Laura Linney
Roundabout's Icy Liaisons, With a Freeze-Dried Laura Linney
I disagree with the critics who feel that Laura Linney has been miscast as the infamous sexual predator the Marquise de Merteuil in Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Ms. Linney’s controversial performance in the erratic Roundabout revival is living very dangerously indeed. Its unyielding ice coldness is overstylized, riveting in both its originality and waywardness, and ultimately a self-negating mistake, like an experiment in the wrong venue. But which other actress on Broadway, I wonder, is as daring as Ms. Linney? read more »
Manhattan Weekend Box Office: Savages and Schadenfreude, Awake a Snoozer
With only one wide release—MGM’s Awake (No. 6)—the box office had a slow weekend, with few, if any, changes either here or nationally in the top five. But that didn’t keep The Savages (No. 8) from making an impression. On two screens in the city, the Tamara Jenkins family drama starring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Laura Linney averaged close to $40,000—a stellar opening for such a slow time.
In the wake of so many dysfunctional Thanksgiving dinners, perhaps receipts were buoyed by people’s desire to see a family more messed up than their own. The film has also certainly been helped by the skillful word-of-mouth and marketing campaign launched by Fox Searchlight—they of Sideways and Little Miss Sunshine fame. Don’t be surprised if this one meets the same Oscar fate—both good and bad. read more »
Laura Linney Works Like a Brit! But Without the TV Mystery and Costume Drama Parts
Laura Linney--whom we think of as a certain kind of actress--says she’s the happiest she’s ever been. (Definitely a good thing; see: The Nanny Diaries, The Squid and the Whale, The Truman Show, et cetera ad infinitum.) The 43-year-old actress' new movie The Savages, directed by Tamara Jenkins and costarring Philip Seymour Hoffman, opens tomorrow. In the film, the esteemed actors do turns playing siblings who are faced with putting their father, played by Philip Bosco, in a nursing home. Ms. Linney’s character, Wendy, a down-and-out playwright fast approaching her 40th birthday, lives in the shadow of her more successful brother, a fellow writer. "For me, things are nothing but good," she said in an interview with Reuters. "For Wendy, she's living like she's 28 [years old] or even 11. She just hasn't had the opportunity to move forward."
Ms. Linney has heaped seven films on her professional plate over the last two years. "I just really enjoy it,” she said. “I find it constantly challenging. It's taken me to parts of the world I never thought I'd see and I've worked with people whom I admire and learned from. It's pretty damn good."
Nothing Primitive About These Savages: Drama of Dad’s Dementia
Director Tamara Jenkins (Slums of Beverly Hills) delivers that rare gift for the holidays: a meaningful movie about the ravages of age. read more »
The Linney Diaries: Raised on the Upper East Side, But Laura Was No Mrs. X
Actress Laura Linney was raised on the Upper East Side, but that doesn’t mean she was a natural to play the snooty mom-employer Mrs. X (whom she called “a mess—just a mess!”) in the film version of The Nanny Diaries. “It was one of those things where the clothes did so much for me,” said the chestnut-tressed Ms. Linney, 43, clad in a slim-fitting black Donna Karan frock at WASP bastion Swifty’s on Monday, Aug. read more »















