Mary-Kate & Ashley Olsen Club
gabung
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
OLSEN TWINS MINE GIRLS' MARKET

Double Vision
Watch Out, Mickey: Olsen Twins Gain Fast In Kids' Entertainment


HOLLYWOOD - Quick: After Disney, what is the most populer name in kids' halaman awal entertainment these days? Sesame Street? Barney? Try Olsen. With a series of low-budget videocassettes that have raked in $77 milliony in sales, 10-year-old twins Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen have taken the No 1. spot in the nonanimated children's video market. In the process, the sisters, who cut their teeth on the hit ABC televisi sitcom "Full House," have become heroes to the under-12 set and millionaires to boot. Thanks to skillfull maneuvering oleh their parents, a careful master plan oleh an ambitious lawyer-manager, and a dearth of film and video for young girls, the sisters now sit atop an entertainment empire. Their credits include an eigth-season run on network TV, three made-for-TV movies, 14 shows made especially for halaman awal video, and a feature film. "When the girls left the TV show, everybody berkata their careers were over," says Robert Thorne, 42, the Hollywood lawyer who has carefully orchestrated Mary-Kate and Ashley's akting careers and business dealings since they were four. Instead, he says, "we decided it was time they could step out." The girls aren't taking baby steps, either. Dualstar Entertainment Group Inc., the twins' Los Angeles holding company, now encompasses film and TV production, records, publications and interactive divisions.

'It Takes Two'
Their two video series, "The Adventures of Mary-Kate and Ashley" and "You're Invited to Mary-Kate and Ashley's," have sold lebih than six million units, and now Scholastic Inc. is distributing a line of 14 children's buku based on the shows. The video of their first feature film, "It Takes Two," sold 3.2 million copies, bringing in $36 million in revenue to distributor Warner Bros., a unit of Time Warner Inc. Two Olsen musik CDs have each sold lebih than 350,000 copies, and 500,000 copies of their musik video have flown off the shelves. In Las Vegas, thousands of children wait in line while Mary-Kate and Ashley sign autographs from inside an air-conditioned bubble; in New York, a line wraps around FAO Schwarz so kids can spend a few detik single-filing past the girls and waving while parents snap pictures; at Sea World in San Diego, Mary-Kate and Ashley pack a stadium usually reserved for Shamu the Whale. What's their secret? "They're no Shirley Temple," says Andy Tennant, who directed the twins in "It Takes Two," produced oleh Rysher Entertainment. "They don't have exquisite talent. What they have is a lot of charm and a huge marketing campaign. That's what sells these days." For girls who grew up watching the twins on "Full House," Mary-Kate and Ashley are cute, likable role model who sing, dance and throw cool slumber parties. "I like the things they do," says Clea Litewka, who had a slumber party of her own - complete with Olsen video - for her ninth birthday. She has memorized all the songs on the twins' musik videocassette, "Our First Video," which has been on the bestseller charts for the past three years.

A Surefire Formula
"There is nobody competing with them," says Arnold Holland, chief executive of Lightyear Entertainment, an independent video and recording label in New York. "Most TV properties are either aimed at boys of families. It's rare that there are any girl-oriented properties." In the lucrative home-video market, the Olsens' parents and Mr. Thorne have hit upon a sure-fire formula. For "The Adventures of Mary-Kate and Ashley," the girls play two dimpled detectives whose agency motto is "Will solve any crime oleh makan malam time." Mr. Thorne's wife coined the detectives' nickname, "Trenchcoat Twins." The story lines are extremely simple: the hunt for Dad's missing "secret computer disk" during a family Caribbean cruise, atau the cari for something spooky in an amusement park that is scaring customers away from the fun house. And the video are shamelessly crosspromotional. In exchange for being featured prominently in the shows, companies like Carnival Cruise Lines, Sea World and U.S. luar angkasa Camp cover all lodging, transportation and catering costs on location. For "The Case of the Hotel Who-Done-It," the twins repeatedly plug the Hilton Hawaiian Village Hotel. "This hotel was so cool, they even had someone who parked our bikes," the twins say, adding that the lobby is "so awsome." Just when it seems the only thing left for them to do is daftar the hotel's amenities, the girls break into a song during which they raid the minibar, watch in-room film and chant, "Why can't we live in a hotel all the time?" The profit margins on the video are huge. Each half-hour program takes only four to five days to shoot on a shoestring budget of about $250,000, peanuts compared with the $1.6 million it cost to produce one episode of "Full House." Yet every one of the dozen video released so far has sold several hundred thousand units, at $12.95 apiece. After distribution and marketing costs, Dualstar's royalties to tanggal have exceeded $6 million. Two lebih video will hit stores selanjutnya week, "The Case of the U.S. Navy Adventure" and "The Case of the Mystery Volcano"; the latter is timed to capitalize on two gunung berapi films in theaters this year. Mr. Thorne is negotiating a detik deal with Warner halaman awal Video for the girls to produce six lebih video and is developing a detik TV series and another feature film. The selling of the Olsen Twins began when they were just four months old, when their mother, Jarnette, took them to an audition for "Full House" to play the role of Michelle Tanner. Producers often look for twins to play a juvenile role because labor laws restrict the hours children are permitted to work. The sugary sitcom was a big hit for ABC, and soon network research revealed that Mary-Kate and Ashley had a higher "Q rating" - a measure of a star's popularity - among girls than Henry Winkler had when he played The Fonz on "Happy Days" atau Michael J. rubah, fox had on "Family Ties." The girls' compensation rose with the show's popularity, from $2,400 per episode at the start of the series to $80,000 an episode for both of them during the last season. They will continue to earn substantial syndication profits from "Full House" for years to come: So far, Dualstar has collected at least $3 million of such proceeds, a figure that could triple oleh the time all revenues are received. Mr. Thorne and the girls' parents decline to discuss Dualstar's profits. The pindah to establish a production company for the girls began in early 1993 as they started breaking out of their "Full House" role. Alan Berger, head of the TV department at talent agency International Creative Management, remembers meeting with Mr. Thorne shortly after the Olsens' first made-for-TV movie, "To Grandmother's House We Go," became one of the season's puncak, atas TV film in December 1992. Mr. Berger's client Jeff Franklin, who had directed the movie and created "Full House," had worked with the twins for eight years, sometimes waving a cookie to elicit a response from them. Now he wanted to become executive producer of the twins' detik TV movie. But Mr. Thorne had a different plan. "The girls are going to be executive producers," he told Mr. Berger, who winced at the suggestion. "The girls? But their combined ages are 12," Mr. Berger protested. "Yeah," Mr. Thorne acknowledged, "but they're going to cary the movie." Mr. Berger's client opted out. "I just couldn't deal with the absurdity of having Jeff Franklin laporan to two six-year-olds," Mr. Berger says, shaking his head. Mr. Thorne, he says, "wanted to establish them as executive producers and run it through their own company." Sure enough, oleh the time the detik TV movie, "Double, Double, Toil and Trouble" appeared in 1993, Dualstar Productions was listed as a co-producer. Of course, Mary-Kate and Ashley didn't actually hire the writer and director. Instead, the pindah was the first step in "empowering" the girls and their company, Mr. Thorne explains. Mary-Kate and Ashley took in $500,000 for each of the first two TV movies. For their third TV movie, "How the West Was Fun," their fee doubled to $1 million. "That was their price," says Jim Green, whose company produced the shows. The shows did well, both on ABC and in video sales, and the selanjutnya obvious step was to put the girls in a theatrical film. The film "It Takes Two" paired the girls with actors Steve Guttenberg and Kirstie Alley. For their roles as identical rich girl/poor girl who conspire to have their respective guardians fall in love, they earned $1.6 million. The $14 million film garnered only $19,5 millian at box office, but gushed a hefty $75 million in home-video retail sales, making it Warner halaman awal Video's fourth-biggest seller ever in the family category. "They are an unexplainable phenomenon," says Mr. Tennant, the director. He recalls with amazement a hari when three packed school buses passed near the movie's set in New York's Little Italy and came to stop three blocks away. "Ten menit later there was this stampede of 75 children who had gotten off the bus all screaming.... It looked like the beatles. They swarmed the set. Everything came to a standstill." The girls live in southern California with an older brother, a younger sister and their parents, who are divorced and have joint custody. The twins attend a private Christian academy, where they are in different classes and have separate groups of friends. They got straight A's on their last laporan card. Their father, David Olsen, says Mary-Kate and Ashley's personal welfare and aducation have always come first and they aren't under any pressure to act. "From very early on, it's been about controlling their environment," says Mr. Olsen, a mortgage banker and one of the country's puncak, atas amateur golfers. "It's not just throwing them to the wolves. They like acting. As soon as they stop enjoying it, it ends." Asked what she wants to do when she grows up, Ashley is ready with a response: "I really like acting. It's a lot of fun." She also mentions directing. Mary-Kate says she wants to train dolphins and whales, preferably at Sea World. Still, the girls' parents defer to Mr. Thorne on even the smallest of career matters. "Robert likes them in baseball caps," Mr. Olsen says to Harold Weitzberg, the marketing director for Dualstar, one afternoon as Mary-Kate and Ashley are having their hair styled for a publicity foto shoot. "I don't want him yelling at me," the father says. Mr. Thorne comes up with story ideas for the girls' video and works with the writers. One day, he says, he found himself thinking, "Let's put them on jet skis." In a flash the girls were filming their selanjutnya video: "You're invited to Mary-Kate and Ashley's Hawaiian pantai Party." A fierce negotiator with a laconic outward manner, Mr. Thorne spent several years at a Los Angeles law firm, carving out a niche in children's entertainment. He also represents R.L. Stine, penulis of the blockbuster "Goosebumps" series of books, and the child actor Jonathan Taylor Thomas from "Home Improvement." He recently opened his own practise, Thorne & Co., with two other lawyers.

A Watchful Eye
Mr. Thorne keeps his eyes on creative details. When he walks onto the set of the WB network sitcom "Sister, Sister." where Mary-Kate and Ashley are making a special appearance, he glances up on the sign where their names are painted in red letters. "There's no hyphen in Mary-Kate's name," Mr. Thorne Notices. "I hate it when they do that." Within minutes, two scenery carpenters are up on a ladders to paint in a hyphen. When the girls have a problem, Mr. Thorne is often the first person they call. Once after a morning of akting that had gone badly, Mary-Kate was being interviewed oleh a TV crew. Suddenly, she turned to one of the production assistants and said: "I want a phone. I want to call Robert." A call was swiftly put trough to Mr. Thorne's office. "I don't want to do this interview. I had a bad morning. The interviewer is dumb," Mr. Thorne recalls Mary-Kate telling him. The twins glide from set to set in a large entourage that often includes a lawyer, marketing manager, nanny, tutor, and a personal akting coach. At the center are two extremely mild little girls who appear oblivious to the money-making machine around them. Their allowance is just $10 a week. Asked during a break in the taping of "Sister, Sister" wheter they understand the business they have spawned, Mary-Kate and Ashley shake their heads "no" in identical movements.

Salary atau Allowance?
While shooting "It takes Two," Mr. Tennant, the director, overheard the girls discussing their salary. Ashley figured they must be making $5 a week, their allowance at the time. "No way," Mary-Kate protested. "We got to be making at least $10." "People say to them: 'What's it like to be a millionaire? They just get this glazed look on their face," says Barbara Daoust, their cating coach. oleh law, lebih than half the profits from Dualstar Entertainment must go into a trust for the girls. The parents are allowed to take a percentage as a "management fee," but they decline to disclose the amount; Mr. Thorne calls it "nominal." With the girls now 10, Mr. Thorne is heading into a delicate phase of their career, one that has turned many child bintang before them into troubled teens and trivia-quiz answers. "The kids are going through a transition right now. As they mature, they are going to have to reinvent themselves," says Jim Green, the producer who works on their TV movies. "They can't continue to do the same stories they have been doing. When the kids become teenagers, it will be interesting to see what happens." Though the girls are in heavy demand - "Rosie O'Donnel's been after me for weeks," Mr. Thorne says - they aren't doing any TV interviews now. "We don't do the electronic media anymore. It's overkill," Mr. Thorne says. "After a while, the word 'ubiquitous' was cropping up too much.... The family wanted them to take some time off, step back, and come back fresh." Mr. Thorne says he wants to start limiting the girls' projects as well. He says he has turned down merchandising and licensing bonanzas, from "Lunchboxes to horrible network specials." "That's exploitative," he says. "It doesn't build a career."

The dinding jalan, street Journal, Monday, March 10, 1997
added by lorette
Source: google photobuket
added by jessy-lu
In a lot of ways Mary-Kate and Ashley are like anda and your friends. And if anda have a twin, then they really are like you! "People ask us all the time if it's fun to be a twin," Mary-Kate says, "and we always tell them the same thing. Yes!" "We always have each other to talk with," Ashley explains. "We share all our big secrets." Sisters are often very close. But twin sisters are built-in best friends! Like most twins, Mary-Kate and Ashley share a special bond.

Each of them often seems to know what the other is thinking-without saying a word. "Ashley can tell things about me, like if something...
continue reading...
added by flowerdrop
Source: Made oleh me - flowerdrop
added by flowerdrop
Source: olsen twins
added by MJ_Fan_4Life007
part 8 was always blocked. sorry :(
video
mary-kate
ashley
olsen
twins
mjfan4life007
when in rome
added by DramaGeek
Source: Olsens Anon
added by MJ_Fan_4Life007
added by jessy-lu
Source: hiceleb
added by x_ellie_x
Source: Just Jared
added by brittanie81892
added by servaege
added by jessy-lu
Source: hiceleb
added by olsenfanatic
Mary-Kate and Ashley Slideshow
video
mary-kate
olsen
ashley
twins
added by australia-101
added by x_ellie_x
Source: Just Jared