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This Diane Farr Fansite is one of four TIER8.NET sub-domains.
March 6, 2005: This site is being reconstructed. All our pictures are still here, as are three Diane Farr articles.
Please note: This site is completely unofficial and should in no way be seen as a reflection of DianeFarr.
This entire site is still under construction, so please bear with us. Sometimes it takes months for a site to get completely indexed, so we feel it's better to follow Patton's advice:
"Can we go, now, please? A good plan today
is better than a perfect plan tomorrow."
- Conrad Brean (Robert De Niro), Wag the Dog, quoting George S. Patton.
The following partial articles and links are only a small portion of what we have so far; and again, most of this site is still in very rough shape: even the pages that look complete will likely be redone.
We realize many unofficial wesbites post complete articles, and we realize we could probably get away with this for a very long time, but out of basic respect we chose not to do this. We have the complete articles archived, so if any links no longer work, please e-mail us.
Diane Farr Article 1: TXBookmark.com
Diane Farr Article 2: USA Today Yoga
Diane Farr Interview - uniteddivas.com
My most formative sexual years were spent listening to your advice on "Loveline." What was it like telling 12-year-old guys how to put on condoms?
Suprisingly easy. I owned a bar in NY before I worked all the time as an actor and taking care of drinkers is just like taking care of sexual-freshman. “Just use a condom.” Loveline was great because it was all improv and as cheeky as it sounds, I think we really did help people.
And you already had practice helping people...you taught acting in a maximum security prison.
Another side job before acting paid the rent. I taught improv to men between 16-22 who were tried as adults but in an "in-between juve and big house" facility. They gave me the most dysfunctional behavior problems to see if the arts might help them. My first contract was ten weeks. The final project for the inmates was to do Edmund's monologue from King Lear. It was the most I've ever learned about acting.
For the rest of this interview, please go to: Diane Farr Interview, UnitedDivas.com