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In April of
2009, HBO Films released Grey Gardens, a
$12-million feature
starring Drew Barrymore and Jessica Lange, based on the Maysles' 1975
documentary.
The project has been in the works since 2006, though HBO was not
involved at that time.
The HBO movie is directed by Michael Sucsy.
He is also
co-author with Kent Bartram of the definitive biography of the late Little Edie
Beale. Executive Producers are Lucy Donnelly and Rachael Horovitz. |
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In the feature, Lange plays "Big Edie"
Beale and Barrymore plays her daughter,
Little Edie, with shifts between the
characters' heyday and their age
of decline.
Other members of this A-list cast
include
Jeanne Tripplehorn as Jackie Kennedy Onassis;
Daniel Baldwin, who plays
Julius Krug, the former secretary
of the interior and secret true love of Little
Edie;
Ken Howard, who plays Big Edie's husband, Phelan;
Malcolm Gets, cast as
Big Edie's accompanist,
George Gould Strong; and Arye Gross, who portrays Albert
Maysles.
The film spans four decades (from the
1930’s to the 1970’s),
which roughly translates to Little Edie’s late teen years
to her early
sixties.
Sucsy carefully researched the project for over four
years.
The massive creative team that brought the Beales
back to life included
top-of-the-line hair stylists
(Jenny Arbour, Nancy Warren, Rita Pacitto),
makeup
artists (Vivian Baker, Linda Dowds,
Susan Hayward), an award-winning
prosthetics
designer (Bill Corso), a
talented costume designer (Catherine Thomas),
dialect
coaches (Liz Himmelstein, Howard Samuelson),
a singing coach (Bob Garrett), and
choreographer (Amy Wright).
Not to mention a production designer (Kalina Ivanov)
and
prop master (Stephen Levitt) with a keen eye for
detail.
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Some own a growing
collection of Grey Gardens-related memorabilia. Our improbable friend, The
Baron, kindly sold us a wonderful diamond and gold ring that belonged to the
late George Gould Strong. He purchased it directly from the Beales at Grey
Gardens- he was a dear friend to the Edies for many years.
Kent Bartram, who we
came to know through our association with The Baron, introduced us to the
propmaster for the new HBO Grey Gardens movie, Stephen Levitt. They wanted to
use the ring in the film! This obviously made quite an impression on us: a ring
is a very small detail…and they were making a big effort to get the little
details right.
Through a number of emails and faxes to the production
office, we eventually agreed to loan them the Gould ring. The Baron- half
joking, half serious- told us that the "spirits" of Grey Gardens were in the
ring; Kent Bartram had already mentioned that the presence of the Beales was
reportedly felt on the movie set. We felt that the ring had a place in the
film, and hoped that it would give the actor that portrayed Gould an extra boost
of confidence (at the time we did not know that Malcolm Gets was cast in that
role). We sent the ring off and didn't see it again for nearly two
months.
As a condition of the loan, we asked to visit the set for a few
days. They were filming in Canada (it is much cheaper to film a movie in Canada
due to less stringent labor laws and attractive government subsidies and tax
breaks for filmmakers). We arrived in Toronto on November 7, 2007;
coincidentally, it was Little Edie's birthday. We didn't know what to expect.
The project has generated quite a passionate response on the Internet between
those opposed to the making of the movie and those in
favor. |
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They were filming at
property adjacent to the Toronto Zoo, and
the base camp was set-up like a
military fortress.
There were trailers lined up everywhere, a huge dining tent,
production
vehicles traveling to and fro, and walkie-talkies buzzing
about (not
to mention the nicest port-o-potties I have ever seen…
complete with heat and
ambient music).
We felt like spies infiltrating a top-secret mission. We were
warned that it was
a "tense" set and were asked, among other things, not to
make
eye contact with the actors…especially Drew and Jessica, as they
were practicing
"method acting" and would be in character
throughout the duration of the shoot
(this was indeed true as
both actresses used their Edie voices exclusively). We
did
our best to honor their requests but, as you might imagine, it was a
test of
basic human willpower not to be a little awestruck by the whole
thing. |
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A quarter mile beyond the
trailers down a narrow, muddy lane we
could see the façade of Grey Gardens. We
couldn't believe it; it looked exactly
like the Maysles documentary. Vines
crawled up the rotten shingles, the shrubs were overgrown, windows were broken,
and cat food cans, bottles, and
newspapers littered the front porch.
It
had an unfathomable intricacy to it: the scale,
elevation, and other
architectural elements were all accurate.
The old black Cadillac sat abandoned
out front.
This was really like an enormous work of art.
There haven't been
many times in my life when
I felt like I needed to pinch myself, but it was
definitely one of those moments...almost
as if we had been transported back in
time or were in a parallel universe.
This was quite a treat for us, as we
attended a cocktail
party at the (actual) restored Grey Gardens in East Hampton
earlier in the year. |
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Further up the hill they
were shooting interior shots at a 1930's
villa called "Valley Halla."
Word is
that the old home is haunted.
We were introduced to director, Michael Sucsy,
in
an upstairs room that served as Big Edie's
original bedroom at Grey Gardens.
Unsurprisingly, it matched the photos we have all seen before.
The wallpaper
was curled and peeling, a tree limb poked
through the ceiling, and debris
cluttered the living space.
Sucsy is a tall, imposing figure with a determined,
focused look in his eyes. He shook our hands and
graciously welcomed us to the
set. He jokingly said, "
You know, you guys must take home a souvenir or two."
He reached out to me and placed something in my hand. It was plaster of Paris
"faux" cat
poop from Big Edie's bed.
We were then whisked away
to the area
of the house dubbed the "video village."
This is where the producers,
costumers, dialect coach,
and director watch the scenes on monitors as they are
filmed.
We were given headsets to listen to the dialogue.
Barrymore and
Lange's voices were spot-on; you could close your
eyes and it was as if the
Edies were right there in front of you.
But you had every reason to keep them
open: the costumes,
make-up, and hair were also amazing. We overheard
one of
the producers discussing the neck chord on
Little Edie's binoculars. "Its not
aged enough. It looks too new,"
she remarked (another one of those small
details).
It was bitterly cold in the room;
we pulled back the dark drape
covering one of the windows
and peeked outside. Veils of snow were falling and
the
delicate flakes were accumulating against the harsh Grey Gardens façade.
It
was gorgeous- almost like a toxic Norman Rockwell
painting. |
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The set at the East Hampton
Train Depot in Uxbridge and the Reno Sweeney set at the Royal York Hotel in
downtown Toronto were both just as incredible. This was Canada, but you might
as well have been hundreds of miles away in the original settings of New York
City and Long Island.
People that don't understand Grey Gardens might chalk all
of this up to standard Hollywood movie magic; not so, in my opinion. Granted, I
am a little biased, but this seemed like much more than a movie- it was really
like a grand celebration of the Beales, and the Edies were giving it their
blessing.
Thank you to Michael and everyone else for allowing us to
witness the making of this truly wonderful film. |
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