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| • | quit - "I have given up smoking, after ten years", Empire Magazine (UK), Aug. '95 |
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| • | "Ormond, smoking away during a chat at a Manhattan hotel", San Francisco Examiner, Dec. 10, '95 |
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| • | "Check out her someone-to-be-reckoned-with style: authoritative pin-stripe pantsuit, no nail polish, no jewelry except for a watch, no asking permission before she lights up a Marlboro in a small hotel room ... Check out, too, the edicts that issue along with the smoke: 'It's up to women to develop their own stuff, take the responsibilities and the risks'", Washington Post, Dec. 15, '95 |
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| • | Interview, Tampa Tribune, Dec. 29, '95 |
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| • | smoked during interview, Washington Post, c. '95 |
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| • | "Do you mind if I smoke?", Empire Magazine (UK), Feb. '96 |
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| • | "She lights yet another Marlboro", BT newspaper (Denmark), May 5, '96 |
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| • | "The ashtray in front of [Ormond] is filling up with half smoked cigarettes, the only sign that she finds interviews unnerving. She doesn't apologize for smoking - in fact, halfway through the interview, I, a non-smoker, find myself joining her", New Woman Magazine, Mar. '97
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| • | "I went into this bar in Hackney, England, where I've lived for a long, long time to buy some cigarettes. ... the locals thought that Hollywood's Next Big Thing was a bag lady, spending her last pound on a pack of cigarettes", Allentown (PA) Morning Call, Apr. 6, '97 |
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| • | "she tells me how she recently moved to a new flat in Hackney in east London, and was reminded that nothing much had altered, really. She had unpacked crockery from newspaper and went to the pub for some cigarettes, where she noticed people staring at her", The Guardian (UK), Oct. 24, '97 |
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| • | "lighting up the first in a series of Marlboro Lights", Premiere Magazine (UK), Nov. '97
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| • | "Julia Ormond is telling me about the things she's been addicted to. 'Caffeine and smoking,'", Evening Standard (UK), '00
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| • | quit - "She tells me that she gave up smoking three months ago. 'I stopped,' she says. I don't think I've ever heard anybody say those two words with such drama, such weariness and regret. There is a slow grimace. She had been smoking, she says, since the age of 13. 'I was curious, wanting to see what it was like. I remember not liking the first one, but working quite hard to get over that.' The sudden laugh erupts out of her. She's been trying to give up, 'with varying degrees of success', for three years.", "She says, 'I find, once you get through the first half hour, the first 24 hours, the first week, the first month... it eases up a lot. Occasionally I get real pangs for one.' What made her stop? It wasn't affecting her health. 'It's just dumb to smoke,' she says. 'Clearly it raises your chances of...' She pauses for a while, then she says, '...dying.'", Evening Standard (UK), '00
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