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New York Monthly Herald. June 2006 Issue P. 8     CONT'D FROM P7             CONTINUES NEXT                                                                                

ENTERTAINMENT

Sofia Coppola wrote the screenplay based on Antonia Fraser's book.

Coppola looked taken aback after being told of the early reaction and said it was "disappointing". She said: "It is better to get a reaction that people really like it or don't like it, than no response. "Hopefully some people will enjoy it - it is not for everybody." British actor Steve Coogan, who plays the Austrian ambassador in the film, said: "When you make something which is personal and specific it is inevitable there will be some nay-sayers." He added: "Sofia is being true to her voice. It is consistent with all the qualities which made her films brilliant in the past. "People who love Sofia Coppola movies will love this."

Actor Steve Coogan.

Coppola details a decadent world in which the French aristocracy live to excess, with no part of the outside world to disturb them. Marie-Antoinette is a young Austrian girl in a foreign land who turns to drink and gambling when her husband, the heir to the French throne, spurns her in the marital chamber. It is based on the book of the same name, by Britain's Lady Antonia Fraser. "I could picture Kirsten playing that role. I knew she had both the effervescence and playful side of Marie-Antoinette, and also the more deep, substantial side that dignified her later in her life," said Coppola, of her leading lady. Dunst, who appeared in Coppola's first film, The Virgin Suicides, said: "Sofia gave me liberties to be who I am and not be confined by trying to portray an historical figure in a regimented way." She said Coppola was the only director in whose films she was able to recognize herself. "She doesn't make me into somebody who I am not. A lot of directors affect you in a way, into what they see you as. Sofia sees me honestly." Coppola said the movie was not a political statement on current times. "I wasn't making a political movie about the French revolution I was making a portrait of Marie-Antoinette and my opinions are in the film," she said. Although a period drama, the film is suffused with a sense of modernity and stylistically resembles pop videos and teen dramas. "We modernized certain things that were relate-able to me and a modern audience," she said, referring to the music and language used in the film. Coogan said: "Sofia didn't want it to be an historical document. "Often in period dramas people fall into a certain style of acting that is inherited from previous period dramas, which becomes cyclical. "It was important to break out of that and be true to the characters."

Coppola directed Dunst in her acclaimed debut The Virgin Suicides

Dunst said she was not entirely familiar with the story of Marie-Antoinette before she made the film. "When you grow up in France you learn about French history. When you grow up in America, French history is a smaller paragraph in your text book." But Dunst said she could relate to the book's story of a young girl who has been brought to a new world not knowing how to behave. Coppola said she wanted to make a movie she would want to show her friends. "The story is about teenagers in Versailles, so I wanted it to have that energy of youth and teenage feeling to it. "I feel that in my three films there is a theme of young women trying to find their way, their identity." Dunst said she felt that Sofia was the only film-maker telling stories about women and their personal lives. "There are plenty of mopey man movies, but there are no movies about women being introspective, their troubles and relationships. "She speaks to women my age." -By Darlen Watter

50 Cent named songwriter of year

Rapper 50 Cent's latest album sold 7.5 million copies in 2005.

Rapper 50 Cent, singer Annie Lennox and rock band Green Day have won the major awards at a ceremony where US songwriters honor their peers. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) voted 50 Cent songwriter of the year. Lennox collected the Founders Award for her "inspirational" work as a solo artist and with The Eurythmics, one of the biggest groups of the 1980s. Boulevard of Broken Dreams by Green Day was one of the songs of the year.

Lennox was described as having "one of the finest musical voices".

It shared the honour with Mariah Carey's We Belong Together, written by Johnta Austin, Jermaine Dupri and Manuel Seal. Green Day also won another prize at the ceremony in Los Angeles - ASCAP's creative voice award. Lennox joins Sir Paul McCartney, Neil Young and Tom Waits as a recipient of the Founders Award. It is awarded to songwriters who have made exceptional contributions to music and who have influenced their peers. "Annie Lennox is one of the finest musical voices of our time - unlike any other, uncompromising and unpredictable," ASCAP president Marilyn Bergman said. EMI Music Publishing was named publisher of the year for the fourth year in a row.