The
story for Uptown Girls and its party girl heroine, Molly Gunn, originated from a
real-life "Molly" muse, producer Allison Jacobs.
Five
years ago, Jacobs was an ambitious receptionist at Greenestreet Films, who told
partners John Penotti and Fisher Stevens her idea for a story about the
vivacious daughter of a rock star. "It
sounded wonderful," says Penotti, "but you hear a million great ideas,
and only when they're executed do you get a sense of whether they'd work."
To further flesh out her idea, Jacobs hired writer Julia Dahl to work
with her on a first draft. When a
Greenestreet staffer read it, she immediately told the partners that it was
something special. "She said,
'Fisher, it's unbelievable,'" Stevens recalls, "so I read it and I
loved the characters."
Jacobs'
inspiration, she says, was both fantasy and reality. When she read scripts, she felt she never came across
anything that resembled her favorite movies.
Films like Breakfast at Tiffany's, The Goodbye Girl and Annie Hall
appealed to her for the romantic stories they told as well as their idealized
New York City setting. "I
mean, I had to live on Seventy-first Street when I moved to New York because
Audrey Hepburn lived there in Breakfast at Tiffany's," laughs Jacobs.
"Growing up in Bethesda, Maryland, I was so happy to watch these
films. And then I'd want to come to
New York for my birthday."
Her
other inspiration was her experience as a babysitter to a precocious little
girl. Despite her efforts to be the
boss, Jacobs was continually surprised by her young charge.
It made her think about how much a child could influence an adult.
"I really wanted to make a movie about how kids know the
truth," she says. "They
see the truth, they speak the truth - if anything, adults are in denial."
Greenestreet
was charmed by the story and began developing the project, a process which took
about five years. "Movies take
a while to develop," says Stevens, "but the script just kept getting
better."
John
Penotti had produced A Price above Rubies for director Boaz Yakin, and gave him
the Uptown Girls script. Yakin was
best known at the time for his gritty drama Fresh, so "Boaz is not
necessarily the first person you'd think of to direct Uptown Girls," says
Penotti. "But it goes to show
you that you never know. He read
the script initially to give us input as a writer and then just fell in love
with this character." In the
meantime, Yakin went off to make Remember the Titans, but kept in touch with his
friends at Greenestreet. When he
became available, he told them he wanted Uptown Girls to be his next film.
"We
feel so fortunate that Boaz agreed to direct it," says Penotti,
"because he understood the character, and how the comedy could be so
elegant and at the same time really accessible.
He also understood how to make New York shine and sparkle like it does in
the film."
When
the project finally moved into active production mode, it seemed the wait had
been worth it, because what turned out to be Uptown Girls' ideal cast had just
come of age.
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[ Ray's
Tea Party ] [ Ray
at the Ballet ] [ Molly
and Ray ]
[ Molly's Night Life ] [ Molly's
Friends ] [ A Day In The City
With Molly ]
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