Cheryl Hines Brings Life to Adrienne Shelly’s “Moonlight”
by Peter Knegt (November 30, 2009)
Cheryl Hines in Manhattan's meatpacking district. Photo by Peter Knegt.
“It’s interesting, I mean, people are going to take away different ideas from this film, which is one of the reasons I loved the script,” Cheryl Hines told indieWIRE of her directorial debut, “Serious Moonlight,” which opens in theaters this Friday. “A lot of people will just be entertained by it and have a good time watching it. Then, other people will really be asking the question, ‘If you manipulate someone, and get them to be true to themselves, was it a bad thing that you did?’ That’s the question. Was it bad? Or were you just showing somebody something they already knew?” That question comes care of a script by Adrienne Shelly, who had directed Hines in “Waitress” before she was tragically murdered in November 2006. Shelly’s husband, Andy Ostroy, and his producing partner Michael Roiff, asked Hines if she would consider taking on the project while she was doing press for “Waitress.” “I was only aware that the script has been written when I was approached to direct it,” Hines said in an interview in New York’s meatpacking district. “I was promoting ‘Waitress’ at the time and Andy Ostroy and Michael Roiff asked me if I would read the script and if I was interested in directing it. So, that was the first I’d heard of it. And then I read it and I really loved it, and the rest is history.” What Hines loved was the story of Louise (played by Meg Ryan), who holds her husband of 13 years, Ian (Timothy Hutton), hostage when he tells her he’s leaving her for a younger woman (Kristen Bell). Louise refuses to release Ian until he commits to working on their marriage, which is complicated by the arrival of a young gardener (Justin Long) and Ian’s mistress. Hines - perhaps best known for her work playing Larry David’s (now estranged) wife on HBO’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm” - was understandably wary of the challenges in taking control of a project that would serve as a footnote to Shelly’s legacy, but Ostroy and Roiff convinced her. “There was a lot to consider taking this project on,” she said. “But because I knew Michael and Andy, I had a trust with them. I trusted that it wouldn’t be trying to make a film that Adrienne would have made, because I think that would be impossible. You wouldn’t be able to approach a project that way because there’s no way of knowing what that would be. Then you get yourself in trouble and you can’t make any decisions. But I trusted them to allow me to make a film in the way I thought the story should be told.”
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