This Article is From Aug 09, 2010

Why Spielberg missed Chelsea Clinton's wedding?

Highlights

  • Oscar-award winning filmmaker Steven Spielberg missed out on seeing Chelsea Clinton marry so he could spend the day with piglets on a farm in Britain preparation for a new movie.
  • The Jurassic Park filmmaker was one of a handful of A-list celebrities invited to attend the wedding of former US president Bill Clinton's only daughter to her banker fiance Marc Mezvinsky last weekend but Spielberg skipped the affair so he could pay a visit to a farm in Widecombe-in-the-Moor, reports imdb.com.
  • The director was in preparation of his plans to shoot new movie War Horse in Dartmoor on the 450-acre Holwell Farm.
  • "It has been chaotic but very memorable. He came here for a recce of the area. It was Bill Clinton's daughter's wedding and much of the world's media thought he was there," said farm owner Philippa Hughes.
London: Oscar-award winning filmmaker Steven Spielberg missed out on seeing Chelsea Clinton marry so he could spend the day with piglets on a farm in Britain.

The Jurassic Park filmmaker was one of a handful of A-list celebrities invited to attend the wedding of former US president Bill Clinton's only daughter to her banker fiance Marc Mezvinsky last weekend but Spielberg skipped the affair so he could pay a visit to a farm in Widecombe-in-the-Moor, reports imdb.com.

The director was in preparation of his plans to shoot new movie War Horse in Dartmoor on the 450-acre Holwell Farm.

"It has been chaotic but very memorable. He came here for a recce of the area. It was Bill Clinton's daughter's wedding and much of the world's media thought he was there," said farm owner Philippa Hughes.

"We showed him around the farm, showed him the views and he met the animals, like our piglets and Dartmoor ponies. He was very friendly and unassuming. He loved the animals and we found him a very easy person to be around.

"Some of the Americans among the crew were very impressed with Dartmoor. When you tell them the landscape has remained virtually unchanged for centuries, they can't quite believe it. It's such an iconic landscape," he added.

The project, based on Michael Morpurgo's novel, tells the story of a horse shipped to France during World War I.

.