Sunday, July 1, 2012

Remembering Nora Ephron: 5 Classic Movie Moments





"I'll have what she's having," When Harry Met Sally...









The success of this 1989 romantic comedy about a snarky friendship turned swoon-worthy romance made Ephron the woman to watch in Hollywood.

This is arguably the most memorable scene from the film; the punchline marks many a Twitter homage to the late writer. As comedian wrote, "RIP Nora Ephron. All comedy writers are just ladies staring in awe at her talent from a nearby table, saying "I'll have what she's having."

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Celebrated screenwriter Nora Ephron passed away on Tuesday night in Manhattan after a battle with leukemia. She was 71.

Hollywood colleagues and devoted audiences have taken to the web this week, posting remembrances and tributes to the scribe who paved the way for creative females in Tinseltown and beyond. As Ephron told a crowd of ambitious young women at Wellesley College during a 1996 commencement address, women in her generation weren't expected to do much of anything.

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Evidently, that wasn't an option for Ephron. She was a director, journalist, blogger, novelist, playwright and Academy Award-nominated screenwriter. Her films, essays and novels each approached love -- and more often than not, all of its repercussions -- with a deft and brutally honest eye.


And while honesty alone does not a winning writer make, Ephron coupled her raw observations with a charming wit than won over movie audiences just as it won over devoted readers of The New Yorker. With plenty to go around, Ephron also wrote for The Huffington Post, where she notably penned the tagline to the Divorce section: "Marriages come and go, but divorce is forever."


Thrice married, Ephron was all-too-familiar with divorce, and was among the first in Hollywood to throw a women's perspective on the matter into her movies. In 1986, Heartburn cast a semi-autobiographical light on Ephron's divorce from Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein. She later took up issues of single parenting in Sleepless in Seattle (1993), and the sticky situations divorcees might find themselves in when seeking new love online in You've Got Mail (1998).


We've gathered up some of the most memorable moments from Ephron's nearly 40 years in Hollywood. What's your favorite Ephron flick? Let us know in the comments.


This story originally published on Mashable .



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