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Amy Irving
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The first happy day in the adult life of Anjuli (Amy Irving) is the day her husband's body is set on fire. Her rich and powerful husband, the Rana of Bhitor (Rossano Brazzi), is ritually immolated in a lavish ceremony where his other wife, Anjuli's half sister, is expected to commit ritual suttee. Only after she is released from her marriage is Anjuli free to follow her heart. Based on M.M. Kaye's beloved novel, The Far Pavilions tells the haunting love story of Anjuli and Ash (Ben Cross) against the spectacular backdrop of mid-19th-century colonial India, replete with accurate historical and cultural details. Full of battle, treachery, intrigue, passion, and prejudice, the film brims with stunning sights, from the peaks of the Himalayas to the famed palaces of Bhitor, remarkable battle scenes, and royal pageantry, including a lavish, several-day-long traditional Hindu wedding where the groom enters on an elephant.
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Born in Palo Alto, California, Amy Irving was the daughter of influential theatrical producer/director Jules Irving and actress Priscilla Pointer. "I'm a theater brat," she has admitted. "I lived in San Francisco on top of Ninth Avenue, in a two-story house with eucalyptus trees in the backyard." She would later train at the American Conservatory Theater and Britain's LAMDA, before she made her off-Broadway debut in 1970.
In the battered midwestern farmland, a place of broken dreams, Joseph (Dennis Hopper) and Rosealee (Amy Irving) have maintained a relationship of convenience since the death of her husband. The onset of routine over the years has deprived them both of the passion they so eagerly crave. It will take an act of infidelity and the resulting catharsis for them to find their way back to each other's hearts.
Amy Irving.jpg A dark-haired beauty with striking eyes and an intelligent air, Amy Irving seemingly came by her talent genetically: Her father Jules was an accomplished stage director and her mother Priscilla Pointer is a fine character actress. (Pointer has often been teamed onscreen with her offspring, playing either the mother or a motherly figure to characters essayed by Irving.) Although she actually began her career as a guest performer in episodic television and on stage, Irving shot to attention as Sue Snell, the sole teen survivor of Brian De Palma’s splashy “Carrie” (1976). Irving lent her astringent good looks and spunk to De Palma’s “The Fury” (1978), playing a woman with psychokinetic powers, and to her portrayal of an Indian princess in love with a British cavalryman (Ben Cross) in the HBO miniseries “The Far Pavilions” (1984). She ... triumphed on Broadway, first as Constanza Weber, the wife of Mozart, in “Amadeus” (1980) and again as Ellie to Rex Harrison’s Shotover in a 1983 revival of Shaw’s “Heartbreak House”. Despite having some misgivings over the role, Irving accepted the part of Hadass, the bride of “Yentl” (1983), a woman masquerading as a man, in Barbra Streisand’s directorial debut. Despite the inherent pitfalls, she imbued the role with a delicacy and intelligence that was rewarded with an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress.
Amy Irving looks a little tired at first, sitting in a big chair in the lobby of The Cincinnatian Hotel. She's been in Cincinnati filming Traffic with Michael Douglas. But on a day with a light shooting schedule, she's promoting her new film, Bossa Nova, directed by her husband Bruno Barreto. Talking about the project and her relationship with the Brazilian director, Irving brightens quickly.
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Amy Irving, an accomplished actress with dark hair, natural beauty, and genetic charm, was born in California in 1953. Daughter for Jules Irving, and Priscilla Pointer, and sister for David K Irving (successful director by himself) and Katie Irving, Amy was born to act. Amy's mother, Priscilla, was a proven actress by herself, and many times they were playing along as a mother and her daughter,...
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