First-time director Famke Janssen finds Oklahoma a unique setting for film


Posted August 16, 2010 by Gene Triplett Comment on this article Leave a comment

By Gene Triplett

OKLAHOMA CITY– Actress turned writer-director Famke Janssen said she chose Oklahoma as the setting for her film “Bringing Up Bobby” because it provided the perfect background for her “Bonnie and Clyde-esque” story.

Famke Janssen
Famke Janssen

“I’d seen the Round Barn and I’d seen Pops and I’d seen all these places where I thought it would make it really interesting,” she said, ” … and there’s something about Oklahoma, where you still have a train coming right through town.”

She spoke to journalists Saturday night during a gala wrap party at a Nichols Hills residence, in a neighborhood where some of the filming took place. It was the first time she had agreed to be interviewed since filming on the $1.5 million production began on July 19 on locations in and around Oklahoma City, Edmond, Arcadia and Guthrie.

Filming was completed Friday.

“I was introduced to Oklahoma through my boyfriend Cole Frates and, being a foreigner, even though I’ve lived in the United States for about 20 years in New York, I thought it was a unique and different place, very American in a way that I think New York is sort of its own little country.

“I was fascinated by it, it intrigued me and Cole and I just sort of started developing this idea … which became ‘Bringing Up Bobby.’ And Oklahoma just seemed the right setting.

“I kind of felt like my space ship had landed because it was so different from what I have experienced growing up in Holland and living in New York. It really just inspired me.”

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Gene Triplett is a University of Central Oklahoma journalism graduate with 36 years experience as a newspaper writer and editor. As a reporter...


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