Still stinging after all these years
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YOUNG CHANG
NEWPORT BEACH -- Actors Sally Kirkland and James Sloyan say they
haven’t seen each other in “forever.” It’s been awhile, not quite as long
as the 28 years since they made “The Sting,” but time enough that
Kirkland needs Sloyan’s new phone number.
Actor Harold Gould, actress Dimitra Arliss and Oscar-winning
screenwriter David S. Ward -- all members of the once-tight movie
ensemble -- eventually trickled into the mix Thursday to celebrate old
friendships and, most of all, pay tribute to the 1973, seven-time Academy
Award-winning film, “The Sting,” at the Newport Beach Film Festival’s
opening night.
Packed tight in a festive crowd at Fashion Island’s Marriott Hotel,
they ushered each other even closer for photo-ops beckoning from every
angle. They formed a small circle and talked in diagonals.
For these celebrities of yesterday’s generation, the festival’s
opening gala was a time to catch up.
“It’s wonderful to see everybody again,” Ward said. “Often, you’re in
intense participation with people while you’re making a movie, and then
you may never see them again. It’s very nice. It sort of motivates me to
get in touch with everyone else.”
For gala organizers, Thursday night’s festivities were indication
enough that the film festival has more than revived itself from the
bankruptcy-slump that made last year’s festival an almost no-show.
Reels of film dropped from the ceiling in the hotel’s VIP lounge like
opaque streams of chandeliers. Guests chatted, exuding polite whiffs of
alcohol, and festival organizers bustled about, tending to last minute
touches.
Kicking off seven days of 56 feature film screenings, more than 100
short films, post-screening galas and a weekend seminar series with
industry experts, sponsors and celebrities refreshed themselves with
company and drinks before rolling off in limos to the nearby Edwards Big
Newport for a tribute screening of “The Sting.”
“My feeling was that Newport is a very special place, one where there
could be a cultural flowering,” said local sponsor Leigh Steinberg. “And
this tradition really goes back to the 20s and 30s, when [Newport Beach]
was a home for the arts.”
Kirkland said it was an honor to be part of the festival. Gould added
that he was happy to catch up with old friends.
Ward, looking relaxed in a dark suit and sipping a drink, said a
writer never expects quite this much recognition -- throughout three
decades at that.
“When you’re a writer, you’re basically sitting alone in your room
with your ideas,” he said. “It’s always nice to have this kind of
validation.”
Steinberg’s wife, Lucy, offered a reminder that this is only the
beginning.
“I think the opening night is always festive and people are always
very enthused about the beginning of the festival,” she said. “But it
looks like the rest of the festival is going to be very substantive, and
everyone should feel like they can participate if they want to.”
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