Monday 5 November 2012
Saturday 3 November 2012
Tuesday 11 September 2012
Bill Murray has opened up at the Toronto International Film Festival about playing the polio-stricken Franklin Roosevelt in Hyde Park on Hudson.
watch the video here!
new drawings to come...
Saturday 8 September 2012
Friday 7 September 2012
Trawling the net for more interesting Bill fan art and I came across the "Please Post Bills" project. Loving this piece by DKNG studios... two garfield movies though.. we will let that one slide...
Monday 3 September 2012
Sunday 2 September 2012
Lost quite a few days of my life, I wish I had the Bill Murray coloring book to pass the time. Mike Coley has created an amazing coloring book featuring 24 images to color. Available here!
Might have to make do with doing a drawing of my own... or just sticking on a dvd... maybe Rushmore...
Might have to make do with doing a drawing of my own... or just sticking on a dvd... maybe Rushmore...
Thursday 30 August 2012
Wednesday 29 August 2012
February 15 2005
How We Work - Bill Murray
By definition, Hollywood stars must have agents and publicists. Not Bill Murray. He has never had a publicist and, five years ago, he fired his agents. "I said I didn’t ever want to speak to them again, and I never did," he says. "I like to cut my own lawn now. I don’t need a landscaper."
Now Murray’s only contact with the film business is through a freephone number. If people need to talk to him - perhaps producers who want him to star in a film - they have to call the number and leave a message. (Of course, they have to find the number first.) If he feels like it, he will call back. Often, he doesn’t. Sometimes, he’ll go for weeks without even listening to the messages. It took Sofia Coppola hundreds of phone calls and seven months to get him to look at the script for Lost in Translation. Even then, she wasn’t sure he was going to make the film until he appeared on the set on the first day of the shoot in Tokyo. Other directors have apparently been told to leave scripts in a phone booth somewhere near his home outside New York, up the Hudson River. On a recent film, a production assistant who needed to contact him was told to call his freephone and leave a number for a phone that she would not pick up, so he could call her back without having to talk to her. Of course, he doesn't see this as strange or eccentric. He likes to be accessible, he says, but on his own terms.
(Original Link)
How We Work - Bill Murray
By definition, Hollywood stars must have agents and publicists. Not Bill Murray. He has never had a publicist and, five years ago, he fired his agents. "I said I didn’t ever want to speak to them again, and I never did," he says. "I like to cut my own lawn now. I don’t need a landscaper."
Now Murray’s only contact with the film business is through a freephone number. If people need to talk to him - perhaps producers who want him to star in a film - they have to call the number and leave a message. (Of course, they have to find the number first.) If he feels like it, he will call back. Often, he doesn’t. Sometimes, he’ll go for weeks without even listening to the messages. It took Sofia Coppola hundreds of phone calls and seven months to get him to look at the script for Lost in Translation. Even then, she wasn’t sure he was going to make the film until he appeared on the set on the first day of the shoot in Tokyo. Other directors have apparently been told to leave scripts in a phone booth somewhere near his home outside New York, up the Hudson River. On a recent film, a production assistant who needed to contact him was told to call his freephone and leave a number for a phone that she would not pick up, so he could call her back without having to talk to her. Of course, he doesn't see this as strange or eccentric. He likes to be accessible, he says, but on his own terms.
(Original Link)
Tuesday 28 August 2012
Just a heads up the Bill Murray Exhibition at Hemma is now running through till the end of September.
Also on a related note came across this 'Thank you card to Bill Murray' by Niege Borges.
Bill Wearing Socks from Niege Borges on Vimeo.
Unfortunately the 'Bill doll' hasn't gone into production but you can buy a print of the costume changes here. We will all just have to wait a little longer to dress Bill Murray.
Also on a related note came across this 'Thank you card to Bill Murray' by Niege Borges.
Bill Wearing Socks from Niege Borges on Vimeo.
Unfortunately the 'Bill doll' hasn't gone into production but you can buy a print of the costume changes here. We will all just have to wait a little longer to dress Bill Murray.
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