HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021243.jpg

2.75 MB

Extraction Summary

27
People
5
Organizations
6
Locations
3
Events
3
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Narrative account / article draft (produced in house oversight investigation)
File Size: 2.75 MB
Summary

This document is a narrative account, likely written by a publicist (consistent with Peggy Siegal's style), describing a day of filming for the movie 'Wall Street 2' on October 21st (likely 2009). The author details organizing high-society figures like Julia Koch, Amy Fine Collins, and Hamish Bowles to appear as extras in a party scene directed by Oliver Stone. The text also mentions a subsequent lunch at The Monkey Bar with a group referred to as 'The Harpies,' including Barbara Walters and Liz Smith, and an interaction with Graydon Carter.

People (27)

Name Role Context
Narrator Author/Extra
Former personal publicist to Michael Douglas; organized extras for the film; refers to 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Michael Douglas Actor
Referred to as 'Michael' and 'Gekko'; star of the film; friend of the narrator.
Oliver Stone Director
Referred to as 'Oliver'; Directing the film; interacting with extras.
Julia Koch Extra/Socialite
Wife of David Koch; acting as an extra; walked from Park Ave apartment.
David Koch Businessman
Husband of Julia Koch; 'financial titan'; unaware of Julia's location.
Josh Brolin Actor
Playing character 'Bretton James'; interacting with extras.
Shia LaBeouf Actor
Referred to as 'Shia'; appears for a confrontation scene.
Catherine Zeta-Jones Actress
Michael Douglas's wife; mentioned regarding Broadway debut.
Amy Fine Collins Journalist/Extra
Vanity Fair; on set as extra.
Hamish Bowles Editor/Extra
Vogue fashion editor; on set as extra.
Baby Jane Holzer Property Owner
Owner of the townhouse used for filming; art collector.
Graydon Carter Editor
Vanity Fair editor; encountered at The Monkey Bar.
Eric Kopeloff Producer
On set.
Celia Costas Producer/Manager
Location manager on first Wall Street; on set.
Ellen Mirojnick Costume Designer
Created the look for the film.
Jacqueline Stone Extra
Oliver Stone's mother; on set.
Monique Van Vooren Extra
Friend of Jacqueline Stone; on set.
Chuck Pfieffer Extra
Appeared in original film; paired with narrator in scene.
Liz Smith Journalist
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Barbara Walters Journalist
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Noelle Beck Actress
Playing 'Samantha'.
Geoffrey Bradfield Decorator/Extra
On set behind Julia Koch.
Cynthia McFadden Journalist
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Nora Ephron Writer/Director
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Jennifer Isham Associate
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Maury Perl Associate
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.
Beth Kseniak Associate
Part of 'The Harpies' lunch group.

Timeline (3 events)

September 25th
Shared birthday party for Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones.
St. Regis
Wednesday, October 21st
Filming of 'Wall Street 2' (Money Never Sleeps) scenes involving extras.
41 East 65th Street, NYC
Wednesday, October 21st
Lunch with 'The Harpies'
The Monkey Bar

Relationships (3)

Narrator Professional/Friend Michael Douglas
I was his personal publicist when he won the Golden Globe... we have remained great friends.
Julia Koch Spouse David Koch
Her real-life financial titan husband David
Jacqueline Stone Mother/Son Oliver Stone
Oliver's French mother, Jacqueline Stone

Key Quotes (3)

"Give me the night before the Titanic goes down"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021243.jpg
Quote #1
"Her real-life financial titan husband David is unaware where she is this morning."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021243.jpg
Quote #2
"I tell him Oliver Stone wants him in 'Wall Street 2' as an extra. (I make this up.)"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021243.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (4,750 characters)

of Art. Gekko, who used to be a sponsor or honoree of such events, cannot even afford a ticket.
The shot starts with a barking seal jumping for fish, then pans down to the actors. Extras weave in and out. In one take Michael makes a wrong turn and ends up at the monkey house. Everyone laughs. The atmosphere on the set is courteous but quick and tense. There is pressure when you are making a sequel to a hit.
I watch the action on monitors while sitting on the producers' canvas chairs with Pressman, Eric Kopeloff ("Monsters Ball") and Celia Costas, who was a location manager on the first "Wall Street." They have asked me to be an extra in the Alzheimer's Ball scene and bring some friends to play rich Upper East Side socialites. Oliver wants over the top glam, go-to-the-vault jewels and couture gowns. "Give me the night before the Titanic goes down," were his exact words. Not a problem.
I pay a quick visit to Michael in his trailer on Fifth Avenue where he is resting. We go way back. I was his personal publicist when he won the Golden Globe and Oscar for Best Actor for "Wall Street" and we have remained great friends. Gekko is just as challenging for him the second time because of endless pages of technical financial dialogue. We discuss Catherine Zeta-Jones' Broadway debut in a "Little Night Music." Michael has a stack of partially finished handwritten thank you notes next to him for gifts received for their shared birthday party on September 25th at the St. Regis. Her 40th and his 65th.
I tell him I have been cast as an extra in two scenes and he laughs knowing I am desperate to hang around him and the production.
8:30 a.m. on Wednesday, October 21st, another warm, stunning fall day. I report to the wardrobe trailer on 65th Street and Madison Avenue. I carry four elaborate cocktail dresses and bags of matching accessories. My hair is in rollers. Statuesque Julia Koch walks over from her Park Avenue apartment carrying her white Valentino and long diamond earrings. Her real-life financial titan husband David is unaware where she is this morning.
Vanity Fair's keeper of the Best Dressed List, Amy Fine Collins, arrives totally organized in turquoise vintage Geoffrey Beene, and Vogue's fashion editor Hamish Bowles wears a riot of plaids, patterns and a large yellow fake flower on his lapel. Costume Designer Ellen Mirojnick, who created Gordon Gekko's rich slick look in the first film, is ecstatic with the extras I invited.
Oliver is shooting a scene with Josh Brolin (the star of Stone's "W"). His character Bretton (never Bret) James, a ruthless Wall Street kingpin, and his perfect wife Samantha (Noelle Beck) are hosting a benefit piano recital for a 13-year-old child prodigy in their huge, art-filled townhouse at 41 East 65th Street. The building actually belongs to Baby Jane Holzer, a wealthy art collector still famous for hanging with Andy Warhol in the '60s. The production designer had Jane's fabulous Warhols moved to storage and replaced with matching photographic copies. Very expensive contemporary art is again an important production element of Oliver's vision.
At 10:30 a.m., all the extras are placed around the living room set. Oliver's French mother, Jacqueline Stone, and her friend Monique Van Vooren, both in their 80s, are seated in front of the fireplace chatting in French. Production assistants fuss over them. Debonair macho man Chuck Pfieffer, who appeared in the original film, and I immediately invent a back story—I am his corporate wife—and we position ourselves on a couch next to the director's mother. Julia gets the best spot close to the piano and Amy, Hamish and decorator Geoffrey Bradfield are right behind her. Josh is brought in and the kibitzing stops.
Oliver appears on the set with eagle eyes and a sly grin and quickly re-positions everyone. He explains the scene, gives out lines to his favored extras, and on his way out to the monitors in the next room mentions that my earrings are too small. Wardrobe jumps. Josh rehearses and Oliver finally yells, "Action." The kid plays the piano, Josh explains why we are in his home, asks for money, the camera dollies as extras say their lines and Shia appears at the door uninvited for a confrontation with Josh. Three hours later a PA yells, "Lunch".
In costume, Amy, Hamish and I run to The Monkey Bar. I am late to meet "The Harpies," including Liz Smith, Barbara Walters, Cynthia McFadden, Nora Ephron, Jennifer Isham, Maury Perl and Beth Kseniak.
Graydon Carter is at the next table. I tell him Oliver Stone wants him in "Wall Street 2" as an extra. (I make this up.) Graydon jokes that he only works with lines. I say, "Not a problem." (This will be news to Oliver.)
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021243

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