![]() The book includes a number of acerbic Ephron portrayals, such as the Bernstein character (newspaper columnist Mark Feldman), described as "a piece of work in the sack" who is nevertheless "capable of having sex with a Venetian blind." Her description of the other woman (Thelma Rice) is believed patterned after Margaret Jay, the wife of Peter Jay, former British ambassador to the United States. The question of fact and fiction has been pivotal during the legal maneuvering. It also sets aside a percentage of profits from the film in trust for their children. The agreement stipulates that Ephron will not write about Bernstein or the family and says that her name will not appear on any future production of "Heartburn," such as a TV series. ![]() state that Bernstein may read the screenplay and any subsequent drafts written for the movie, view one of the first cuts of the film and submit any concerns. ![]() ![]() In an unusual agreement, Nichols, Ephron and Paramount Pictures Corp. The book is generally viewed as a thinly disguised account of the breakup of their 1976 marriage. At the heart of the separation agreement between former Washington Post investigative reporter Bernstein and author Ephron is how Bernstein and the couple's children will be presented in the Mike Nichols movie based on Ephron's best-selling novel "Heartburn." Meryl Streep and Mandy Patinkin have been cast in the leading roles. ![]() The celebrated marriage of Carl Bernstein and Nora Ephron ended in divorce last Thursday in D.C. ![]()
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