Friday, June 29, 2012

Nora Ephron

  • (CBS News) Nora Ephron left behind a play that will likely get to see the light of day. A lead producer of Ephrons play, Lucky Guy, says he is committed to getting the production to the Broadway stage.
  • (CBS News)
  • A lead producer of Nora Ephrons new play, Lucky Guy, says he is committed to getting her biography of a newspaper columnist on a Broadway stage despite the death this week of the playwright.
  • (Newsday)
  • Nora Ephron was the first modern woman that agent Robert Bookman ever knew. Whether it was writing films about natural, effortless couples or advising him on how to be a father, she understand our new world before we did.
  • (Daily Beast)
  • One of the theater producers aiming Nora Ephron's new play "Lucky Guy" for Broadway confirmed on Thursday that he is going forward with the show, a bio-drama about the New York newspaper columnist Mike McAlary. Ms.
  • (New York Times Blogs)
  • I was saddened to hear about the death of Nora Ephron this past Tuesday. She is responsible for a handful of movies I absolutely love, including Julie Julia (2009), Sleepless in Seattle (1993), Youve Got Mail (1998) and When Harry Met Sally (1989).
  • (Lancaster online.com)
  • In the aftermath of Nora Ephrons passing, on Wednesday Piers Morgan welcomed two of her closest friends – Barbara Walters and Arianna Huffington – to share their memories of the acclaimed screenwriter.
  • (CNN)
  • Nora Ephron, who died this week of complications from leukemia, knew the formula. She learned it from her parents. The journalist, screenwriter, essayist, playwright and director grew up writing in a family of writers.
  • (Chicago Tribune)
  • Nora Ephron, who cast an acerbic eye on relationships, metropolitan living and aging in essays, books, plays and hit movies including Sleepless in Seattle, When Harry Met Sally and Julie Julia, died Tuesday in New York. She was 71.
  • (Los Angeles Times)
  • Harry: You were going to be a gymnast. Sally: A journalist.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • The Ill have what she's having scene in the Nora Ephron-scripted When Harry Met Sally remains one of the most memorable moments in romantic comedy history.
  • (Hollywood Reporter)

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