This Article is From Jan 20, 2013

Sundance is not fun with people like Paris Hilton: Robert Redford

Sundance is not fun with people like Paris Hilton: Robert Redford

Highlights

  • As the likes of Paris Hilton and Wilmer Valderrama descend upon Park City, Sundance Film Festival founder Robert Redford admits that it has all become too much of a circus.
  • During a panel discussion, the 76-year-old actor complained that Hilton, a socialite, didn't have anything to do with the films, reported New York Post online.
  • "I said, 'What movie is she in?'. She and her hard-partying, swag-grabbing cohorts have made the festival not as much fun. There are too many people who come to the festival to leverage their own self-interest," Robert Redford said.
  • Paris Hilton has been partying it up in Sundance for years. Robert Redford also talked about Sundance's transformation from a sleepy, indie movie festival in Utah to party circuit destination.
  • "We were besieged by the ambush mafia. Fashion houses would come in and they would take over the houses on Main Street and pay three times the rent to get the space. Then they bring celebrities in to give them free stuff," he said.
  • He added the economic downturn chased some of the marketers away.
  • "Then the recession hit and those people went away. And now we can focus again," Robert Redford said.
New York: As the likes of Paris Hilton and Wilmer Valderrama descend upon Park City, Sundance Film Festival founder Robert Redford admits that it has all become too much of a circus.

During a panel discussion, the 76-year-old actor complained that Hilton, a socialite, didn't have anything to do with the films, reported New York Post online.

"I said, 'What movie is she in?'. She and her hard-partying, swag-grabbing cohorts have made the festival not as much fun. There are too many people who come to the festival to leverage their own self-interest," Robert Redford said.

Paris Hilton has been partying it up in Sundance for years. Robert Redford also talked about Sundance's transformation from a sleepy, indie movie festival in Utah to party circuit destination.

"We were besieged by the ambush mafia. Fashion houses would come in and they would take over the houses on Main Street and pay three times the rent to get the space. Then they bring celebrities in to give them free stuff," he said.

He added the economic downturn chased some of the marketers away.

"Then the recession hit and those people went away. And now we can focus again," Robert Redford said.
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