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Showing posts with label Years. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Years. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

'New Year's Eve' leads slow box office sales

Holiday romance "New Year's Eve" led North American box office charts over the weekend, although sales were sluggish, industry data showed Monday.

The star-studded romantic comedy featuring Michelle Pfeiffer and Zac Efron, with appearances by Robert de Niro and Halle Barry, scored $13 million for its opening weekend, according to Exhibitor Relations.

That pushed it ahead of adult comedy "The Sitter," with Jonah Hill starring as a reluctant babysitter. Also showing in theaters for the first time this week, it raked in $9.9 million.

Blockbuster vampire heart-throb flick "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1," came in third after three weeks at the top of box office. It rang up $7.8 million, pushing it past the quarter-billion-dollar mark for a total of $259.4 million so far.

That put the teen vampire sequel ahead of "The Muppets," the new film based on Jim Henson's puppet characters, which grossed $7 million for its third week in theaters.

In fifth place was animated family comedy "Arthur Christmas," about Santa's son tasked with completing a mission by Christmas morning. It pulled in $6.5 million.

Martin Scorsese's first 3-D film "Hugo" came in sixth place. The adventure drama based on Brian Selznick's novel "The Invention of Hugo Cabret" about a boy who lives alone in a Paris railway station raked in $6.1 million.

In seventh was George Clooney comedy-drama "The Descendants," with $4.4 million, enough to push it ahead of penguin tale "Happy Feet Two," which got $3.7 million.

Adam Sandler's "Jack and Jill" comedy, in which he plays both a successful Los Angeles advertising executive and his needy twin sister, came in ninth. It got $3.1 million.

Big-budget 3-D epic "Immortals" rounded out the top 10, with $2.5 million.


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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Jerry Lewis a no show at Telethon after 45 years (AP)

NEW YORK – No one would sniff at all the dollars Jerry Lewis raised for muscular dystrophy: a couple of billion during his 45-year reign as host of the Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon.

But what kind of TV did he offer in exchange? The short answer: Jerry put on a show like no other.

Labor Day this year promises to be bland by comparison, with the 85-year-old Lewis now banished from the annual rite he built from scratch and molded in his image.

As if deflated by the absence of its larger-than-life host, "The 46th Annual MDA Labor Day Telethon" will fill just six hours (Sunday from 6 p.m. to midnight in each of the United States' four time zones), rather than the grueling 21 1/2-hour endurance contest that Lewis used to churn through with his viewers in tow.

On this year's broadcast (which, ironically, will no longer be airing on Labor Day), a quartet of lightweights are standing in for Jerry: Nigel Lythgoe ("So You Think You Can Dance"), Nancy O'Dell ("Entertainment Tonight"), Alison Sweeney ("The Biggest Loser") and Jann Carl (billed as "an Emmy-winning journalist").

Celebrities will include Celine Dion, Jennifer Lopez, Lady Antebellum, Richie Sambora and Jordan Sparks.

It may be entertaining. It may spur contributions. But as a media event, this year's telethon can hardly match the display of wretched excess Jerry Lewis guaranteed, especially in his epic, unbridled prime.

"Jerry is a ferociously contradictory personality, and that's what makes him fascinating to watch," says satirist-actor-writer Harry Shearer, a Jerry-watcher for a half-century. He noted just two of Lewis' clashing identities: "the inner 9-year-old, set loose" and the would-be deep thinker "who fancies himself something of an autodidact."

"It all makes for psychodrama of a high order," Shearer marvels.

Year after year, Lewis bounced between the polarities of smarmy sentimentalism and badgering lunacy as if in a weightless environment. He put his multiple identities on raw display, each constantly jostling for the spotlight.

Hear him on a circa-1970s telethon introducing singer Julius LaRosa with syntax-butchering effusiveness as "the kind of human being that is wonderful to get close to and near, and then you pray that it's contagious" and as "what the literal translation of the word `professional' means," in possession of "probably the best singing voice I think anyone has ever heard, when you listen to the heart that goes into it."

It was fascinating, ridiculous, cringe-worthy and spellbinding to see how Jerry held court for the parade of entertainers, the checks-bearing civic leaders and corporate sponsors, and the adorable, afflicted kids.

The Jerry Lewis telethon was a reality show decades before the term or genre had been invented. It was video retailing, years before QVC. It was round-the-clock TV companionship long before cable news and the Weather Channel.

For nearly a full day, it was a spectacle of show-biz glitz, heart-tugging emotion and suspense: Would Jerry make it to the end without unraveling? Would the level of pledges do justice to his efforts at soliciting them?

There was a perfect symbiosis of the telethon and Lewis. He made muscular dystrophy as big a star as he had once been. Meanwhile, aligning himself with the search for its cure gave him the gravitas he had always sought. He branded the disease with himself, and vice versa.

He was not only the host of the telethon and chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy Association (a job he would hold for 60 years), but the central figure in a massive enterprise as the self-styled avenging angel of a dread disease.

The contradictions, though, were legion, breathtaking to behold. Shearer covered the 1976 telethon during its heyday for Film Comment magazine.

"The telethon combines the hysterical mystique of the (Las Vegas) Strip superstar with equally hysterical desperation of the downtown lounge act," he wrote. "It mixes the glib disinterest of a TV star taping a thirty-second public-service spot with the glib agony of a comedian on a crusade."

There was the unresolvable question of Lewis' motives; he has famously refused to say why he poured so much of his life into MDA. How much of what he did was prompted by humanitarian urges? How much is explained by the voracious appetites of an attention hog?

And how to explain the choice of theme songs by Lewis for his righteous cause: the piteousness of "Smile (Though Your Heart Is Aching)," and, of course, the riotously inappropriate "You'll Never Walk Alone" with which Lewis, overcome by emotion, ended each telethon, daring his audience to consider it a cruel joke.

Lewis found a perfect counterbalance for his excesses and vanities in the purity and urgent need of "his" kids. Everything he did he was doing in their service, which, in his mind, absolved him of his carte blanche life-or-death extravagance.

It made him, at last, a success on TV. He was a comedian-singer-writer-actor-director-producer-movie star who, after splitting with his partner Dean Martin in the mid-1950s, had failed to match his other triumphs with any real television inroads. But on the telethon each year, for 21 1/2 hours, he was the unquestioned boss of the Love Network.

It is not as if his TV acceptance was not a mixed blessing, as Shawn Levy observed in his Lewis biography, "King of Comedy."

On the one hand, Lewis was the star of a hit show "for which the nation not only dropped all else on a summer holiday weekend but actually opened its wallets." On the other hand, Lewis could never be certain "that it was to him and not his cause that the American public was responding with its support."

This has long since become moot, all the more so since Aug. 3, when, with no elaboration, MDA announced that Lewis had "completed his run" as national chairman, and that he would not be appearing on the telethon, as promised earlier.

Lewis has provided no insight into the matter. But it is hard to imagine how wronged he must feel after bonding with the telethon for so long. As Levy writes in "King of Comedy," Lewis "had conflated America's charitable instincts with love for himself as a public figure and even as one more lonely child."

The telethon will be on again this Labor Day weekend, in some faint version of what Lewis wrought. But for those who watch, and remember it with Jerry, it is likely to feel like a lonely affair.

___

Online:

http://www.mda.org/telethon

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier


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Sunday, July 31, 2011

UK watches year's second, low key, royal wedding (AP)

EDINBURGH, Scotland – Queen Elizabeth II's granddaughter Zara Phillips married England rugby star Mike Tindall on Saturday — but Britain's second royal wedding of the year was largely a low-key affair, with only a hint of the glamor and excitement of Prince William's showstopping nuptials.

Phillips, 30, who is 13th in line to the throne but does not use a royal title, and Tindall, 32, were greeted by hundreds of flag-waving well-wishers and the sound of traditional bagpipes as they left their wedding service at Edinburgh's Canongate Kirk following a private ceremony.

The often publicity shy bride wore a traditional ivory silk gown and a full-length flowing veil, but posed only briefly for onlookers — and gave her husband a fleeting, modest kiss — as they left the 17th century church for a reception at the queen's Scottish residence, the Palace of Holyroodhouse.

Unlike William and Kate Middleton's spectacular ceremony in April, the wedding service led by Rev. Neil Gardner was not broadcast on television and crowds gathered in the Scottish city were warned by police there would be little for them to see.

Members of the public packed along Edinburgh's Royal Mile, the city's famed cobbled boulevard, cheered loudly for William and Middleton, now known as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, as they arrived to join the congregation, traveling in a sleek black sedan with Prince Harry.

Middleton, wearing a biscuit colored coat, dress and large angled hat won a warm reception as she offered a wave, as did the queen and Duke of Edinburgh who arrived shortly before the bride.

While the details of Middleton's wedding gown were a closely guarded secret, Phillips — more commonly seen in jeans or sportswear — made an expected choice in choosing Stewart Parvin, a British designer favored by the queen. She also wore a Greek Key tiara lent to her by mother Princess Anne, and Jimmy Choo shoes.

Parvin also designed the queen's apricot wool coat and silk dress.

Peta Hunt, fashion director of You & Your Wedding magazine said the ivory gown hinted at the bride's quirky personality.

"Who else could go to a wedding and have their dress done by the same person who does their granny's? It allowed her to move with ease and grace, but had an element of fun and flirtiness," Hunt said.

The occasion was far removed from April's international spectacle at Westminster Abbey, but neatly reflected the couple's unflashy style. Tindall had even proposed in a modest setting, as he and Phillips curled up on a sofa at home watching a movie.

Before the ceremony, royal officials confirmed that Phillips will keep her maiden name rather than be known as Mrs. Tindall, largely because of her sporting career.

Phillips is known better for her sporting achievements than her royal heritage, as a world class equestrian who is likely to compete in the 2012 Olympics. Tindall — who Phillips met in 2003 in Australia during England's triumphant Rugby World Cup campaign — is a leading rugby player who has captained his country.

The ceremony was the first royal wedding held in Scotland since 1992, when Princess Anne — the mother of the bride — married her second husband, Timothy Laurence. Anne's elder child, Peter Phillips, married his Canadian partner Autumn Kelly in 2008.

Even the prospect of a brief glimpse of the royal family was enough to entice hundreds to Edinburgh for Saturday's wedding, including a few dozen stalwarts who camped overnight to win a front row view.

Waving a Canadian flag, Margaret Kittle, 76, said she had traveled from Ontario, Canada, and staked out a spot on Friday night. "I flew over last Saturday and have been here since last night. I started following the royals after I saw George VI and the Queen back home in Canada when I was 4 years old," she said.

Helen Sutherland, a 65-year-old from Muir of-Ord in the Scottish Highlands, was wrapped in a warm blanket as she waited for a glimpse of Britain's newest royal couple. "It got chilly through the night, but we want to see the bride and her dress. They seem to be a very happy couple," she said.

Phillips and Tindall hosted a glitzy cocktail party late Friday for relatives and guests aboard the former royal yacht Britannia, which they had hired for the occasion. The famous ship, once used by the queen to tour the world, was decommissioned in 1997.

But the party was a rare moment of public glamor for the couple, who are known for putting their devotion to sports ahead of their celebrity. The couple's honeymoon has been postponed because both are due to feature in major events next week — the bride in horse trials, and the groom in England's rugby international against Wales.

___

David Stringer in London contributed to this report.


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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Barenboim to stay 10 more years at Berlin opera (AP)

BERLIN – Renowned conductor Daniel Barenboim signed a new contract Wednesday to remain musical director of the city's Staatsoper opera house for another decade, Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit said.

The Israeli-Argentinian conductor has been in the role since 1992.

"I'm extraordinarily happy that we managed to keep Daniel Barenboim in Berlin for the coming years," Wowereit said. "His efforts for the Staatsopera and the city of Berlin are indisputable."

Wowereit said the city's new contract for the 68-year-old would take effect when his current one expires at the end of the month.

The famous opera's 19th-century home on Unter den Linden boulevard in what used to be East Berlin is currently under construction and will reopen at the beginning of the 2014-2015 season.

The Staatsoper has moved across town to the Schiller Theater during the restoration work.

It's one of three major opera houses in the German capital.


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Friday, July 1, 2011

Francis Ford Coppola back at Comic-Con after 20 years (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Francis Ford Coppola is returning to Comic-Con next month for the first time since 1991, presenting portions of his latest film, "Twixt."

The panel at the San Diego Convention Center will be held on July 23. Not much is known about "Twixt," other than it takes Coppola to his early filmmaking roots when he was making flicks for Roger Corman. Coppola wrote the screenplay and self-financed the picture, which stars Val Kilmer, Bruce Dern, Elle Fanning, and Ben Chaplin.

Coppola calls it "one-part Gothic romance, one-part personal film, and one-part the kind of horror film that began my career." The project was also inspired by the writings of Edgar Allen Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne.

Coppola first attended Comic-Con in 1991 as part of a presentation for his "Dracula" movie.

Comic-Con this year runs from July 21 to July 24. In a "Twixt" twist, will have a live music component. Indie performance artist Dan Deacon will be on hand to "demonstrate the interactive experience of the film," according to the Twixt filmmakers. The film incorporates both 2-D and 3-D elements.


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Thursday, June 30, 2011

Man gets two years for Paris Hilton burglary attempt (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – A man who tried to break into Paris Hilton's house while wielding two large knives was sentenced to two years in prison on Wednesday.

Nathan Lee Parada, 32, has already spent about 10 months behind bars since being arrested at the socialite's Los Angeles home last August.

Hilton posted a photo on her Twitter page of police outside her house and a man in handcuffs. She wrote, "just got woken up to a guy trying to break into my house holding 2 big knifes (sic)."

Parada was convicted of one count of attempted first-degree residential burglary in April after jurors spent less than an hour deciding his fate. He faced a three-year term. Van Nuys Superior Court Judge Michael Kellogg recommended that he receive mental health counseling while in prison.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman)


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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

After 30 years with film academy, Davis retires (AP)

By SANDY COHEN, AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen, Ap Entertainment Writer – Wed Jun 29, 7:00 am ET

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. – It was 1981: MTV was born, Diana Spencer married Prince Charles, "Ordinary People" won the Oscar for best picture and Bruce Davis joined the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Since then, the academy has built the Margaret Herrick Library, launched its burgeoning film archive, and bought a block of land that will one day become Hollywood's first serious movie museum.

Davis' 30 years with the organization also included 30 Academy Awards ceremonies — three of which almost didn't happen, an expanded best-picture category, 30 new best-picture winners, a handful of academy presidents and hundreds of new academy members.

But, for Davis, it all ends Thursday. The 68-year-old, who has served as the academy's executive director for the past two decades, is retiring.

"It's been stimulating, it's been fun ... but it's time to let somebody else do it for a while," Davis said from his office at AMPAS headquarters, which will soon be taken over by successor Dawn Hudson. "I feel like I've left it in good hands, but I'm leaving with no regrets."

During his tenure at the top of one of the movie industry's most elite organizations, Davis has worked closely with scores of filmmakers, from Michael Moore and Kathryn Bigelow to Annette Bening and Tom Hanks. He helped create academy programs, shepherd the awards shows and solve emergencies — like the year when all the Oscar trophies were stolen.

"We were going around the offices here kind of counting which ones were on display, because honestly we were sure we didn't have enough on hand to do it," Davis recalled, his lips curling into a smile. "That was the same year that the post office lost all the ballots, so we just kind of started giggling at some point, because what are you going to do?"

The academy now keeps a two year's supply of statuettes on hand, just in case, and efforts began last month to bypass the post office and move to online voting for the awards.

Then there were the years when the show almost didn't go on.

In 1981, the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan prompted a delay of the Oscar ceremony from Monday night, when it used to be held, to the following Tuesday night.

In 2003, the Gulf War started days before the Oscars were to be presented, "and there was a feeling that something as frivolous as the Academy Awards was maybe not appropriate," Davis said. He and the academy brass wrestled with the idea of canceling the show, but ended up airing a more subdued version that was interrupted twice with war updates from ABC News.

"It was quite dramatic, but it was actually a pretty good show," Davis said. "I think the general consensus afterward was it had been right for us to go ahead and hold the ceremonies."

In 2008, the Writers Guild strike threatened to shutter the show. The Golden Globes ceremony was canceled, but the strike was settled 12 days before the Academy Awards.

But Davis didn't just deal with the shows.

"He's the engine that keeps the academy machine moving along," said former academy President Sid Ganis.

Davis oversaw all academy employees and voting for the Academy Awards. Ganis called him "a physically imposing, powerful man, in his heart and soul a scholar and intellectual." He had strong views about how the academy should be run, Ganis said, and the board of governors often took his advice.

Though Davis met and worked with many celebrities during his 30 years on the job, he was reluctant to share any superstar anecdotes: "I treasure the interactions, but they're kind of private and personal and whatnot," he said.

But, when pressed, a gleam came into Davis' eye as he talked about working with director Sidney Lumet on a committee focused on foreign-language films.

"I was thinking, `I'm sitting here with a ballot, and there's Sidney Lumet with his ballot, and we're talking about the movies,'" Davis said. "I just thought this is a rare, rare privilege."

Working for the academy was actually Davis' second career. First he was a professor at a small college in Pennsylvania, where he ran the theater department. He started dabbling in screenwriting, then came to Los Angeles to look for success. He was at a party when he had "this very flukey experience" of meeting someone whose wife worked for the academy. A month or so later, Davis was hired to arrange seminars and lectures for the academy, and in a decade, he ascended to the top spot.

"I don't think I've been bored for a minute in 30 years here," he said. "I feel like such a rube sometimes. To this day, when I get out of the car on Oscar night and step up there onto that carpet, you get that rush of energy. The lights are popping — not that anybody's aiming at me — but still I think it's one of the great rushes, emotionally speaking, that a person can have. I have never gotten tired of that."


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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Russia theatre legend quits in fury after 50 years (AFP)

MOSCOW (AFP) – Russia's most celebrated living director on Sunday parted company with the theatre he has led for almost a half century, accusing its actors of only being interested in money.

Yuri Lyubimov, 93, who founded Moscow's Taganka Theatre in 1964, fell out with the acting troupe in a dispute over pay while on tour in the Czech Republic and said he had no intention of working with them any more.

"I confirm I have taken my final decision -- to leave the theatre," the director declared to the RIA Novosti news agency late on Saturday.

"I have no intention of working with this troupe. Let them be led by their trade union. I've had enough of this disgrace, these humiliations, this lack of desire to work, this desire just for money."

The scandal erupted before a performance of Brecht's classic morality play "The Good Person of Szechwan" when the actors refused to rehearse unless they were paid first.

His wife Katalin told RIA Novosti that to keep the show going Lyubimov paid the actors out of his own pocket but then vowed never to work with them again.

Yuri Lyubimov commented: "Clearly this is a loss of prestige for the country, for Russian theatre. But, it seems, the actors don't give a damn."

Although Lyubimov has become somewhat notorious in the last years by repeatedly threatening -- in true theatrical style -- to quit, he confirmed to Echo Moscow radio Sunday "that my decision to depart is final".

Speaking to the same radio, Katalin Lyubimova denounced the actors as an "uncontrollable band who just want money and don't want to work", adding that the theatre would now be headed by a trade union committee.

One of the theatre's main actresses, Tatyana Sidorenko, denied that the actors had threatened to torpedo the performance, telling Echo Moscow that "we just wanted to be paid money for our work".

Lyubimov was one of the giants of Soviet theatre, winning fame not only in Russia but also abroad for hugely visual and experimental spectacles that transcended language.

He was acclaimed as the heir to the innovative director Vsevolod Meyerhold, who was executed in the Stalin purges after changing the the face of Russian and world theatre.

Lyubimov dazzled the Soviet public with his productions until 1984 when he was stripped of his Soviet citizenship after giving an interview to the Times newspaper while putting on a play in London.

But with the onset of perestroika, Lyubimov returned to Moscow in triumph in 1988 and retained his near mythical status after the collapse of the Soviet Union, still putting on new productions in his nineties.

He was particularly known for his work with the actor Vladimir Vysotsky who won immense fame for songs containing unusually sharp social commentary and died aged just 42 in 1980 in during the Moscow Olympics.

Lyubimov first ran into major trouble with the Soviet authorities 1980 when they banned his play about the late Vysotsky. In 1982 his production of Pushkin's politically loaded "Boris Godunov" was also banned.

After his citizenship was annulled, his name was famously removed from all programmes and posters at the theatre, making him something of an icon for the dissident movement.

Both banned plays were triumphantly revived after his return in the late 1980s and he won back his Soviet passport and position as the theatre's artistic director.


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Fans mourn Michael Jackson, two years on (AFP)

LOS ANGELES (AFP) – Michael Jackson fans paid their respects Saturday to the late King of Pop on the second anniversary of his shock death, as his famous "Thriller" video jacket went under the hammer in Los Angeles.

Fans were allowed to place flowers by the singer's mausoleum at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park just outside Los Angeles, where he died from an overdose of powerful sedative propofol on June 25, 2009, aged 50.

"He just wanted to make the world a better place, and now that he's gone, that lives on through the fans who love him," fan Linda Higgins told KABC television.

"We're carrying that message and his mission through us," she added outside the mausoleum in Glendale, where Jackson's close friend Elizabeth Taylor was laid to rest nearby in March.

The anniversary was more low-key than one year after his death, when the singer's siblings gathered at the picturesque cemetery, and were joined by thousands of fans.

This year, Jackson's father Joe was reported to have been seen at his son's memorial early in the day.

Two years after Michael Jackson's surprise death, the mystery over exactly how he died continues to fuel legal wrangling, conspiracy theories and family strains.

His personal doctor Conrad Murray is still awaiting trial on manslaughter charges for allegedly giving Jackson an overdose of propofol to help him sleep on that fateful morning at his Beverly Hills mansion.

Days ahead of the second anniversary of his death, Jackson's sister La Toya published a new book reiterating her claim that he may have been murdered, and had voiced fears to her that someone was out to kill him for financial reasons.

"I truly feel Dr Murray was simply the fall guy. I think it's too easy to blame him. I think the investigation needs to go a bit further than just stopping at Dr Murray," she said ahead of the book's publication this week.

On Saturday, the famous red and black leather jacket worn by Jackson in the iconic "Thriller" video was going under the block.

Auctioneer Darren Julien called the jacket "the most recognized and significant piece of pop culture" at a two-day Music Icons sale, and said he expected it to fetch at least $200,000.

In downtown Los Angeles, the Grammy Museum -- the music industry body's showcase -- opened a permanent exhibit devoted to Jackson, including two of his famous sequined gloves.

Elsewhere, Jermaine Jackson sang a tribute to his late brother, on the eve of Saturday's anniversary, on the sidelines of the 2011 International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) in Toronto, Canada.

In Las Vegas -- where a permanent show by the Cirque du Soleil troupe is due to open -- a shooting incident reportedly clouded a tribute by fans visiting a home where Jackson lived during a stint in the casino capital.

Police rushed to the scene when gunshots were heard from a few houses away -- although initial reports said the victim was a dog, shot by a police officer after it attacked him, according to the TMZ celebrity website.

Fans also posted their comments on Jackson's official website, where an anniversary message trumpeted the "indescribably unique spirit that still connects Michael today with countless fans in a way that knows no borders."

"I can't stop crying because you were so loved by everyone. I have pictures of you all over my house, and every day I talk to you as though you are still here," wrote one, Mama60Jama.


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Thursday, June 9, 2011

Man ordered to stay away from Lohan for 2 years (AP)

By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer Anthony Mccartney, Ap Entertainment Writer – Wed Jun 8, 2:54 pm ET

SANTA MONICA, Calif. – A judge on Wednesday ordered a man accused of showing up at Lindsay Lohan's court appearances and leaving gifts at her house to stay away from the actress for the next two years.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Joseph Biderman issued the restraining order against David Cocordan after a hearing in Santa Monica, Calif. Neither Lohan, who is serving house arrest, nor Cocordan attended the hearing.

Biderman said the man had filed a statement agreeing to the stay-away order.

Lohan wrote in a court filing last month that she is frightened of Cocordan, 38, who she stated had sent her more than 100 text messages, including one describing having sex with the "Mean Girls" star.

The actress is serving house arrest on a 120-day jail sentence for violating her probation by taking a necklace without permission from a jewelry store in January. She is expected to serve about 35 days.

One text message contained in the court documents indicates Cocordan was in the courtroom last month when the 24-year-old actress was sentenced to jail.

Lohan's attorney, Blair Berk, told the judge that police officers would serve the two-year restraining order on Cocordan, who according to court records lives in Glendora. That is about 45 miles east of Lohan's home in the beachside community of Venice.


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Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Rapper Ja Rule sentenced to two years in prison (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Hip-hop artist Ja Rule was sentenced to two years in prison on Wednesday, six months after he pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a weapon.

The 35-year-old rapper and actor, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins, did not speak during the sentencing held at New York State Supreme Court. He was set to report to prison later on Wednesday.

The charge stemmed from a July 2007 incident, when police pulled Atkins over after a New York concert and found a semi-automatic handgun hidden in his car, according to authorities.

Ninety minutes before his sentencing, Atkins sent a final message to his 50,000 Twitter followers: "Out on my patio having my last free moment I love all my fans Pain is love!!!" He signed autographs on his way into the courthouse.

After the sentencing, Atkins, who wore white sneakers and matching gray sweatpants and a sweatshirt, hugged his attorney and waved to his wife.

He will likely serve between 18 and 20 months with good behavior, his lawyer Stacey Richman said.

Fellow rapper Lil Wayne was arrested separately after the same concert at New York's Beacon Theater after police discovered him smoking marijuana near a tour bus.

Atkins also faces possible federal prison time for failing to pay taxes from 2004 to 2008. He pleaded guilty to three counts of failing to file taxes in a New Jersey federal court in March.

A sentencing date has not been set on that case.

Atkins received a 2002 Grammy nomination for his album, "Pain is Love," and has appeared in several films, including "The Fast and the Furious."

His latest studio effort, "Pain is Love 2," is scheduled to be released later this summer, and his manager, Ron Robinson, said he was putting the finishing touches on the album two nights ago.

He spent his last day of freedom Tuesday seeing the movie "X-Men: First Class" with his family, according to his Twitter feed.

(Reporting by Joseph Ax, editing by Christine Kearney)


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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Chili Peppers to release first album in 5 years (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The Red Hot Chili Peppers are gearing up to release their first album in five years on August 30, the rock band said on Monday.

"I'm With You" also marks their first album since guitarist John Frusciante quit for a second time in 2009 and was replaced by Josh Klinghoffer.

As usual, "I'm With You" was produced by Rick Rubin. Their previous collaboration, the 2006 double album "Stadium Arcadium," debuted at No. 1 in 28 countries, including the United States where it went on to sell 2.3 million copies. It also won the Grammy for best rock album.

The only concerts currently scheduled are the band's Hong Kong debut on August 9, a pair of festivals in Japan on August 13 and 14, and the Rock in Rio festival in Rio de Janeiro on September 24.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman)


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Saturday, June 4, 2011

20 years later, "Lambada" still inspiring hits (Reuters)

MIAMI (Billboard) – "Lambada" by French group Kaoma became a worldwide smash in 1990, reaching No. 46 on the Billboard Hot 100 and topping the Hot Latin Songs chart for seven straight weeks.

The song's ascent was aided by the lambada dance craze that preceded the song's release, as well as two cheesy 1990 movies -- "Lambada" and "The Forbidden Dance" -- that sought to capitalize on the popularity of the Brazilian dance style.

Fast-forward 20 years and the sounds of "Lambada" are back with not one but three charting songs featuring the melody of the 1990 hit. First up was Edward Maya and Vika Jigulina's soulful dance track "Stereo Love," which entered the Hot 100 last October at No. 92 and peaked in January at No. 16, spending 28 weeks on the chart.

Then there's Don Omar's "Taboo," a Portuguese/Spanish version of the original that peaked at No. 9 on Hot Latin Songs in May.

Finally, there is Jennifer Lopez's hit "On the Floor," featuring Pitbull, which sports the melodic hook of "Lambada," with Lopez singing new English lyrics to the original melody. The track peaked at No. 3 on the Hot 100 in May and has generated U.S. digital track sales of 2 million, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

"Good music revives every so often," says Rogelio Alfonso, PD for Miami's Clear Channel-owned WMGE (Mega 94.9), which plays all three tracks, as do several other Miami stations, including top 40 WHYI (Y-100). "Plus, danceable Brazilian music is super catchy."

And as it turns out, Kaoma's "Lambada" wasn't the first recording of the song. The original version is "Llorando se Fue," written and performed by Bolivian folk group Kjarkas, which used an Andean flute instead of an accordion.

Kaoma took credit for the composition and gave it Portuguese lyrics and the beat and instrumentation of the lambada, an urban Brazilian rhythm known for its sensual, hip-to-hip grinding dance. When the song became a smash, the original writers, brothers Gonzalo and Ulises Hermosa, successfully sued for a share of the royalties.

Today, all versions of the song, including Omar's and Lopez's, cite the brothers as the writers of the song, although the roster of co-writers of "On the Floor" includes Pitbull and RedOne, while "Taboo" includes Omar.

As for Maya's "Stereo Love," it doesn't quote the trademark lambada accordion hook; writers changed the note sequence just enough so that it would evoke the melody rather than replicate it.

The success of "Stereo Love" was surprising, says Patrick Moxey, president of Ultra Records, which released the track in North America. "Working a record with an accordion hook into all these different formats and sell copies? That doesn't happen very often."

The danceable yet melancholic accordion hook of "Lambada" has proved to be timeless. In the original Kaoma video, the protagonists were two children -- a blond girl and a black boy, both around 10 -- who escape their parents' watchful eyes to dance. Twenty years later, Omar's video for "Taboo" continues the story, borrowing images from the original clip and hinting that he's the boy, all grown up.

For those who ever danced to this track, it's a powerful image.

(Editing by Chris Michaud)


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Friday, May 27, 2011

'Oprah' finale scores biggest audience in 17 years (AP)

NEW YORK – Preliminary figures show Wednesday's finale of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" scored its highest audience in 17 years.

The Nielsen Co. said Thursday that the final episode delivered a 13.3 household rating in the nation's metered markets.

It was the highest number since February 1994. That's when an "Oprah" episode called "People Shed Their Disguises" got a 13.4 rating.

Metered market ratings measure roughly half the nation and can't be translated into audience figures. A viewer count for the "Oprah" finale won't be available from Nielsen for two weeks.

The metered market rating for Monday's surprise farewell episode of "Oprah" logged a 10.2. Nielsen said Tuesday's episode got a 10.7.


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Friday, May 13, 2011

Christopher Cross back with first album in years (AP)

CHICAGO – The Oscar-winning singer-songwriter recalled a recent trip to the airport where an official took his passport and noticed his name. As she looked at the document, she said: "Christopher Cross. There was a singer named that. I really liked his music. He passed away a few years ago."A A 

    Cross was so stunned, all he could say was, "Oh, really?"

    "I was afraid if I told her I was still alive, she'd have a heart attack or something," he added.

    Not only is Cross alive and well, he's also out with a new album this month. 

    "Dr. Faith" is his first studio album in 12 years (he put out a live album, "The Cafe Carlyle Sessions," in 2008, and a Christmas album last year). Cross, who is best known for early 1980s hits like "Sailing," "Ride Like the Wind," "Never Be the Same" and "Think of Laura," cited a divorce after 18 years of marriage and "some personal distractions" as the reasons behind not releasing any new material for so long.

But he said time away can sometimes benefit the creative process.

"Maybe what happens after all these years of writing, you just want to take a break, let the well build up, let the energy build up until I ... had something to say."

Cross describes "Dr. Faith" as sounding like a Crowded House record. It's more guitar-oriented than his earlier albums.

A A  A "Instead of transcribing the songs to keyboard, I just did them with guitar, and I really had a good time," he said. "I've always been a guitarist, but this was a real fun exploration of that medium."

    Releasing "Dr. Faith" means Cross can finally play those songs live. He refused to do so until the album came out.

A A  A "With all the downloading and YouTube and cellphone-taping and all that, it's just too risky. Once something's out there on the Web, it's out there and it's gone," he said.

    Sharp-eyed Cross fans will notice that the flamingo that's traditionally on his album covers can only be seen in his name. His original drummer had drawn a much bigger flamingo for Cross' first album cover, and Cross put a flamingo on nearly every cover since then as a good-luck charm.

    So where's the flamingo?

    "We shot him in the head a long time ago," Cross joked. "After a while it gets to be kind of an annoyance, like people putting them in their yard. With this album, we just really decided to purposely let it go."  

    Cross, who recently turned 60, won the 1981 best original song Oscar for "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)."

____

Online:

http://www.christophercross.com


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Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Schwarzenegger, Shriver separating after 25 years (AP)

By MICHAEL R. BLOOD, AP Political Writer Michael R. Blood, Ap Political Writer – 1 hr 5 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – It was a storybook marriage in 1986 on a spring weekend on Cape Cod that united a princess of an American political dynasty, Maria Shriver, and the gap-toothed muscle-clad movie star famous enough to be known by one name, Arnold.

In many ways, it was a pairing of opposites: Her uncle was a U.S. president; his father was an Austrian policeman. She was the rising star of a network TV news show; he was the pot-puffing star of "Pumping Iron." He was a Republican with a soft spot for Richard Nixon; her family was a pillar in the nation's Democratic establishment.

Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Shriver announced their separation late Monday, cleaving a sometimes-turbulent 25-year relationship after "a time of great personal and professional transition for each of us," the couple said in a joint statement.

The breakup comes about four months after Schwarzenegger ended a bumpy, two-term run as California governor, a job his wife never wanted him to pursue. Since then, Schwarzenegger, 63, has been fashioning a role as an international advocate for green energy, giving speeches and lining up work in Hollywood. Shriver, 55, has guest-edited an edition of Oprah Winfrey's magazine but also talked about the stress of changing roles after serving as California's first lady.

The joint statement said the two were working on the future of their relationship while living apart and they would continue to parent their four children — Katherine, 21, Christina, 19, Patrick, 17, and Christopher, 13.

"After a great deal of thought, reflection, discussion, and prayer, we came to this decision together," the statement said.

Shriver stood by her husband during his 2003 campaign for governor after the Los Angeles Times reported accusations that he had a history of groping women. Schwarzenegger later said he "behaved badly sometimes."

Shriver has moved out of the couple's gated estate in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Brentwood, but they remain on speaking terms. They had brunch with their children on Mother's Day in a tony restaurant in Santa Monica, and met privately on their wedding anniversary last month.

Prior to the announcement, there were hints of a rift. The former governor tweeted frequently during his recent travels to Brazil, Nigeria and France, but Shriver was not mentioned in his online updates from the road. Shriver, also active on social networks, posted three updates on her Twitter page on the day of their 25th wedding anniversary, April 26, but did not mention the milestone.

About a month before the anniversary, Shriver wrote on her Facebook page that she was going through a transition in her life.

"As you know, transitions are not easy. I'd love to get your advice on how you've handled transitions in your own life," she said in a video posted on YouTube.

"It's so stressful to not know what you're doing next. People ask you what are you doing and then they can't believe that you don't know what you're doing," she said.

Schwarzenegger has often said that Shriver, who is keenly attuned to the risks of a life in politics, initially was very upset about his plan to run for governor. But when Schwarzenegger announced his decision on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in August 2003, he said his wife stood by his decision.

During Schwarzenegger's time in office, Shriver and the couple's children never moved to Sacramento, preferring their secluded estate a few miles from the Pacific Ocean. Schwarzenegger never settled in Sacramento, choosing instead to commute by private jet between his home and the state capitol.

Schwarzenegger and Shriver long presented a gilded partnership that crossed politics, Hollywood and media. They are known for charitable work, and he also founded a committee with New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell to encourage road, bridge and other infrastructure development.

Shriver, the daughter of the late Eunice Kennedy Shriver, left her job as an NBC News correspondent after Schwarzenegger took office.

In a May 2009 commencement speech at the University of Southern California, Schwarzenegger alluded to the powerful influence Shriver had on his life. He said when people ask him the secret to success, "I say, number one, come to America. Number two, work your butt off. And number three, marry a Kennedy."

As the state's first lady, Shriver ran an annual women's conference that attracted a long list of business, political and entertainment luminaries, along with an audience of thousands. She also was credited with overhauling the California Museum in downtown Sacramento, and, with Schwarzenegger, starting the California Hall of Fame.

In 2007, Shriver said she wouldn't resume a TV news career after the media circus surrounding Anna Nicole Smith's accidental drug overdose.

"It was then that I knew that the TV news business had changed and so had I," she said at the time. In a 2009 interview with The Associated Press, she said "I'm too much of a free spirit" to consider running for elective office.

The breakup comes months after the death of Shriver's father, Peace Corps founder and former vice presidential candidate Sargent Shriver, in January. Eunice Kennedy Shriver, who founded the Special Olympics, died in 2009.

___

Associated Press writer Daisy Nguyen contributed to this report.


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Sunday, May 1, 2011

Welcome to the Whitest Oscars in Ten Years

Comparing this year's pool of Academy Award nominees to last year's, one major difference is evident: the obvious lack of minorities among the contenders. In fact, this year represents the whitest group of Oscar contenders in the major acting categories in 10 years, since the 73rd Oscars.

"These are some seriously white Oscars, I can't lie. I kind of imagined Mo'Nique wanting to go all 'Precious' upside Tom Sherak's head with an ashtray this morning by the time they got to the end of the Best Picture category," says Movieline Editor S.T. VanAirsdale.


One of the reasons minorities were not represented among this year's nominees, says Hollywood Reporter Film Editor Gregg Kilday, is that there simply weren't any African American-themed movies that had a legitimate chance to get a nomination.

"The problem with this year [was] there wasn't a real small, serious-themed movie about African American subjects that the Academy could turn to for nominations," Kilday says.

Kilday believes that at one point during the fall it looked like Tyler Perry's star-studded drama 'For Colored Girls,' with performances from Kimberly Elise, Anika Noni Rose and Macy Gray, could emerge as a contender.

"But it didn't get a great critical reception, and it didn't turn into a crossover hit," Kilday told PopEater. "Tyler Perry is a very successful pop entertainer who isn't yet taken as a serious director, and that movie fell by the wayside. It wasn't a legit contender."

VanAirsdale adds that Kerry Washington could have been a contender for one of the actress awards, but her two films, 'Night Catches Us' and 'Mother and Child,' were just too inconsistent to attract serious awards attention.

Denzel Washington, always an Academy favorite, was in two films this year, but both were the kind of genre movie that isn't typically nominated for an Oscar.

Part of the blame can also be attributed to the way the Oscar process is heavily influenced by publicists and marketers waging multimillion-dollar Oscar campaigns.

"I'm not exactly sure what the Academy can do. On the one hand, they're a historically lazy group of viewers who aren't going to discover or nominate anything independently," VanAirsdale says.

He explains that 'Precious' grew into the phenomenon it was because of its Sundance roots, and this year's big Sundance hit happened to be 'Winter's Bone.'

"These films are cultivated that way for months. Their ethnic representation from year to year is dictated by a handful of marketers and publicists, very, very few of whom are minorities."

Next year could be a different story. Jennifer Hudson is in the process of making a movie about Winnie Mandela that is already starting to generate Oscar buzz before it is officially in the can, and the Academy is sure to take note of the lack of diversity at this year's awards. Still, that lack of diversity could point to a deeper problem in Hollywood.

"Hollywood is happy to cast black actors like Don Cheadle in 'Iron Man 2,' Queen Latifah in 'The Dilemma,' but it doesnt make that many serious-themed films that take a serious look at African American themes," Kilday says. "It doesn't make that many serious movies of any different stripe or color."

Check Out the Full List of Oscar Nominations 2011

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Friday, April 1, 2011

Edward Norton Engaged to Girlfriend of Six Years

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Wednesday 30 MarchBy chrchao4Lowest Rank Vote downVote upReport this

Way to stir the pot, Courtney. We hope Norton won't be in the doghouse for getting his wife-to-be anything less than a killer rock.I love reading this , So does My boyfriend .he is almost 11year older than me .i met him via agelessc'upid.c'om a nice place for seeking age le ss love.which gives you a chance to make your life better and open opportunities for you to meet the attractive young girls and treat you like a king. Maybe you wanna check it out or tell your friends..

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Wednesday 30 MarchBy RongrantHighest Rank Vote downVote upReport this

Ms Love didn't mention when Ed bought her the ruby. He probably woke up one morning, looked over

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