Diane Keaton & Warren Beatty in "Reds" caught me up by surprise. Again, I got caught up with surprise with that Warren Beatty married with Annette Bening - nobody thought that happened.
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Famous couples who've worked together
Slide 1 of 30: Annette Bening and Warren Beatty first connected while shooting 1991's "Bugsy." A year after the biographical crime drama debuted, they tied the knot. They've collaborated twice more since then. First, the parents of four portrayed lovers in the 1994 drama "Love Affair." More than two decades later, Warren directed his missus in 2016's "Rules Don't Apply." In honor of the 25th anniversary of "Love Affair" on Oct. 21, 2019, Wonderwall.com rounded up more celeb couples who've worked together over the years. Keep reading to get the scoop on celeb couples who collaborate...
Slide 8 of 30: During their romantic partnership of more than a decade, Tim Burton directed Helena Bonham Carter in several major films including "Big Fish," "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street," "Alice in Wonderland" and "Dark Shadows."
TJKCB2019-10-21 11:14:45回复悄悄话
Nobody killed Ben over money,” Bee says. She is 75 years old when the documentary film crew brings her into focus, a tiny lady in a flowered housedress who lives in a ranch house way out in Corona that swarms with rescued cats. Once she was married to the Mob. Now she’s a widow twice over, living on bologna sandwiches, two-for-one hot dogs from Der Wienerschnitzel, and the pull of her memories.
“I still love him—not like a lover, but I miss him,” she says as tears wet her eyes. She is thinking of Ben Siegel—the azure-eyed rogue, part charmer, part sociopath, and the father of modern Las Vegas. Half her lifetime ago, on the night of June 20, 1947, he was shot dead in his girlfriend Virginia Hill’s rented Beverly Hills home on Linden Drive, just south of Sunset Boulevard. At about 10:45 p.m., as Siegel sat on a floral couch reading the Los Angeles Times, an unidentified gunman fired a .30-caliber military M1 carbine through the living room window, hitting him several times in the head and torso. One bullet penetrated his right cheek and exited through the left side of his neck. Another struck the bridge of his nose and blew his left eye out of its socket. He was 41 years old.
“I still love him—not like a lover, but I miss him,” she says as tears wet her eyes. She is thinking of Ben Siegel—the azure-eyed rogue, part charmer, part sociopath, and the father of modern Las Vegas. Half her lifetime ago, on the night of June 20, 1947, he was shot dead in his girlfriend Virginia Hill’s rented Beverly Hills home on Linden Drive, just south of Sunset Boulevard. At about 10:45 p.m., as Siegel sat on a floral couch reading the Los Angeles Times, an unidentified gunman fired a .30-caliber military M1 carbine through the living room window, hitting him several times in the head and torso. One bullet penetrated his right cheek and exited through the left side of his neck. Another struck the bridge of his nose and blew his left eye out of its socket. He was 41 years old.