Lifestyle
Elisabeth Moss' Father, Ron Moss, Dead at 79
Elisabeth Moss‘ dad, Ron Moss, has died … TMZ has learned.
The actress’s father passed away Thursday night in Clearwater, FL after a brief battle with an infection — this according to his grandson, Max, the executor of Ron’s estate. We’re told he was surrounded by family, and that his death was peaceful.
Max writes of his granddad … “Ron made so many friends throughout his rich life and we want everyone to know that you all meant so much to him. Thank you for everything that any of you did for him throughout his life.”
Ron was a professional musician, and was a trained trombone player who played in jazz bands throughout his life … including gigging with none other than the father of Scientology leader David Miscavige. Yes, Ron was also a Scientologist himself … as is Elisabeth.
He actually served as a manager for some big stars over the years too — including Chick Corea, Isaac Hayes and others. Chick is Elisabeth’s godfather, interestingly enough.
While he was born and raised across the pond, he and his ex-wife, Linda, raised Elisabeth and her brother Derek here in the States … Los Angeles specifically. While Elisabeth has posed for some shots with her dad … it doesn’t appear they were that close of late.
Unclear if Elisabeth is aware of her father’s death at this point — we’ve reached out to her camp for comment … but so far, no word back. Ron was 79.
RIP
Lifestyle
Jodie Foster plans more French roles after ‘A Private Life’
Jodie Foster has her first solo lead role entirely in French in A Private Life.
Jérôme Prébois/Sony Pictures Classics
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Jérôme Prébois/Sony Pictures Classics
After dozens of films over a storied six-decade career, Jodie Foster is trying something new, playing the lead role in a French film for the very first time.
There’s hardly a trace of an American accent in Foster’s turn as Parisian therapist Lilian Steiner in A Private Life (Vie privée) and she appears to be very much at home.
The character she plays is an American woman who built her career in France. So director Rebecca Zlotowski added some small asides — and swearing — in English because of Foster’s brisk and fluent French. “People suddenly were just completely confused that I wasn’t a French person,” the actress said.
All apparent ease aside, “I have a different personality in French than I do in English,” Foster told Morning Edition host Leila Fadel during a recent visit to NPR’s New York studios.
Her voice has a higher pitch in French, something she attributes to the French ladies who taught her at the private school she attended, Le Lycée Français de Los Angeles. Foster also had some smaller roles in three French films prior to A Private Life, including in 2004’s A Very Long Engagement.
“I’m just much more insecure and kind of vulnerable because I never know whether I’m communicating properly. And, you know, am I going to find that word at the last minute?” Foster said.
This frustration is also built into the script itself. When we first meet Steiner, she’s constantly frazzled, barely listening to her patients and hardly sparing a minute for her newborn grandson.
Lilian Steiner (Jodie Foster) and Gabriel Haddad (Daniel Auteuil) find love again — for each other — years after their divorce in A Private Life.
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Then, her eyes start watering constantly, something someone more grounded would call crying, but not Steiner, who grows increasingly frustrated that water is coming out of her eyes.
It turns out to be especially fitting for someone who is a Freudian psychoanalyst. “In true Freudian fashion [she] is having a physical demonstration of a psychic ill,” Foster explains.
That psychic ill is caused by the death of a patient (the Franco-Belgian social drama star Virginie Efira), purportedly by suicide.
But Steiner suspects her patient has been murdered and launches her own — inconclusive, darkly comedic — investigation, enlisting help from her ex-husband (played by Daniel Auteuil, a mainstay of French cinema), and rekindling their old flame in the process.
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All of those disparate plot lines play into the film’s French title, Vie privée, which Foster explains is a double entendre: “So private life, meaning everything that you think that would mean the opposite of a public life — an internal life. But private also means has been deprived of, so somebody who has been deprived of life, meaning somebody who’s died potentially.”
In her own life, Foster said she’s had to fight for privacy, ferociously. “I had to say I will go to Disneyland and I will not have a film crew following me… I will go to college and I will not give everything to the public eye, in order to make sure that I survived intact,” she explained.
After a frenetic pace of filming in her teens and twenties, Foster says she became more deliberate about the roles she accepted so that she could bring more depth to the screen. “I really was careful to make sure that I had real life and I worked more sporadically than most other actors,” she said.
In a hallucinatory dream sequence while under hypnosis, Lilian (Jodie Foster), left, is transported to WWII-era Paris, where she and her present-day patient Paula Cohen-Solal (Virginie Efira) were lovers.
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Today, she’s especially excited about working with women directors. She also directs herself. Recounting that she only worked with one female director — Mary Lambert for 1987’s Siesta — in the first four decades of her career, Foster said she’s now working more with women.
“It’s been a shift that’s a long time coming… But it came very, very late,” she added, noting that the prevailing bias against women directors has only “recently” changed in mainstream cinema.
Foster also hopes to take part in more French movies, maybe even direct a film in France. “That’s something I’ve always wanted to do and something that would be a great challenge for me,” she said.
Director Rebecca Zlotowski, shown here on the set of A Private Life, says she had long dreamed of directing a film featuring Jodie Foster.
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She urged American audiences to embrace learning to speak languages other than English.
“It’s surprising how Americans don’t hear other languages… how you can go your whole life without really hearing other languages spoken in your state,” she said. “We have to make an effort to connect to a wider world and understand that we’re all part of the same universe.”
The broadcast version was produced by Julie Depenbrock. The digital version was edited by Treye Green.
Lifestyle
Gene Hackman’s House Goes Up for Sale Less Than a Year After Deaths
Gene Hackman And Wife
Death House Hits Market For $6.25M
Published
Gene Hackman‘s New Mexico estate is officially up for sale … less than a year after he and his wife, Betsy Arakawa, were found dead in the sprawling compound.
Gene and Betsy’s Santa Fe house — which sits on a 53-acre estate in The Land of Enchantment — has hit the market with an asking price of $6.25 million.
At the time of their deaths, police body cam footage showed the place was in shambles, with rat feces and urine everywhere. But, we’re told the place has been completely cleaned up and looks absolutely amazing now!
The 13,000-square-foot estate sits in a gated community and consists of two separate buildings — the main 3-bedroom area, which features floor-to-ceiling windows, a grand living room, and a library, as well as the 3-bedroom guesthouse. The compound also includes a lap pool, hot tub, putting green and an actor’s studio.
Remember … Gene and his wife were found dead in their home last February 26 by maintenance workers after their bodies had been lying around for at least 9 days. Police said Hackman’s pacemaker registered its last known activity on February 17.
The Santa Fe County Medical Examiner ruled that Gene died at 95 from Alzheimer’s disease and Betsy died at 65 from hantavirus infection — a disease spread by rat feces and urine.
Tara S. Earley and Ricky Allen of Sotheby’s International Realty hold the listing … but they told The Wall Street Journal they know this house won’t be everyone’s cup of tea.
Lifestyle
Tig Notaro talks growing up in Mississippi, parenthood and her friendship with poet Andrea Gibson : Wild Card with Rachel Martin
A note from Wild Card host Rachel Martin: Tig Notaro has built a career dissecting her own life. In her stand up, podcasts, even a TV show – Tig has brought her audience into some of the most personal parts of her own living: growing up as a gay kid in the South, falling in love with her wife, and her struggle through breast cancer.
But in her latest creative project, Tig turned the spotlight on a close friend of hers – the poet Andrea Gibson. Andrea died from cancer last year. Tig produced a documentary about Andrea’s incredible life – it’s called “Come See Me in the Good Light.”
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