Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Trivia / TheLonelyLady

Go To

OR

Added: 299

Removed: 292

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Old Shame is In-Universe only


* CreatorBacklash: Creator/PiaZadora says that she was sure the movie was terrible and tried to make her husband\executive producer halt the release. [[http://articles.latimes.com/1985-11-19/entertainment/ca-7761_1_pia-zadora She doesn't spare mean words about how incompetent the whole thing was.]]



* OldShame: Creator/PiaZadora says that she was sure the movie was terrible and tried to make her husband\executive producer halt the release. [[http://articles.latimes.com/1985-11-19/entertainment/ca-7761_1_pia-zadora She doesn't spare mean words about how incompetent the whole thing was.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Up until this point, author Harold Robbins had had a pretty successful career complete with screen adaptations of all of his dozen published novels. ''The Lonely Lady'' single-handedly transformed him into box-office poison. Though he went on to write another 20+ novels, [[FranchiseKiller none of them were ever adapted again.]]

to:

** Up until this point, author Harold Robbins had had a pretty successful career complete with screen adaptations of all of his dozen published previous novels. ''The Lonely Lady'' single-handedly transformed him into box-office poison. Though he went on to write another 20+ 10 bestselling novels, [[FranchiseKiller none of them were ever adapted again.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Up until this point, author Harold Robbins had had a pretty successful career complete with screen adaptations of all of his dozen published novels. ''The Lonely Lady'' singlehandedly transformed him into box-office poison. Though he went on to write another 20+ novels, [[FranchiseKiller none of them were ever adapted again.]]

to:

** Up until this point, author Harold Robbins had had a pretty successful career complete with screen adaptations of all of his dozen published novels. ''The Lonely Lady'' singlehandedly single-handedly transformed him into box-office poison. Though he went on to write another 20+ novels, [[FranchiseKiller none of them were ever adapted again.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Ellen Shepard and Shawn Randall, two of the film's credited screenwriters, never wrote a theatrical film again, with Shepard's only other credits being on documentaries and/or as a technical consultant. This is the only known credit for Randall, period, and this combined with sharing the same surname as the film's main character -- a BrokenBird screenwriter -- has led to some speculation that Randall is a [[AlanSmithee pseudonym]] for someone[[note]](possibly the movie's original director, Matt Cimber)[[/note]] who realised how terrible the film was and took their real name off it. The third screenwriter, John Kershaw got off a little lighter in comparison, working on one more film (the extremely obscure ''Film/YellowhairAndThePecosKid'') and various TV shows until his death a decade after the film's release.

to:

** Ellen Shepard and Shawn Randall, two of the film's credited screenwriters, never wrote a theatrical film again, with Shepard's only other credits being on documentaries and/or as a technical consultant. This is the only known credit for Randall, period, and this combined with sharing the same surname as the film's main character -- a BrokenBird screenwriter -- has led to some speculation that Randall is a [[AlanSmithee pseudonym]] for someone[[note]](possibly the movie's original director, Matt Cimber)[[/note]] who realised how terrible the film was and took their real name off it. The third screenwriter, John Kershaw got off a little lighter in comparison, working on one more film (the extremely obscure ''Film/YellowhairAndThePecosKid'') ''Film/YellowHairAndTheFortressOfGold'') and various TV shows until his death a decade after the film's release.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Ellen Shepard and Shawn Randall, two of the film's credited screenwriters, never wrote a theatrical film again, with Shepard's only other credits being on documentaries and/or as a technical consultant. This is the only known credit for Randall, period, and this combined with sharing the same surname as the film's main character -- a BrokenBird screenwriter -- has led to some speculation that Randall is a [[AlanSmithee pseudonym]] for someone[[note]](possibly the movie's original director, Matt Cimber)[[/note]] who realised how terrible the film was and took their real name off it. The third screenwriter, John Kershaw got off a little lighter in comparison, working on one more film (the extremely obscure ''Yellowhair and the Pecos Kid'') and various TV shows until his death a decade after the film's release.

to:

** Ellen Shepard and Shawn Randall, two of the film's credited screenwriters, never wrote a theatrical film again, with Shepard's only other credits being on documentaries and/or as a technical consultant. This is the only known credit for Randall, period, and this combined with sharing the same surname as the film's main character -- a BrokenBird screenwriter -- has led to some speculation that Randall is a [[AlanSmithee pseudonym]] for someone[[note]](possibly the movie's original director, Matt Cimber)[[/note]] who realised how terrible the film was and took their real name off it. The third screenwriter, John Kershaw got off a little lighter in comparison, working on one more film (the extremely obscure ''Yellowhair and the Pecos Kid'') ''Film/YellowhairAndThePecosKid'') and various TV shows until his death a decade after the film's release.

Top