Odette said:The terrible thing is that Sienna is going to start this new "60's,Edie,hard rock" look a must have. We will see al those boho girls turning into Edie/Sienna wannabes, not knowing but bit of its cultural background. Gap, topshop...get ready to see black/white striped shirts, skinny black jeans, long earrings, 60's dresses!
babydoll1125 said:I still don't get if she went to Cambridge or Harvard, which is in Cambridge. I always thought she went to Harvard but someone said it wasn't co ed untill 1966...so i guess it must have been Cambridge and she just hung out with Harvard people.
fairyx said:I just finished reading Edie: American Girl... very sad.... and I´m sad it ended, I never wanted the pages to end...
I found two quotes in the book that I wanted to write down... they just say so much about her...
"I brought a man with me called Paco - an English Yogi. Edie loved him. He was reading this girl´s hand in the hallway just before Edie came through to be married. Paco grabbed Edie´s hand, looked at it, and then looked at her. And Edie said, "Yes, I know.""
(by her brother Jonathan Sedgwick)
"Edie was a star who by mistake got incarnated into a human body, and never could figure it out and wanted to get back up there."
(by John Anthony Walker who went to Cambridge with her)
BooBah said:wow, those quotes are beautiful. ive read the book too, and i also liked that part about the star. i dont remember the first quote uve written down tho, does she say, yes i know, coz she knows she's kinda ill fated?
the ending of the book was very sad, and its very sad knowing that the books over and u cant read any more. its like a real person u kno has died. my favourite quote from the book was the final paragraph, when one guy (cant remember his name) describes about when he retold everything he knew about edie for hours one night after she died, and left a glass and a cigarette ther in memory of her. he says that he could feel her presence so strongly that he looked over and the cigarette was lit? 'edie was there'.
sorry, i cant remember it exactly and i dont wanna ruin it for anyone, but i just found that final passage so beautiful yet so so sad and haunting at the same time.
fairyx said:I just finished reading Edie: American Girl... very sad.... and I´m sad it ended, I never wanted the pages to end...
I found two quotes in the book that I wanted to write down... they just say so much about her...
"I brought a man with me called Paco - an English Yogi. Edie loved him. He was reading this girl´s hand in the hallway just before Edie came through to be married. Paco grabbed Edie´s hand, looked at it, and then looked at her. And Edie said, "Yes, I know.""
(by her brother Jonathan Sedgwick)
posted at jjb and originally from: http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/384953p-326717c.html'Factory' film on Warhol
no work of art, says Reed
'Factory Girl' has only just started shooting, but one-time Warhol acolyte Lou Reed is ready with his review: He thinks it stinks.
Sienna Miller, Hayden Christensen and Guy Pearce just started filming "­Factory Girl," in which Miller plays Andy Warhol's drug-addled muse Edie Sedgwick.
But Lou Reed has already formed his opinion of director George Hickenlooper and his cast.
"They're all a bunch of wh*res," the rock god tells us.
Reed knew Sedgwick, and his band, The Velvet Underground, provided the jagged soundtrack to her 1960s scene. In "Factory Girl," The Velvets are played by the highly regarded indie rockers Weezer. Hickenlooper says that guitarist Brian Bell, as Reed, does a terrific cover of "Heroin."
But Reed is far from flattered.
"I read that script," Reed said the other night at a party for his new photo shows at the Hermès boutique and the Steven Kasher Gallery. "It's one of the most disgusting, foul things I've seen — by any illiterate ****** — in a long time. There's no limit to how low some people will go to write something to make money."
Reed was asked at one point to get involved with the project.
"I wouldn't be part of that," said the rocker. "Just like I wouldn't be part of 'I Shot Andy Warhol,' " Mary Harron's 1996 film about Valerie Solanas' assassination attempt on the artist. "They tried to turn Valerie Solanas into a heroine. They're all a bunch of wh*res."
Reached on his set in Louisiana, Hickenlooper questioned whether Reed had read the latest script by "Wonderland" writer Captain Mauzner.
"There've been several Edie screenplays over the years," said Hickenlooper. "I adore Lou Reed. I love him for hating my project, which can only bring it more attention. But nobody is making big money on it. We're all working for scale to tell a complex story about a wonderful young woman.
"Lou will be making some money, since we've licensed his song."
