Kodi Smit-McPhee Chose a Fox as His Animal Archetype for 'Power of the Dog': 'Light on Their Feet, but Fatal' My husband and I were kind of frightened about it.” ![]() “I couldn’t focus, I couldn’t have acted,” she said. I couldn’t get my mind into any other mode.”įun as that might sound in an Oliver Sacks kind of way - the late neurologist wrote about similar, potentially stroke-inspired symptoms in his book “Musicophilia” - Steenburgen wasn’t thrilled about the sudden mental shift. ![]() “The best way I can describe it is that it just felt like my brain was only music, and that everything anybody said to me became musical. ![]() “I felt strange as soon as the anesthesia started to wear off,” Steenburgen said. The bizarre odyssey of how Oscar-winning actress Mary Steenburgen came to co-write the euphoric power-ballad that Jessie Buckley performs at the end of “ Wild Rose” - easily the year’s best original movie song - began 10 years ago, when the “Melvin and Howard” star woke up after a minor arm surgery feeling like her mind was on fire.
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