Current:Home > ScamsFaye Dunaway reveals hidden bipolar disorder in new HBO documentary -WealthSync Hub
Faye Dunaway reveals hidden bipolar disorder in new HBO documentary
View
Date:2025-04-13 07:55:49
It’s described as maybe the greatest Hollywood photo ever taken. There is Faye Dunaway sprawled on a chair next to the Beverly Hills Hotel swimming pool the morning after her Oscar win. Newspapers headlining the awards show are strewn near a table that’s presided over by her gleaming golden statuette. But the actress' gaze at the ultimate trophy seems disillusioned as the reality of it hits her.
“What I love is that ‘Is that all there is?’ was kind of the theme to it,” says the ferociously talented legend, who is the subject of a documentary that debuts at 8 p.m. ET/PT Saturday on HBO (and will be available for streaming on Max).
“Faye” is a candid, affectionate portrait of a woman who reigned on the big screen from the late 1960s to the middle of the 1970s, when American movies caught up to the turmoil and tumult of the modern world.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
If you’re a GenXer, you may recognize Dunaway, now 83, and recall one or two of her films, perhaps the 1981 camp classic “Mommie Dearest,” the biopic about Joan Crawford that nearly destroyed her career. Long before the technology existed, the image of Dunaway as Crawford screaming, “No wire hangers!” at her adopted daughter was meme-worthy.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Those in the Gen Z range probably are unfamiliar with Dunaway, which makes the HBO doc a remarkable opportunity to introduce the current generation to a complex artist who was often labeled as difficult. As “Faye” sensitively reveals, Dunaway wasn’t just battling the usual show business sexism against independent women. She was struggling with bipolar disorder at the time she was achieving greatness.
Directed by Laurent Bouzereau, “Faye” features his extensive interviews with Dunaway, along with film clips, archival footage and illuminating interviews with her son, Liam Dunaway O’Neill, and close friend Sharon Stone, among others.
It traces how Dorothy Faye Dunaway grew up with an alcoholic father and a mother who eventually divorced him and raised her alone in Florida, where pretty Southern girls with ambitions of performing pursued beauty queen titles. After Dunaway won a “sweetheart of Sigma Chi” contest while attending the University of Florida, she transferred to Boston University and then landed in a Lincoln Center repertory theater led by director Elia Kazan.
Noticed for her acclaimed off-Broadway acting in 1965’s “Hogan’s Goat,” Dunaway was cast opposite Warren Beatty in 1967’s “Bonnie and Clyde,” the cultural inflection point that helped create New Hollywood with its violence, humor, sense of anguish and willingness to depict subjects like sexual impotence. She became an overnight star, plus a fashion trendsetter for her striking costumes (designed by Theadora Van Runkle) as one-half of the famous bank-robbing duo from the Depression era.
In an early interview around that time, Dunaway said “success is freedom,” a truism that was only partly true for the female population in cinema. She would go on to deliver brilliant performances in classics like 1968’s sexy caper “The Thomas Crown Affair” with Steve McQueen, 1974’s bleak neo-noir “Chinatown” with Jack Nicholson and 1976’s scathing satire “Network.” Her role as a brittle TV executive with a prescient knack for reality TV won her the best actress Oscar.
In "Faye," Dunaway addresses the double standards of filmmaking in that era, when wanting more control over your projects and having strong opinions were accepted and encouraged for men, but treated as drawbacks for women. She discusses the notorious anecdote about her walking off the set when “Chinatown” director Roman Polanski (who later pleaded guilty to unlawful intercourse with a minor and fled America) yanked a stray hair from her head that was interfering with a shot.
Afterward, she says, Nicholson nicknamed her the dreaded Dunaway, or “Dread,” much to her delight.
The pinnacle of Dunaway’s daring as an uncompromising actress is “Network.” Although it is remembered for Peter Finch’s “I’m mad as hell” speech as troubled TV anchor Howard Beale, it also must be recognized for Dunaway’s steely commitment to playing Diana Christensen, a woman dominating an industry run by men. “All I want out of life is a 20 share and a 30 rating,” says Dunaway as Diana, and she means it. There’s no love in this character, no hidden empathy or tenderness that surfaces late in the story. Dunaway is magnetic, but completely unsympathetic as Diana, never taking an easy route that might have won her some sympathy.
Once “Mommie Dearest” was declared a disaster by critics (the documentary argues it needed a director who would have toned down its midnight movie aspects), Dunaway struggled to regain her momentum. Always serious about her craft, she kept taking chances in smaller movies. She played an unglamorous alcoholic in 1987’s “Barfly” and won a Golden Globe for playing modeling agency founder Wilhelmina Cooper opposite a young Angelina Jolie in HBO's “Gia.”
"Faye" is at its most sensitive regarding the revelations about Dunaway’s mental health issues. The frankest observations come from Dunaway herself, who, during a sequence that documents her micromanaging tendencies, says: “So now you see what it is about me. Not easy.”
Dunaway opens up about her struggles with manic depression and alcoholism, particularly in terms of how her bipolar disorder has impacted life behind and in front of the cameras. She describes how she is happier and healthier thanks to medication and treatment.
“I think you have to ask yourself this question: If she wasn’t in so much pain, would she have been that good? Which then, in turn, wouldn’t have made her be able to touch people acting,” her son says. “You’ve got to take the good with the bad. That’s just life.”
It takes guts to go the places that Dunaway did emotionally in her movies, but it requires even more to sustain a full personal life while juggling the demands she had to meet. “Faye” is never more compelling than when it examines how Dunaway adopted a son with her then-husband, photographer Terry O’Neill (who took her famous Oscar photo) and began devoting herself to motherhood at roughly the same time she was taking on a job that required her to portray the abusive parent of an adopted daughter in “Mommie Dearest.”
As the documentary nears its conclusion, Dunaway is shown at Cannes Film Festival in 2011, the year she was chosen as the face of the festival. As photographers snap away, Faye, the mega-star, snaps into gear, exuding her full charisma as a personality.
Watching it on a TV screen, “Faye” demonstrates that Dunaway’s talent radiates on any screen: big, small or pocket-sized smartphone. As author and critic Mark Harris says in capturing her essential quality. “Faye Dunaway in one word: undismissible.”
veryGood! (9114)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Vatican monastery that served as Pope Benedict XVI’s retirement home gets new tenants
- Algerian president names a new prime minister ahead of elections next year
- Longtime Democrat from New York, Brian Higgins, to leave Congress next year
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Taylor Swift Runs and Kisses Travis Kelce After Buenos Aires Eras Tour Concert
- Al Roker says his family protected him from knowing how 'severe' his health issues were
- Louisville, Oregon State crash top 10 of US LBM Coaches Poll after long droughts
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Humane societies probe transfer of 250 small animals that may have later been fed to reptiles
Ranking
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Japanese vice minister resigns over tax scandal in another setback for Kishida’s unpopular Cabinet
- ‘The Marvels’ melts down at the box office, marking a new low for the MCU
- What the Global South could teach rich countries about health care — if they'd listen
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Patriots LB Ja’Whaun Bentley inactive against Colts in Frankfurt
- Amtrak service north of NYC disrupted by structural issues with parking garage over tracks
- The third of four men who escaped a Georgia jail in mid-October has been captured at an Augusta home
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Latvia’s president says West must arm Ukraine to keep Russia from future global adventures
Anti-mining protesters in Panama say road blockades will be suspended for 12 hours on Monday
Canadian jury finds fashion mogul Nygard guilty of 4 sexual assault charges, acquits him on 2 counts
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Algerian president names a new prime minister ahead of elections next year
Texas police officer killed in a shooting that left another officer wounded
Heinz says ketchup can be a good energy source for runners. What do experts say?