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Lindsay Lohan’s publicist fires back at media
From Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES—Actress Lindsay Lohan’s publicist fired back at the media on
Thursday, saying journalists had crossed a line by mocking a heartfelt
letter the screen star wrote following director Robert Altman’s death
last week.
Spokeswoman Leslie Sloane said the note — which one columnist suggested
was composed by Lohan on “one of her legendary party benders” — was
instead dashed off by the distraught 20-year-old actress on a
Blackberry, moments after she learned Altman had died.
Altman, who died on November 20 at age 81, directed Lohan in the last
film of his career, “A Prairie Home Companion.”
“When I got the reports that he had died, I reached Lindsay on her cell
phone, and she had no idea. She was devastated. She started crying,”
Sloane told Reuters. “She quickly put something together on her
Blackberry.” “Here was a girl who found something special in this man
that she felt so close to,” Sloane said. “And she was completely shocked
and blown away that he just died. It was written very quickly and it was
from the heart.”
Lohan titled her November 21 e-mail “Dead is hard, Life is much easier,”
a quote she attributes to actor Jack Nicholson. In it, she sent
condolences to Altman’s family, adding, “I feel as I’ve just had the
wind knocked out of me.” The film star, who is famously estranged from
her father, also describes Altman as “the closest thing to my father and
grandfather that I really do believe I’ve had in several years.”
Days after the missive was made public, Los Angeles Times columnist Patt
Morrison ridiculed it on a Web site as “alarmingly incoherent,”
apparently referring to misspellings and grammatical errors by Lohan,
and wrote that Altman himself might find it “comedic.”
Andrew Gumbel wrote in the London Independent that the letter, which
ends with the odd sign-off “Be Adequite,” had become the talk of
Hollywood. “Was the actress on a misguided — and utterly botched — quest
for publicity, exploiting the death of a revered director for her own
purposes?” Gumbel wrote. “Had she been on one of her legendary party
benders? Or was this Exhibit A for the indictment of America’s education
system?”
Other media quickly picked up on the story, an example of what Sloane
said was a steady drumbeat of derisive stories about Lohan in the
tabloids, which often focus on her penchant for parties.
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