Times Colonist

The real Molly behind Molly’s Game

Former poker game organizer Molly Bloom recalls how her story ended up on big screen

- AMY KAUFMAN

Ahotel manager was circling the Polo Lounge, surveying the stately dining room, when he suddenly did a double take. “Molly? Molly Bloom? I thought I saw you come in,” he said. “Mind if I sit — just briefly?”

Stephen Boggs, the director of guest relations at the Beverly Hills Hotel, slid into the booth where Bloom was having breakfast. The two had met in the early 2000s, when she began hosting undergroun­d poker games for the entertainm­ent industry elite in the hotel’s private bungalows.

She’d returned to the venue last month to talk about a new Aaron Sorkin movie based on her life, Molly’s Game, which follows her journey into the secretive world of high-stakes poker, which led to her arrest by the FBI in 2013.

Bloom says that the celebritie­s who frequented her games — Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, Todd Phillips — have never contacted her following her brush with the feds. But Boggs, at least, seemed ready and willing to welcome her back into the Hollywood fray. After chatting with her for a few moments, he offered her his business card and urged her to keep in touch.

“It’s so great to see you,” he said. “You look terrific, and congratula­tions on everything. We always loved having you. Email me.”

Bloom, 39, smiled politely and bade him farewell. Asked if she intended to contact Boggs, she shook her head.

“I already know too many secrets,” she said.

Bloom still knows how to pass in L.A., with her immaculate­ly white Louis Vuitton sneakers and brown tresses blown out despite spending the previous night retching during a bout of food poisoning. But being here — at a hotel that “smells like people owing me money,” no less — brought up a slew of conflictin­g feelings for her.

She moved here from Colorado in 2001, fresh out of college. She wanted to take a year off before heading to law school, and after a decade of skiing profession­ally she was tired of being cold. She wasn’t coming to Hollywood to make it, she just wanted some sun.

Her parents — especially her strict father, a professor at Colorado State University — weren’t thrilled with the idea and cut her off financiall­y. Bloom slept on a friend’s couch and started cocktail waitressin­g to make ends meet. One night, while serving overpriced vodka, she met a real estate investor who needed an assistant. She got the gig, part of which included helping him organize weekly celebrity poker games at the Viper Room.

Bloom didn’t know anything about poker. She arrived at the first game with a cheese plate and a CD filled with songs she’d chosen after Googling “what kind of music do poker players like to listen to?” But when she looked around the table and realized who was playing, her mind began to race.

“It just occurred to me instantly — this is a massive opportunit­y to build a network,” Bloom recalled. “Who gets that opportunit­y? I lived across from a cornfield when I was growing up. And so I really wanted to stay in the room. I didn’t know what I wanted to do. And all of a sudden, here were the most successful people from all these different walks of life who could maybe open doors for me.”

She was good at running the poker games. So good that she convinced the guys from the Viper Room to play elsewhere with her.

Instead of a grimy basement, Bloom set up tables in luxurious hotel suites at the Beverly Hills Hotel, the Peninsula and the Four Seasons. She ordered Mr. Chow’s and had beautiful women on hand to offer massages. If a game lasted for three days, she would stay up for three days.

In 2009, she moved her operation to New York, and that’s where the trouble began. Her games in L.A. had basically been legal. Her salary came from the hefty tips players gave her, and she paid taxes on that income. (The most money she made in one year was $4 million US, Bloom said.)

But in New York, she started extending more and more credit to the players.

“I was guaranteei­ng the game,” she said. “I was essentiall­y giving them money to play. It wasn’t like: ‘Thanks for bringing me a drink’ or ‘Thanks for inviting me.’ It was like: ‘Thanks for allowing me to win $5 million with the money you vouched for.’ ”

After being stiffed $250,000, Bloom decided to start taking a rake — a percentage of the pot — which is illegal. She was in the midst of a downward spiral, taking pills to stay up, drinking alcohol to take the edge off the pills and then popping Xanax to come down from it all. In 2011, the FBI got wind of the scheme and raided one of her games. The government seized all of her money.

She was broke, and the U.S.’s Internal Revenue Service was after her to pay taxes on the additional income she’d made.

After drying out at rehab, Bloom moved in with her mother in Colorado and decided writing a book could help pay her debts. When she went to shop her proposal, she said publishers told her they would give her a substantia­l advance only if she shared revealing stories about the stars at the games.

Bloom opted to disclose only names that had been previously unveiled in court documents related to a Ponzi scheme run by one of her former players, Bradley Ruderman. (DiCaprio and Maguire were among them.) Harper Collins paid her $45,000 US for the book, she said.

She finished her first draft and moved back to Los Angeles in 2013, but 10 days after settling into a new apartment in West Hollywood, 17 FBI agents turned up outside her door with automatic weapons. They arrested her, pushing a paper in front of her face that read: “The United States of America vs. Molly Bloom.” Her mother put up her house to get Bloom out of jail.

“There were days where I felt like I couldn’t get out of bed,” Bloom said. “My life was such a gigantic mess in so many ways. But I was just, like: ‘You’ve got to finish this book. Pitch to Hollywood. Now the story is even better. Just focus on that.’ ”

In May 2014, Bloom got a break. A Manhattan federal judge ruled that she had ultimately been a minor player in the illegal gambling ring and sentenced her to one year of probation, fined her $1,000 and said she would have to perform 200 hours of community service.

Her book was published a month later, and she quickly started pitching it as a movie adaptation. Although she met with a handful of potential screenwrit­ers — many of whom were interested in the “lowhanging fruit,” a.k.a. the celebritie­s — she was intent on getting a meeting with Sorkin.

“I went around to all these agencies and was, like: ‘Can you get to Aaron Sorkin?’ ” she said. “I was a huge fan of his work.”

Bloom hired the first person who said he had ties to Sorkin — an entertainm­ent lawyer — and a meeting was set.

“I said I’d meet with her as a courtesy to him,” said Sorkin, who also directed Molly’s Game. “The book is a great ride, but I really wasn’t thinking this was in my wheelhouse. But when I met Molly, everything changed. I’d been very stupid. I’d made assumption­s about Molly that were totally unfounded.

“To say she was down on her luck is an understate­ment,” Sorkin said. “Things were looking very bleak for her when we met, and yet she was poised and confident. There was an inner strength built out of integrity. Far from cashing in on her decade-long brush with celebrity, she was refusing to dish on anyone. This wasn’t the female Wolf of Wall Street. What I saw was an honest-to-God movie heroine.”

Even though Sorkin knew he was in, he kept Bloom on the hook for two months, emailing her a handful of questions about her life. What was her relationsh­ip like with her father? Why didn’t she take the bigger book advance? Why didn’t she hire people to collect her debts?

Jessica Chastain, who was cast as Bloom, had her own questions for the woman the tabloids had called the “poker princess.”

“I really just wanted to know why — why was it so important to her?” Chastain said. “The rules were set up for her by her father from the very beginning. But why play by those rules?”

Though Bloom never went to set — much of Molly’s Game was filmed in Canada, where she, as a convicted criminal, is not permitted to go — she moved back to Los Angeles during the production process to work with Sorkin.

Bloom has returned to Colorado, this time into her own place in Denver. She has paid her legal bills, and is negotiatin­g with the IRS to work out a payment plan for her restitutio­n. She leaned into a 12-step program and meditates regularly. Bloom plans to launch her own company, which will oversee co-working, membership­only spaces for women.

“I’ve learned to live in the smaller moments of life. The big moments are great, too. But it’s a more comprehens­ive picture this time.”

 ??  ?? Molly Bloom ran an undergroun­d poker game for high-profile celebritie­s and businessme­n in Hollywood for many years before she was investigat­ed by the FBI. Her life story is the subject of the movie Molly’s Game, directed by Aaron Sorkin.
Molly Bloom ran an undergroun­d poker game for high-profile celebritie­s and businessme­n in Hollywood for many years before she was investigat­ed by the FBI. Her life story is the subject of the movie Molly’s Game, directed by Aaron Sorkin.
 ??  ?? Jessica Chastain plays Molly Bloom in Molly’s Game.
Jessica Chastain plays Molly Bloom in Molly’s Game.

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