skooldem1
08-19-2010, 08:10 PM
A great movie could be made of Berry's relationship with Diana. I always thought of them as one of entertainments greatest duos. Together they accomplished alot. Some of it was historic. Theres always call for a movie to be made about the artist, but what about one about Berry, the business, and his personal life? Can a movie be made about Berry with he being the focus and the music, although prominent, secondary? I read the following quote over at Dick's Diana Ross website. I feel Diana was very candid here. Side note. There were many gems like this in her book [[see below). What do you think about what Diana said? Even if you think the idea I mentioned wouldn't work, what about their relationship and Diana's point of view in general?
"How do I begin to define my relationship with Berry, a connection that began when I was fifteen and, although it has completely altered, still exists today, some thirty five years later? As all relationships do, ours went through many changes and took on various forms over the years. Sometimes Berry was a father to me, at other times a partner and cohort, and finally, at others, controlling and dominating. He and I could sail along on the identical wavelength, riding the surf so perfectly in communion that we left everybody else on the shore, or we could clash so dramatically that the treacherous seas we left in our wake would be hazardous for any craft. Berry was one of the most important men in my life when I was young. We went to some ecstatic places together, and then we could be shockingly out of touch. Even when I was deeply wounded by the startling lack of sensitivity he was capable of demonstrating, even when I felt unseen and emotionally abused, I always recognized him as an incomparable visionary, a dynamite character, a special human being."
"How do I begin to define my relationship with Berry, a connection that began when I was fifteen and, although it has completely altered, still exists today, some thirty five years later? As all relationships do, ours went through many changes and took on various forms over the years. Sometimes Berry was a father to me, at other times a partner and cohort, and finally, at others, controlling and dominating. He and I could sail along on the identical wavelength, riding the surf so perfectly in communion that we left everybody else on the shore, or we could clash so dramatically that the treacherous seas we left in our wake would be hazardous for any craft. Berry was one of the most important men in my life when I was young. We went to some ecstatic places together, and then we could be shockingly out of touch. Even when I was deeply wounded by the startling lack of sensitivity he was capable of demonstrating, even when I felt unseen and emotionally abused, I always recognized him as an incomparable visionary, a dynamite character, a special human being."