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Post by defhermit on May 24, 2006 20:41:22 GMT
The Subject/Title of this thread is the exact wording used on www.drudgereport.comcheck out the site (the headline might not be there once you read this)... I guess Drudge was talking about her obvious new plastic surgery, but who knows? Considering ideas that have been floated around here about Dunaway, maybe this is actually Faye part III? I tried to insert an image in this post but I'm not sure how to do it.
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Post by byrdsmaniac on May 24, 2006 23:05:08 GMT
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Post by sinbad on May 25, 2006 2:58:25 GMT
When did the "switch" happen?
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Post by byrdsmaniac on May 26, 2006 18:14:54 GMT
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Post by khamira on Mar 25, 2007 11:26:43 GMT
Searching and searching, more than interested in what is goin on in this filthy world and implicitly, filthy world of music and film, I found this. "Student piece A classic obituary of Faye Dunaway copyright © Akbar Khan, 2000. Used with permission. Faye Dunaway died in a car accident in Los Angeles yesterday. She was 54. Dunaway was the last of the Hollywood actresses who knew what it was to be a star. Like Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, she ate chauvinistic Hollywood bigwigs for breakfast and used her severe beauty to seduce and conquer. Her steely sexuality and cold egotism made her intimidating but irresistible. Those around her tolerated her diva-ish behavior because her talent, focus, and dedication made it worth it. They knew she had fought her way from the dusty streets of a Florida hamlet to play alongside Warren Beatty and Jack Nicholson and to win an Academy Award. In her forty-year career she has played the unforgettable roles of a young woman on a crime spree with her boyfriend (Bonnie and Clyde), a ruthless TV executive (Network), a delicate socialite widow (Chinatown), and Joan Crawford (Mommie Dearest). Dunaway stormed off the set of Chinatown for two weeks when Roman Polanski pulled a stray hair out of her head, she battled Bette Davis on the set of the TV movie The Disappearance of Aimee, and she refused to continue her Broadway role of Maria Callas until the producers promised her the same role in the movie version. Today's stars throw fits and make petty demands on their coworkers, but they just seem petulant and bratty. They lack the talent that would justify their bitchiness. So many of them are, as Dunaway's Joan Crawford says in Mommie Dearest, "spoiled Hollywood brats." Here's also the link: classicprose.com/csguide.html#DUNAWAYIntriguing, dont u think?
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Post by Paul Bearer on Mar 25, 2007 22:36:13 GMT
The disappearance of Aimee may have been the debut of the first Faux Dunaway right before Network. I haven't seen it but the story of the disappearance of Aimee may in itself be a "signature" clue.
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Post by Sun King™ on Mar 26, 2007 21:49:50 GMT
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