2020-03-26_The_Hollywood_Reporter

(Tuis.) #1

About Town


People, Places,
Preoccupations

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 32 MARCH 26, 2020


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that much for Biden, accord-
ing to several political advisers.
Biden never has benefited from
a large grassroots donor pool,
instead relying on a small cadre
of donors that includes some of
Hollywood’s big bundlers. Biden
has seen a huge surge in fundrais-
ing since Super Tuesday. During
the last debate, he said he had
raised $33 million in the first
half of March, but he still has
a ways to go to catch President
Tr u m p, whose reelection cam-
paign has more than $94 million
in reserves. “The effort now is
to stop picking up the $2,800
checks,” says one consultant in
contact with Biden’s campaign.
“They’re trying to finish that and
move into much larger figures.
That’s where the big Hollywood
bundlers will be helpful.”
That strategy, however, comes
with risks. Reaching millennial
voters — the ones who typi-
cally write those smaller checks
— has been a challenge for the
77-year-old Biden, and the optics
of further neglecting that class of
voters could be perilous.
“Obviously there will be new
opportunities to fundraise, and
hopefully by late summer or early
fall, some of this will have sub-
sided,” says Gianopulos. Still, how
do you make a fundraising ask in
such an environment? “People are
feeling good about the campaign
and will still actively do things to
support Joe, but we also have to
be sensitive and prioritize taking
care of people and things in our
own community,” says James
Costos, a former HBO exec who
has hosted fundraisers for Biden.
Adds Gianopulos: “Hopefully,
once he’s the candidate, even
small measures will matter.
And a lot of people giving a little
money adds up.”

In his new memoir, Barry Sonnenfeld, Call
Your Mother: Memoirs of a Neurotic Filmmaker,
the cinematographer turned director (The
Addams Family, Men in Black) traces his rise from nebbish
teen (the title refers to when his mother had him paged
during a concert) to the heights of Hollywood. The book
covers his early days shooting XXX movies (he learned
“maximum efficiency”) and working with
Scott Rudin (“Read [the script] in the next two
hours,” the producer once ordered him) and
Penny Marshall. The Telluride-based director,
66, finds home isolation easy: “I don’t do much.
I don’t ski or hike. I walk the dog and read.”

MEMOIR:
HOW BARRY
SONNENFELD
STARTED IN PORN

Book
Scene

The ‘neurotic’ director
recalls life on every sort
of film set By Seth Abramovitch

H


ey, everybody, WG here. OK,
here we are, doing our part
to slow the rate of infection
by staying away from each other. If
there is a silver lining, maybe it’s to
be more grateful for the uncondi-
tional time we’re used to spending
with one another. A few days into
my limited contact with friends,
co-workers and family have me
taking inventory of my life and the
joy I derive from interacting with the
world. If I’m honest, I’ve taken it for
granted. I won’t anymore. I like peo-
ple. I need people. I love people! It is
important in this time to take care of
ourselves, to boost our immune sys-
tem as much as possible. But if you
say, “Fuck it, I need a drankkk” — I
did it day one! — here are six recipes
to try at home while waiting it out.
Restaurants and bars the world over
will at some point be filled again with
conviviality. I can’t wait to see you
there. — AS TOLD TO BRAD JAPHE

From left: Barry Sonnenfeld, Scott Rudin, Jimmy Workman and
Christina Ricci on the set of 1991’s The Addams Family.

APRIL SHOWERS
2 oz. Mulholland Gin
Rosemary sprig
Lightly muddled lime
4 oz. tonic water
Add squeeze of lime
to gin and top off
with quality tonic
water in a Collins
glass with ice.
Garnish with a lime
wheel and rosemary.

MAY FLOWERS
1.5 oz. vodka
.75 oz. chamomile
syrup
(make by steeping
chamomile tea
and adding equal
parts sugar)
.75 oz. fresh
lemon juice
Shake ingredients
together in a cocktail
tin with ice. Strain
into a tumbler with
ice. Garnish with a
lemon wedge and/or
chamomile flower.

BREAKFAST IN BED
2 oz. whiskey
.5 oz. maple syrup
Angostura bitters
Orange and
lemon peel
Add all ingredients in
an Old Fashioned
glass with ice and
stir. Garnish with an
orange peel and
lemon peel.

HOME BASIL (GIMLET)
1.5 oz. gin
Basil leaves
.75 oz. fresh
lime juice
.5 oz. simple syrup
(make with equal
parts water
and sugar)
Put basil and other
ingredients in a
shaker; don’t muddle,
but shake with ice.
Strain into a
stemmed glass.
Garnish with
basil leaf.

EARL GREY GOLD RUSH
1.5 oz. whiskey
.75 oz. Earl Grey
honey syrup
(make by steeping
Earl Grey tea and
adding equal parts
local honey)
.75 oz. fresh
lemon juice
Shake ingredients
together in a cocktail
tin with ice. Strain
into a tumbler with
ice. Garnish with a
lemon twist.

SAGE ADVICE
2 oz. vodka
2-4 sage leaves
Grapefruit soda
Lime
Salt
Lightly press sage
leaves into a Collins
glass with ice. Top
off with a quality
grapefruit soda.
Garnish with lime
wedge and salt.

Rothman

Ingredients
for the April
Showers
cocktail.

Actor and Mulholland Distilling co-founder
Walton Goggins’ ideas for after-WFH drinks

My Quarantini


Cocktail Recipes


Gianopulos

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