Displaying all articles tagged:

Blythe Danner

  1. movie trailers
    What They Had Trailer: Hilary Swank and Blythe Danner Remind You to Call MomAlso, call your dad. And your brother. Call everybody!
  2. Hilary Swank and Michael Shannon Reveal Their Strangest Interactions With Fans’I’m really going to let her down.”
  3. trailer mix
    Showtime’s Patrick Melrose Trailer: Benedict Cumberbatch Hates Being Lucid!What a great cast.
  4. goop glop
    The Goop Robbery: Totally Great for BusinessIt’s good publicity.
  5. chat room
    Blythe Danner on the Price of Aging, Insomnia, and Her First Starring Film Role“We all experience loss, and grief is the price we pay for loving. You have to not fall apart, and keep going.”
  6. movies
    Blythe Danner Breathes Life Into I’ll See You in My Dreams Danner is all three reasons to see the film.
  7. moooom
    Gwyneth Paltrow’s Mom Still Doesn’t Get Conscious Uncoupling “What is that thing that they’ve been doing?”
  8. Let’s Explore TV’s Extended Family Trees, Courtesy of Frequent Guest Moms and DadsBunny from Sex and the City is the missing mom link between Sex and the City, Cheers, and Parenthood.
  9. party chat
    Blythe Danner: Gwyneth Used to Play Hooky at School … to Go to Art MuseumsPerfect even when she’s being bad. That’s our Gwyneth!
  10. glee
    Blythe Danner Would ‘Do Glee’ With Gwyneth“Oh my gosh! You know what, I will do anything.”
  11. the industry
    Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams to Remember the Days When Things Didn’t SuckPlus: Hedy Lamarr, scientist?
  12. party lines
    For Blythe Danner, New York Is Wistful, EnergeticBlythe Danner still has a love-hate relationship with New York City, where she lived with her husband, Bruce Paltrow (dad of Gwyneth and Jake), until he died in 2002. She’s still in mourning, she says. “A poet wrote, ‘The edge softens, but it never leaves.’” And there are a lot of memories to contend with. “We met here,” she said at a recent benefit for the Williamston Theater at the Puck Building. “I was in a show he produced that lasted two weeks. And we were walking home one night and went to a fortune-teller on a lark in the Fifth Avenue Hotel,” she told New York. “And she told us we were going to get married. We weren’t even dating.” Yet in the end, she says, it’s the city that keeps her going. “For a woman who’s a widow and pretty much a loner, I can walk out and I’m surrounded by NYU kids. The energy jumps off the sidewalks, and I never feel sad or bored.” —Tim Murphy