his longstanding collaboration
with its director, and current Revolution Studios Chairman, Joe
Roth. Schiff then spent a successful seven years
based at Twentieth Century Fox, where he produced such films as
My Cousin Vinny starring Joe Pesci and Marisa Tomei, The
Vanishing starring Jeff Bridges and Kiefer Sutherland, PCU
and Ghost in the Machine. Prior to his tenure at Fox,
Schiff produced Coupe de Ville, directed by Roth, Renegades,
Young Guns and its sequel, all for Morgan Creek Productions. Schiff produced Wes Anderson's critically
acclaimed Rushmore starring Bill Murray and Jason Schwartzman.
He also served as head of production at Propaganda Films. He is
currently in production on Mona Lisa Smile starring Julia
Roberts. CHARLES NEWIRTH (Executive
Producer) joined Revolution Studios in May 2000. He is responsible
for the physical production of all motion pictures at Revolution
Studios. Newirth most recently produced the hit film
America's Sweethearts. He previously produced the 1999
sleeper hit Galaxy Quest and the popular Robin Williams
hit Patch Adams, as well as Home Fries starring
Drew Barrymore. His credits as an executive producer include
Brad Silberling's City of Angels starring Nicolas Cage
and Meg Ryan, Rob Reiner's true-life drama Ghosts of Mississippi
with Alec Baldwin, Whoopi Goldberg and James Woods, The American
President, also for Reiner, starring Michael Douglas and Annette
Bening and Jon Turtletaub's Phenomenon starring John Travolta. In addition, Newirth co-produced Robert
Zemeckis' Academy Award®-winning blockbuster Forrest Gump.
He also served as a co-producer on the Barry Levinson films Toys
and Bugsy, and as associate producer on Levinson's Avalon. A native New Yorker, Newirth broke into
the film industry as a location manager on such films as Flashdance,
Pretty in Pink and Ferris Bueller's Day Off. He later
moved up to production manager on Throw Momma From the Train
and RoboCop, before getting his first producing credit
as associate producer on Andrew Davis' The Package. BENNY MEDINA
(Executive Producer) -- TK KARL WALTER LINDENLAUB (Director of Photography) Since moving to the U.S.
in 1991, award-winning German director of photography Karl Walter
Lindenlaub, ASC, bvk, has worked steadily on a wide variety of
feature films. Before serving as director of photography on The
Banger Sisters co-starring Goldie Hawn and Susan Sarandon,
he shot Michael Caton-Jones' City by the Sea starring Robert
DeNiro and Frances McDormand. Lindenlaub's recent credits include Garry
Marshall's The Princess Diaries, Jan de Bont's The Haunting,
Up Close and Personal, Red Corner and One Night at McCool's. In addition, Lindenlaub has worked on two
previous films for director Caton-Jones, The Jackal and
Rob Roy. Other career highlights include six films for
Roland Emmerich: Independence Day, Stargate, Universal Soldier,
Moon 44 (for which he won a German Film Award for Best Cinematography),
Ghost Chase and Eye of the Storm, which Emmerich produced.
Musky was production designer on Ethan and
Joel Coen's first and second features Blood Simple and
Raising Arizona. Among her other credits are Young Guns,
When Harry Met Sally, Ghost, Boomerang, Glengarry Glen Ross,
Two Bits, City Hall, The Devil's Own, At First Sight, Illegally
Yours and Patty Hearst, CRAIG McKAY,
A.C.E. (Editor) brings extensive editing credits to Maid in
Manhattan, including The Silence of the Lambs, for
which he received his second Academy Award® nomination, Philadelphia,
Married to the Mob, Something Wild, Swing Shift and Melvin
and Howard, all for director Jonathan Demme. Other feature film credits include K-Pax,
Return to Paradise, A Map of the World, Cop Land, Some Mother's
Son, Mad Dog and Glory, Shining Through, Miami Blues, She-Devil,
Crack in the Mirror, Private Sessions, Thieves and Scarecrow.
McKay's work on Reds, directed by Warren Beatty, earned
him his first Oscar® nomination. McKay received an Emmy Award® for the
TV miniseries Holocaust. ALBERT WOLSKY
(Costume Designer) is a two-time Academy Award® winner for
All That Jazz and Bugsy. He also received nominations
for his work on Sophie's Choice, The Journey of Natty Gann
and Toys. The renowned designer's recent credits are Road
to Perdition, Galaxy Quest, Runaway Bride and You've Got
Mail. Other credits include The Jackal, Striptease, Junior,
Up Close and Personal, The Grass Harp, The Pelican Brief, Enemies,
A Love Story, Down and Out In Beverly Hills, The Turning Point,
Lenny, Grease and Manhattan. Wolsky began his career working on New York
stage productions and his first film was The Heart is a Lonely
Hunter. ALAN SILVESTRI (Composer) received Oscar® and Golden Globe
nominations for his Forrest Gump score and two Grammy nominations
for the compositions he created for the Back to the Future
trilogy. Silvestri's most recent credits are Stuart Little
2, Lilo and Stitch, Showtime, Serendipity, The Mummy Returns,
What Lies Beneath, Castaway, What Women Want and The Mexican.
In all he has composed scores for more than 80 films including
The Abyss, Eraser, Predator, The Bodyguard, Romancing the Stone,
Stuart Little, Practical Magic, Grumpy Old Men and its sequel
Grumpier Old Men, Father of the Bride and Father of
the Bride Part II, Contact and Who Framed
Roger Rabbit. Upcoming for Silvestri is the feature film
version of Pirates of the Caribbean.
Return to Film
Home Page
SYNOPSIS
Ty appears at the door with the handsome Christopher Marshall (Ralph Fiennes), an aspiring U.S. Senator and one of Manhattan's most eligible bachelors. Ty has come to ask Marisa's permission to walk through Central Park with Christopher and his dog Rufus. Christopher is immediately attracted to Marisa. Assuming she is a hotel guest, he asks her to join them. She is about to refuse, but Stephanie intervenes and accepts for her.
Revolution Studios presents A Red Om Films Production, Maid
in Manhattan, a Columbia Pictures release, starring Jennifer
Lopez and Ralph Fiennes. The co-stars are Natasha Richardson,
Stanley Tucci and Bob Hoskins. The director is Wayne Wang. The
screenplay is by Kevin Wade from a story by Edmond Dantes. Also
starring Frances Conroy, Chris Eigeman, Amy Sedaris and Priscilla
Lopez. Introducing Tyler Garcia Posey and Marissa Matrone.
Maid in Manhattan is produced by Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas,
Deborah Schindler and Paul Schiff. The executive producers are
Charles Newirth and Benny Medina. Karl Walter Lindenlaub, ASC,
bvk, is the director of photography. Jane Musky is the production
designer. Oscar® nominee Craig McKay, A.C.E is the film's
editor. The costume designs are by Academy Award® winner Albert
Wolsky. The music is by Alan Silvestri. The music supervisor is
Randall Poster. HOW
IT GOT MADE
With Lopez aboard, Thomas and Schindler recruited director Wayne
Wang (The Joy Luck Club, Smoke) because "not only
has he shown great wit in movies like Smoke and Chan
is Missing," says Schindler, "and even the more
dramatic Joy Luck Club, but he has demonstrated a very
sure command of character-driven pieces. That seemed to be the
ideal combination for this story."
Though the film tells its story through humor, Lopez admired its
underpinning of reality. "Marisa is a woman who has put her
personal life on the back burner, which a lot of mothers do, especially
single mothers," she says. "The story is about how she
finds balance in her life, how she learns to take care of her
own needs and, at the same time, continues to meet the needs of
her son."
For the role of Christopher Marshall, the wealthy son of a prominent
politician, Thomas, Schindler, Wang and Lopez were looking for
someone with "that 'Cary Grant' quality. I think it was Jennifer
who suggested Ralph first," says Thomas. "While none
of us had seen him do comedy, we certainly knew he could pull
off the romance. He's an amazing actor. So we chased him, begged
him, and smiled a lot until he couldn't refuse."
Producer Paul Schiff found the contrast between Fiennes' and Lopez's
styles also suited the characters they were portraying. "Having
two actors who come at performing in distinctly different ways
and having them play characters from opposite ends of the social
spectrum, seemed an ideal way to convey their unique attraction
to one another," says Schiff.
Fiennes researched his role by spending time with a New York politician.
In addition he read about the life of John F. Kennedy, Jr. and
watched tapes of Andrew Cuomo, two men with political aspirations
who, like the character of Christopher Marshall, have been compared
to their famous fathers.
Like Posey, Marissa Matrone also makes her big-screen debut in
Maid in Manhattan and was also brought to the project by
casting agent Todd Thaler. "Todd put her on tape and, when
we saw it, we couldn't stop laughing," says Lopez. The role
of Stephanie, Marisa's best friend and co-worker was a natural
fit for Matrone. "When I started reading the script I immediately
thought of all my cousins from Brooklyn," Matrone recalls,
"with hearts of gold and truck-driver mouths. Let me tell
you, in Brooklyn, they all speak their minds."
On the set, Wayne encouraged improvisation between Fiennes and
Stanley Tucci, who plays campaign manager, Jerry Siegel. Much
of their screen time together is spent sparring, a battle of wits
for control over Christopher's political future. Both men are
seasoned stage performers who are keenly aware that "acting
is listening, responding, having a sense of playfulness, especially
in this kind of light-hearted material," says Fiennes. "And
Stanley and I just kicked it about, throwing things at each other
and improvising." ABOUT
THE PRODUCTION
Production designer Jane Musky led the filmmakers to the famed
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Park Avenue, where much of the film was
shot. "The Waldorf is just what a big, fancy hotel should
be," she says. "Their downstairs area was bigger and
they employ more people than any other hotel in Manhattan."
The Waldorf was also one of the few actual hotels in Manhattan
that was large enough to accommodate a film crew without interfering
with its day-to-day operation.
For the house where Lopez's character lives, Wang was looking
for an area in the Bronx that looked poor but still had integrity
and a little bit of taste, reflecting Marisa Ventura's personality.
Musky, who has previously worked in the Bronx, most recently on
Finding Forrester, found a row of two-family houses in
the Morris Heights section that were perfect. "I know all
these people in the Bronx," she says, "and they're very
proud of what they have no matter how modest. I felt we should
pay homage to that." This section of the Bronx is also dominated
by the elevated subway, which Musky saw as Marisa's ever-present
connection between her home and downtown.ABOUT
THE CAST
JENNIFER
LOPEZ (Marisa Ventura) earned widespread acclaim for her work
in the title role of Selena, and then was showered with
extensive praise for her role opposite George Clooney in Steven
Soderbergh's Out of Sight.
Most recently, Lopez released her third album "This is Me...Then,"
which includes the hit single "Jenny From the Block."
In November of 2001, Jennifer expanded her talents to fashion
design by launching the "J.Lo by Jennifer Lopez" women's
collection. This fall she also introduced her own fragrance. Future
plans for her Sweetface Fashions, a joint venture with an investment
group led by Andy Hilfiger and Larry Stemmerman, will include
licensing agreements to expand the "J.Lo by Jennifer Lopez"
brand into other fashion categories, including accessories, eyewear
and swimwear.
RALPH
FIENNES (Christopher Marshall) has
emerged as one of the leading actors of his generation, with acclaimed
screen performances in films such as the Oscar®-winning The
English Patient and Schindler's List, as well as Quiz
Show, Sunshine, The End of the Affair, Oscar and Lucinda and
Onegin. Fiennes has also garnered a great deal of critical
acclaim for his performances in the theater, both here and in
the U.K., for the title roles in such classics as "Hamlet,"
"Ivanov," "Richard II," and "Coriolanus."
This past year he was also seen in two thrillers, Red Dragon
and David Cronenberg's Spider.
Born in Suffolk, Fiennes grew up in England and Ireland and graduated
from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1985. He began working
professionally as an actor in England's open-air theatre in Regents
Park, the Theatre Clwyd and the Oldman Coliseum, and became part
of Michael Rudman's company at the National Theatre in 1987, only
two years after leaving drama school. In 1988, he joined the Royal
Shakespeare Company where he remained for two seasons, giving
notable performances in "Henry VI," "King Lear"
and "Love's Labour's Lost."
In 1991 Fiennes landed a small, but compelling, role in the award-winning
TV series "Prime Suspect." This led to his being cast
by David Puttnam as T.E. Lawrence in a special television film
about the legendary hero, "A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After
Arabia." That same year he made his feature film debut in
an adaptation of Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights opposite
Juliette Binoche. Fiennes next starred in the BBC's haunting
telefilm, "The Cormorant."
It was Fiennes' iconoclastic interpretation of Bronte's Heathcliff
that compelled Steven Spielberg to cast him as SS Commandant Amon
Goeth, opposite Liam Neeson, in Schindler's List, the Oscar®
winner for Best Picture in 1993. His extraordinary performance
in the film won critical praise worldwide. He received an Academy
Award® nomination as best supporting actor as well as the
BAFTA, New York Film Critics, National Society of Film Critics,
Boston and Chicago Film Critics Awards, a Golden Globe nomination
and the London Film Critics Award for Best British Actor of 1994.
Returning to the stage, at London's Almeida Theatre, he portrayed
the title role in Chekhov's tragicomic early play "Ivanov."
With a striking modern translation by David Hare, and rave reviews
all around, the production and cast were granted the singular
honor of an invitation to Moscow for a week's special performance.
In 1997, Fiennes starred opposite Cate Blanchett in Oscar and
Lucinda, an eccentric love story adapted from Peter Carey's
celebrated novel and directed by Australia's Gillian Anderson.
He then starred in and executive produced the feature film version
of Pushkin's classic verse novel, "Eugene Onegin." Directed
by his sister Martha Fiennes, and co-starring Liv Tyler, this
visually stunning production was shot on location in Russia. In
1999, Fiennes starred in Neil Jordan's film adaptation of novelist
Graham Greene's The End of the Affair opposite Julianne
Moore and Stephan Rea, as well as writer/director Istvan Szabo's
epic Sunshine, which spans three generations, from the
fall of the Hapsburg Empire to the 1965 Hungarian Revolution.
Fiennes portrayed the central character in each of the three linking
stories.
Everett, Helen Mirren and Christopher Walken, which brought her
the London Evening Standard Award for Best Actress. She also starred
in Widow's Peak with Mia Farrow and Joan Plowright (Best
Actress Award at the 1994 Karlovy Vary Festival), Nell
co-starring Jodie Foster and Liam Neeson, and The Parent Trap,
Blow Dry, Waking Up in Reno and Chelsea Walls, directed
by Ethan Hawke.
STANLEY TUCCI (Jerry Siegel) is currently dazzling Broadway
audiences in a revival of "Frankie and Johnny in the Claire
de Lune" opposite Edie Falco. He recently co-starred in Sam
Mendes' The Road to Perdition with Tom Hanks and Paul Newman,
the comedy Big Trouble and Edward Burns' Sidewalks of
New York. Last year he appeared in Revolution Studios' America's
Sweethearts opposite Julia Roberts and John Cusack, released
by Columbia Pictures.
Tucci's second project, The Imposters, which he wrote,
directed, co-produced and in which he starred, was an Official
Selection at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. Previous film credits
include Woody Allen's Deconstructing Harry, William Shakespeare's
A Midsummer's Night's Dream, The Alarmist, A Life Less Ordinary,
The Daytrippers, Kiss of Death, Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle,
It Could Happen to You, The Pelican Brief, Prelude to a Kiss,
Billy Bathgate, In the Soup, and Slaves of New York.
On Broadway, Tucci has appeared in numerous plays, including "Execution
of Hope," "The Iceman Cometh," "Brighton Beach
Memoirs," and "The Misanthrope." He has also performed
in a number of off-Broadway plays, at Yale Repertory Theater and
at SUNY Purchase, where he first studied acting.
Ms. Conroy's film credits include The Crucible, Scent of a
Woman, Sleepless in Seattle, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Rocket Gibraltar
(with Burt Lancaster in his last role), and the Woody Allen films
Manhattan, Crimes & Misdemeanors and Another Woman.
Most recently, she was nominated for an Emmy as "Best Actress"
for her portrayal of Ruth Fisher in the award winning HBO series
"Six Feet Under."
Most recently Eigeman was seen in the HBO feature "Path to
War," directed by John Frankenheimer. He also starred in
the romantic comedy The Perfect You, with Jenny McCarthy,
which premiered at the LA Film Festival last summer. He enjoyed
rave reviews for the film The Next Big Thing, a send-up
of the art world, directed by P.J. Posner, and recently completed
principal photography on Clipping Adam, with Louise Fletcher.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
KEVIN WADE (Screenplay) started his career as a playwright
in 1981 with "Key Exchange," which moved from the Off-Off
Broadway WPA Theatre to a two-year run at New York's Orpheum Theater,
and was later made into a movie starring Brooke Adams. Wade is
also the author of the plays "Cruise Control" and "Mr.
& Mrs."
ELAINE GOLDSMITH-THOMAS (Producer) is a partner and head
of New York operations for Revolution Studios, where she oversees
and develops projects for the company. In addition to her duties
of running the New York office, she is supervising the operations
of Julia Roberts' Red Om productions, headed by Deborah Schindler.
Over the past two years, Revolution Studios East and Red Om Films
have together developed an impressive slate of projects. During
post-production on Maid in Manhattan, principal photography
began on Mona Lisa Smile directed by Mike Newell and starring
Julia Roberts, Kirsten Dunst, Julia Stiles, Maggie Gyllenhaal
and Marcia Gay Harden. Schindler and Thomas also serve as Executive
Producers on the original TV series for CBS, "Queens Supreme."
Created by Kevin Fox and based on an idea by attorney Daniel Thomas,
son of a State Supreme Court judge, "Queens Supreme"
is a one-hour drama centered on the behind-the-scenes politics
in State Supreme Court. Like Maid in Manhattan, and Mona
Lisa Smile, "Queens Supreme" is shooting in and
around the New York Metropolitan area. In one year, Revolution
Studios East and Red Om Films have been able to bring three new
productions to New York. Thomas and Schindler hope to continue
that pattern in 2003. "Both Elaine and I feel committed to
story, plot and dialogue. We have the utmost respect for writers
and, therefore, try to give them the room they need to allow their
projects to grow," says Schindler. "Our goal is simple,"
states Thomas. "We develop the scripts until we love them,
until we see them so clearly in our heads that we are driven to
find the right filmmakers and stars to bring the vision to life."
Schindler began her film career as an assistant to Martin Scorsese,
with whom she worked on Raging Bull, The King of Comedy, The
Last Temptation of Christ and The Color of Money. She
served as associate producer on Scorsese's After Hours.
She lives in New York City with her husband and daughter.
JANE MUSKY (Production Designer) was most recently production
designer on the drama City by The Sea, starring Robert
DeNiro.
Finding Forrester and The Object of My Affection. Musky's
television credits include George C. Wolfe's "Fires in the
Mirror" for American Playhouse, PBS's "The Little Sister"
and "Under the Biltmore Clock," as well as "LBJ:
The Early Years," "Ghost Dancing" and "Murrow."
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2002. Revolution Studios/Columbia Pictures. EntertainmentMagazine.net