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Source / Date: Premiere Online January 2000
Title / Page(s): "Thurman Gets Edwardian" by Joan Dupont

       Thurman and Nolte get bowled
       over.

       On a canopied bed in a romantic Edwardian boudoir, UMA
       THURMAN is kissing NICK NOLTE. It is the actors' first
       scene together, and they are warming to their task:
       The kiss starts out languid and doesn't let up.
       Director JAMES IVORY (Howards End), amused, takes his
       time before calling, "Cut."

       The movie is The Golden Bowl, the latest-and most
       torrid-Merchant Ivory production, and the third based
       on a Henry James novel. "We've always wanted to do one
       of his big novels in a lavish international setting,"
       Ivory says. "But the American-based ones [had always
       been] cheaper." The Golden Bowl, which has a budget of
       $15 million, is being filmed largely at Syon House,
       the London residence of the Northumberlands since
       Elizabethan times. "But I think that people won't talk
       only about the stately mansions in this film," Ivory
       says. Today, despite the sedate turn-of-the-century
       decor, all is not tranquil at the castle. At 4 a.m.,
       security guards intercepted a gang of intruders;
       planes from nearby Heathrow Airport whine overhead;
       and now, Ivory announces with a shudder, the 12th Duke
       of Northumberland, the lord of the manor, plans to
       drop by, "which may mean trouble."

       The film is about the weaving of dangerous liaisons, 
       starting with Charlotte (Thurman) and her Italian lover, Prince
       Amerigo (JEREMY NORTHAM). When the prince, who turns
       out to be not so princely, marries American heiress
       Maggie (KATE BECKINSALE), Charlotte weds Maggie's
       father, art collector Adam Verver (Nolte). The
       father-daughter pair have their own secret connivance;
       on hand to witness the double intrigue is Fanny,
       played by ANJELICA HUSTON. "At first she said no,"
       Ivory says. "Then we made the part bigger." The story,
       he notes, is "very modern, but it wasn't easy to get
       the actors to feel the modernness of it. Today, when
       you have an affair with somebody, you don't use words
       like honor; we've grown too far away from that."

       Thurman was always Ivory's choice for the "dashing,
       glamorous" Charlotte, although there was a time-while
       she was nursing her baby and then making Woody Allen's
       Sweet and Lowdown-when they weren't sure their
       schedules would mesh. "She's like a thoroughbred," a
       delighted Ivory says. "She quivers." She also goes
       barefoot on the set so that she doesn't loom over her
       costars. "I've done many period pieces," Thurman says
       between takes, "but finally I have something to sink
       my teeth into. Charlotte is outwardly polished and
       refined, but inwardly, she's out of control-passionate
       and belligerent. She's a very sensual character, and
       that will be an interesting exploration for me."

       "Charlotte's dilemma is a common one," Ivory says. "A
       brilliant, gifted woman falls in love with the wrong
       man. And we've all seen the closeness between father
       and daughter that makes for a monstrous couple. All
       this is in James, and for once, it has a happy
       ending."


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