Simply Streep is your premiere source on Meryl Streep's work on film, television and in the theatre - a career that has won her three Academy Awards and the praise to be one of the world's greatest working actresses. Created in 1999, we have built an extensive collection to discover Miss Streep's work through an archive of press articles, photos and videos. Enjoy your stay and check back soon.
Mar
11
2017

According to Deadline, “The Post will be hitting theaters much sooner than we have thought. Steven Spielberg only said yes this past Monday to direct Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep in the Fox/Amblin co-production and they’ve all been clearing their schedules to start production in late May. Deals are still being finalized, but that means the film will be ready for release to qualify for this coming Oscar season. As AwardsWatch continues in a second artice, Spielberg was prepping The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara for a 2017 release (and was heavily predicted by the Gold Rush Gang in those first predictions) and is in post- production on Ready Player One (set for March 2018). That opens up the schedules of Mark Rylance and Oscar Isaac, both set to star in Mortara (but also opens up their Oscar chances in other 2017 films). Hanks was ready to start the WWII thriller Greyhound but now that’s pushed back. This marks Hanks’s fifth collaboration with Spielberg. Streep is currently filming Mary Poppins Returns in London but will be long finished by the time The Post begins. Many thanks once again to Frank for the heads-up.

The Post details one of the most volatile and well-known newspaper stories of all time, when The Washington Post fought to expose The Pentagon Papers – the leaked government documents amidst accusations of treason by the White House at the time. The Pentagon Papers was a classified study by the Defense Departement that revealed the Johnson and Nixon administrations had perpetuated the Vietnam War despite a clear inability to win it and lying to the American people about everything from its success to the escalation of troops and secret bombings. Daniel Ellsberg, a military analyst at the time and the source of the leaks, initially gave photocopied reports to the New York Times who began publishing the documents but stopped. The Washington Post then picked up where they left off. Despite taking place in 1971, the story is mirroring what is happening right now with the current White House and WikiLeaks, making what’s old new again. Interestingly enough, it’s The Washington Post who is again at the forefront of combatting the current administration in the face of heavy scrutiny by the White House.

In the film, Hanks will play Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee and Streep will play the newspaper’s first female publisher, Katharine Graham. In an Oscar full circle, this is the second film to feature Bradlee. 1976’s All the President’s Men, which dealt with Nixon’s Watergate scandal (which was the aftermath of the reveal of the Pentagon Papers), won four Oscars – including Best Supporting Actor for Jason Robards, playing Bradlee. Bradlee’s son (Ben Bradlee Jr.) was a part of the Pulitzer Prize-winning team from The Boston Globe that exposed rampant pedophilia among Boston Catholic priests and its cover-up by the church. Bradlee Jr. was played by John Slattery and the film based on the story, Spotlight, was last year’s Best Picture winner.

The Post will be released in the US by 20th Century Fox with Spielberg, Amy Pascal and Kristie Macosko Krieger producing from a script by Liz Hannah. No date announced yet.

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