Lethbridge Herald

ACTRESS CAN RELATE TO ROLE

DIANE LANE AT A CROSSROADS JUST LIKE HER CHARACTER

- Oscar-nominated Lane stars in dramedy by Eleanor Coppola “Paris Can Wait”

Like her character in the new film “Paris Can Wait,” Diane Lane says she’s at a “crossroads.” The dramedy by Eleanor Coppola, which opened Friday in Toronto and Vancouver, stars Lane as Anne, the wife of a bigwig Hollywood producer, played by Alec Baldwin. Anne’s husband is often away due to work and, after a road adventure through the south of France with a charismati­c Frenchman (played by Arnaud Viard), she gains a new perspectiv­e on life.

“I’m at that crossroads, like my character is, obviously we’re the same age, which is nice, too,” said Lane, 52.

“When everything is gone — your parents have passed away, your child has grown up, your marriages are adios, and so here you are. And now I get to say, ‘Oh, I have all of this extra availabili­ty. What do I care about?’”

For Lane, who was nominated for a best actress Oscar in 2003 for “Unfaithful,” one of her current passions is climate change.

“It’s interestin­g right now, it’s the most powerfully, politicall­y charged time since when I was very little and we were going through Vietnam,” she said.

“Having just gone to Washington, D.C., and marching for climate acknowledg­ment, I’m showing up as a citizen, I’m showing up as a civilian, I’m showing up as a woman .... We’re signing petitions and we’re trying to not just be railroaded.”

This is 81-year-old Coppola’s first time directing a scripted feature, which she also wrote based on a road trip she once took. Her husband, Francis Ford Coppola, has also directed Lane on four films — “Rumble Fish,” “The Outsiders,” “The Cotton Club” and “Jack.”

“My God, they couldn’t be more different, like most married couples,” said Lane. “But it’s a family business .... It’s inevitable that she’s going to have some knowledge from behind the scenes that almost no first-time director can have, because she’s armed with all of that experience of being behind the curtain in Oz all these years of what it takes to get a film made.”

“Paris Can Wait” features a gorgeous backdrop and delectable dinner scenes with French cuisine that Lane found overwhelmi­ng.

“I think I was strobing from the amount of chocolate I consumed,” she said. “It was like that Pink Floyd song where they say your hands are floating up like two balloons.

“I was like, ‘Bye, I’m floating up into the ceiling from caffeine and this chocolate. I can’t feel my digits, my lips are going numb.’ I’m exaggerati­ng, but I’d been worried that I wouldn’t be able to go to sleep again. It really is a drug. You don’t think about it but then when you eat that much of it, you certainly are confronted with that reality.”

Also like Anne, Lane said she has a hard time luxuriatin­g and living spontaneou­sly in the way Viard’s character does.

“I get nervous when I have nothing planned,” she said. “I don’t mean like over a 48-hour period of time, that’s fine.

“But I’ve never had a vacation that lasted longer than two weekends, meaning a 10-day, that’s it. The thought of taking off the month of August blows my mind. The way the Europeans do every year? I just can’t even.”

The experience on set brought back memories of when she hit the road with her dad as a kid.

“My first road trip, I was four years old and I basically lived in the back windshield,” said Lane. “I camped out there, I guess it was 1969 crosscount­ry with my dad.

“We went from California to New York and that was special, that was amazing.”

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 ??  ?? Actress Diane Lane attends a special screening of Sony Pictures Classics' “Paris Can Wait” in New York.
Actress Diane Lane attends a special screening of Sony Pictures Classics' “Paris Can Wait” in New York.

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