The Notebook’s Gena Rowlands reveals she has Alzheimer’s
Gena Rowlands has revealed that she has Alzheimer’s.
The acting legend, 94, played the older version of Rachel McAdams‘ Allie in The Notebook – a character who was battling dementia on-screen.
The heartbreaking health update was announced by her son, Nick Cassavetes, to Entertainment Weekly.
Emmy and Golden Globe winner Rowlands has had the disease for five years, and is now ‘in full dementia,’ according to her devastated family.
Gena Rowlands has revealed that she has Alzheimer’s
The acting legend, 94, played the older version of Rachel McAdams ‘ Allie in The Notebook – a character who was battling dementia on-screen
Cassavetes said: ‘I got my mom to play older Allie, and we spent a lot of time talking about Alzheimer’s and wanting to be authentic with it, and now, for the last five years, she’s had Alzheimer’s.
‘She’s in full dementia. And it’s so crazy — we lived it, she acted it, and now it’s on us.’
Although she had a decades long career, Rowlands’s depiction of Old Allie, the older version of Rachel McAdams’s character, made the movie a love story for the ages.
In a 2004 interview with O Magazine, Rowlands opened up about how her mother’s struggle with the disease impacted her decision to play Allie.
‘I went through that with my mother, and if Nick hadn’t directed the film, I don’t think I would have gone for it — it’s just too hard. It was a tough but wonderful movie.’
Nick Cassavetes, reflecting on his experience directing his mother in ‘The Notebook’, shared a bittersweet memory with Entertainment Weekly.
After showing the completed film to studio executives, they requested a reshoot. Specifically, they wanted Rowlands to display stronger emotions when her character rediscovers her memories and reunites with her love, Noah.
Rowlands (left) has been battling Alzheimer’s for the last five years (Pictured: Rowlands as Marion Post in the movie Another Woman (1988), directed by Woody Allen)
‘She’s in full dementia. And it’s so crazy — we lived it, she acted it, and now it’s on us,’ her son Nick Cassavetes announced (Pictured: Rowlands playing Marion Post in the movie Another Woman (1988), directed by Woody Allen)
Cassavetes recounted the awkward moment of informing his mother about the reshoots, and she was not happy; ‘Let me get this straight. We’re reshooting because of my performance?’ she said.
‘We go to reshoots, and now it’s one of those things where mama’s pissed and I had asked her, ‘Can you do it, mom?’ She goes, ‘I can do anything,” Rowland’s son recalled.
‘I promise you, on my father’s life, this is true: Teardrops came flying out of her eyes when she saw [Garner], and she burst into tears. And I was like, okay, well, we got that … It’s the one time I was in trouble on set.’
Cassavetes said he is not only proud of the film’s success, cemented as a romance ‘cult classic’ for the past 20 years – he also looks backs warmly at the times he shared with his mother on set.
‘It’s always a shock to hear that as much time has gone by as it has, but it makes sense. I’m just happy that it exists,’ he says, adding, ‘It seems to have worked and I’m very proud of it.’
The veteran actress recalled how difficult it was to play Allie in the Notebook as her own mother suffered from Alzheimer’s Pictured: Rowlands as Myrtle Gordon in the movie Opening Night (1977), which she won the Silver Bear Award for Best Actress
Pictured: Gena Rowlands accepts an award onstage during the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ 7th annual Governors Awards at The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center on November 14, 2015
Wisconsin-born Rowlands dazzled on the big screen and stage for seven decades before retiring from her stellar career in 2014, at the age of 84.
Many of her best performances were in collaboration with her actor-director husband John Cassavetes, who died in 1989 – notably A Woman Under the Influence (1974) and Gloria (1980).
She also starred in Woody Allen’s film Another Woman (1988), where she played the philosophy professor Marion Post who becomes fascinated with a psychiatric patient named Hope.
This is a breaking news story.