Faye Dunaway, now 83 and somewhat reclusive, revisits her exceptional rise to fame and subsequent decline in a new documentary — which also confronts her complicated reputation and reveals previously ...
A hair was standing up on Faye Dunaway’s head. The Hollywood legend was filming a restaurant scene for the 1974 movie “Chinatown,” opposite Jack Nicholson, but production kept being halted by a ...
Faye Dunaway attends the 'Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga' premiere at the 77th Cannes Film Festival on May 15, 2024. Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images After revealing some of her most intimate ...
Celebrity documentaries are a dime a dozen these days. But celebrity docus that don’t serve as an infomercial for a star are rare. Laurent Bouzereau‘s HBO documentary “Faye,” about Faye Dunaway, is ...
"I’m glad you see it as a redemption story. To some extent it is." HBO's celebratory showbiz documentary, “Faye,” directed by Laurent Bouzereau, showcases Dunaway as the seminal 1970s screen actress ...
Early in Faye, Laurent Bouzereau’s entertaining portrait for HBO of screen legend Faye Dunaway, Bette Davis in a Johnny Carson clip names her without hesitation as the one star with whom she would ...
“Faye,” a documentary memoir of Faye Dunaway, begins with the “Chinatown” star barking orders at her interviewer, saying, “We need to shoot. I’m here now, come on.” It’s a perfect introduction to an ...
Celebrity biodocs are like feral cats these days: A half-dozen of them on every streetcorner. But Faye (now streaming on Max), a retrospective on the life and career of superstar actor Faye Dunaway, ...
As a young cinephile in the late ’60s and early ‘70s I was always a little frightened by Faye Dunaway. I was too young to have caught Bonnie and Clyde during its 1967 theatrical run (there’s being ...
The 75-year-old actress landed her first big screen role in the 1967 film The Happening, before shooting to stardom after starring opposite Warren Beatty in Bonnie & Clyde, which was released a few ...
A new Faye Dunaway documentary wants to turn us from gossips into cheerleaders. By Dina Gachman The Method taught actors to channel the complexity and messiness of human emotion into a performance.