news Bette Midler Confirms No ‘First Wives Club 2’ Due to ‘Political Reasons,’ Studio Sexism: ‘A Pretty Serious Diss’

Bette Midler is finally revealing why “The First Wives Club” didn’t get a second shot.

The classic 1996 film starred Midler, Diane Keaton, and Goldie Hawn as a trio of jilted women who seek revenge on their respective former spouses. Midler’s “Hocus Pocus 2” co-star Sarah Jessica Parker played the mistress Midler’s husband (Dan Hedaya) was cheating with in the film.

Stockard Channing, Maggie Smith, Rob Reiner, Marcia Gay Harden, Victor Garberm Timothy Olyphant, J.K. Simmons, Jon Stewart, and Gloria Steinem also starred. Based on the 1992 novel by Olivia Goldsmith, the Hugh Wilson-directed comedy grossed $180 million at the global box office. It was nominated for an Oscar for Best Music.

Now, over 25 years later, Midler opened up about why the studio did not greenlight a sequel.

“I used to lobby for ‘First Wives Club 2,’ but there were political reasons they didn’t want to do that again. And it always broke my heart,” Midler told People. “I really felt that it was a pretty serious diss, because when women have hits, it’s a fluke. But when men have hits, isn’t it great? At least that’s what they told us on ‘First Wives.'”

Co-star Hawn previously told AARP Magazine in 2009 that Paramount Pictures was going to pay Keaton, Hawn, and Midler the same salary as the first movie for a sequel, despite the film’s success.

“Diane [Keaton] called me and said, ‘We’ve got to do this,'” Hawn said at the time of the follow-up. “I got a call from the head of the studio, who said, ‘Let’s try to make it work. But I think we should all do it for the same amount of money.’ Now, if there were three men that came back to do a sequel, they would have paid them three times their salary at least.”

Hawn, Midler, and Keaton were attached to the film “Family Jewels” in 2020 (via Variety) to mark a “First Wives Club” reunion of sorts about three women who were all at one time married to the same man but become friends after his passing.

Meanwhile, “The First Wives Club” TV show has been airing on BET+ with Michelle Buteau, Jill Scott, and Ryan Michelle Bathe starring as the core trio. The series premiered in 2019 and has been renewed for a third season.
 
Stockard Channing starred in a 1973 made for tv movie called The Girl Most Likely To..
A very good movie about a picked on homely college girl who, after plastic surgery becomes beautiful, then goes for revenge against those who made her life a living hell. It's listed as a dark comedy. I think you can find it on Youtube.

I've always liked Stockard Channing. Bette Midler, not so much.
 
"Bette Midler is finally revealing why “The First Wives Club” didn’t get a second shot."

"I got a call from the head of the studio, who said, ‘Let’s try to make it work."

Wtf even is this saying, can someone decrypt this bullshit for me.

the HEAD of the studio wanted to make it work, what is the reason why it didn't get a second shot?
 
First Wives Club movie budget: $26 million
Domestic box office: $105 million
International box office: $76 million
Box office total: $181 million

That doesn't include cable revenue, streaming, etc.

Clearly a VERY successful movie.

Studio said thank you but NO you can't have a raise on the next movie.
Stars said, seriously assholes? (I'm paraphrasing)
 
I thought it was diane keaton saying they should all do it for the same amount of money. 😄
thanks that makes more sense - but it seems like they could have negotiated for some points on the backend if the sequel was succesful and not worry so much about upfront payment. I get it though maybe they were insulted.
 
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they could have negotiated for some points on the backend if the sequel was succesful and not worry so much about upfront payment.
I think when you've just delivered a very successful (read: profitable) movie, you want to get paid upfront, not have the bosses say, "Great! Do it again and THEN we'll pay you."
 
They are saying "Let's make it work" translated to "We are not paying you what men would make but let's still do this, okay?"
 
I think when you've just delivered a very successful (read: profitable) movie, you want to get paid upfront, not have the bosses say, "Great! Do it again and THEN we'll pay you."
Yeah i meant get paid same as the first movie && negotiate for the additional points based upon the sequels performance.
But like i said i get that they were insulted, they felt like they deserved more based upon it... and walked away.

Personally I never saw the film bc i was 13 when it came out and not interested in divorce stories, so i can't comment anything specific about it.
 
I did a search for what their salaries originally were and came across this bit.

everyone took a cut in salary to do it so the studio could make what it needed. We all took a smaller back end than usual and a much smaller front end

This makes a lot more sense... Offering the same pay as the 1st movie was actually offering them an ALREADY reduced salary rate
That info puts a different spin on this to me. Way more insulting and understandable they walked away.
 
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