She does look really pretty here, even more than in the film. This hairdo is really flattering and still looks good even looking at it decades later, unlike a lot of 80s hairstyles. I have seen clips of Molly in The Facts of Life and she wasn't this pretty or cute kid really. But in just a few years she would transform into peak prettiness in her teens.
You forget how enchanting Molly Ringwald was. Wow!!! She's so precious!!! I can definitely see why John Hughes was so taken with her, and why America fell in love with her. She's so cute!!!
What people think you are isn’t necessarily ,what you are, exactly! So don’t judge a book by its cover, the inside could be Amazing!! :) 💖⚓️🔥🔥🏝🏝🌟🌟🌟🌟✌🏻💙🌈🌹
It's evidently a satellite feed that somebody recorded. Back in the day, you could surf satellite channels and find the same raw feeds that went to local stations. That's why you can see what's going on before the interview starts (Molly fixing her hair, etc.). The station doing the interview hadn't picked up the feed yet.
The interviewer, Ms. Bobbie Wygant, was in a different (remote) location conducting the interview, probably via satellite. Both Ringwald & Nelson were wearing very small ear pieces, in one ear only, know as "IFB" (Interruptible Fold Back) audio units, so they can hear & interact with the interviewer. The recording video camera, which we are "viewing", was also receiving the remote audio feed of Ms. Wygant's questions, BUT the boom mic on the local studio camera was ONLY (very obviously) picking up what was being said in the room, where Ringwald & Nelson were seated. At the conclusion of the interview (probably after Ringwald & Nelson departed) we see Ms. Wygant reciting "B-Roll" questions, leaving little space for Ringwald & Nelson's response, because those questions would be edited in AFTERWARDS, during the video post-production session, just in case Wygant needed to re-shoot her portions. Bobbie Wygant was a consummate professional, as well as her support & technical staff and were to able to totally in advance, plan, layout & construct a via satellite interview session, in non linear form, if need be, without glitch & with the least margin of error. Today, here in 2024, most video interviews are just "slapped together" with choppy, guillotine type editing & very little goes into substance & quality assurance. "BolsaChicaRadio" Audio/Video/Radio Broadcaster 1979-2019 (retired)
Two cuties, Sagittarius Judd and Aquarius Molly on screen and ofscree so cute togather.. I had big crush for Judd, wish he got to act many hollwyood big movies..
I wonder what they're talking about at 12:00. You know you think these stars lead such glamorous lives, and you don't think about how boring it must be for them to have to answer the same questions over and over again on all these press junkets. I guess it's part of the job.
Not being able to hear the questions posed by the interviewers makes those two iconic actors (Molly Ringwald and Judd Nelson) look awkward; as if they came to the set that morning unprepared. Seems unfair that they were portrayed that way by the person filming.
The interviewer, Ms. Bobbie Wygant, was in a different (remote) location conducting the interview, probably via satellite. Both Ringwald & Nelson were wearing very small ear pieces, in one ear only, known as an "IFB" (Interruptible Fold Back) audio unit, so they can hear & interact with the interviewer. The recording video camera, which we are "viewing", was also receiving the remote audio feed of Ms. Wygant's questions, BUT the boom mic on the local studio camera was ONLY (very obviously) picking up what was being said in the room, where Ringwald & Nelson were seated. At the conclusion of the interview (probably after Ringwald & Nelson departed) we see Ms. Wygant reciting "B-Roll" questions, leaving little space for Ringwald & Nelson's response, because those questions would be edited in AFTERWARDS, during the video post-production session, just in case Wygant needed to re-shoot her portions. Bobbie Wygant was a consummate professional, as well as her support & technical staff were able to totally in advance, plan, layout & construct a via satellite interview session, in NON LINEAR form, if need be, without glitch & the least margin of error. Today, here in 2023, most video interviews are just "slapped together" with choppy, guillotine type editing & very little goes into substance & quality assurance. "BolsaChicaRadio" Audio/Video/Radio Broadcaster 1979-2019 (retired)
Molly Kathleen Ringwald (Roseville, California, 18 de febrero de 1968) es una actriz, cantante y autora estadounidense. Fue elegida para su primer papel principal como Molly en The Facts of Life (1979-80) después de que un director de casting la viera interpretar a una huérfana en una producción teatral del musical Annie. Más tarde, hizo su debut en el cine en la película independiente Tempest (1982), que le valió una nominación a los Globos de Oro.
It's funny how some people just have that natural charisma. They are so interesting to watch. So young and vibrant. Even this dead space at the beginning is interesting to watch. Not many people can pull that off. I can definitely see why they were cast for these roles, as well as many others.
In an interview the actor that plays Brian says that when they were making The bresk fast club, Molly told him that she had a big crush on him so they ended up dating. I don't know if that is true but they were the same age at the time, 16.
The interviewer, Ms. Bobbie Wygant, was in a different (remote) location conducting the interview, probably via satellite. Both Ringwald & Nelson were wearing very small ear pieces, in one ear only, know as "IFB" (Interruptible Fold Back) audio units, so they can hear & interact with the interviewer. The recording video camera, which we are "viewing", was also receiving the remote audio feed of Ms. Wygant's questions, BUT the boom mic on the local studio camera was ONLY (very obviously) picking up what was being said in the room, where Ringwald & Nelson were seated. At the conclusion of the interview (probably after Ringwald & Nelson departed) we see Ms. Wygant reciting "B-Roll" questions, leaving little space for Ringwald & Nelson's response, because those questions would be edited in AFTERWARDS, during the video post-production session, just in case Wygant needed to re-shoot her portions. Bobbie Wygant was a consummate professional, as well as her support & technical staff and were to able to totally in advance, plan, layout & construct a via satellite interview session, in non linear form, if need be, without glitch, with the least margin of error. Today, here in 2023, most video interviews are just "slapped together" with choppy, guillotine type editing & very little goes into substance & quality assurance. "BolsaChicaRadio" Audio/Video/Radio Broadcaster 1979-2019 (retired)
Judd played the destroyer, like a Lucifer character that antagonised and questioned but was hidden from the teacher who represented God. So a Genesis type story but a gnostic version as through knowledge of self rather than obedience they found redemption.
What an intelligent and extraordinarily insightful comment about the film.....if only it had lived up to that powerfully symbolic and anarchic theme on a much more dangerous and ambitious level of filmmaking, which might of raised it significantly beyond it's inescapably compromised origins as a clearly conservative Reagan-era Hollywood product of it's time. Reply
The interviewer, Ms. Bobbie Wygant, was in a different (remote) location conducting the interview, probably via satellite. Both Ringwald & Nelson were wearing very small ear pieces, in one ear only, know as "IFB" (Interruptible Fold Back) audio units, so they can hear & interact with the interviewer. The recording video camera, which we are "viewing", was also receiving the remote audio feed of Ms. Wygant's questions, BUT the boom mic on the local studio camera was ONLY (very obviously) picking up what was being said in the room, where Ringwald & Nelson were seated. At the conclusion of the interview (probably after Ringwald & Nelson departed) we see Ms. Wygant reciting "B-Roll" questions, leaving little space for Ringwald & Nelson's response, because those questions would be edited in AFTERWARDS, during the video post-production session, just in case Wygant needed to re-shoot her portions. Bobbie Wygant was a consummate professional, as well as her support & technical staff and were to able to totally in advance, plan, layout & construct a via satellite interview session, in non linear form, if need be, without glitch & with the least margin of error. Today, here in 2023, most video interviews are just "slapped together" with choppy, guillotine type editing & very little goes into substance & quality assurance. "BolsaChicaRadio" Audio/Video/Radio Broadcaster 1979-2019 (retired)
Judd Asher Nelson (Portland, Maine; 28 de noviembre de 1959) es un actor estadounidense. Conocido miembro del grupo de actores denominado "Brat Pack", entre sus trabajos más notorios se encuentran The Breakfast Club, Steel, New Jack City o Fandango. También es reconocido por ser la voz de Rodimus Prime en la versión animada de Transformers.