Baltimore Sun

Legends bound as friends by ‘Book Club’ films

Actors jet to Italy in sequel with quartet all together more

- By Lindsey Bahr

Candice Bergen hatched the idea for a sequel to “Book Club” before the first had even come out.

It was 2017, and the stars were flying to a convention of movie theater owners to drum up excitement for their movie where she, Jane Fonda, Mary Steenburge­n and Diane Keaton play friends who decide to read “Fifty Shades of Grey.”

Like all movies, it wasn’t the easiest to get made — somewhere along the line someone even suggested a younger cast. But they were pretty sure they had something that audiences were going to like and that a sequel would happen.

Bergen said, “It has to be Italy.”

Why Italy? Well, about the same reasons anyone would choose Italy: the food, the wine, the history, the art, the people.

And their dream came true: “Book Club: The Next Chapter,” now playing in theaters, finds the women traveling to Rome, Venice and Tuscany. It’s part bacheloret­te party for Fonda’s character, who is getting married for the first time (to Don Johnson) and part bucket list fulfillmen­t — years ago, life got in the way of a trip, and postpandem­ic, they’re all feeling more adventurou­s.

“On the first film, we were only together when we got together for a book club meeting. It was about our individual storylines,” Fonda said. “This time we were together all the time.”

That meant full filming days, dinners out with everyone and weekend excursions to Florence and gelato in between takes. One morning, a makeup artist spotted Fonda at

5:30 a.m. outside the Pantheon with a map in hand and hat on her head. A few hours later, while filming, she would exclaim she had already hit 10,000 steps.

“We had a schedule,” Bergen said. “It wasn’t like anarchy. When the day wrapped, we went to dinner.”

“But the dinners out were very important,” Steenburge­n added.

“There were a lot of discussion­s about where we were eating, who was eating and dreaming about Aperol Spritzes — at least for me.”

Though there was support for a sequel after the first made over $100 million at the box office, there was a fixation at the studio on the book choice being the hook.

But director Bill Holderman and his co-writer Erin Simms were pretty sure that wasn’t it.

“We felt like the driver of the success was the women, their friendship and the bond,” Holderman said. “We had to go through a bit of a journey to convince everyone that we didn’t need another ‘Fifty Shades’-style book.”

Ultimately, they chose Paulo Coelho’s “The Alchemist,” inspired by something Steenburge­n had said about getting written off after a certain age.

The four stars — though of somewhat similar generation­s with ages ranging from 70 (Steenburge­n) to 85 (Fonda) — hadn’t known each other very well and had never worked together before the first film. But they soon became real friends and have stayed in close touch — usually waiting for “Candy,” as they call Bergen, who lives on the East Coast, to tell them she’s coming to Los Angeles. Then they scramble to figure out whose house they’ll go to for dinner. All have hosted at least one.

“The biggest gift by far of these two movies for me is just the friendship­s with these beloveds in my life,” Steenburge­n said.

Italy was a dream for everyone. Some had filmed there before. Fonda had once stayed in Rome for a year doing “Barbarella” with Roger Vadim, and Bergen had shot Lina Wertmuller’s “A Night Full of Rain” there. When it came time to make “Book Club: The Next Chapter,” Bergen suggested they call on her co-star from the 1978 film, Giancarlo Giannini, to play a part.

“He definitely has a little crush on you,” Steenburge­n teased. “He couldn’t keep his eyes off of you.”

Bergen politely disagreed. Besides, they were all focused on being together.

By the time the rest of their male counterpar­ts arrived for the final scenes, including Johnson, Craig T. Nelson and Andy Garcia, Fonda laughed that it was like, “Who are you? We felt very complete unto ourselves.”

None took the film for granted, either.

“They really understood how lucky they were to be together and to be doing this,” Simms said. “Not everybody sends older women to Italy to go make a movie. I think they really felt that, and it bonded them more deeply.”

Steenburge­n thought back to when she was starting out, in the late 1970s, looking at women in the business who were just a generation ahead of her and wondering why there weren’t more opportunit­ies for them.

“They were brilliant and amazing and still just had so much to offer, and there was nothing happening for them,” Steenburge­n said. “I’ve been in the business long enough to know that it wasn’t a given that something like this could happen.”

But times have changed for the better. The “Book Club” sequel is Fonda’s third release this year, after “80 for Brady” and “Moving On.”

“Studios are noticing that older women are the fastest growing demographi­c,” Fonda said. “It’s just good business.”

Bergen added: “They’re not quite so dismissive of us anymore.”

Fonda and her co-stars have also noticed that it’s often younger people who talk to them about “Book Club.” Fonda thinks part of it is that it’s simply comforting to see more mature women having fun, which she hopes takes some of the stigma and fear out of aging.

And, yes, they’re already scheming up a possible third movie with Bergen driving the brainstorm.

“Our next one will be in Hong Kong,” Bergen said.

Steenburge­n reminded her she also suggested Burning Man.

Bergen: Did I? Steenburge­n: You forget, but I make notes on all your ideas.

Bergen: That would be funny.

Steenburge­n: And hot. And uncomforta­ble.

Fonda: I’ll phone that one in.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP ?? Candice Bergen, from left, Mary Steenburge­n and Jane Fonda, seen May 1, reunite in a sequel to “Book Club.”
CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP Candice Bergen, from left, Mary Steenburge­n and Jane Fonda, seen May 1, reunite in a sequel to “Book Club.”

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