Richard Gere & Diane Lane Interview

By: Izumi Hasegawa

Izumi Hasegawa: It’s always great to see you two on screen. Did you know that the other was already signed to this
when you got on board? How does it feel to be reunited once again?

Diane Lane: I remember this phone call that we had. I was in Toronto, and it was January of 2007.

Richard Gere: This is going to be a Rashomon, by the way. Her story is going to be totally different than mine.

DL: You said, “So, you’re really going to do this, huh?” We were both like, “Yeah. We are really going to go for it.” All
these conversations had been had in sections. By the time we finally got on the phone with each other, we were a little
pregnant. It was like that — we knew we were on the track, yet still with a question mark at the end, just a little bit. Then
I’ll have to say that I finally got the chance to see Lackawanna Blues and that sealed the deal for me. Richard was so
enamored with George C. Wolfe as a person.

RG: It was vaguely like that, but — is the producer here? So I can say anything I want? The script was not perfect. They
had brought this to me a couple of years before we actually ended up making it. I kept going, “This needs a lot of work. I
get where it could go. I think I understand how it probably functions the best for the story it’s telling, but the script is not
happening.”

DL: It read like a play for a little while, like two people without being fleshed out.

RG: In a way, it didn’t give us space to let anything organic happen. It was trying to work it too much in an obvious kind
of way. Anyhow, through the process of that, it still wasn’t coming together. Diane, of course, was perfect for the part.
There wasn’t a director involved. It was all kind of fluffy, out in the air somewhere. Then, I think, for me, it was
probably meeting George [Wolfe] that I said, “Okay, here is a smart guy.” We just talked about movies and storytelling
when he came over to my office. Diane was in Toronto and we were in New York. She didn’t have a chance to meet
him, but you obviously spoke on the phone. We spent quite a bit of time just talking about things in general, to see where
we were coming from. I had a comfort level with him. As Diane said, we spoke about it and I said, “Look, I feel good
with this guy. We’ll develop it, we’ll work on it — it won’t be easy, but we’ll find what there is in this material that
resonates with us. We’ll try to bring something to it.” It wasn’t easy, believe me. It wasn’t like, “Here’s the script. Do
you want to do it or not?” “Yes, let’s go.” It really was a slow burn over quite a bit of time.

IH: Because George had done a lot of stage work, did he direct differently than film directors?

RG: I don’t think so. He has a sense of the theatrical. There are a couple of scenes in the movie that maybe a movie
director wouldn’t have thought of. He thinks about music a lot. He designed a couple of scenes around music. He
specifically had something in his mind that would be the music of those scenes. We improvised a lot within that, but I
think he’s more of an idea guy, coming from the world of theatre. What’s the idea of the scene? Then we would
construct something that would make that work. I think that a lot of movie directors tend to go by the feeling of it and
find a way to film the feeling, rather than something that is more manifest in the behavior.

DL: He would talk a lot also about the energy of the scene. He talked about the house being a character in the story that
goes through the storm, as we are part of the story going through our storm. There are these parallel lines — it’s very
theatrically described.

RG: George is incredibly articulate also. A lot of film directors, especially that don’t come out of the theatre, find it very
hard to articulate what they are trying to do.

DL: That’s true — communicating.

RG: George absolutely can communicate. That is his life in the theatre. You learn how to do that there. If you can’t say it,
then you probably are not going to get it on stage. You need to have that level of communication. Theatre is a verbal
medium, and George is incredibly verbal. In a way, that made it easier for us because we weren’t thinking, “What is he
talking about?”

DL: We just nodded a lot.

RG: “What does he want here?” Sometimes you do that in a movie. You try 15 different things and the director is still not
giving you anything. You kind of go, “Okay, look — I’ve done everything I could do. What do you want?” But George
isn’t really like that. No, he has a very clear sense that he can verbalize.

IH: This is the third time you are working together. You have great chemistry. What did you discover, this time, working
together?

RG: I discovered that she’s still 18 and I grew older. That’s what I discovered.

DL: I am just enjoying the fact that this was the first time we’ve heard that question, and I know we’re going to be
hearing it a few more times. I’m trying to come up with really funny answers for every single time. First thought that
came to mind was that you could teach an old dog new tricks. Then, see? There was no laugh. It’s true that Richard and
I have this thing. It feels like five minutes ago we were in Germany doing this table, and it was eight years ago.

RG: I don’t remember that at all.

DL: It’s another worm hole where I keep popping up in your past. It’s wonderful to have the comfort level of all our past
conversations and experiences to not have to wear kid gloves. We can get right in there and trust each other’s boundaries,
or not be worried about them, walking on egg shells like you would with somebody you just met, in terms of
communication.

RG: Or someone who is crazy.

DL: At least we know that we don’t have to wonder.

RG: We don’t have to worry. We absolutely know for sure. I think what Diane said is true. If you have a built-in level of
respect and trust, and an openness to be yourself, and especially in film acting, then you are way ahead. It allows for a
deeper and uncensored communication.

DL: You can get there by take two instead of take seven, hopefully. George liked that idea.

IH: What do you think this film teaches us about life?

DL: Teaches us? Interesting — I have to go in another room and think about that one.

RG: She is stuck on the teaching. I don’t know that the movie is teaching anything. Aren’t movies that work probably a
mirror in some way, so we can see ourselves? I don’t think this is a story for teenagers. There is not a lot in this for
teenagers.

DL: Except they will see themselves with their parents.

RG: When they become parents, then they will see it like we all do. I think this is about people who have been through a
lot. They know themselves enough that they know what’s emotionally and psychologically real and what isn’t. It’s very
hard to be a kid and know that you are just floating on hormones. I think these people have a certain sense of dignity and
responsibility about them that they listen to each other. They can be affected by each other, but they trust their basic
instincts that they are going towards the good.

DL: Right, and they have a sense of what that is as well. That’s the joke about the old dog and new tricks. When you
meet someone who challenges you on a level of what you’ve become comfortable with about yourself — you really
thought you had it figured out — then somebody challenges you, that is very affecting. To open that door of being willing
to reassess one’s self, one’s ambitions in life, and say “I can do better” and “What would that look like?” because
somebody else has forced you to open your eyes where you didn’t want to look, that is very endearing. That is what
intimacy is — into me you see. So when somebody sees something about you that you would rather not look at yourself,
it can definitely get the adrenaline going.

IH: I could really see that your character was torn about this decision she had to make about her ex-husband. That is
really a testament to your performance — that we are going through that with you. But in real life, would you consider
giving a guy like that a second chance?

RG: The camera should be on this guy — that was brilliant.

IH: It works for the movie.

DL: You mean to string it along? I don’t know, I guess I would have to parlay that into the best answer I can. That’s to
say that it’s not unheard of to manipulate the children into taking sides in a relationship with the parents. I like the fact that
the movie touched on that because all is fair in war and love. When you get the kids to take sides, that’s cheating — that’
s below the belt. They are not supposed to be used as balancing the scales of power within the emotional dynamics of the
adults. It’s very unfair. That, to me, was worth visiting. You say, “Well, when that happens, then we are justified in
saying it’s an unfair fight.” I don’t want to play with somebody who is going to fight not fair.

IH: Of course, everyone is talking about the great chemistry in the films you do together. To me, the most effective part
of this film is that we really felt you guys falling for each other. It really, really took off when you guys were writing each
other letters. Maybe you recorded the voice over at the same time or maybe you didn’t. How was that process different?

RG: It’s interesting because that wasn’t part of the original script. That was an addendum and it was in trying to figure
out where the movie was in the editing process. The movie was strange. In a way, it ended earlier than that, not in terms
of the time but in terms of our story. It actually ended earlier. The letters, I think, are from the book. A lot of it was from
the book.

DL: Yes, letting people into the later part of our relationship…

RG: It kept us alive as a couple until almost the end of the movie. That actually wasn’t part of the original structure.

DL: It was conveniently available — hindsight: 20/20.

RG: The novelist knew that, though. I guess, when we were fashioning the script, we didn’t think that was necessary. In
terms of storytelling, the kind of mysterious ways that stories are conveyed, then it was required.

IH: You had never read the novel prior to this?

RG: Not prior to making the movie.

IH: Have you read or are you aware of his other novels?

DL: Oh yeah, very aware.

RG: I wasn’t very aware. I’ve seen a couple of the movies. I thought The Notebook was a terrific film, but I had never
read any of the books.

DL: So many books, so little time. I want to say one thing about the letter-writing. I love the rebelliousness of snail mail. I’
m very sentimental about anything that can arrive with a postage stamp on it, how quickly things become relics. There is
something about paper, the other person’s hands and breath, and pennants were upon that paper. It’s tactile.

RG: It’s time.

DL: You can touch the same object that the other person touched just for you.

RG: Time and effort had to be committed to this thing. Care was taken.

DL: And you couldn’t just edit and leave no trace of your change of thought like you can now.

IH: Do you do much corresponding with anyone by snail mail?

DL: There are always birthdays. I’m exaggerating slightly. Even my daughter, who just turned 15, got some letters in the
mail. She was ecstatic. She had forgotten that existed as an option.

RG: My son is the same way. I have an eight-year-old son. When he gets a letter from an old teacher who writes from
vacation somewhere around the world, he knows the difference when a card comes and someone just signs it. But if
someone actually wrote sentences, it’s huge. It touches your heart in a totally different way.

IH: Can you recall your first impressions of each other?

DL: Yes.

RG: This is new territory. I thought we had done everything. Okay, go ahead.

DL: Ladies first, suddenly? Okay, here we go. I don’t know what to do now. I was very insecure and I think it
manifested itself by coming off age-appropriate for 18. Just a little defensive and a little bitchy maybe?

RG: Yeah.

DL: And I got the part! It was interesting because I was filming Streets of Fire and I had to come out and do the
chemistry meeting. Can you imagine flying out with that in mind? No pressure or anything. You walk in the room and you
are already pissed off. So I was just: “Hi, I’m here. Do you like me?” That’s how I felt.

RG: I just went down the worm hole. It’s Francis Ford Coppola and me. She’s worked with him two or three films, so
you had a comfort level with him for sure.

DL: Earlier that year, basically. I was like, “Now you want me to audition? This is unfair.” I thought I was in like Flynn. I
was making all Cathy Moriarty’s price down, that’s why they had me in there. I was such a bitch.

RG: She really remembers everything. I have no memory of this whatsoever. I remember she was an absolute doll, no
question about it. What had been out at that point — that was the adult you and not kid you?

DL: Six Pack?

RG: It was one of the ones you had done with Francis and it was out already.

DL: Sure, The Outsiders and Rumble Fish were probably out.

RG: Yeah, and absolutely adorable, watch-able, and something mysterious going on. But she was very self-possessed at
the same time. She came in with all those qualities — precociousness, in terms of being able to deal with a situation. At
18, I couldn’t deal with anything. I couldn’t even speak. I could see immediately how she could play this part and bring a
quirky “I don’t care” attitude. Underneath, you knew that she desperately did. That’s one of the tricks of film acting.
Underneath is the opposite of what you are showing, almost always. The subtlety with which you can communicate, that
is probably the degree that you succeed, or not nonverbally. It has to be done quick and without relying on words. She
has always had that quality. And very defensive yes, I do remember that much. You were leaving the room and like,
“Wow, okay.” I woke up the next day and I called Francis and said, “She’s the one. She is absolutely the one.” But he
had made up his mind already.

DL: Well, I’m glad to hear that after all this time. No, seriously.

RG: And Cathy Moriarty was more expensive.

DL: So it’s true.

IH: Can you talk about the love scenes? Is it harder to do it when you are friends, or does that make it easier? Do you
laugh more?

DL: Oh yeah, we laugh a lot.

RG: Should we tell them? It was body doubles. We weren’t even there.

DL: They burned it all in later. You know how when they do movies where they save the stunt for the end?That’s in case
something bad happens. That’s what they did with the love scene for us — in case one of us got hurt. “Oh, my back!”
Sorry.

RG: I guess it seems to me that they went pretty quickly. We didn’t have to labor them.

DL: George was so funny that day.

RG: George was nervous.

DL: He couldn’t be in the room. He had to be in another room with the monitors and saying, “Go for it, honey. You know
how to do it.”

RG: And she does.

DL: That was the royal “we” he was speaking to, because it takes two.

IH: You shot on location in North Carolina, right?

DL: Yes, and the house was being reclaimed by the sea, as you can see in the trailer.

IH: How was that shooting? Was the storm real? Were any of the sea caps and stuff real?

RG: There is footage in this that was shot during tests before I got there. Did we both get there about the same time?
Anyhow, the storm hit. There was a hurricane. It took much of the set. That house was gone.

DL: The stairs were gone, all kinds of things.

RG: And the beach was gone. The storm took the beach away so we had to rebuild the beach. They were doing camera
tests, so a lot of the footage of that storm is in the movie now. That thing was totally out of control. We had to find other
things to shoot while they rebuilt the beach, the house, and before we even started shooting. It was serious.

DL: We were standing on the stairs of the house and there was a moment where Richard is upstairs, I’m downstairs, but
we don’t know that both of us are having a similar moment within the house. We can’t see each other at all. The ocean
waves just blew up my dress. I screamed and ran away, “Cut, cut, cut! That was not part of the scene.” I said, “Well
neither was the ocean coming up my dress. What do you want me to do? Pretend it’s not happening and nobody will
see?” I don’t think we could use that take.

RG: There were wild tides too, as I recall. We started shooting something on the beach and if we didn’t get it done
quickly, the tides would be all the way up past the shore where we were shooting.

DL: The horses would have been swimming.

IH: Do you look for properties to do together? Do you read something and think, “Oh God, Diane would be good for
that,” or “Richard would be good for that”?

RG: I keep trying to find things that I can’t do with her, because it’s so obvious that we should be doing everything
together. Every time I read something, it’s always Diane, isn’t it? I read and go, “It’s Diane, isn’t it?”

DL: That’s very sweet. He’s buttering me up for kill here, I love it. There were a couple of times that have been close
calls that didn’t happen.

RG: We are both very picky also. We are very picky and don’t necessarily work a lot.

DL: When you have kids, you factor in where, when, how long. I remember you saying, “Bring Eleanor, she’ll like the
Antarctic.” I said, “Wait, let me get this right. We’ll be in an ice breaker on a big metal ship for how many weeks?”

RG: I had forgotten about that one.

DL: Lots and lots of penguins.

RG: There was a movie we were going to shoot in Antarctica. Again, “It’s Diane, isn’t it?” She was perfect for it.

DL: She’s too skinny. She can’t handle the cold.

RG: I said, we’re going to go down to Iraq. Well, after we came back from Iraq, I didn’t want to do it anymore. It was
so hard, everything about it. It was hard to get down there, hard to function when you are down there, we were trying to
do camera tests…it was impossible.

DL: You can’t form consonants; it’s too cold.

RG: And if a storm comes in, you can be stuck there for three months.

DL: That’s the fine print in the contract.

RG: And not being able to work?

DL: Well, the sun is always out — you can just run out and shoot.

RG: Yeah, we didn’t make that one.

IH: What are each of you looking for these days in scripts?

RG: I look less than an hour from my house. That’s one very powerful criteria. Every time I have thought, “Well, I am
desperate to make a movie where I’m an out-of-work musician who has one leg…” whatever it is, but very specific.

DL: I’m seeing a top hat.

RG: Those never happen. It’s always something that you were working on this and then something comes in, you look at
it…

DL: It’s adopting you.

RG: Oh, yeah. It’s always a surprise. I have never had anything that was part of the development process that worked —
ever.

DL: I really want to play a bitch in a comedy. There it is, so I’m open to any submissions. No, I’m half kidding.

RG: She’s not kidding at all.

DL: Whenever she says she is kidding, then you know. That’s kind of territory for me — being sympathetic is a burden I
would like to shirk, at this point. Something like Anjelica Huston in The Grifters or something.

IH: You both share pretty important pivotal scenes in this film with James Franco. Each of you obviously had your
separate time with him. What was that experience like for both of you?

RG: It was also very quick. It is a small part. In movies you care about, the small parts are incredibly meaningful. You’ve
seen that in movies where they will hire any actor to play a small part and it destroys the movie. You get nothing out of
the scene. You start questioning basic reality. To have really terrific actors in small parts is maybe the most important
thing in a film. It’s just the fact that he was willing to do it and also brought so much of himself. I wasn’t there when he
shot his scenes with Diane, but to see how much he brought to those was wonderful. During the storm sequence in
Ecuador, we actually were creating the storm. There was a faulty rain line and the whole set started to collapse and we
were underneath it. I ran one direction and he ran the other. The powers that be came in and said, “We are stopping
production. Someone will get hurt.” This was the last day we had with him. He had to go off and shoot something else. I
said, “Okay, let’s take a deep breath here. We’re not going to do that, but let’s shoot. We need a couple of close-ups and
we can cut in what we have. We can finish the big stuff later.” We did that, we took a deep breath, went in and did some
tight close-ups. It was something we could control with not a lot of craziness around. In the end, we didn’t need the rest
of the big stuff. We had enough to make it work. It was enormous pressure to get everything done with him in the time
we had allotted. Everything he did is in the film. It adds a lot to the film.

IH: Diane, Richard has a sexy, timeless quality that has made him such an icon. Why do you think that is?

DL: Oh, my word.

RG: You don’t have to answer that question.

DL: I don’t know. I feel like he might know what I would say.

RG: While she is thinking, I’ll tell you a story. I was shooting a film in Sarajevo and we ended up calling it The Hunting
Party. We did a press conference there because we were shooting in the community. It was about this size, and there
was a very young and shy girl in the back. She raised her hand and said, “On behalf of three generations in my family, I
would like to thank you for continuing to make movies. We love you. On behalf of myself, my mother and my
grandmother.” I thought how sweet that was, but it also gave me a sense that I’m really old. I’ve been doing this a long
time.

DL: I was just remembering that wonderful movie you made with Mr. Altman.

RG: Dr. T and the Women.

DL: Yes, and I love that movie. One thing I always felt about Richard, whether it’s on screen or in person, is that he has
this ability to make you feel as though he can see right through you. He can see the core of you. I don’t know if its true,
but it might as well be true because I have nothing opposing that. Women just feel basically disrobed, and that’s a plus.

RG: A plus for me too.

DL: At the same time, I do recall when we were filming The Cotton Club and you would come in the mornings and tell
me what color my aura was.

RG: Hey!

DL: That was a good thing! I didn’t know that was the thing you were embarrassed about of all the stories we have. I
think it’s adorable. So, he was right every time. I would look up the color and he was right. I was defensive that day, or
whatever. It’s true — you can’t really pull the wool over Richard’s eyes. It’s very disarming and it’s charming.

RG: And annoying.

DL: A little annoying. It works to his advantage.

IH: I’m looking ahead to Halloween and wondering which of your characters might make good costumes…

DL: I’m going to write that one down and tell my daughter. I will say, “See what I do for a living, dear? This gentleman
said this to me today and I had no comeback. What should I have said?” I like that. I have a visual from it, but I don’t
know what to say.

IH: Maybe the rock star from Streets of Fire? That would be cool.

DL: I know you are serious.

RG: And that is what’s deeply frightening about it — you are serious.

IH: Both of you are parents in real life. For each of you, did any of the circumstances you found yourself in resonate with
you as a parent? Did you go through any of this yourself as a child?

DL: I’ve certainly yelled at people on the phone over parenting issues. I’ve certainly had comeuppance moments with
teenagers. You can’t be popular and be productive very often. They don’t go together sometimes, but that is a very adult
lesson. It requires a lot of finesse that sometimes escapes us and, in hindsight, we wish we could have done better. That
is a very humbling, parental reality. You learn it as you go. You don’t get any rehearsal, and every kid is different.

RG: You do get a rehearsal.

DL: You do?

RG: Yeah, you’ve been married a couple of times. I’ve been married a couple of times.

DL: That didn’t help me as a parent. You mean my first son, the sons. The husbands?

RG: What are you talking about?

DL: The joke is: “Have you met my first born?”

RG: “No, that’s my husband.” Yeah. The clinical psychologists in the back row, could they come up now please?
Lane, Gere finally get their happily ever after in
'Rodanthe'
By Anthony Breznican, USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES — Romantic chemistry? Diane Lane and
Richard Gere aren't sure how they got that reputation,
especially since their past on-screen pairings always skewed
toward the dysfunctional.
In 1984's The Cotton Club, she was a sultry jazz singer and he
was a troubled cornet player.

They joined again 2002's Unfaithful, earning Lane an Oscar
nomination and causing a stir with its steamy scenes — though
not with Gere. He played the cuckolded husband.

Now, with the film adaptation of the Nicholas Sparks tearjerker
Nights in Rodanthe, opening Friday, Gere and Lane finally get
to rush into each other's arms.

Lane plays a mother of two who is separated from her husband
but weighing whether to rebuild the relationship. She escapes to
oversee a seaside inn on the Outer Banks of North Carolina,
where she meets a doctor (Gere) who is trying to reconstruct
his life after he realizes his own marriage and relationship with
his son (James Franco) have collapsed.

Naturally, being stranded alone together at the gothic beachside
home — as a hurricane is about to strike — triggers feelings of
love between them.

It was producer Denise Di Novi (Message in a Bottle) who "had
the vision," Lane, 43, says, sitting with Gere in The Polo
Lounge of the Beverly Hills Hotel. "She said, 'I want you guys
paired up together again because of the C-word.'
Gere, 59, puts a hand on her arm and laughs. "There are a lot of C-words," he says.

Lane is stunned. "I mean 'chemistry!' "After a weekend of interviews, the statement "Talk about your chemistry
…" was repeated to the point that Lane doesn't even want to
say the word out loud.

"If you want to be a scientist about it, fine," she says, "but don't ask the petri dish to explain it to you."

The template for Rodanthe epitomizes another C-word — chick flick — though Gere protests that it's more. The
male characters,quarreling fathers and sons, are given substantial stories, he points out.

"What would you call Bridges of Madison County? Is that a women's picture?" he asks. "Because it's definitely in
that world, there's no
question about that. But its not like, I forget the title, the uh …Traveling Pants? It's not that. And that to me is a
women's picture."

Lane laughs. "You could have The Brotherhood of the Traveling Pants. But it would be a very different movie."

"Make it Biker Jackets instead," Gere says.

Though it may not be the newest genre, straight-up romance is something new for them together. Most famous
screen couples end up
playing similar roles in similar movies.

Gere and Lane tend to be more experimental.

Cotton Club was a 1930s crime thriller and a train wreck behind the scenes. "I saw it the other night (on cable)
and was freaking out,"Lane says. "It is a beautiful oil painting of a film."

"Which film is that?" Gere asks.

"The Cotton Club," she says. "It just needed the patina of time to be fully appreciated."

Gere rolls his eyes. "It's astonishing that even the narrative holds together." He laughs and says, "There was
never a script."

In Unfaithful, they were more at odds than in love.

Neither is sure why their film relationship has evolved this way. "We never plan these things," Lane says.

"I think next time, we need to do something that's less naturalistic, something outsized," Gere says.

"This is a fairy tale already, so outsize that," she says.

Even the name "Rodanthe," a real town on North Carolina's Hatteras Island, sounds as if it might be next door to
Narnia. "Or from Arabian Nights," Lane says.

Even the seaside estate where the characters meet, with its wooden towers and jutting decks, is a kind of hazy
fantasy.

"It's this fantasy dreamscape … It's someplace else. Your imagination. Once upon a time …" Gere says.

Asked to share some bold romantic experience of his own, Gere (who is married to actress Carey Lowell) defers
to his co-star. "I've
never had anything like that," he says, presumably joking. "But Diane has had a lot of this. So I'm going to go
away and come back when she's done recounting."

Lane (who is married to Josh Brolin), laughs and says, "I can't compete with things that even happened in our
film."

Her character builds boxes out of driftwood and stuffs them with mementos, and she offers that she has a
similar habit.

"I have different boxes for different people. I'm a very sentimental person, and I have to come to terms with
this because it's very hard
for me to part with even a concert ticket. It'll be on the fridge for a year, and then I get embarrassed and have
to put it in a box."

It's Gere's turn again, but he still demurs. He stands and says he needs to finish packing for his flight home to
New York. "Come on,"
he says. "You could fill two pages with what Diane just said. You've got no more space."
CS Videos: Nights in Rodanthe Interviews

Debra Winger and Richard Gere: 'Officer and a Gentleman' Reunion?
September 16, 2008

By Roger Friedman

Richard Gere
Officer and a Gentleman' Reunion?

I told you a few weeks ago that Debra Winger is likely to make her Broadway debut soon in “Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner?” in the Katharine Hepburn part.
But this production has been delayed as producers hunt for an actor to play opposite Debra, in the Spencer Tracy role.
Now I’m told that an offer has gone out to none other than Richard Gere. If he accepts, it would reunite Gere and Winger
for the first time since their hit movie, “An Officer and a Gentleman.”
Previously, producers had gone to Bill Pullman, but he was unavailable.
As I also reported, Amanda Bynes and Mekhi Phifer are more or less set for the parts of the young couple who seek to
marry despite their racial differences. LaTonya Richardson, the great actress wife of Samuel L. Jackson, has signed on for
the role of the maid.

Gere’s one and only stint on Broadway was in “Bent,” back in the 1980s. But he never fails to surprise, even getting an
Oscar nomination for his role as Billy Flynn in the musical hit movie “Chicago.”

And what would a Gere/Winger pairing do for the “Dinner” box office? Let’s just say that if this happens, the producers will
be doing more dancing than Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick combined when they were just playing producers!

By the way, just in case you were wondering, this is the first time “Dinner” has been on stage. The 1967 movie was
directed by the late, legendary Stanley Kramer.
Richard Gere Recent News Page XI
Richard Gere and Diane Lane are... Finding Love
The Second Time  
Dotson Rader
September 14, 2008

'Happiness is not about being loved, it’s about
loving someone else,” says Richard Gere.

Gere is in a hotel room in Manhattan talking about
love. At 59, he still looks every inch the romantic
dreamboat he was
when he first won movie stardom in American
Gigolo in 1980. Tall, buff, silver-haired, handsome,
and suave, he is
dressed in a tight T-shirt and fitted jeans.
Charming company, he smiles a lot.

“I’m talking about genuine love with a committed
partner,” he adds. “Because she is there, you grow,
you feel more. You
have greater compassion. Real love frees you. It
breaks the bonds of selfishness. It makes you
larger.”

Gere grins broadly because he is talking about
himself. Today, he is in a happy second marriage
after a failed first marriage
and a series of dead-end affairs.

His new movie, Nights in Rodanthe, opening Sept.
26 and co-starring Diane Lane, is about the
courage to move on when
your marriage is over and you need to be open to
loving again. Its story is similar to the personal
experiences of Gere and
Lane—each of whom found new love in second
marriages that work.

“A marriage is a miracle every day,” says Lane, 43.
“I can’t tell you what the secret is. But there’s
nothing more
challenging in life than an intimate, one-on-one
relationship where there is such complete exposure
to each other. There’s
nothing riskier.”

Lane’s first love was French movie heartthrob
Christopher Lambert (Greystoke and Highlander).
They met when she was
19 and wed four years later, in 1988.
“I wanted somebody to belong to and somebody to belong to me,” she says. “But intoxication with someone is a very
dangerous territory to be in. The idea of losing your identity to someone else should have been a red flag for me. I was
really in love with Christopher, but I was trusting in something that I hadn’t tested at all.”

Lane and Lambert divorced in 1994, one year after the birth of their daughter, Eleanor.

“When your marriage ends, when you lay that down and walk away from it, you have to grow some new limbs,” she
says. “You’re like a little lizard that loses its tail. You feel like you’re going to die, but you don’t.”

Wounded by the failure of her marriage, Lane had no intention of ever marrying again. She rarely dated for the next decade
and devoted herself to her acting career and to raising her daughter. She made some fine movies, notably A Walk on the
Moon with Viggo Mortensen, The Perfect Storm with George Clooney, and Under the Tuscan Sun. Unfaithful, her
previous film with Richard Gere, won Lane a 2002 Best Actress Academy Award nomination. She finally remarried in
2004, to actor Josh Brolin, 40. Together they’re parenting three children.

“You’ve got to have emotional largesse, especially in a blended family, and Josh does,” Lane says. “It means putting your
ego aside.”

I ask Lane why her marriage to Brolin is successful, unlike her union with Lambert.

“Because I didn’t go into this marriage blind,” she replies. “I now can trust my choices. Before, I was so lost. I’d rather
have the sanity of my maturity than to be that young again.”

Gere says he was similarly unprepared for his 1991 marriage to supermodel Cindy Crawford. Both Crawford and Gere
already were world-famous when they married.

Although Gere had established a suave style onscreen, playing the romantic hero in movies like Pretty Woman and An
Officer and a Gentleman, his personal life was different.

“I was shy and insecure,” he says. “There was some self-loathing, certainly. I was the most self-conscious, full-of-crap
kid. I know the forces that were playing on me. Suddenly everyone wants to know about you, and everyone figures they’
re going to penetrate you. You have an animal reaction. You want to run. The sexual image people had of me, I knew that
was not me. I was playing characters.”

Gere also was playing the field, before and after his marriage to Crawford. But none of his romantic relationships lasted,
until he met actress Carey Lowell and fell in love. Lowell, now 47, was once a “Bond girl” and an actress on TV’s Law &
Order.

“I believe we’re drawn to certain people because this affinity for them is built into us already,” Gere says. “Your mind
asks, ‘Why am I attracted to her?’ I wasn’t looking for someone to complete me, that’s for sure. But your heart rushes to
this person even when everyone around you is saying, ‘You’re crazy. You can’t do that!’”

They married in 2002, two years after the birth of their son, Homer, now 8.

“Our marriage is brilliant because of Carey,” he says. “She’s a fellow traveler with me on the voyage. We’re partners,
honest mirrors in which to see ourselves and grow and change. We help each other. It is love without ego. And that’s a
big deal for any of us—to back off our egos and be there for someone else. That’s why people get married, isn’t it,
because they want to be with that person?

“I think with Carey I realized that, wow, I can actually have a child with this great woman and not be afraid of doing it,”
he says. “This wonderful child is now in our lives. I’m nuts about my son! He fills me with joy. You have to make time
for a child, but it’s enormously satisfying.” Gere shakes his head at the wonder of it all, smiling. “That’s love, too.”
Counter
September 16, 2008
RICHARD GERE is in talks to reteam with his AN OFFICER + A GENTLEMAN co-star DEBRA WINGER on Broadway.
Gere is the favourite to replace Bill Pullman in the upcoming revival of Guess Who's Coming To Dinner? opposite
Winger. according to FoxNews.com.
Pullman was forced to pull out of the production because of a reported scheduling conflict.
If Gere accepts the role, it will be his first Broadway stint since he appeared in Bent in the early 1980s.
The play is based on the beloved 1968 movie, which starred Kathryn Hepburn and Spencer Tracy as the
concerned parents of a young woman who brings a black doctor home as her fiance.
Amanda Bynes has been lined up to play the couple's daughter in the revival.
Richard Gere and Carey Lowell
leaves Madeo restaurant in West Hollywood
Los Angeles, California - September 13, 2008
Richard Gere and Diane Lane
on
Entertainment Tonight
September 11, 2008
Richard Gere and Diane Lane sit down with ET's Kevin Frazier to
talk about the hurricane that swept over the set of their new film
'Nights of Rodanthe' that was filmed in the Outter Banks of North
Carolina. Gere says, "We came to shoot [and the movie] takes
place in a hurricane and in fact a real hurricane had just come in
and destroyed the set!"

The two also talk about what it was like kissing on screen again.
"There is a comfort level that makes it easy for sure," Gere says
about his smooches with Lane.

First co-starring in 'The Cotton Club' in 1984 and then 18 years
later in 'Unfaithful,' Gere and Lane put their chemistry to the
test a third time in 'Rodanthe,' the story of a married mother
(Lane) who travels to a tiny North Carolina coastal town to
escape her personal demons. Tending to a friend's inn for the
weekend, she finds herself weathering a major storm with an
enticing doctor (Gere) -- and igniting a romance that could
change their lives forever.
'Nights in Rodanthe' is set to hit theaters on September 26
Richard Gere at the "Nights in Rodanthe" press conference at the Four Seasons Hotel on
September 13, 2008 in Beverly Hills, California.
Romantic sparks fly once again on screen as Richard Gere and Diane Lane reunite for their third movie
together, the romantic drama 'Nights in Rodanthe.' And "The Insider"'s own Cheryl Woodcock has the happy
pair all to herself! When it came to shooting the movie's love scene Cheryl asked Gere just how many takes
does a scene like that require?  
Gere said, "As many takes as we can have!"

First co-starring  in 'The Cotton Club' in 1984 and then 18 years later in 'Unfaithful,' Gere and Lane re-unite for
 'Rodanthe,' the story of a married mother (Lane) who travels to a tiny North Carolina coastal town to escape
her personal demons. Tending to a friend's inn for the weekend, she finds herself weathering a major storm
with an enticing doctor (Gere) -- and igniting a romance that could change their lives forever.

The two first met when Diane was 18 and they  say their latest movie requires that same chemistry they found
all those years ago. "There's no way this film ['Nights in Rodanthe'] would work if we couldn't pull off what
we have to do as actors together," Richard says.

Watch the interview
'Nights in Rodanthe' hits theaters September 26
September 15, 2008

Richard Gere: John McCain is 'Not the Guy I Knew'
September 15, 2008 11:00 AM

Actor Richard Gere sat down with "Extra" to promote his film "Nights in Rodanthe"
-- and the conversation quickly turned political!

"I know John McCain -- I always found him to be honest and straightforward," said
Gere. "I'm astonished by the lies coming out of his campaign -- this is not the guy I
knew."

The Hollywood icon teams up with "Unfaithful" co-star Diane Lane for "Rodanthe" --
and she revealed her feelings on their reunion sex scenes! "I think it gets more
awkward," Lane said, laughing. When asked about their spouses' reaction to their
steamy love scenes, Gere said, "I was just asking my wife about that -- she said,
'The only thing I get jealous about is that it's her doing it and not me.'"
Baltimore Orioles v New York Yankees
NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 21: Actor Richard Gere
stands on the field prior to the last regular season
game at Yankee Stadium between the Baltimore
Orioles and the New York Yankees on September
21, 2008 in the Bronx borough of New York City.
The Yankees are playing their final season in the
85 year old ball park and plan on moving into the
new Yankee Stadium across the street to start
the 2009 season.
Actor Richard Gere, left, talks with New York Yankees' Bobby Abreu before a
baseball game between the New York Yankees and the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday,
Sept. 21, 2008, at Yankee Stadium in New York. Sunday was the Yankees final
regular season home game played at Yankee Stadium.
(AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)
"Nights in Rodanthe" New York Premiere - Outside Arrivals
NEW YORK - SEPTMEBER 23: Actor Richard Gere attends the
premiere of 'Nights in Rodanthe' at the Ziegfeld Theatre on
September 23, 2008 in New York City.
Richard Gere leaving ABC studios after appearing on
'Live with Regis and Kelly' New York City, USA -
September 24, 2008
Richard Gere New York Premiere of 'Nights
in Rodanthe' at the Ziegfeld Theatre -
Arrivals New York City, USA -         
September 23, 2008
By Jonas Oliver | Article Date: 9/24/2008 10:13 AM
It’s not often these days that you hear men like Sidney Poitier, Michael Douglas or Mike Bloomberg
described as ‘sexy,’ but a new list out from the women at wowOwow.com thinks that these guys and a
slew of other fellows who have crossed the 50-year-old mark are just that. In their first annual photo
essay of the 50 sexiest men over 50, wowOwow.com contributors have come up with a list of
entertainers, politicians, businessmen, journalists and musicians they believe were bringing sexy back
before Justin Timberlake was even a Mouseketeer.

"Older men have just always been the sexiest to me," says Candice Bergen, one of the women
wowOwow.com, who was herself married to an older man, French director Louis Malle, at a young age.

That sentiment was echoed by fellow contributor Joan Juliet Buck who says, "We all know the glossy lure
and sad reality of cute men. The dream is a mature man who knows what he likes, knows himself, has
seen what life does, but still can laugh and has kept up his hope and is not bitter, who is curious,
enterprising and strong."

In addition to those already mentioned, here is a look at some of the mature gentleman that still rev up
the engines of some of the most successful and iconic women in America:
Mikhail Baryshnikov - 60
Harry Belafonte, Jr. - 81
Tony Blair - 55
David Bowie - 61
Richard Branson - 58
Pierce Bronsan - 55
Sean Connery - 78
Barry Diller - 66
Michael Douglas - 65
Clint Eastwood - 78
Harrison Ford - 66
Morgan Freeman - 71
Richard Gere - 59
Ben Kingsley - 64
Paul McCartney - 66
Robert Redford - 72
Charlie Rose - 66
Bruce Springsteen - 59
Patrick Stewart - 68
Ted Turner - 69
Denzel Washington - 54
Bruce Willis - 53
Richard Gere on The Early Show ~ September 25,2008
Richard Gere and Diane Lane Discuss
"Nights in Rodanthe"
USA - "Nights in Rodanthe"
World Premiere in New
York City  

Actor Richard Gere attends
the world premiere of
"Nights in Rodanthe" at the
Ziegfeld Theater in New
York CIty.
Also pictured with Richard
Gere, wife Carey Lowell
and co-star, Diane Lane
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