Was she very famous ? Was she a major teen idol, the like of Natalie Wood's magnitude ? Were people accross the nation fangirling over her ? What should I see ? What was her bravura piece ? I only saw her in 'looking for mr. Goodbar'. She was beautiful and very believable, but oscar worthy I don't know....do tell please
She was wonderfully satirical as a dumb/smart blonde teenybopper bimbo in "Lord Love a Duck" with Roddy McDowall.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | April 20, 2018 8:18 PM |
I’m sure she appeared in Teen Idol magazines, like Sal Mineo, Sandra Dee, Ricky Nelson, Frankie Avalon, etc. It was an industry. Sixteen, Tiger Beat and other mags were aimed at teens and featured young tv and movie stars.
by Anonymous | reply 2 | April 20, 2018 8:25 PM |
Dotty Parker living on Norma Place, West Hollywood said: "Have you met her mother, Wednesday?"
by Anonymous | reply 3 | April 20, 2018 8:25 PM |
She and Warren Beatty were semi-regulars on "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis."
by Anonymous | reply 4 | April 20, 2018 8:27 PM |
Not even close to the wit of younger Dotty.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | April 20, 2018 8:28 PM |
[quote] What was her bravura piece ?
For comedy, the aforementioned "Lord Love a Duck."
For drama, "Pretty Poison."
by Anonymous | reply 6 | April 20, 2018 8:31 PM |
I worked in a hospital that had a crazy ass dr on staff in the 1990s. He wore a Ben Casey shirt to work every day. He’d had some minor fame as an anti-drug, singing doctor in the late 50s or early 60s. He brought in his album covers and a teen celeb magazine he’d appeared in. I flipped through the magazine and there was a story on the handsome, brooding young star Anthony Perkins. The story focused on how seriously Perkins took his acting. He was an artist. He wanted to be the best. He still took acting classes. He read about all the famous actors throughout history. He was so busy focusing on his career, the story said, that he didn’t have time to date.
by Anonymous | reply 7 | April 20, 2018 8:35 PM |
The name of Wednesday Addams was inspired by her. She was famous because of "Doivie Gillis" when the network was developing "The Addams Family" for TV, and they let Charles Addams name all the characters from his famous New Yorker cartoons, and inspired by Tuesday Weld, he named the daughter "Wednesday": "Wednesday's child is full of woe."
by Anonymous | reply 8 | April 20, 2018 8:36 PM |
Was Tuesday bearding for Tony when he double dated with Tab and Natalie ? I always thought james Dean and Nat Wood were THE teen idols of the 50's, but was it so ? Were was Tuesday in the food chain ?
by Anonymous | reply 9 | April 20, 2018 8:38 PM |
PS - the magazine story on the singing doctor talked about all the work he did with young men who were heroin addicts. He went on and on about these wonderful young men and how he felt a need to do whatever he could to help them. ;)
by Anonymous | reply 10 | April 20, 2018 8:38 PM |
Tuesday is a member of the very old, very distinguished Weld family of Boston.
by Anonymous | reply 11 | April 20, 2018 8:45 PM |
She seems to have aged over night.
by Anonymous | reply 12 | April 20, 2018 8:51 PM |
I'm an eldergay (45) and I don't know who the fuck that is.
by Anonymous | reply 13 | April 20, 2018 8:52 PM |
Who was more famous ? Tuesday or Natalie ?
by Anonymous | reply 14 | April 20, 2018 8:53 PM |
She is in a few of these very cool Roddy mcDowall home movies. Looks beautiful but craycray. Wasn't she emancipated from her parents ? The Weld didn't want anything to do with the mother, who was a disgusting commoner. Didn't they buy her and Tuesday off ?
by Anonymous | reply 15 | April 20, 2018 9:00 PM |
[quote]"Doivie Gillis"
Oh, dear!
by Anonymous | reply 16 | April 20, 2018 9:04 PM |
I'm equal to four (and sometimes five) of her!
by Anonymous | reply 17 | April 20, 2018 9:05 PM |
Tuesday was riding John Ireland's huge cock when she was 16 years old. Ah, the good old days before MeToo.
by Anonymous | reply 18 | April 20, 2018 9:11 PM |
Her big scene on 'goodbar' with Diane. She won an oscar nom for that. Typical 70's ' serious ' acting
by Anonymous | reply 19 | April 20, 2018 9:34 PM |
She is delightfully trashy as the moll who likes it rough in "Once Upon a Time in America"
by Anonymous | reply 20 | April 20, 2018 9:40 PM |
Very intersting interview. This is about Tuesday and Warren. The end is a shocker
by Anonymous | reply 21 | April 20, 2018 9:48 PM |
I remember her as a presenter on an Oscar broadcast,when her elaborate up do began to fall.Hedda Hopper made a snide comment about it in her column the next day.
by Anonymous | reply 22 | April 20, 2018 9:49 PM |
I remember Matthew Sweet releasing this album with a picture of her on the cover. It was originally titled Nothing Lasts, but she objected to that and he changed it to Girlfriend.
by Anonymous | reply 23 | April 20, 2018 9:51 PM |
In the late 50s there was a game show host named Hal March III. The joke went, if Tuesday Weld married Hal March, her name would be Tuesday March the Third. Tuesday Weld was all over fan magazines back in the 60s, much more beautiful than most starlets of the time, but never really had the career she should have.
And how COOL is Sheila Kuehl? LOVE her!
by Anonymous | reply 24 | April 20, 2018 10:06 PM |
Pauline Karl loved her.
She gave very natural performances and had an exuberance that fit perfectly with a film like Lord Love a Duck, though I don’t really see that film as a comedy, or if it is, it’s very dark.
Pretty Poison is a nice companion piece to LLaD. She’s a teenage femme fatale.
In neither film would you want to be her mother!
by Anonymous | reply 25 | April 20, 2018 10:09 PM |
Again at Roddy's beach house. Riccardo Montalban showing bulge. Some hot dudes. Who is the guy pretending the hound dog is his erected penis? I like the simplicity of the house and the clothes. Nothing like the pretentious OTT malibu mansions of today 's A.list. My favorite of Roddy's home movies is the one with Natalie, judy and betty Bacall chatting and laughing together. It's unreal to see these three icons in the same frame
by Anonymous | reply 26 | April 20, 2018 10:11 PM |
How did Tuesday end up with the late great British comedic actor, writer and musician Dudley Moore? He was so short, did he have a big dick?
Dudley sure attracted some hot blonds, from his first wife Brit actress Suzy Kendall, to US actress/model Susan Anton to Tuesday. Odd.
by Anonymous | reply 27 | April 20, 2018 10:17 PM |
Did she ever say who Andrew Stevens' father was?
by Anonymous | reply 28 | April 20, 2018 10:19 PM |
Jane Fonda never interracts with other big female names in these home movies. She is always away, in her own circle. with men only. Odd. I read her book. It's obvious she didn't like Natalie and was jealous of her for getting the part she wanted in 'splendour'. She throws some pretty bad shade over Nat, but you would think she didn't know her personally at all when you read the book. And then you see she spent days at the beach with her.... Not good Jane. Tuesday and Natalie have a lot in common I think.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | April 20, 2018 10:24 PM |
Lord Love a Duck is a crazy movie. Definitely one to catch if it's ever on TCM or something (preferably in a double feature with Pretty Poison). Apparently she turned down Bonnie & Clyde.
by Anonymous | reply 30 | April 20, 2018 10:24 PM |
Oh YES! Thanks R30, I remember that!. She turned down 'Bonnie and Clyde' and a couple of other big profile projects, and then she started drifting away from hollywood. I saw an interview of her in the early 80's. She sounded very bitter and a bit crazy.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | April 20, 2018 10:28 PM |
I’m seventy and everyone idolized her. She was so cool that a bizarre name like Tuesday sounded enviable. She was beautiful right up there with Marilyn without just being a variation on that theme. Later in her career she played in “Play it as it Lays” by Joan Didion and John Dunne. Tony Perkins played a gay character. It was so unusual to have anyone include a gay character. I was impressed she would play in a film with one (yes, it was that bad back them).
by Anonymous | reply 32 | April 20, 2018 10:47 PM |
So R32 ( thanks btw) Natalie or Tuesday ? Who was the bigger star ?
by Anonymous | reply 33 | April 20, 2018 10:52 PM |
I heard on the PA system at the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas in 1978: "Paging Miss Weld, Miss Tuesday Weld."
Everyone in the whole casino started looking around.
by Anonymous | reply 34 | April 20, 2018 11:03 PM |
I used to confuse her with Yvette Mimieux
by Anonymous | reply 35 | April 20, 2018 11:09 PM |
One of her exes was Israeli violinist Pinchas Zukerman, she sure did attract a wide variety of men.
by Anonymous | reply 36 | April 20, 2018 11:13 PM |
She was on an episode of "77 Sunset Strip" that aired on Decades last weekend. She was young and unnrecognizeable (to me, at least.....I was surprised when I saw her name in the credits at the end). It must have been an early appearance for her because she was slightly better than a block of wood when acting.
by Anonymous | reply 37 | April 20, 2018 11:22 PM |
Very pretty, above average acting abilities, really shone through in comic roles, but thought she was too good for that sort of thing.
by Anonymous | reply 38 | April 20, 2018 11:23 PM |
She was a child model of some magnitude I think. Then she became a hot teen movie star. By the time she reached adulthood, much like Natalie she had been working in the entertainment industry most of her life and she was fed up.
by Anonymous | reply 39 | April 20, 2018 11:26 PM |
[quote]I'm an eldergay (45) and I don't know who the fuck that is.
In the time it took you to write how ignorant you are you could have googled her name.
by Anonymous | reply 40 | April 20, 2018 11:28 PM |
The official story for the name of “Wednesday Addams,” given to the previously unnamed character for the TV show, is that Charles Addams felt the name fit her because of the well-known nursery rhyme line, "Wednesday's child is full of woe.”
But I think at least part of it was a humorous reference to Tuesday Weld’s preposterous screen name.
by Anonymous | reply 41 | April 20, 2018 11:33 PM |
Sometimes when you discover a very famous star, that you had never heard of, you react like that. I understand.
by Anonymous | reply 42 | April 20, 2018 11:33 PM |
I just watched a short YouTube tribute to Dudley Moore. Dudley was a huge deal in the 60s (with Peter Cook) in the UK.
Sad end of lif Dudley had
by Anonymous | reply 43 | April 20, 2018 11:35 PM |
R33 Natalie was the way bigger star, she worked in more prestigious movies and her career was longer lasting.
R28 You should ask Andrew Stevens' mother, Stella Stevens, who his father is. Tuesday Weld wouldn't know.
by Anonymous | reply 44 | April 20, 2018 11:35 PM |
she is/was the queen witch of satanic Hollywood, according to urban legends/tin hats/Illuminati fithing aficionados
by Anonymous | reply 46 | April 20, 2018 11:42 PM |
[quote]I just watched a short YouTube tribute to Dudley Moore. Dudley was a huge deal in the 60s (with Peter Cook) in the UK. Sad end of lif Dudley had
I was a bigger fan of Dudley (and Cook) than Tuesday Weld, she was before my time. I saw her as some type of blond bimbo starlet from the 1960s. I admit knowing little about her, I was quite shocked when I heard she got married to Dudley. Besides being part of the very famous Dudley & Moore comedy duo as well as an actor, Dudley was a very accomplished jazz pianist. I have his tribute album to Errol Garner. Yes, what a sad ending for such a talented man, his last wife seemed like a total evil beast.
by Anonymous | reply 47 | April 20, 2018 11:51 PM |
Short european /jewish comics were considered a hot prize in the late 60's/70's. Beauties who dated famous troll faced midgets were considered cool feminists who didn't care about looks, and were brainy enough to love a witty guy. All the hot chicks wanted their short comic. Moore, Allen, Sellers and co were bedding Hollywood 's most beautiful girls.
by Anonymous | reply 48 | April 20, 2018 11:56 PM |
Tuesday Weld didn't have a very happy childhood. She was put to work as a child model when she was very young, and then started TV and film work when she was a teen. This caused problems for her later as an adult, which in turn affected her career in a negative way.
She was charming in the Dobie Gillis TV show, where she first gained fame. She played a beautiful teenage flirt who was only interested in money. Poor Dobie didn't have a chance with her, but she loved to drive him crazy anyway.
She left TV and started making movies as a teen star, and her talents were wasted in sex kitten roles comparable to Ann-Margret. She played Bob Hope's teen daughter in I'll Take Sweden, a godawful comedy that was the nadir of her career. Like Ann-Margret, it took years before she was taken seriously as an actress, and she missed out on a lot of good roles, such as Lolita.
She slowly built up her reputation by starring in small films like Lord Love a Duck , Pretty Poison and especially Play It As It Lays, which garnered her excellent reviews. None of these movies made a lot of money, however.
She got a supporting actress nomination for Looking for Mr. Goodbar. Then made another acclaimed film called Who'll Stop the Rain. But her career never really reached the heights of contemporaries such as Sally Field, Jane Fonda, Faye Dunaway or even Ann-Margret.
She started making interior TV movies, such as playing the Lana Turner role in a remake of Madame X, before she gave it up and sank into obscurity. Her last credit listed on IMDB was in 2001, but she had not been very busy for a while.
She was truly beautiful and a good actress who never had the breaks or the drive to pursue a career.
by Anonymous | reply 49 | April 21, 2018 12:02 AM |
She had an odd career - she didn't work that often, and when she did it was often in small parts in low-key films, like Michael Mann's Thief. But she was usually good in them.
by Anonymous | reply 50 | April 21, 2018 12:08 AM |
Here’s the short bio r47
Actually, Dudley was very cute in his heyday he “owned”:his shortness
by Anonymous | reply 51 | April 21, 2018 12:09 AM |
Gushers was born on Wednesday.
by Anonymous | reply 52 | April 21, 2018 12:09 AM |
She was on the Flintstones as Tuesday Wednesday...or was it Wednesday Tuesday?
by Anonymous | reply 53 | April 21, 2018 12:15 AM |
Yep, Tuesday Weld was a huge name in the 50-60's, especially for kids/teens growing up at that time. She was very cute, had an interesting lilting voice and a rather sex-kittenish demeanor. I remember her as Dobie Gillis' girlfriend (I think) ; the last film I recall seeing her in was Thief (1980) with James Caan. Natalie Wood was a child actress (Miracle on 34th Street with Maureen O'Hara) that grew into a stunning beauty and brilliant actress, sadly drowning in some strange boating accident in the late 70's I believe.
by Anonymous | reply 54 | April 21, 2018 12:15 AM |
She was the High Priestess of the Church of Satan for many years.
by Anonymous | reply 55 | April 21, 2018 12:16 AM |
R53 She wasn't on The Flintstones. That was Ann-Margret, aka Ann-Margrock.
by Anonymous | reply 56 | April 21, 2018 12:24 AM |
[quote]She was the High Priestess of the Church of Satan for many years.
How gullible so many on DL are! Next you'll tell us, she was married to Anton Levey and was one of Aleister Crowley's illegitimate children! Tho, I think Crowley died way before Tuesday was born, I'm too lazy to look it up.
by Anonymous | reply 57 | April 21, 2018 12:26 AM |
She's definetely bipolar though.
by Anonymous | reply 58 | April 21, 2018 12:31 AM |
R32 & R49: I'm not too familiar with Miss Weld's movies (older Millennial here) but love Play It As It Lays. She and Anthony Perkins were wonderful in that film. I didn't know she was in Looking For Mr. Goodbar. I'll have to see it sometime.
by Anonymous | reply 59 | April 21, 2018 12:34 AM |
R59, take a xanax before seeing it. It's so gloomy and doomy. On the funnier side, Keaton shows pussy ( yes, she of the turtleneck) and Richard Gere prances around in a jockstrap. You see his crack. And not like, furtively. It's a whole jockstrap-ed karaté sequence. As opposed to Jeff Bridges's soft porn fuck scene in 'against all odds' it brings second-hand embarrassment to a whole new level.
by Anonymous | reply 60 | April 21, 2018 12:44 AM |
R55 She wasn't in the Church of Satan. You have her confused with Jayne Mansfield.
by Anonymous | reply 61 | April 21, 2018 12:48 AM |
I'm guessing Harvard's freshman dorm, Weld Hall, is named after her family.
by Anonymous | reply 62 | April 21, 2018 1:24 AM |
[R11} Yes, roots are Boston Brahmin types...a distant relation to Gov. Weld of Massachusetts.
by Anonymous | reply 63 | April 21, 2018 2:02 AM |
R59 must be the only gay guy who hasn’t seen Goodbar.
by Anonymous | reply 65 | April 21, 2018 2:36 AM |
She was hilarious in Serial a 1980 a satire of faddish Southern California of the late 70s. She calls Pamela Bellwood of Dynasty fame a cunt.
by Anonymous | reply 66 | April 21, 2018 2:41 AM |
r66 "Serial" was about Marin County, not southern California.
by Anonymous | reply 67 | April 21, 2018 4:36 AM |
R18, Natalie Wood also enjoyed riding John Ireland's huge cock, as did Joan Crawford during the filming of "Queen Bee".
by Anonymous | reply 68 | April 21, 2018 5:02 AM |
"Weld" is a stage name. Her real last name is "Solder."
by Anonymous | reply 69 | April 21, 2018 5:14 AM |
Where's the "Tuesday Weld is the supreme witch of the Hollywood coven black magic cult"?
I thought this thread would be lousy with it by now.
by Anonymous | reply 70 | April 21, 2018 5:45 AM |
Back in 2012 someone (not I) started a thread about witch Tuesday Weld.
Enter at your own risk.
by Anonymous | reply 71 | April 21, 2018 6:22 AM |
So she's sort of like the Brooke Shields of her time? Blue blood father knocked up white trash mother and then walked our on her. Trash mother than proceeds to put infant in the biz to be the breadwinner.
by Anonymous | reply 72 | April 21, 2018 6:37 AM |
Tuesday Weld turned down some high-profile roles in the late 60s:
Rosemary's Baby (1968)
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969)
Cactus Flower (1969)
True Grit (1969)
"Around this time Weld became famous for turning down roles in films that succeeded at the box office, such as Bonnie and Clyde, Rosemary's Baby, True Grit, Cactus Flower and Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. In a 1971 interview with the New York Times, Weld explained that she had chosen to reject these roles precisely because she believed they would be commercial successes: "Do you think I want a success? I refused 'Bonnie and Clyde' because I was nursing at the time, but also because deep down I knew it was going to be a huge success. The same was true of 'Bob and Carol and Fred and Sue' or whatever it was called. It reeked of success.""
by Anonymous | reply 73 | April 21, 2018 7:08 AM |
r13, you call yourself an eldergay but you've never seen "Looking for Mr. Goodbar"? Tuesday Weld received an Oscar nomination for this eldergay classic.
I'm gonna start a petition to get your gay card revoked.
by Anonymous | reply 74 | April 21, 2018 7:27 AM |
74 comments and still not a peep about her relationship with the young gorgeous al pacino......
she was also real in that michael douglas movie....gene hackman was a cop in it, she played his uh, needy? wife... Falling Down..... still super intense,,,,
by Anonymous | reply 75 | April 21, 2018 7:36 AM |
I am 27 and have known her for years. Will she ever make a comeback?
by Anonymous | reply 76 | April 21, 2018 10:13 AM |
She never turned down ' Rosemary's baby ' poor delusional bipo.. Polanski wanted her ( ahem) but Evans imposed Mia Farrow who at the time was a huge tv/tabloïd name and would be a bigger draw.
by Anonymous | reply 77 | April 21, 2018 10:20 AM |
I have only seen her in "I walk the line" with Gregory Peck. I had never seen her before but to me she had a certain charisma. I will have to check out the movies mentioned above, thanks for the recommendations.
by Anonymous | reply 78 | April 21, 2018 10:27 AM |
Short hot and crazy.
Loved her work with A Perkins.
by Anonymous | reply 79 | April 21, 2018 12:32 PM |
Here she is on Dick Cavett. Her interview starts at 33:30.
by Anonymous | reply 80 | April 21, 2018 2:51 PM |
She was on 'The Flintstones', though she went by the moniker 'Wednesday Tuesday, or is it Tuesday Wednesday?'
She also admitted to being an alcoholic by the time she was 14 years old.
by Anonymous | reply 81 | April 21, 2018 3:22 PM |
The 60s and 70s actors tried to be “real” in interviews. After that it was all self promotion and fake shit
by Anonymous | reply 82 | April 21, 2018 3:44 PM |
Classic DL post from the older thread on Tuesday Weld:
If Sienna Miller was talented, if Jennifer Jason Leigh washed her hair or if Sandra Dee ate a sandwich, Tuesday Weld would still exist. The oddest living movie star we have. She did not do it all, she did many of the same things over and over again. Then a few things different. Then no more. And she lived to not tell and have no one wonder. That's one definition of success.
by Anonymous | reply 83 | April 21, 2018 3:59 PM |
Wow, you can already see the neurological disease in Dudley Moore’s face in his mugshot. But Hollywood was so full of drunks and drugs that Moore just seemed like another user back then. His behavior became more and more crazy, including hiring prostitites to dance for him for hours. If he’d been a “regular” person, his illness might have been diagnosed sooner. Not that there was anything that could be done about it....
by Anonymous | reply 84 | April 21, 2018 5:03 PM |
she turned down lolita, said she'd already lived the part.
by Anonymous | reply 85 | April 21, 2018 5:38 PM |
Tuesday Weld was one of the lead contenders for the part of Frances Farmer in "Frances" (1982). Executive Producer Mel Brooks wanted to cast her, but by the 1980s, Weld's film career wasn't exactly on fire. So director Graeme Clifford convinced him to take a risk and go with Jessica Lange, whose stalled career was starting to warm up again. 1970s Lange bared a striking resemblance to Weld.
Ironically (since Natalie Wood was mentioned), Wood was attached to play Frances Farmer since the 1960s, but the project never got off the ground. By the time this iteration was ready to go into production, Wood's film career, like Weld's, was on life support.
by Anonymous | reply 86 | April 21, 2018 6:12 PM |
[quote]1970s Lange bared a striking resemblance to Weld.
Oh, DEAR!
by Anonymous | reply 87 | April 21, 2018 6:15 PM |
Sorry, wrong verb. "Bore a striking resemblance."
by Anonymous | reply 88 | April 21, 2018 6:16 PM |
we would need a pic of them naked together to verify the bared resemblence
by Anonymous | reply 89 | April 21, 2018 8:37 PM |
Tuesday Weld, wasn't there some rumor that she was like the Queen of the Illuminati in her day?
Sort of the like olden days version of Beyonce...except Tuesday couldn't sing - she could act, a little
by Anonymous | reply 90 | April 21, 2018 11:26 PM |
Lol R90 Beyonce can't sing or act.
by Anonymous | reply 91 | April 21, 2018 11:56 PM |
R64 nailed it. That pic is perfect facsimile of Edie belowo
by Anonymous | reply 92 | April 22, 2018 12:13 AM |
I've always thought Tuesday Weld would have been perfect as Rosemary Woodhouse.
From the "Rosemary's Baby" page at IMDb:
Casting for this film presented its own problems: Roman Polanski at first saw Rosemary as an "All-American Girl" and sought Tuesday Weld for the lead, but she passed. Jane Fonda was then approached, but turned down the offer so she could make Barbarella (1968) in Europe with then-husband Roger Vadim. According to his memoirs, Polanski for a while had the idea of having his future wife Sharon Tate on the part of Rosemary, but he decided not to because it would have been unethical. Other actresses considered for the part were Julie Christie, Elizabeth Hartman and Joanna Pettet. Robert Evans suggested Mia Farrow based on her TV work and her media appeal (at the time she was Mrs. Frank Sinatra).
by Anonymous | reply 93 | April 22, 2018 8:13 AM |
Tuesday and Redford would have killed the movie. It's Mia' s great moment. There is something disturbing lurking beneath her waif-like frailty, that is still intriguing the world to this day.
by Anonymous | reply 94 | April 22, 2018 10:13 AM |
r93, I agree Tuesday Weld would have been great in the role. But I'm glad Jane Fonda also turned it down. She's a terrific actress, but she would have been all wrong for Rosemary. When I think of "naive" and "vulnerable", Fonda is the last actress that comes to mind.
by Anonymous | reply 95 | April 23, 2018 7:42 AM |
Weld's mother was scandalized by her teenage daughter's affairs with older men, such as actor John Ireland, but Weld resisted, saying, "'If you don’t leave me alone, I’ll quit being an actress — which means there ain’t gonna be no more money for you, Mama.' In 1961, when Weld was 18, she had an off-screen romance with Elvis Presley, her costar in Wild in the Country.
by Anonymous | reply 96 | April 23, 2018 8:10 AM |
Jane Fonda and Robert Redford in "Barefoot at The Dakota."
by Anonymous | reply 97 | April 23, 2018 3:38 PM |
I don't like Jane Fonda. At all. She's crafty, envious, oversexed, pretentious and extremely hypocritical. Hanoï Jane. Like Hepburn said of Treep you can see the weels going click click click when she's acting. She was ok in Klute. Because she's a whore who's faked her whole life.
by Anonymous | reply 98 | April 23, 2018 4:10 PM |