The Guardian (USA)

Cher announces biopic to be made by Mamma Mia! producers

- Laura Snapes

Cher has announced that a biopic about her life is in the works at Universal Pictures. She will co-produce the project, alongside Judy Craymer and Gary Goetzman, who produced the film adaptation­s of Mamma Mia! – the second of which, 2018’s Here We Go Again, starred Cher.

Cher said that her “dear dear friend” Eric Roth – of Forrest Gump and the most recent A Star Is Born adaptation – will write the screenplay. He worked with Cher on the 1987 legal thriller Suspect.

“Gary and I are thrilled to be working with Cher again and this time bringing her empowering and true-life odyssey to the big screen,” Craymer said in a press release. “One cannot help but be drawn to and inspired by Cher’s larger than life talent, fortitude, unique wit, warmth and vision. Her unparallel­ed success in music, film and TV has inspired generation­s. We could not be happier to tell her story to cinema audiences.”

Cher celebrates her 75th birthday on Thursday (20 May). She shared the news of the biopic in characteri­stic fashion on her Twitter feed, making the announceme­nt 42 minutes after tweeting that she had to take a shower. In response to a fan who said they had been waiting for a Cher film for 50 years, the singer, actor and campaigner said: “I had more life to live.”

During that half century, Cher has sold more than 100m records and waged several musical comebacks – notably launching a solo career after her divorce and subsequent creative split from Sonny Bono, and pioneering the use of Auto-Tune in pop with 1998’s Believe, which won the Grammy award for best dance recording in 2000.

Her filmograph­y includes Silkwood, Mask, The Witches of Eastwick and Moonstruck, for which she won the Academy Award for best actress.

Recently, she co-founded Free the

Wild, an organisati­on aimed at stopping the suffering of wild animals in captivity. Their efforts successful­ly rescued Kavaan, the world’s “loneliest elephant”, who was confined in a shuttered zoo in Islamabad, Pakistan.

The Cher biopic will follow a recent rash of music films, some more successful than others, and is one of the few high-profile feature films about female musicians. Rocketman, about the life of Elton John, and Judy, about

Judy Garland, were met with acclaim.

But the Queen film Bohemian Rhapsody was accused of “straightwa­shing” the group’s story, The United States vs Billie Holiday was panned for foreground­ing violence and degradatio­n, and the David Bowie film

Stardust – made without the involvemen­t of Bowie’s estate, or the inclusion of his music – currently holds a 21% rating on criticism aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.

Forthcomin­g music biopics include projects on Celine Dion, Elvis Presley,

Bob Dylan, Marianne Faithfull, Michael Jackson, Teddy Pendergras­s, Bob Marley and Madonna.

 ??  ?? Cher at the Billboard Music Awards, October 2020. Photograph: Amy Sussman/BBMA2020/Getty Images for dcp
Cher at the Billboard Music Awards, October 2020. Photograph: Amy Sussman/BBMA2020/Getty Images for dcp

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