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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Sean Kingston stabilized after watercraft crash (AP)

MIAMI – Hip-hop singer Sean Kingston remained hospitalized Tuesday after crashing his watercraft into a Miami Beach bridge.

Publicist Joseph Carozza said there were no updates Tuesday morning on his condition. He added that Kingston's family is grateful for everyone's prayers and support.

Kingston, 21, and a female passenger were injured when the watercraft hit the Palm Island Bridge around 6 p.m. Sunday, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokesman Jorge Pino said.

Both were hospitalized at Ryder Trauma Center.

A number of hip-hop musicians were in Miami Beach over the weekend for Urban Beach Week.

Kingston rose to fame with his 2007 hit "Beautiful Girls" and was also featured on songs by artists including Justin Bieber. His self-titled debut album sold over 1 million copies worldwide.

In a 2007 interview with The Associated Press, Kingston described his music as a fusion of reggae, pop, rap and R&B.

"It's Sean Kingston genre. I have my own genre," Kingston told the AP at the time. "No disrespect to no artist or dudes out there. I feel like I am my own person. I am doing my own thing."

Since the crash, musicians including Bieber, Rihanna and Nicki Minaj have posted messages of support for Kingston on Twitter.


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At 81, Plummer still relishing the actor's life (AP)

NEW YORK – Ewan McGregor was having a hard time keeping up with Christopher Plummer.

At the suggestion of director Mike Mills, McGregor had brought his 81-year-old co-star to Barney's in Los Angeles to pick up a scarf for Plummer's elderly gay character in their film "Beginners." But Plummer had other designs.

"Christopher only wanted to get skinny black jeans," recalls McGregor. "That was his main goal in life. When we got there, he asked where the jeans department was, and off he went to find skinny jeans."

That one of the finest living interpreters of Shakespeare and one of the few remaining greats of classical acting was hell-bent on procuring a hipster staple might seem odd. But then again, Plummer has seldom acceded to the stereotypes of old age.

"I'm glad (my ambition) is still there," said Plummer in a recent interview. "If it faded, what's there to live for? It makes you appreciate other things if you keep working at your job and you love your job. Too many people in the world are unhappy with their lot. And then they retire and they become vegetables. I think retirement in any profession is death, so I'm determined to keep crackin'."

Plummer's remarkable late period began with his acclaimed performance as Mike Wallace in Michael Mann's 1999 film "The Insider," continued in films such as 2009's "The Last Station" (his performance as a fiery yet deteriorating Tolstoy was nominated for an Oscar) and arguably culminated with his staggering "King Lear" at Lincoln Center in 2004.

In "Beginnings," which opens in theaters Friday, Plummer gives yet another career-capping performance. He plays Hal, a 75-year-old who comes out of the closet after his longtime wife dies, and shortly before terminal cancer sets in. McGregor stars as his son in a film largely based on Mills' own family.

The role suits Plummer particularly well because Hal, like Plummer, is randy, funny and undimmed.

"The wonderful thing about Hal is that he has such a ball at the end of his life," says Plummer. "It was a charming script, I thought, and so lacking in sentimentality and self-pity. There was none of that nonsense. Usually, when scripts like that come along, you have to work so hard to play against them because they're just so saccharine. And the writers and producers will tell you that's what the public wants. Blow it out your bum!"

Plummer long chaffed at less dynamic roles, none more than his most famous part: Capt. Von Trapp in "The Sound of Music." In his rollicking 2008 memoir, "In Spite of Myself," he surveys a life begun amid Montreal privilege, carried through boozy `50s New York and swinging `60s London, and ultimately spent in reverence of, as he says, "the Thee-ah-tah." He also refers to "The Sound of Music" as "S&M" and laments the "humorless and one-dimensional" Von Trapp.

"We tried so hard to put humor into it," he says now. "It was almost impossible. It was just agony to try to make that guy not a cardboard figure."

The role catapulted Plummer to stardom, but he never took to leading-men parts.

"I hated playing them," he says. "They were so innocuously and badly written and cardboard figures, most of them. In my 40s, I began to suddenly enjoy making movies because the character parts are so much more interesting. I started having a ball and working with much better directors — John Huston, for example, and Anatole Litvak from the old school. After Michael Mann's `The Insider,' then the scripts improved. I was upgraded! Since then, they've been first-class scripts. Not all successful, but worth doing."

All the while, though, Plummer would "go back for my medicine" on the stage. The Canadian-born actor has performed most all of the major Shakespeare roles (among them Hamlet, Macbeth, Henry V, Iago and Cyrano), often at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Canada. Plummer, who lives with his wife of 41 years, Elaine Taylor, in Weston, Conn., last year played Prospero in "The Tempest" at Stratford.

"I've become simpler and simpler with playing Shakespeare," he says. "I'm not as extravagant as I used to be. I don't listen to my voice so much anymore. All the pitfalls of playing the classics — you can fall in love with yourself."

"I'm determined to finish playing all the great parts," says Plummer. "I think I have, actually."

Actors who have recently worked with Plummer speak of his unceasing joy in his work and his commitment to still growing as an actor.

"That was the surprising thing about Christopher, just how contemporary he is as an actor, how modern it feels when you're working with him," says McGregor. "Acting was very different and it's evolved. But what's very clear is that so has Christopher's acting. He gives an amazing performance in this film, but it never, ever felt like he was when we were acting it. We were never aware of his performance. It just felt like I was in a scene with my dad."

Mills, whose only previous feature was 2005's "Thumbsucker," calls Plummer "a bit of a rascal, in the best sense of the word."

"It's really contagious being around a 79-year-old man (during filming two years ago) that loves what he's doing and isn't taking it for granted," says Mills. "There's something really magical and special about that. Ewan and I both talked about that a lot, like, `Wow, I want to be like that.'"

Plummer has been working at a pace of about three films and a play every year. He co-stars in the highly anticipated "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," due out later this year, and is currently prepping roles in two films and one play (though he declines to name them).

Plummer says he relishes finding "new ways of simplifying things," and is enjoying acting more than ever.

"It's cliche, but you know that you have to," he says. "You appreciate life much more because there's so little of it left. I must say there's a sort of panic, too, that takes over when you hit 80. Am I going to be able to do all the things that I want to do, starting now? Rather like Hal, in that respect, that he starts his life when it's too late. But never too late because even five minutes is glorious."


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Jim James leads My Morning Jacket on new journey (AP)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Jim James is on a spiritual quest of sorts, and you're invited to listen in.

The My Morning Jacket frontman sat in the prayer room of a church in a quiet neighborhood of his hometown last month, talking about old records, religion, philosophy and his perpetual yearning for understanding. These things color the Kentucky quintet's much-anticipated new album, "Circuital," and James says the record reflects a search he's been on for some time.

"I just want to be peaceful," James said. "I just want to find peace. I don't want to be questioning anymore. I don't want to be searching anymore."

Don't get James wrong. He understands he's living the life millions dream of as the head of an increasingly important and influential rock band. That part of his life is great. James is looking for solace in other places as well, however. He jokingly calls himself a recovering Catholic and says he's given up on organized religion. He's now seeking comfort from other sources.

"There's so much stuff that you just don't need in your brain that they hammered there so young and you're trying to deal with it," James said. "I don't consider myself any faith. I just try to listen to all faiths and all ideas and sift out what I believe and what I don't."

Increasingly James is finding answers in music. Long a rock `n' roll fan, he started to grow uninterested and turned to different forms of music to feed his need for new sounds. His discovery of soul music has influenced his own music over the last five years. More important, it's opened his mind about the possibilities of life.

"I'll never forget hearing (Marvin Gaye's) `What's Going On' for the first time and being like, `Oh, my god,'" James said. "All this rock music is beautiful and serves a purpose, but so much of it is about pain and darkness. And when I hear `What's Going On' or when I hear some of Sam Cooke's religious work, I hear all the mystery and passion that I loved about my rock music, but I also hear hope and praise and all this glory that I feel like I don't hear in all this sad stuff growing up, listening to Nirvana. When I put on Nirvana now, it's like nails shooting into my ears."

Like Gaye, Pastor T.L. Barrett also blew his mind, and helped set the stage for the recording of "Circuital," My Morning Jacket's first album since 2008's "Evil Urges," out Tuesday. Barrett's little-known "Like a Ship ... (Without a Sail)" was a gospel funk masterpiece that all but disappeared after a small pressing decades ago. Boutique label Numero Group reissued the album, which Barrett recorded with his Chicago church's youth choir.

James decided he wanted to recreate the uncommon energy and communal spirit of that album and other lost gospel records, and rented the church (the band asked its name and exact location be withheld for privacy reasons). The church's large, echoing gymnasium was the perfect space for the band to gather after a yearlong hiatus. There was room for everyone to set up and face each other, and they were able to strip away all the artificial separation you find in a traditional studio.

"We're in a band. We play music live all the time, so I wanted this album to showcase just us being a band, all playing together and hopefully achieving that moment of good tape together," he said.

After a rather confined experience recording "Evil Urges" in a New York City studio, the "Circuital" sessions were freewheeling and loose for the band, which also includes bassist Tom "Two-Tone Tommy" Blankenship, drummer Patrick Hallahan and multi-instrumentalists Carl Broemel and Bo Koster. James brought the lyrics and skeletons for songs and the band worked each over for a few days, at most, before recording them. They skipped the usual step of rehearsing and making rough demos for each song and went right to the tape recorder, keeping it loose as they tried to turn the sprawling church's gym, soaring chapel and various gathering spaces into something useful.

"There was an element of do-it-yourself with this one ... because we just walked into a space that isn't a studio and had to make it sound good," Hallahan said. "We built a tent around my drum kit to reign in the cymbals because it's such a big, wide room. We had to dampen the whole floor with acoustic absorb material. It was just like a big project that never ended."

Hallahan describes the group as "five compassionate and curious souls" and James' bandmates get where he's coming from when he's translating his spiritual questions into artistic expression. Each has had his own journey over the last half decade as My Morning Jacket toured relentlessly, earning the combination of critical adoration and experimentation-indulging fan bases of top rock acts like Radiohead and Wilco.

So James' ruminations resonated with his bandmates as they laid down the tribal vibe of opening track "Victory Dance" or matched the beauty of James' soaring tenor on "Wonderful (The Way I Feel)." They nailed the title track, which builds over a long crescendo to some of the album's most heroic guitar work and interesting sonic moments, on just the second take.

Todd Haynes picked up on that connection on the record when he first heard it. The "Far From Heaven" director is helming a live webcast of My Morning Jacket's Tuesday concert at The Louisville Palace Theater. Haynes met James when the singer stole a scene in his Bob Dylan film "I'm Not There" and has followed the band for some time.

He called "Circuital" a "powerful" album and noted how different it is from My Morning Jacket's previous sound, which has evolved from lush alt-country to Neil Young-style rock to something fairly unpredictable.

"When I really listened to `Circuital' through the first time, I really noticed it as a through-line lyrically in this record — this sense of a new beginning, of a new life, of sort of turning the page on the past and having a kind of confidence. It's very optimistic," he said.

And why shouldn't they be? With one of the year's most anticipated albums and tours, they've attained a kind of long-term stability that's rare in the music world. It seems natural that should be reflected in their music.

Now the question is, will it help James find some of that peace he's looking for?

"There's things that I'm trying to figure out that I haven't figured out," James said. "I'm getting clues and stuff but I don't know why it's built into my brain that way. My brain is just not satisfied. It has to question something infinitely. And usually it questions something so much that it eventually kills it, and then I go somewhere else, and then it questions that. So I'm trying find a way to stop that."

___

Online:

http://www.mymorningjacket.com


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Opera stars, fearing radiation, skip Japan tour (AP)

TOKYO – Two of the biggest stars of New York's Metropolitan Opera have bowed out of a Japan tour, citing fears of radioactive contamination and sending the company scrambling to find last-minute stand-ins.

Soprano Anna Netrebko and tenor Joseph Calleja announced just days before the opening show that they would not join the tour of Nagoya and Tokyo despite experts' assurances they would be safe, forcing the Met to "scour the world" for replacements, general manager Peter Gelb said Tuesday.

"Part of what makes opera such an exciting art form is that it is so unpredictable," Gelb said. "If there were a rationality clause in opera singers' contracts, not many opera singers would perform."

Japan was hit by a devastating earthquake and tsunami on March 11 that left about 25,000 people dead or missing and crippled a nuclear power station north of Tokyo, setting off radiation leaks. The plant remains unstable, though the leaks have declined substantially.

Tokyo briefly registered nominally higher radiation levels in its air and water, but they have subsided to pre-tsunami levels. There was never any scientific concern of a radiation impact on Nagoya, which is much farther away.

The disaster and the uncertainty it spawned caused a spate of concert cancellations, and the arts scene is only now returning to normal. Along with pop music and sports events, classical concerts by the Vienna Boys Chior, the Lyon Orchestra and the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra also were nixed, along with performances by violinists Hillary Hahn and Anne Sophie Mutter.

"Of course, Tokyo is safe," said Momoko Serizawa, a spokeswoman for concert organizer Japan Arts. "But the visit by the Met comes at a very important and delicate time and we hope it will give impetus to others to follow soon."

Not all artists have stayed away — last month, opera great Placido Domingo performed in Japan and later donated $200,000.

Even so, Gelb said Netrebko, who is Russian, chose not to go through with the tour because of radiation concerns and because, she said, she had friends who died of cancer after the Chernobyl disaster in 1989.

Gelb said she told him that she would be so distraught that she wouldn't perform well and would be a disappointment to her fans.

Calleja also said he was concerned for his health.

Gelb said the Met struggled with whether to go ahead with the performances, planned years in advance.

Last month, David Brenner, an expert on low-dose radiation, was brought in from Columbia University to meet with the company. He informed them that radiation levels in Tokyo had returned to their pre-tsunami norm, and that the airplane trip or a simple X-ray would probably lead to greater exposure than the stay in Japan.

"There are cities in Europe with higher levels," Gelb said Brenner told the performers.

That was enough to convince all but three — German tenor Jonas Kauffmann announced last month he was pulling out. The rest of the 300-plus member company arrived in Nagoya, west of Tokyo, on Monday.

"Obviously, if it were not safe we wouldn't be here," Gelb said. "I feel very strongly that we have a responsibility to be here. I think we are setting an example by being here for the global artistic community and for the Japanese public."

Gelb said he hoped the Japanese would not take the withdrawals as an insult. "They are great artists and I hope the Japanese public won't think less of them," he said.

The tour, the Met's seventh in Japan, begins Saturday and runs through June 19.

Four singers — soprano Marina Poplavskaya, along with tenors Marcelo Alvarez, Rolando Villazon and Alexey Dolgov — will fill the hole left by Netrebko and Calleja.

The Met will be performing performing "La Boheme," "Don Carlo," and "Lucia di Lammermoor."


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Palin a no-show for fans wanting Gettysburg view (Reuters)

GETTYSBURG, Pennsylvania (Reuters) – Sarah Palin has found a new way to keep her political faithful guessing.

Palin was a no-show for several hundred supporters, celebrity-watchers and media who turned out in hopes of seeing her at the Civil War battlefield of Gettysburg on Monday. She and her entourage arrived at a hotel outside the town late in the day and spoke to a smaller group of people gathered there.

The Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008 is on a tour of historic sites on the East Coast, renewing speculation she might be testing the waters for a presidential bid in 2012.

Palin remained noncommittal on whether she will run.

"I honestly don't know," the former Alaska governor said, CBS reported on its website.

There is one thing she does know but is not telling: her itinerary. That has left supporters as well as reporters guessing where she will pop up next.

On Sunday, Palin entered Washington on the back of a Harley-Davidson in a war veterans' motorcycle parade that is part of the Memorial Day weekend observance in the capital.

Rumors, then Twitter messages, then posts on her website showed Palin had also visited sites in and near Washington -- the National Archives, where the U.S. Constitution is on display, and Baltimore's Fort McHenry, where the "rockets' red glare" described in the national anthem took place.

A photo on her website late on Sunday showed the closing words of the Gettysburg Address delivered by President Abraham Lincoln after the 1863 battle. That was taken as a hint.

WHERE'S SARAH?

Several hundred people gathered at the Civil War site on a hot, sunny day for a glimpse of the woman who supporters hope will inject some life into a sluggish race for the Republican nomination to challenge President Barack Obama next year.

Some of those assembled there were puzzled by goal of the tour, which seemed designed to attract public attention despite a lack of information.

"In a way it's cool. In a way it's, 'Whaa?'" said John Hower, a baker who drove for three hours from Berwick, Pennsylvania, with two friends to see Palin. "She's trying to avoid the media. But I'd like to see the bus. We're, like, where's this bus?"

A charismatic and polarizing figure who resigned as governor, wrote a book, and became a Fox News commentator after the 2008 election, Palin's entry into the Republican field could spice up a race among candidates who so far have failed to arouse passion among core party members.

"I think she'd kick the mix up," said Janita Carlton of Green Forest, Arkansas. "I think she's a smart lady and she has backbone."

By the evening, reports of her bus being parked at a hotel reached the crowd. Many stayed at the battlefield hoping she would visit the memorial as temperatures cooled late in the day. Eventually, after hours of waiting, the crowd thinned.

"I'm disappointed. Yeah, I would have liked to have seen her," said Sharon Danielski, who left after a nine-hour vigil.

Hower, the baker, described what drew him there.

"She's a big name, she's always in the news," he said. "She might be a future president. Maybe not this time but sooner or later she might get it right."

(Editing Doina Chiacu)


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Hollywood star Blanchett digs in over carbon tax (AFP)

SYDNEY (AFP) – Hollywood star Cate Blanchett Tuesday defended her decision to front a campaign promoting the Australian government's carbon tax, saying she backed action on climate change for her children's sake.

Dubbed "Carbon Cate" by the Sunday Telegraph, the actor was attacked as being a jet-setting, multi-millionaire who was out of touch with ordinary Australians who fear a rise in the cost of living from a price on carbon.

"I'm not really surprised by the reactions from people on the other side of the debate. People are entitled to their opinion," said Blanchett, who was dismissed in one comment piece as "just another morally vain Hollywood star".

The Oscar-winning actor, who has three young boys with husband Andrew Upton, said there was a cost to society from carbon pollution, and this was what she was passionate about as a mother.

"That's where it gets me in the gut," she told The Sydney Morning Herald.

"I can't look my children in the face if I'm not trying to do something in my small way and to urge other people.

"Yes, I've been fortunate in my career but that's no reason not to stand up for something that I deeply believe in."

Blanchett's star role in the new television campaign, which is funded by a coalition of unions and green groups and urges Australians to "Say Yes" to a tax on carbon, has become a national talking point in the climate debate.

Centre-right opposition leader Tony Abbott used the celebrity endorsement to attack Prime Minister Julia Gillard in parliament on Monday.

"This is a prime minister who's happy to listen to actors, but she won't listen to voters," he said.

Australians are among the world's worst per capita carbon polluters and Gillard has proposed a tax to be levied on major industrial polluters by July 1, 2012, with plans for a full emissions trading scheme in three to five years.


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William and Kate's Canada itinerary announced (AFP)

LONDON (AFP) – Prince William and his new wife Kate will visit eight cities during their July visit to Canada, their first overseas royal tour as a married couple, palace officials have announced.

The couple, officially titled Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, will kick-off their visit in Ottawa before taking in Gatineau, Montreal, Quebec City, Charlottetown, Summerside, Yellowknife and Calgary.

From there, they will fly to California and spend two days in the Los Angeles area.

"The couple are very much looking forward to their first joint royal tour," a royal source said.

"Their purpose is to strengthen the very strong ties that exist between Canada and their royal family and for the duke and the duchess to get to know Canada better."

William last visited Canada when he went to Vancouver aged 15 in 1998 with his father Prince Charles and brother Prince Harry. He was given a pop star's welcome and was mobbed by teenage girls.

The brothers also toured Ontario province with their parents in 1991.

As Canada is a Commonwealth realm with Queen Elizabeth II as its sovereign, the duke and duchess will visit as members of the Canadian royal family.


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Is ABC's "Wipeout" a rip-off? (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – In the 1996 film "Swingers," Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau and their fellow wannabe actors debate whether Quentin Tarantino ripped off a slow-motion sequence in "Reservoir Dogs" from Martin Scorsese. "Everybody steals from everybody," Vaughn's character announces. "That's Hollywood."

The Swingers maxim is true throughout showbiz, but perhaps it most accurately describes one particular segment of Hollywood: Reality TV. Since "Survivor" kicked off the U.S. boom in unscripted, narrative programing 11 years ago, the niche has been littered with more copycat shows and derivative concepts than hit original formats. "American Idol," the official U.S. version of Britain's "Pop Idol," spawned countless singing elimination shows. History's "Pawn Stars" begat "Hard Core Pawn," "Pawn Queens" and the rest. Producers of ABC's "Wife Swap" once sued the makers of Fox's similar family switcheroo series "Trading Spouses."

Owing to what might be a knee-jerk reaction against protecting the creativity in a genre dubbed "reality," as well as a lack of clarity in copyright law, many producers believe there is a Wild West mentality in the unscripted world that has given rise to a culture of rampant, unlicensed borrowing.

Not helping matters was a leaked 2008 memo from an ABC executive, urging executives and producers to "carefully scrutinize" whether licensing foreign formats was "necessary or appropriate" before going forward with similar shows, especially when they might only be interested in the "general, underlying premise."

The memo didn't specifically target reality shows, but it drew the ire of the Format Recognition and Protection Association, an international group pushing for intellectual property rights for unscripted TV formats. FRAPA suggested that producers consider helping themselves to the "underlying premise" of Disney's Hannah Montana and Mickey Mouse.

Against that backdrop, a lawsuit coming to a head in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles might determine where a court will draw the line on copyright infringement in reality TV. The case, filed in 2008 against ABC by Japan's Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS), claims that ABC's wacky obstacle-course competition "Wipeout" copied original elements of six TBS shows, including "Takeshi's Castle," "Most Extreme Elimination Challenge" (MXC), "Sasuke" and "Ninja Warrior."

The suit alleges that ABC and "Wipeout" producer Endemol set out to replicate the TBS shows, lifted popular components and even sought to manipulate Google into sending traffic for search terms "Takeshi's Castle" and "Ninja Warrior" to a "Wipeout"-sponsored link. The case has a key summary judgment hearing this summer after a May 12 mediation failed to produce a settlement.

Crucial to the case is which unique elements of the TBS shows warrant copyright protection (what lawyers call the "protectable" vs. "nonprotectable" elements). In court papers, ABC argues that TBS "remarkably claims copyright protection in obstacles and obstacle concepts ubiquitous in the public domain, such as 'rope swings,' 'mechanical bulls' and 'pole vaults.'"

The network points out TV's history of obstacle-course competitions, from the BBC's "It's a Knockout" in the '60s to ABC's "Battle of the Network Stars" in the '70s to "Fear Factor," the 2001-06 NBC series from Endemol, produced by "Wipeout" co-creators Matt Kunitz and Scott Larsen. "Wipeout," ABC argues, uses only general scenes a faire, rather than any unique, and thus copyrightable, expression.

Considering the limited number of reality-TV tropes available to producers, ABC makes a compelling argument. Still, when Judge Margaret Nagle sits down to watch Wipeout and the six TBS shows (a good reason to give federal jurists raises), she will likely notice alarming similarities. "Wipeout's" "Cookie Cutter" contraption appears nearly identical to MXC's "Rotating Surfboard of Death," as do the wisecracking hosts. Ditto "Wipeout's" "Hopping Blocks" and Sasuke's "Six Jumps." And so on. How many similarities are too many?

Therein lies the larger question beyond the minutia of the "Wipeout" case: What aspects of any reality show are subject to legal protection? In a genre where the traditional plot and character aspects of scripted works have been replaced by unique formats, the law might need to evolve to protect the creativity that informs this powerful segment of the TV world.


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Swedish king flatly denies improprieties, scandal grows (AFP)

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Swedish King Carl XVI Gustaf gave a rare interview in an attempt to quash a swelling scandal, flatly rejecting media reports he had visited strip clubs and even had indirect contact with organised crime.

In a long interview with the TT news agency published late Monday, Sweden's head of state denied recent reported claims from a former mafia member, Mille Markovic, that he had pictures in his possession showing the king in a sex club in the same shot as two naked women.

"No, it is impossible that they exist," the king insisted, stressing that "it is also difficult to comment on something one has not seen and no one else has seen either."

The royal court has demanded that public broadcaster TV4, which in a report two weeks ago about the alleged pictures said a journalist had seen them, show the shots to prove there is any substance to the claims.

The TV4 report and a new book about another shady figure from Sweden's underworld alleged friends of the king had been willing to pay large sums of money to block the publication of pictures of the monarch in compromising situations.

One of the king's childhood friends, Ander Lettstroem, admitted in a statement last week he had contacted people involved with organised crime, but insisted it was purely his own initiative and had nothing to do with Carl XVI Gustaf.

In Monday's interview, the king reiterated a previous statement that he had no knowledge of Lettstroem's actions and had nothing to do with his confession.

"That he has been in contact with such people ... is not appropriate. That's something one could wish he had not done, I must say," he said, adding that "I have distanced myself completely from his actions and thereby also from our acquaintanceship."

He admitted the scandal had "of course hurt confidence in me, and even confidence in the monarchy and also Sweden."

"That is something I really regret, but it is something I will fix, and I will work double as hard in the future," he said.

The latest scandal comes just over six months after a tell-all biography of the king hit the bookstands, causing uproar with its descriptions of his participation in wild parties and affairs with young women.

The allegations also come shortly after the royal court announced the king's wife, German-born Queen Silvia, had launched a probe into her father's Nazi past.

When asked about claims in the book he had visited several specific strip clubs, the king on Monday was often on the defensive, responding repeatedly with "No," and "I have no idea."

Following the latest allegations, several polls have shown that a majority of Swedes would like the king to soon abdicate and hand over the throne to Crown Princess Victoria, who has long been far more popular than her father.

The king, who reached the official retirement age of 65 last month, reiterated Monday he has no plans to step aside in favour of his 33-year-old daughter.

"There is a tradition and custom and that is not what is going to happen," he said.


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AIDS claimed celebrity victims, but stars lead fight (AFP)

LOS ANGELES (AFP) – AIDS claimed a string of celebrity victims in its early days, from Rock Hudson to Freddie Mercury, but fellow stars have played a major role in fighting the killer disease over the years since.

Elton John and Elizabeth Taylor were among leading figures who used their celebrity from the start to raise awareness and funds for research into HIV, as well as reducing the stigma of what was initially seen as a "gay plague."

Retired basketball player Magic Johnson has campaigned tirelessly since announcing in 1991 that he had contracted HIV, while pop icon Michael Jackson, a friend of Taylor's, was also a strong supporter before his death in 2009.

John's "White Tie and Tiara Ball" has become an annual star-studded fixture organized with his partner David Furnish since 1999 to raise funds for his Elton Joects in 55 countries since it was founded in 1992.

"Both Elton and David are absolutely passionate about the work of the Foundation. They are on the phone weekly getting updates ... and discussing stategy," said Anne Aslett, boss of EJAF's British arm.

"Celebrities can speak personally and emotionally ... This means their influence can be enormous," she told AFP, citing the impact of others including the late Princess Diana, Whoopi Goldberg and Sharon Stone.

AIDS first came to broad public notice in 1981, when US doctors noted an unusual cluster of deaths among young homosexuals in California and New York.

In the three decades since then it has killed nearly 30 million people, and 33 million others live with it or HIV, the virus that causes AIDS by destroying immune cells, according to 2009 World Health Organization (WHO) figures.

The first major celebrity victim was Hudson, whose admission that he was suffering from HIV in the early 1980s helped raise the profile of the disease. He died in 1985, aged 59.

Flamboyant US entertainer Liberace died in 1987 followed in 1990 by Scottish "Chariots of Fire" actor Ian Charleson and New York artist Keith Haring, who was only 31 when he died.

Queen frontman Mercury died the following year, perhaps the first high-profile pop star to succumb publicly to the disease. Jacques Morali, creator of camp music icons the Village People, died the same year.

Also in 1991 Oscar-winning British director Tony Richardson died, while Magic Johnson announced he was HIV positive, retired immediately and dedicated his life to fighting the deadly disease.

In 1992 "Psycho" actor Anthony Perkins, Britain's Denholm Elliott and sci-fi writer Isaac Asimov all died, followed by tennis star Arthur Ashe and ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev in 1993.

The list of high profile AIDS victims has tailed off as awareness grew and more effective treatments were introduced -- at least in rich developed countries -- but celebrity campaigners kept fighting.

Screen siren Taylor, who died in March aged 79, regularly organized AIDS fund-raising benefits until her own health complications mounted.

"She saw this terrible disease, and she was angered by the fact that nobody was doing anything about it," said Kevin Frost, head of the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR), co-founded by Taylor in 1985.

"She just stepped right into the breach."

Magic Johnson, 51, was one of the first to benefit from the cocktail of antiretroviral medications which emerged in the mid-1990s to keep HIV in check -- and he believes his infection and survival were meant to be.

"This happened to me for a reason, and I know it was for me to help someone else," he said in an interview in Newsweek magazine ahead of the HIV anniversary.

But he is concerned that, while gays have taken steps to protect themselves, African Americans still treat the subject as taboo -- the HIV infection rate for black women was 15 times that for white women, according to 2006 figures.

"Those numbers really break my heart... The gay community has done such a great job of getting their message across, and it?s worked, But there is still such a stigma with the virus in our community, and that prevents any progress."

Some groups who benefit from celebrity funding play down the importance of star power, saying staying power is more important.

"In the world of AIDS advocacy, Elton is seen less as a celebrity and more as one of the real leaders in the fight," said Drew Altman of the Kaiser Family Foundation, one of dozens of groups backed by Elton John's Foundation.

"When he gets involved he sticks with it when others show only temporary interest," he told AFP.

But while the British singer has made a huge difference, after three decades there is still much more to be done, stresses Aslett.

"I know Elton would say we've lost so much and we've come so far because of AIDS, we cannot give up now. The fight against AIDS is mobilizing the greatest support even seen for a health issue," she said.

"As we go into the fourth decade since HIV first appeared, we must work towards an end for this global killer."


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Monday, May 30, 2011

New 'X-Men' film to explore the mutants' origins (AP)

LONDON – They are a merry band of mutants, at least when the director is away and the hard work is done.

They've been given a task — concoct a "prequel" that will satisfy longtime fans of the "X-Men" series and bring in new moviegoers as well — and, with global release just a few days away, they think they've nailed it.

Much of the cast gathered in London recently to boast about the film — tastefully of course — at a round-table discussion that focused on the challenge of creating a credible early life for comic strip characters already portrayed successfully in four films by such masters as Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen, venerable English actors who carry the title "Sir" in front of their names.

This time, it's a much younger cast playing the mutants in their formative years, when they were still discovering and honing the special powers that set them apart from what they view as the rather drab human race. As a result, "X-Men: First Class" is filled with soul-searching identity crises as the mutants wrestle with a central dilemma: To downplay their differences in order to be accepted by humanity, or to celebrate what makes them unique, humanity be damned.

Instead of McKellen and Stewart in the key mutant roles of Magneto and Professor X, it's Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy, starting off as allies but ending up as bitter foes. The closest thing the cast has to eminence is Hollywood veteran Kevin Bacon, who plays evil mutant Sebastian Shaw with villainous glee.

Fassbender, a talented actor of German and Irish descent, said he did not feel hemmed in by earlier portrayals of Magneto, even if his approach doesn't appeal to fans of the earlier movies, which turned the old Marvel comic into a lucrative international film franchise that started with "X-Men" in 2000.

"I think we all realize there's a massive fan base out there and we definitely want them to like it," said Fassbender, seen in 2009's "Inglourious Basterds." "They are the first sort of go-to audience, but there has to be a certain amount of disrespect for them as well, because you're trying to do something new. You're trying to make decisions that you think are justifiable and you have to forget about that or you can end up not making any bold choices. And I think we all made bold choices and took risks."

McAvoy, his voice still carrying a heavy hint of his native Scotland, said that means the new cast is to blame if the movie bombs — a fate that would sink plans for two additional "X-Men" prequels and a chance for the franchise to continue a few more years at least.

"It is intimidating because the four films made a lot of money, so clearly people like the characters enough to go and see them," said McAvoy, who starred in "The Last King of Scotland" and "Atonement." "If it doesn't work, we take full blame."

He said his approach to Professor X was to show how different the character was as a very young man just discovering the range of his phenomenal telepathic powers. Director Matthew Vaughn had made it clear at the start of filming that he did not want McAvoy and Fassbender to simply portray younger versions of Stewart and McKellen.

Vaughn's approach meant developing an inner life and a back story for the characters, and playing them in the turmoil of youth, when their personalities are still being forged.

Fine, but isn't it a bit absurd working out a complex inner life for comic strip characters? A case of overkill in the motivation department?

No way, said Bacon, who handled Sebastian Shaw's sociopathic tendencies with care.

"You can never have too much back story," he said. "For me at least, if there's no back story in the movie then you look for some kind of source material, and if there's no source material, you make it up. You sit there and you write it: 'I was born in this town and this is what my daddy did, and here's my playlist of songs I like to listen to.' For me, that's what it's gotta be."

The film takes place in the 1960s — the height of the original Marvel comics era — and gives Bacon's character a key role in a highly fictionalized version of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. The plot device gives the director a chance to use actual footage of President Kennedy and Soviet hothead Nikita Krushchev, remembered for banging his shoe on a table during a spirited United Nations debate.

The '60s setting is exploited by the set and costume designers — the cleavage-boosting outfits worn by January Jones as Emma Frost are the most obvious examples — but they also provide a wistful quality to the mutants as they search for themselves.

"A lot of the characters are more innocent," said McAvoy. "Certainly my character is much more innocent, he's not tainted."

The youthful rebellion of that era is mirrored to some degree by the mutants, who can't decide whether to trust or obliterate the humans who seek their help.

Fassbender said the fans identify with the mutants' struggle for identity and respect. The new film shows how the young mutants find one another — and bond out of deep relief that they are not alone.

"It gives them hope to find other people are experiencing the same thing as they are," he said. "You know, it's a horrible feeling to think, oh my God, I'm on my own. I'm going through this by myself. But no, there are actually other people going through the same thing."

He said the genetic mutations are "the handicap that can actually become a special quality."

McAvoy's take is that the mutants all have terrible lives, full of angst and rage, but also find they are terribly special because of their secret abilities.

"That's the thing about every mutant, isn't it?" he said.


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Sean Kingston injured in Miami crash: report (AFP)

MIAMI (AFP) – "Beautiful Girls" singer Sean Kingston was injured when his personal watercraft slammed into a bridge in Miami, The Miami Herald reported Monday.

Kingston, 21, was riding with a female friend when they crashed into the Palm Island Bridge, and the two were picked up by another boater, authorities told the paper. His condition was not immediately known.

The Jamaican-American singer's "Beautiful Girls"

hit number one in 2007. He recently toured with pop superstar Justin Bieber, the daily said.

Born Kisean Anderson in Miami, Kingston moved to Jamaica as a boy. His stage name is the Caribbean country's capital.


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Hip-hop star Sean Kingston stable after water crash (Reuters)

MIAMI (Reuters) – Chart-topping hip-hop star Sean Kingston remained hospitalized in intensive care on Monday, a day after his personal watercraft hit a bridge in Miami Beach, a spokesman for his record label said.

"Sean Kingston is now stabilized and has moved from the trauma unit to ICU," according to a statement from Epic Records. "Sean's family thanks everyone for their prayers and support during this time."

Kingston, 21, and a female passenger were injured when the watercraft hit the Palm Island Bridge early Sunday evening. They were plucked from the water by a passing boater. The extent of their injuries was not known.

The Jamaican-raised singer first found fame in 2007 with his ubiquitous hit song "Beautiful Girls," which spent four weeks at No. 1 on both the U.S. and UK pop charts.

Last year, Kingston and pop idol Justin Bieber collaborated on the tune "Eenie Meenie." Bieber said on Twitter that he was praying for Kingston, describing him as "a true friend and big bro."

(Reporting by Dean Goodman in Los Angeles; editing by Peter Bohan)


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Blanchett, other prominent Aussies back carbon tax (AP)

CANBERRA, Australia – Actress Cate Blanchett and former conservative Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser are among prominent Australians who threw their support Monday behind the unpopular government plan to tax major polluters for the carbon gas they emit.

Blanchett and Fraser were among 140 personalities and organizations who signed a petition distributed to federal lawmakers supporting the center-left government's plan to make polluters pay for every ton of carbon gas they produce in a bid to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The petition — whose signatories also include a Roman Catholic bishop and a Nobel Laureate scientist — is part of a $1 million national newspaper and television advertising campaign funded by environmental groups and unionists.

The conservative opposition Liberal Party is opposed to making polluters pay. The governing Labor Party wants to tax polluters starting in July 2012, and is locked in negotiations with the minor Greens party and independent lawmakers on how much the tax should be on a ton of carbon.

Opinion polls show that both the tax and Labor are unpopular with voters.

John Hewson, an economist and a former Liberal Party leader who signed the petition, said Australian business leaders were not signatories because they are historically slow to respond to economic challenges.

"The business community's starting to come on board," Hewson told reporters at Parliament House.

"It's a pity they're not leading this debate. Unfortunately, as on many occasions in the past, they come, but they come late," he said.

The Business Council of Australia, a leading business lobby, has called for the tax to be set at 10 Australian dollars ($10.69) per metric ton (1.1 tons), while the Greens want the tax to be four times higher. The government has said it will set the price by July.

Liberal Leader Tony Abbott called the proposal a "toxic tax" that businesses increasingly oppose.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard has said her government would meet its target of slashing Australia's greenhouse gas emissions to at least 5 percent below 2000 levels by the year 2020.

Australia is one of the world's worst greenhouse gas emitters per capita because of its heavy reliance on abundant reserves of cheap coal for power generation.

Blanchett's participation in the advertising campaign has been criticized, but the Oscar winner says people are entitled to their opinions and she's not deterred.

"Everyone will benefit if we protect the environment. There is a societal cost of increased pollution, and that's what I'm passionate about as a mother," Blanchett, a mother of three boys, told The Sydney Morning Herald.


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My Morning Jacket get nostalgic on "Circuital" (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Southern rock act My Morning Jacket call their sixth album "Circuital".

But rather than coming full circle after 13 years, the five piece band drifting away from their rock roots for songs that blend R&B, funk and a handful of nostalgia laden tunes.

"It's been our most peaceful record to date," Jim James, guitarist/vocalist of the Louisville, Kentucky band, told Reuters ahead of the album's release on Tuesday. "It's been the most unified that we've ever felt."

Through slower tempos and adding different sonic elements, My Morning Jacket have achieved a record that sounds mature, and feels more consistent than 2008's "Evil Urges."

"I hate to say that I've gotten sick of the guitar, but the size of the guitar takes up so much space that can be used for other things," James said.

"Whether it's different vocal treatments or keyboards or even just air. My favorite instrument on the new record is the air in the church where we recorded. When you put a lot of guitars in it, it eats the air up."

Formed in 1998 by James, My Morning Jacket have become an enduring presence in the U.S. rock scene, headlining large festivals and playing big arenas. Part of their success is their cross-over appeal: they're consistent hits with critics, indie fans and jam band fans as well.

Inevitably, the band's longevity seeps into "Circuital" with a handful of songs about memory and letting go.

Most obvious is "Outta My System," a mid-tempo rock song that finds James, 33, singing about ditching the bad habits of youth and the ballad "Wonderful (The Way I Feel)," a dreamy, utopian outlook about finding peace.

Even the funky, horn lined song "Holdin' On To Black Metal" centers around grasping at pop culture fandom once enjoyed as a youth.

Despite the slightly new direction, My Morning Jacket fans won't stray far -- the title track "Circuital" is a seven-plus minute song that builds to a crescendo around James' voice and dueling guitar and piano lines.

SIDE PROJECTS

"Playing with these guys in the band is like your best, comfortable old car that you love to drive: It just feels right, it feels good but you only know that from stepping outside and looking back in," he said.

The band stays fresh these days by enjoying extra-curricular activities. Along with Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis and She & Him's M.Ward, James formed the Monsters of Folk.

They released 2009's "Monsters of Folk" and toured extensively. In 2009, James also released a six-song EP of George Harrison covers called "Tribute To."

My Morning Jacket guitarist Carl Broemel has also released two solo albums and recently logged studio time with Wanda Jackson and Abigail Washburn.

The songs have for "Circuital" were written sporadically over the last several years, even as the group continued to tour and branch out. Still, it's these new opportunities that have come with their growing success that are shaping their own recorded output these days.

"There's no way you can't learn or grow from that," James said. "It's puts you in a self-analysis mode, where you're kind of like a kid again showing up to tee-ball practice for the first time."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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Sean Kingston moved to ICU after watercraft crash (AP)

MIAMI – Hip-hop singer Sean Kingston has been stabilized and moved to the intensive care unit at a hospital after crashing his watercraft into a Miami Beach bridge, his publicist said Monday.

The publicist, Joseph Carozza, said Kingston's family is grateful for everyone's prayers and support.

Kingston and a female passenger were injured when the watercraft hit the Palm Island Bridge around 6 p.m. Sunday, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokesman Jorge Pino said.

The Miami Herald reports that a passing boater saw the accident and took the two on board his vessel.

Both were hospitalized early Monday at Ryder Trauma Center, but Pino said he didn't know their conditions.

Authorities are investigating the crash, and "nothing at this point would indicate that alcohol played a role," Pino said.

Kingston rose to fame with his 2007 hit "Beautiful Girls" and was also featured on songs by artists including Justin Bieber. His self-titled debut album sold over 1 million copies worldwide.

On Twitter, Bieber posted a message of support for Kingston.

"Got my friend Sean Kingston in my prayers tonight," Bieber tweeted early Monday. "A true friend and big bro. Please keep him in your prayers tonight as well."

A number of hip-hop musicians were in Miami Beach over the weekend for Urban Beach Week.

In a 2007 interview with The Associated Press, Kingston described his music as a fusion of reggae, pop, rap and R&B.

"It's Sean Kingston genre. I have my own genre," Kingston told the AP at the time. "No disrespect to no artist or dudes out there. I feel like I am my own person. I am doing my own thing."

His music has been unique among hip-hop offerings, as Kingston refused to use profanity.

"To put it in my music, that's not the message I am trying to send out," he said in the 2007 interview. "That's not the type of artist I am trying to be."


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My Morning Jacket get nostalgic on "Circuital" (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Southern rock act My Morning Jacket call their sixth album "Circuital".

But rather than coming full circle after 13 years, the five piece band drifting away from their rock roots for songs that blend R&B, funk and a handful of nostalgia laden tunes.

"It's been our most peaceful record to date," Jim James, guitarist/vocalist of the Louisville, Kentucky band, told Reuters ahead of the album's release on Tuesday. "It's been the most unified that we've ever felt."

Through slower tempos and adding different sonic elements, My Morning Jacket have achieved a record that sounds mature, and feels more consistent than 2008's "Evil Urges."

"I hate to say that I've gotten sick of the guitar, but the size of the guitar takes up so much space that can be used for other things," James said.

"Whether it's different vocal treatments or keyboards or even just air. My favorite instrument on the new record is the air in the church where we recorded. When you put a lot of guitars in it, it eats the air up."

Formed in 1998 by James, My Morning Jacket have become an enduring presence in the U.S. rock scene, headlining large festivals and playing big arenas. Part of their success is their cross-over appeal: they're consistent hits with critics, indie fans and jam band fans as well.

Inevitably, the band's longevity seeps into "Circuital" with a handful of songs about memory and letting go.

Most obvious is "Outta My System," a mid-tempo rock song that finds James, 33, singing about ditching the bad habits of youth and the ballad "Wonderful (The Way I Feel)," a dreamy, utopian outlook about finding peace.

Even the funky, horn lined song "Holdin' On To Black Metal" centers around grasping at pop culture fandom once enjoyed as a youth.

Despite the slightly new direction, My Morning Jacket fans won't stray far -- the title track "Circuital" is a seven-plus minute song that builds to a crescendo around James' voice and dueling guitar and piano lines.

SIDE PROJECTS

"Playing with these guys in the band is like your best, comfortable old car that you love to drive: It just feels right, it feels good but you only know that from stepping outside and looking back in," he said.

The band stays fresh these days by enjoying extra-curricular activities. Along with Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis and She & Him's M.Ward, James formed the Monsters of Folk.

They released 2009's "Monsters of Folk" and toured extensively. In 2009, James also released a six-song EP of George Harrison covers called "Tribute To."

My Morning Jacket guitarist Carl Broemel has also released two solo albums and recently logged studio time with Wanda Jackson and Abigail Washburn.

The songs have for "Circuital" were written sporadically over the last several years, even as the group continued to tour and branch out. Still, it's these new opportunities that have come with their growing success that are shaping their own recorded output these days.

"There's no way you can't learn or grow from that," James said. "It's puts you in a self-analysis mode, where you're kind of like a kid again showing up to tee-ball practice for the first time."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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William, Kate TV movie being shot in Romania (AP)

By ALINA WOLFE MURRAY, Associated Press Alina Wolfe Murray, Associated Press – Mon May 30, 4:41 am ET

BUCHAREST, Romania – Barely a month after their fairy-tale wedding, a new film depicting the budding romance of Prince William and Kate Middleton is being rushed out for television viewers.

A mixture of fact and fiction, "William & Kate: A Royal Love Story" is expected to be released in August on the Hallmark Channel.

Director Linda Yellen took some time out from filming at MediaPro Studios in Romania to speak with The Associated Press. The American was also producer of CBS's "The Royal Romance of Charles and Diana" in 1982, a film that had a huge audience at the time.

"William & Kate" is more than a romance — it's also "a psychological story of the memory of the mother, in this case Princess Diana, and her legacy," Yellen said. The film shows how William "has to choose to live his life with her memory and with the decisions he has to make," including the decision of whom to marry.

The couple was married April 29 in a lavish ceremony at Westminster Abbey watched by millions. Filming began in early May and AP Television cameras were given exclusive access to the set.

Yellen, who met Princess Diana three times, called the movie "a very personal story. In a way, it's my tribute to her as well as a tribute to the young couple."

Yellen, whose father died on the first day of shooting the film, said her loss made her better understand some of the scenes where William communicates with his mother in a spiritual way. She wrote the script in two weeks, after she saw William had given Diana's ring to Middleton.

"The whole story came to me in that moment," she said.

While using real events and words that were told in real life, there are also dialogues she's written and situations she imagined. One such scene depicts William's 21st birthday party, with Kate and William dancing together as Queen Elizabeth II looks on. Guests are dressed in vividly colored African costumes with tables laid for a feast in a large hall with ornate arcades. There are statues of elephants and potted palm trees in the background as Kate and William are having fun — and falling in love.

British actress Alice St. Clair, who plays Middleton, said the film — her first — is a series of snapshots of the relationship between the couple and tracks their developing friendship. She said it shows how William is attracted to Kate, with whom he shares a sense of humor, because she challenges him and is very competitive.

St. Clair, who has short hair but wears extensions for the movie, acknowledges she was not "a carbon-copy of Kate." "We were not trying to mimic her but ... to show the essence of her and bring my own self into it," the actress, wearing a blue gown and fascinator, said during a break from filming.

American actor Dan Amboyer, who plays William, called the film "a modern fairy tale." Amboyer, who made his debut in the "Law & Order" series, said the "script is smart, is fun, there is real wit between them. It's not at all schmaltzy."

In the film, the two meet by chance when William bumps into Kate who was carrying laundry. Amboyer said his character learns from her about ordinary things such as cooking a meal or doing the laundry. There are friends, parties, the breakup, the makeup and of course the British royal family.

Oscar-nominated Jane Alexander is Queen Elizabeth II, a grandmother pondering whether Kate is right for Will and for the throne.

"We don't show a lot of disapproval or doubt," she said, "but you see her (the queen) questioning Kate about her public speaking, about what she calls training."

"I think she is trying to make sure that what happened with Diana and Charles does not happen with Kate and Will," Alexander said.


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David Hyde Pierce starring in psychological thriller (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Backstage) – David Hyde Pierce, best known for his Emmy-winning role as neurotic shrink Dr. Niles Crane on "Frasier," will show a different side in the upcoming psychological thriller "The Perfect Host."

He plays a seemingly well-to-do, uptight suburban man set to be victimized by a criminal seeking refuge for the night. But Pierce's character has a dinner party to throw that night, and instead of playing hostage, he decides to play host -- and hostage taker. The film opens July 1 in Los Angeles and New York through Magnolia Pictures.

The actor is also venturing into directing. His first staging venture will be "It Shoulda Been You," a new musical starring Tyne Daly, set for the George Street Playhouse in New Brunswick, N.J., this fall.

HOW DID YOU BECOME INVOLVED WITH "THE PERFECT HOST"?

David Hyde Pierce: I think part of what drew me to it is that the character starts out in ways that are kind of similar to the way people are used to seeing me. But then what happens in the course of the movie allows me as an actor to move along with the character away from that way of people seeing me. And that's a great luxury because of course the flip side of the success of a long-running television show is people tend to see you only one way, so this is a nice opportunity for me to play off my more popular image.

YOU STARTED OUT STUDYING PIANO. WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE YOU WANTED TO GO IN A DIFFERENT DIRECTION?

Pierce: I loved music, but my real skill and a lot of the pleasure I got from it was as a performer, but not necessarily as a musician. I didn't really have the technique (and) I didn't have the interest. The discipline, the time, the solitude, the work required to really be a musician, I didn't have the drive to do that, whereas I could rehearse a play all day.

WHAT DO YOU THINK THE MOST CHALLENGING ROLE YOU'VE PLAYED HAS BEEN?

Pierce: I just finished this stage production of "La Bete" by David Hirson. It was written entirely in rhyming couplets, set in the 1600s, and for large chunks of the play my character doesn't say a lot. (It's) tough because in a way nothing's been charted for you specifically by the playwright in the same way it would be if you had lines. So there's so much trial and error in the rehearsal process. You can have moments where you discover that you don't really know what this moment is about and the greatest way to find out is to turn to the other actors. Your reaction with them, your interaction with them, will tell you more than anything you try to figure out on your own.

YOU'RE MAKING YOUR DIRECTORIAL DEBUT IN THE FALL WITH "IT SHOULDA BEEN YOU." WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE TO TRY DIRECTING?

Pierce: People for years have said to me they thought I should direct. And I have never wanted to. I've always wanted to be onstage. And then this show, "It Shoulda Been You," came along. (It's) something that would attract me as an actor. I just finished "La Bete" and it was in every way different from anything I'd ever done before. So plays that were offered to me after that could be perfectly fine, but nothing came close to what that experience was and so I thought it was time to try a different direction. And at the exact time this piece came along in need of a director.

WHEN YOU'RE DIRECTING, DO YOU LOOK AT THE SHOW FROM A DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE THAN AS AN ACTOR?

Pierce: I think the reason people always said, "Oh, you should direct" is that as an actor, I tend to be someone who is very aware of the whole picture and how my character and the other characters fit into the storytelling. Now that I'm actually directing, I find that I look at theater completely differently. Kathleen Marshall, who directed the revival of "Anything Goes," and Rob Ashford, who directed the revival of "How to Succeed in Business," let me sit in on technical rehearsals for their shows as they were mounting them. I have been through many, many, many technical rehearsals in my life, but never sitting out front in the position of having to make them happen -- looking at things like lighting and set design, meeting with the designers and all that. It's stuff that I've been aware of and appreciated as an actor, but not as the guy who's going to shape the whole event.


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No let-up for perpetual music maker Quincy Jones (Reuters)

RABAT (Reuters) – After a frenetic career as producer to Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Michael Jackson and many other music legends, 78-year-old Quincy Jones refuses to slow down and has just signed up for a new project in the Arab world.

"I'm 78 and I've still got a lot of energy and I want to do what my dreams are, which is to see people come together across the barriers," Jones told Reuters in the Moroccan capital Rabat where he appeared in the Mawazine music festival.

He scoffs at a question as to whether age and past medical woes, such as a serious cerebral aneurysm he suffered in 1974, might encourage him to ease up.

"Not at all. I'll slow down when I die," he said.

As a performer, Jones was already touring North Africa and other parts of the world in the 1950s with some of the biggest names of jazz including Lionel Hampton and Dizzy Gillespie.

He arranged Sinatra's "Fly Me to the Moon" and produced Michael Jackson's album "Thriller" and the 1985 "We are the World" recording for African famine relief.

Watching the star-studded 1990 documentary "Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones" today, one is struck by how many of the music legends linked to Jones have since died.

"Sinatra, Ray Charles, Billy Eckstine, Ella Fitzgerald -- all gone," Jones said before adding the name of film director Sidney Lumet and others. "How do you think I feel? I've lost 188 friends, man, in less than 15 years."

"It hurts," the veteran producer, musician and arranger continued. "It just doesn't stop."

Doctors have long told Jones to reduce his workload. "I know, I don't care. I like what I am doing," he said.

RIFFING ON HIS PAST

Like a master jazz improviser able to draw on thousands of musical phrases, Jones, with the slightest association, is well prepared to roll out a remarkable array of genial anecdotes about a lifetime of adventures with music legends.

A mention of Italy prompts him to show off his much cherished ring from Frank Sinatra. India sparks him to tell of meeting sitarist Ravi Shankar in 1956, after which he recalls that Shankar is father to singer Norah Jones.

A reference to Serbia inspires him to show off a few words in Serbian, including one off-color one that causes him much amusement.

In one of his latest projects, Jones, who has won 27 Grammy Awards, has launched a joint venture to promote music in North Africa and the Middle East in which musicians from different cultures will work together.

They are also recording a new song to raise funds for regional scholarships.

A musician from the besieged Libyan town of Misrata made a visit to Rabat this week for the project. On Sunday, Jones was also set to appear at a memorial concert in Marrakesh after an attack there killed 17 people a month ago.

"More and more when you get older you do exactly what you believe in with the people that you love and trust and admire," he told Reuters. "That's where I am now, which allows me to do what I feel and give back what I feel, whatever I want to do."

Jones says he feels an affinity for Arabs as they have often suffered from prejudice like American blacks.

"People have preconceived concepts of you just on your appearance. That's sad," he said. "My two least favorite words are 'you people." I hate that word."

"All the things I did, they said you were the first. That means only," he said. "Like first black (vice) president of a record company or the first one to produce the Oscars."

As a musician, Jones has frequently changed with the times, from bebop and big band jazz earlier in his career to pop and hip-hop later on. He is hoping evolving medical technology will enable him to stay involved for many more years.


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Moroccan activists slam music festival as corrupt (AP)

RABAT, Morocco – With Shakira and other top international artists performing in open air venues around Morocco's capital — often for free — the annual Mawazine world music festival doesn't at first seem like something anyone could dislike.

Activists from Morocco's pro-reform February 20 movement, however, tried to get it canceled, describing it as a symptom of the country's corruption and cronyism.

In the past, religious conservatives have criticized the eight-day extravaganza for being decadent, and last year they were angered that it featured openly gay performer Elton John. This year, however, the attacks are coming from Facebook-savvy youth who would normally be found in the audience of such celebrations of international music.

"The struggle against the Mawazine is the struggle for democracy," said Rachid el-Belghiti, a freelance journalist heading the National Campaign to Cancel the Mawazine, a Facebook group with more than 30,000 members.

He's using online organizing much the way protest movements in Tunisia and Egypt did in uprisings earlier this year that overthrew longtime authoritarian presidents and sparked protests around the Arab world.

"I love Shakira, I have no problem with Shakira — she gave $400,000 for a school in Haiti — but there are serious education problems here," he said. Colombian superstar Shakira closed the festival Saturday night.

He said the millions of dollars raised for the festival, which come from the public and private sector, should have gone toward education and development — or even other festivals outside the capital.

The festival is put on by the nonprofit Maroc-Cultures association and paid for by corporate sponsors.

Maroc-Cultures, however, is run by Mounir El Majidi, a close confidant of the king, and many of the sponsors, such as Maroc Telecom and the national airline, are at least partly owned by the state. Critics say the festival underlines how intertwined the royal palace remains in Morocco's economy.

"We just think it's a waste of money, it could be invested in more constructive projects," said young activist Zineb Belmkaddem, a teacher at a local American school. "Presenting Kanye West and Shakira for free is ridiculous in a country with so much poverty."

According to Abbas Azzouzi, a member of the festival's organizing committee, the event cost around $7.8 million — a hefty price tag in a country lacking the oil of its North African neighbors and with at least 30 percent unemployment, especially among urban youth.

Protesters against the festival gathered last week in downtown Rabat before they were dispersed by truncheon-wielding policemen.

The festival comes at a delicate time for the February 20 movement, which through demonstrations around the country pushed Morocco's all-powerful king, Mohammed VI, to start a process of constitutional reform.

The movement, however, has refused to meet with the committee deliberating the new constitutional amendments, because that committee was appointed by the king, and now they risk being left out a reform process expected to stretch through the summer.

Unlike the movements elsewhere in the Arab world that helped inspire it, February 20 is not calling for the departure of the country's leader, but rather Morocco's transformation into a constitutional monarchy.

Lacking a cohesive leadership, however, the movement has said little beyond calling for reform and social justice and has had some of the air taken out of its sails by the king's own initiative.

The regime also appears to have adopted a new zero-tolerance policy toward the movement's demonstrations and attempts over the past week to rally around the country have been quickly and violently suppressed.

The Mawazine festival began 10 years ago as an opportunity to expose people to music from around the world. But under El Majidi's tutelage it turned into a mega-production featuring international stars at hefty price tags.

Kanye West, Cat Stevens, Earth Wind and Fire, Lionel Ritchie and Quincy Jones starred in this year's festival.

The eight venues around town also feature the cream of Arab pop stars, including the soulful Iraqi crooner Kadhem al-Saher and Egyptian megastar Amr el-Diab, as well as several big African acts.

"That's what Morocco is, its roots are Arab with influences of Africa and links to the West," said festival organizer Azzouzi. "That's what we want to express through the festival."

He explained that with artists from 60 different countries, the festival's creed as always been to promote values of diversity, exchange and cultural tolerance, and this year's 10th anniversary show is the biggest yet.

In the wake of the April 28 bombing at a Marrakech cafe that killed 17, many of the them foreigners, it was even more important to keep the festival going.

"(The cancellation) is what those people, the terrorists are looking for, this has never been considered," he said.

By all accounts, the festival is popular, especially with a certain number of seats kept free at every venue. Azzouzi said 2.2 million are expected to attend with another 16 million Moroccans, in a country of just 30 million, watching it on television.

Activists say that private and public corporations are pressured into donating to a festival under the king's patronage. Azzouzi dismissed these allegations, explaining that corporate sponsorship of the arts is mutually beneficial and involves no coercion.

The flavor of what the festival first set out to be can be seen at the world music stage, set in a beautifully preserved medieval fortress on the edge of town overlooking a river. The intimate setting of less than a 100 seats features bands from Colombia, South Africa and Iran playing traditional music while overhead soar the castle's resident population of storks.


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Seal, Clarkson team for Indy 500 anthem duet (AP)

INDIANAPOLIS – Grammy winner Seal's first trip to the Indianapolis 500 is also his first time singing the U.S. national anthem.

The Grammy winner from England was among the celebrities taking part in Sunday's pre-race celebrity red carpet walk. Country singer Kellie Pickler, actor Tim Daly and "The Biggest Loser" trainer Jillian Michaels also were among those making appearances.

Seal performed the national anthem in a duet with "American Idol" winner Kelly Clarkson. They were accompanied by Canadian composer David Foster on piano.

Seal says he's pulling for friend Danica Patrick to win the race.

Michaels also was rooting for Patrick and called her a `total athlete.'


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Sarah Palin: From 'Mama Grizzly' to motorcycle mama (AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – A Harley-Davidson-riding Sarah Palin, outfitted in black leather and heels, joined a massive annual motorcycle rally in a high-profile appearance amid speculation she will make a bid for the Republican presidential nomination.

Palin was at the "Rolling Thunder" Memorial Day holiday weekend rally, in which tens of thousands of motorcyclists ride through the nation's capital to honor US war veterans, at the launch of her "One Nation" tour up the east coast.

"There's no better way to see DC than on the back of a Harley!" Palin said after the ride, in a statement posted on her website.

Her presence, however, was not met with universal approval.

Rolling Thunder's national legislative director Ted Shpak told the Washington Post he was unhappy with the commotion surrounding her appearance at what has been a traditionally non-political event.

"I'm very not appreciative of the way she came in here," he said.

But some veterans said Palin was welcome, provided she was not attending the rally for political reasons.

"That's fine if she wants to come here and join in the festivities as a citizen of this country, not running for office or any political gain," Sheldon Wagner, a 65-year-old Vietnam veteran, told AFP.

The former Alaska governor and 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate drew a crowd of photographers and well-wishers as she rode on the back of the Harley, amid a crush of motorbikes filling the streets of the US capital city.

"Riding with these patriots today reinforced that we must do all we can to remind all Americans that we owe our freedom to our vets and to those missing and to those who made the ultimate sacrifice to make this the greatest country on earth," Palin said.

Her statement, which included a quote from 1960s civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr, also noted that she met with families of soldiers killed in action.

"My family may be used to snowmachines more so than motorcycles... but whether you're riding the open road or the frozen tundra, you're celebrating a free spirit. What could be more American than that?" she said.

According to Palin's website, the "One Nation" tour "is part of our new campaign to educate and energize Americans about our nation's founding principles, in order to promote the Fundamental Restoration of America."

Asked during her appearance if her upcoming events would be as loud as the eardrum splitting Rolling Thunder rally, Palin responded: "It would be a blast if they were this loud -- if they smelled this good. I love that smell of the emissions!"

Vietnam War veterans began Rolling Thunder in 1987 to bring awareness to prisoners of war and soldiers who went missing in action. It has since evolved, its website said, into an event to show "respect for soldiers and veterans from all wars."

Middle-aged bikers, many carrying POW and US flags, gathered in the parking lot of the Pentagon and their route brings them to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall.

"These politicians need to find out what the American families and the veterans are all about. It's a good thing for her to do," said 62-year-old Ray King, a retired law enforcement officer from New Jersey who has joined the rally for the past 23 years.

Palin, who was Republican presidential nominee John McCain's surprise running mate in 2008, joined the rally as she launched her bus tour, which is being funded through contributions to her political action committee (PAC).

Palin has not announced whether she will seek the Republican nomination to challenge President Barack Obama in next year's election, but her website includes campaign hallmarks such as links to make donations, videos, and patriotic slogans and images.

Palin also plans to debut a film documentary about her political career next month in Iowa, another key early presidential contest state.

McCain told Fox News Sunday that his former running mate can win the nomination and unseat Obama.

"Of course she can," he said.

"Whether she'll even run or not, I don't know. A lot of things happen in campaigns. I was written off a few times and we were able to come back so it's going to be a roller coaster ride for all of them before we arrive at our nominee."

Recent polls suggest no great enthusiasm for any of the announced or potential Republican candidates, with even leading figures like Mitt Romney garnering less than 20 percent support.

Others like Minnesota's Tim Pawlenty, libertarian congressman Ron Paul and former House speaker Newt Gingrich have so far inspired even less excitement.


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Hollywood stars at center of Broadway backlash (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Back Stage) – Every year, Hollywood celebrities head to Broadway where they get plenty of attention for their headlining efforts.

The Tony Awards, being presented on June 12, are the ultimate judge of the skills of any stage actor, famous or not, and many lesser-known performers worry that the value of the award diminishes as film stars continue to take them home.

Last year's star-studded broadcast disheartened many New York actors, including Hunter Foster, who started the Facebook group Give the Tonys Back to Broadway!! in an effort to combat the Tinseltown effect. With the now almost 9,000-member group, Foster hopes to restore the ceremony as a beacon of hope for the next generation of stage performers.

Whether stage actors like his sister, Sutton Foster -- nominated this year for her performance in "Anything Goes" -- will disappear from Broadway's future if the Tonys continue to focus on Hollywood stars is debatable. Many actors appearing on Broadway -- including Al Pacino, a nominee this year for "The Merchant of Venice" -- began their careers on stage, but their mass appeal comes from their films.

"I have worked my ass off to get to where I am, so I understand that struggle," Scarlett Johansson -- who was one of four Hollywood actors to win a Tony in 2010 -- told BroadwayWorld.com last year. "If somebody is cast because they are a name but they're not right for the job, well, it's very frustrating."

Experts and actors agree, however, that celebrities are necessary for some producers to bankroll productions, and a famous headliner brings more stable jobs for New York actors.

This year's list of nominees lacks many of the Broadway season's big names -- including Chris Rock, Robin Williams, Ben Stiller, and Daniel Radcliffe. David Sheward, executive editor of Back Stage and a Tony voter, blogged about how the dearth of well-known nominees could be a response by the nominating committee to last year's backlash.

However, Charlotte St. Martin, executive director of the Broadway League, which presents the awards with the American Theater Wing, said there is no correlation between last year's response and this year's nominees.

"If you look at the shows, most of the people who got good reviews are nominated," said St. Martin, who is also on the awards' administration committee, which oversees the nominating process. "People whose reviews were not as good, either for the show or the individual, perhaps are not."

A star can be an economic necessity for a Broadway show, and Michael Riedel, New York Post theater columnist and host of PBS's "Theater Talk," does not think Hollywood stars take jobs away from New York actors. "If you didn't have these celebrities, a lot of these shows wouldn't be produced," he said. "All of these shows have people in them who are not movie stars and they're all working."

CRUSADERS

A Tony represents the Holy Grail for a stage actor and can significantly boost a performer's career, whereas film and television actors are already honored with awards like Oscars and Emmys. Having widely recognized actors swoop in and secure a Tony nomination can be upsetting to some, said Garrett Eisler of the blog The Playgoer, as there are limited spots.

According to Eisler, stars have driven Broadway ticket sales throughout history, but "what changed is the definition of who is a star." In the 1950s and '60s, the box office names were Robert Preston, Rex Harrison, and Zero Mostel, who had some fame from film but whose main medium was the stage. "A Broadway star could really be a star," Eisler said, recognizing that Patti LuPone is one of the few who fits this bill today. "Now you can't be a star unless you're a Hollywood star."

The Internet democratizes entertainment, and a stage performer will never receive the same size audience for a Broadway show that another actor will receive for a film or a television series.

"There's been a generational shift," Eisler explained, noting that today's generation of young people is the first to come of age with the Internet. "Certain stars can't become household names without appearing on multiple platforms."

Tony winner and New York stage veteran Victoria Clark acknowledged her win for "The Light in the Piazza" in 2005 helped launch her career and turned her into more of a "known quantity." Her role as Mother Superior in this year's "Sister Act," for which she is nominated, came to her in part because of her name and the connections she made through her past work.

"Jerry Zaks could have gone after anybody between the ages of 45 and 80 for this part," she said, referring to the show's director. "There's a message to our directors: Support the people that supported you when you first started your career and go back to those people and give them a shot."

Celebrities coming to Broadway take work away from New York theater actors, according to Clark, but she also says the industry should not separate actors into film, TV, and stage categories. "It's our culture that segregates us," she argued. "If we were actors in any other country, we'd all be doing everything, no questions asked."


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Former Texas Governor Bill Clements dies at 94 (Reuters)

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) – Former Texas Governor Bill Clements, who was the state's first Republican governor since Reconstruction when he took office in 1979, has died at the age of 94.

His family said in a statement that he died after a brief hospital stay surrounded by his wife, daughter, and numerous family members. He had been ill for several months, the statement said.

Clements, who served two terms as governor, from 1979 to 1983 and from 1987 to 1991, was remembered by current Governor Rick Perry as "the father of the modern day Republican party" in the state.

Expressing condolences from himself and his wife Anita, Perry said in a statement: "Anita and I are deeply saddened today as our state and nation have lost a true pioneer, and a larger-than-life entrepreneur, public servant and, most of all, a Texan."

"Today, Texans and Americans have lost a leader whose leadership, service and patriotism were unparalleled," Perry said in the written statement released through his office.

Clements, was born in Dallas in 1917 and served as deputy secretary of defense under President Richard Nixon before running for Texas governor.

"It is somewhat fitting that he died Memorial Day Weekend since he so appreciated the opportunities he had to serve his state and country, his family's statement said.

(Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Jerry Norton)


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Top Cannes movies get box office boost (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Did winning the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival do the trick for "The Tree of Life," a new drama starring Brad Pitt and Sean Penn?

The film grossed an estimated $352,000 during its opening weekend in a total of four theaters in New York and Los Angeles. Its per-screen average of about $88,000 is a record for a film released by Fox Searchlight, surpassing the $80,000 average for "Black Swan" last year.

The critically acclaimed film's performance was all the more impressive given its lengthy running time of 138 minutes, said Sheila DeLoache, the studio's senior VP for distribution. And Fox Searchlight relied almost entirely on publicity to generate interest in the drama, versus an expensive media campaign.

"Winning the Palme d'Or really pushed it forward," DeLoache said.

The last American film to walk away with the festival's top honor was Michael Moore's documentary "Fahrenheit 9/11" seven years ago.

"Tree of Life" isn't the only film feeling the Cannes glow. Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris," the festival's opening-night film, remained strong business in its second weekend.

The Sony Pictures Classics release jumped six places to No. 7 with $1.9 million from 58 theaters; its 10-day total rose to a stellar $2.8 million. Last weekend, "Midnight" scored one of the best location averages of all time -- $99,834 -- when opening in six theaters.

"Tree of Life" had a long and twisted journey to the big screen. The film's producer, Bill Pohlad, originally intended to open the movie in late 2009, but notoriously perfectionistic director Terrence Malick wasn't done in time. Nor was he ready for Cannes last year.

DeLoache said evening shows were sold out in all four theaters. The studio is planning a slow rollout. This coming Friday, the film adds eight markets, playing in a total of 18 theaters. Come July 1, the film will be in a modest national release of 200 to 300 theaters.


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