2020-03-26 The Hollywood Reporter

(WallPaper) #1

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 20 MARCH 26, 2020


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Rambling Reporter

The Report


Larry David fundraises for his caddies, Amy Adams reads to kids and fake doctors support real ones
as THR’s Rambling Reporter columnist takes the pulse of an industry in upheaval BY CHRIS GARDNER

Hollywood Grinds to a Halt:


Tales From the Shutdown


TV Docs Sending Their Scrubs and Gloves to the Pros
They’re not real doctors, they only play them on TV. Still, they’re helping to battle the COVID-19 pandemic
just the same, with shows like Fox’s The Resident, NBC’s Chicago Med and ABC’s The Good Doctor donating
such props as surgical masks, gloves and gowns to hospitals and first responders around the country. “We
were lucky enough to have about 300 of the coveted N95 masks,” says Krista Vernoff, a Grey’s Anatomy veteran
who now serves as an exec producer on Station 19, ABC’s Seattle-based firehouse drama. “We donated [them]
to our local fire station — they were tremendously grateful.” In Atlanta, The Resident packed up two trunks’
worth of scrubs, surgical caps and lab coats and sent them to Grady Memorial Hospital. “It’s pretty appall-
ing to think that our doctors and nurses at hospitals don’t have the proper protection — they’re facing these
patients who are highly contagious without being protected,” says showrunner Amy Holden Jones. ABC’s
Grey’s Anatomy sent much-needed supplies to various L.A. hospitals; FX’s Pose (which isn’t a medical show
but has several hospital sets) donated prop supplies to Mount Sinai in New York; The Good Doctor, based in
Vancouver, donated to the local provincial Canadian government; and NBC’s New Amsterdam sent unused
props to New York’s Bellevue, where the series is shot. Making it even more personal, one of that show’s cast-
members, Daniel Dae Kim, was diagnosed with COVID-19 on March 19. — RAMONA SAVISS

Masks, gowns
and other
supplies from
The Resident’s
costume
department
heading to real-life
first responders.
Above, from left:
Matt Czuchry,
Kwajalyn Brown,
Eli Gelb and
Manish Dayal
on the show’s
March 24 episode.

O.J. Simpson bought supplies at Costco.

Joaquin Phoenix (and Other
Stars) Stock Their Shelves
Stars hoard, too: Oscar-winning
vegan Joaquin Phoenix (wearing
an L.A. Animal Save hoodie and
black latex gloves) was spied by
Rambling Reporter in the
checkout line at Erewhon near
the Grove in mid-March with
three carts full of groceries.
Other actors — To m my Dorfman,
Kaia Gerber and Cara Delevingne
and girlfriend Ashley Benson
— also have been spotted
stocking up at the pricey health
food market (sales are up
75 percent to 100 percent,

according to Erewhon vp Jason
Widener, who tells THR that “this
is our time to shine”). Other
high-end grocery stores are
getting the star treatment as
well: Charlize Theron was seen
collecting provisions at West
Hollywood’s Bristol Farms,
Gwyneth Paltrow and husband
Brad Falchuk donned designer-
looking black masks while
scavenging at Brentwood’s
farmers market, and food star
Bobby Flay was spotted buying
large amounts of beef at Eataly in
Century City. Of course, not all
famous people shop at such

high-end venues; O.J. Simpson
tweeted a photo of himself with
a cartload of supplies outside
a Costco.

An Industry Insta Star
Learns Social Distancing
Richard Weitz boasts one of the
buzziest (private) Instagram
accounts in Hollywood. Just
this past year, he’s treated his
2,500 followers to posts featuring
Barack Obama (in Chicago during
NBA All-Star Weekend), client
Ricky Gervais (backstage at the
Golden Globes) and George Lucas
(in the filmmaker’s kitchen). But,
of course, social distancing has
put a kink in the famously social
WME partner’s Instagramming
habit. Instead, like everybody
else, he’s stuck at home working
and watching a ton of TV. “I’m
not leaving the house,” he tells
Rambling, listing some of the
classic comedies from the 1980s
he’s been binge-watching (Three
Amigos, Ghostbusters, Uncle Buck
and Trading Places, to name a few).
Weitz says he’s in regular con-
tact with clients and colleagues,
though there’s obviously not a
whole lot of dealmaking going on

Richard Weitz in a (now) rare Insta post.

and he’s clearly growing fidgety.
“Everyone is definitely getting
restless,” he says. “But everyone
knows how serious this is.”

Love and (Delayed) Marriage
in the Time of Coronavirus
Looks like Emma Stone won’t be
having a spring wedding after
all. The Oscar-winning actress
has postponed her nuptials to
SNL writer Dave McCary — origi-
nally scheduled for the March 13
weekend — until further notice.
And she’s not the only one putting
a wedding on hold: The Irishman
producer Randall Emmett and
Vanderpump Rules star Lala Kent
have moved their April ceremony

10rep_rambling+quotes_L [P]{Print}_53675444.indd 20 3/25/20 3:37 PM

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