For the 1998 production of Adiv's Story, she stars as Co-ed.
For the 2003 production of The Bakery, she plays the part of Susie.
Celeb Spenders and Savers: Amy vs. Eva
(E! Online)
E! Online - Amy Adams and Eva Mendes know that shiny red dresses are always a hit around the holidays. on 2008-11-29 04:45:08
Anand Tucker jumps at 'Leap Year'
Los Angeles: Romantic comedy stars Amy Adams -- Anand Tucker ("Shopgirl") will direct romantic comedy "Leap Year," starring Amy Adams. Spyglass Entertainment and Benderspink produce.
on 2008-11-24 04:46:35
'Monsters vs. Aliens': First Look
Meet Ginormica (voiced by Reese Witherspoon) from '09 3-D feature. Plus: Seth Rogen, Amy Adams on 2008-11-23 04:45:38
Amy Adams set for 'Queen of Sheba'
Radio News: Karen Croner script based on Jacki Lyden bio -- Amy Adams will star in the indie drama "Daughter of the Queen of Sheba" for producers Susan Cartsonis and Matt Williams ("What Women Want").
on 2008-10-28 04:47:13
Casting Couch: Amy Adams Takes the Leap
(E! Online)
E! Online - ? Amy Adams is ready to enchant screens again, targeting the rom-com Leap Year as her next flick, per the Hollywood Reporter. She plays a woman who travels to Dublin to propose to her beau on Leap Day, Feb. 29, only to have things go horribly on 2008-10-17 04:45:25
Casting Couch: Amy Adams Takes the Leap
? Amy Adams is ready to enchant screens again, targeting the rom-com Leap Year as her next flick, per the Hollywood Reporter. She plays a woman who travels to Dublin to propose to her beau...
on 2008-10-16 04:46:09
Casting Couch: Amy Adams Takes the Leap
? Amy Adams is ready to enchant screens again, targeting the rom-com Leap Year as her next flick, per the Hollywood Reporter. She plays a woman who travels to Dublin to propose to her beau...
on 2008-10-16 04:45:58
Sugar Shout Out: Celebs and Their Pets Bark for the Cure
In the spotlight: Celebs (and their pets) bark for the cure
What a home foreclosure looks like
10 ways to burn 100 calories indoors
Pharrell Williams is a PC just like B.G.
Bill Maher sells doubt in Religulous
Check out the celebaby roundup
Let's dish: on 2008-10-07 05:01:50
Amy Adams' wedding wish
Amy Adams wants a huge wedding. The 'Enchanted' actress - who recently announced her engagement to Darren Le Gallo, her boyfriend of six years - wants to tie the knot in front of her entire family in a lavish ceremony. on 2008-10-06 04:50:55
Link Time! 8/21
It looks like Michael Phelps's Olympian success will probably not equal many film and TV cameos. ? Popwatch
I am loving the new animated video for Jeff Hanson's song "If Only I Knew." ? Stereogum
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia game show tour?! Sign m on 2008-08-22 05:01:20
Amy Adams and Darren Legallo are Engaged
Enchanted star Amy Adams is engaged to boyfriend of six years Darren Legallo, her rep confirms.
Legallo, 34, proposed with a diamond by French jewelry designer Jean Dousset of Beverly Hills, according to USA Today.
Adams, 33, met Legallo, an actor and art on 2008-07-28 04:50:38
Adams Engaged
Amy Adams is ready to marry her boyfriend of six years, Darren Le Gallo The 33-year-old Enchanted star met Le Gallo - a fellow thespian - in an acting class in 2001 and they began dating following a year of friendship. on 2008-07-26 04:49:47
Amy Adams to Marry Acting-Class Sweetheart
'Enchanted' actress Amy Adams is engaged to be married to her long-time boyfriend, whom she met in an acting class on 2008-07-26 04:47:38
Amy Adams engaged to acting-class sweetie
(AP)
AP - Now Amy Adams' love life is "Enchanted," too. on 2008-07-25 04:45:22
Amy Adams engaged to Darren Legallo
The couple reportedly met in acting class in 2001, and plan to tie the knot next year. on 2008-07-25 04:47:21
'Enchanted' Amy Adams to Marry Next Year
ET has the latest...
ET confirms that Oscar-nominated actress Amy Adams is
engaged to her longtime boyfriend Darren Legallo and the couple plans
to marry sometime next year.
Legallo reportedly proposed with a diamond by French jewelry designer Jean on 2008-07-25 04:49:27
Amy Adams is Getting Married!
“Enchanted” actress Amy Adams has happily announced her engagement to actor boyfriend Darren Legallo – as the couple are said to be tying the knot sometime next year.
The two met in an acting class seven years ago and Legallo is said on 2008-07-25 04:55:19
The 2008 Saturn Awards Honor the Best in Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Horror
Each year the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films hands out the Saturn Awards, honoring the best actors, movies and TV shows in these genres. It's a pretty all-encompassing way to group things together and the list of projects that earn on 2008-06-26 05:02:53
Amy Adams Disenchanted by Teen Photog
Filed under: Paparazzi Video, Wacky and WeirdTMZ.com: Amy Adams has never complained about the 20-something guys who work as TMZ photogs -- but one pap who doubles as a DC high schooler got her inner guidance counselor all worked up.She'd freak if she ev on 2008-05-19 17:07:18
Ruffalo, Adams team for comedy-drama
(Reuters)
Reuters - Mark Ruffalo and Amy Adams
are attached to star in writer-director Noah Baumbach's next
feature. on 2008-05-19 00:46:12
"Rick in Oz" wrote in message
news:rpkPf.732$NN.15886@snnrp1.syd4.maint.ops.aspac.uu.net...
> http://breakingnews.iol.ie/entertainment/story.asp?j=214131012&p=zy4y3y875&n
> According to the Nielsen ratings, the 2003 show got the lowest audience,
> with 33m tuning in.
> highbrow
> nature of the five movies nominated for best film - 'Brokeback Mountain',
> 'Capote', 'Crash', 'Munich' and 'Good Night, and Good Luck'.
Who was? Amy Adams in Junebug? Never heard of her or her movie.
And audiences will continue to tune out in droves year after year until the
Academy begins to correct the boring nature of its own program. Not a
single, dang durn viewer gives a shitizzle about the President of the
Academy coming out onto the stage and addressing the audience on the
importance of film and motion pictures. Nobody cares about all these
retrospectives. The Academy only has about six major categories, and they
front load the beginning of the show with one major award, then tease
everyone along for the rest of the interminably long show to get to the last
major categories. The show always runs long. It ought to take a cue from the
Golden Globes. The show needs more categories as well. It's too
conservative.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
ICEBREAKER
"You know, I probably wasn't abducted by aliens. Come to think of it, I was
raped by teenagers."
Brokeback? Whatever you think, you will not be able to change God's
Word regarding homosexuality and will one day have to pay the price for
not believing what God has written.
Leviticus 18:22 Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it
is abomination.
Leviticus 20:13 If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a
woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be
put to death; their blood shall be upon them.
Romans 1:22-27
V22 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, V23 And
changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to
corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping
things.
V24 Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of
their own hearts, to dishonour their own bodies between themselves:
V25 Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served
the creature more than the Creator, Who is blessed for ever. Amen.
V26 For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even
their women did change the natural use into that which is against
nature:
V27 And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman,
burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that
which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their
error which was meet.
1 Timothy 1:8-10
V8 But we know that the law is good, if a man use it lawfully;
V9 Knowing this, that the law is not made for a righteous man, but for
the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and for sinners, for
unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers,
for manslayers,
V10 For whoremongers, for them that defile themselves with mankind, for
menstealers, for liars, for perjured persons, and if there be any other
thing that is contrary to sound doctrine;
1 Corinthians 6:9 Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit
the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves
with mankind
SAY THIS PRAYER: Dear Jesus, I am a sinner and am headed to eternal
hell because of my sins. I believe you died on the cross to take away
my sins and to take me to heaven. Jesus, I ask you now to come into my
heart and take away my sins and give me eternal life.
http://www.armyofgod.com/Leviticus.html
Dr. Jai Maharaj wrote:
> Oscars tension mounts as 'Brokeback Mountain' rides
> Sunday, March 5, 2006
> Hollywood began the final countdown to Sunday's Oscars,
> with a posse of "serious" films, led by "Brokeback
> Mountain," set to overrun the big night.
> preparations for the 78th annual Academy Awards, which
> start with the legendary red carpet celebrity fashion
> show, the anxious nominees are crossing their fingers.
> political or social messages, Taiwan director Ang Lee's
> film about gay cowboys is the frontrunner for the top
> awards, including best picture and best director.
> leading the race," said veteran Hollywood Reporter online
> columnist Marty Grove.
> love despite themselves and pursue an unfulfilled 20-year
> romance faces a last-minute challenge from a dark horse,
> Paul Haggis's racial drama "Crash."
> is now very real," awards expert Tom O'Neil of the
> website theEnvelope.com said of the tiny independent
> movie that may crash Ang Lee's party.
> have 'Capote' and 'Transamerica' this year and they may
> have created a gay fatigue," he told AFP.
> offbeat Western which has swept Hollywood's awards season
> and led the Oscars race from the start will still rope in
> five statuettes Sunday.
> nominations, including best picture, director, best actor
> for Australia's Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger and best supporting role
> nods for Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal and Michelle Williams.
> "Crash," about a group of ethnically diverse people whose
> lives collide in a Los Angeles car accident, and George
> Clooney's political drama Good Night, and Good Luck,"
> which is also up for six awards.
> Spielberg's epic about the aftermath of the Palestinian
> massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics -- and
> "Capote," about US author Truman Capote, both of which
> are up for five Oscars.
> to win the best actor Oscar for his staggering title role
> in Bennett Miller's biopic, facing off against the
> Australian star of "Brokeback," Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger, 26.
> country star Johnny Cash in the biopic "Walk the Line,"
> nominated for five Oscars, David Strathairn, for his role
> as newsman Ed Murrow in "Good Night," and Terrence Howard
> for "Hustle and Flow."
> actor categories, so we may see the jaw-dropper of the
> evening be Jake or Michelle winning for 'Brokeback,'"
> O'Neil said.
> the women's award for her role as an activist fighting
> the pharmaceutical industry in Kenya in "The Constant
> Gardner," with Williams -- Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger's real-life
> fiancee -- trailing for her portrayal of his cuckolded
> wife in "Brokeback."
> McDormand for "North Country," Amy Adams for "Junebug"
> and Catherine Keener, who played writer Harper Lee in
> "Capote."
> win best supporting actor for his role as a CIA spy in
> the oil industry thriller "Syriana."
> competition from Paul Giammati for "Cinderella Man," Matt
> Dillon for "Crash," and William Hurt for "A History of
> Violence."
> are "Capote's" Miller, Haggis for "Crash," Clooney as
> director of "Good Night," and Spielberg for "Munich," the
> only big-budget film in the major categories.
> his best original screenplay for "Good Night," the story
> of newsman Ed Murrow's crusade against the repression of
> the US and-Communist witch hunt of the 1950s.
> is further stoked by the Palestinian best foreign
> language film contender "Paradise Now," about two friends
> who become suicide bombers, a nomination that infuriated
> many Israelis.
> Noel," Italy's story of sex abuse, "Don't Tell,"
> Germany's "Sophie Scholl -- The Final Days" and South
> Africa's crime drama "Tsotsi," by Gavin Hood.
> the nominees. "In the past, the Oscars were only about
> great filmmaking and entertainment, but now its about
> passing on an important message."
> reference, but hundreds of Communist spies within the
> government is hardly a "witch hunt." Russia was only
> pointing nuclear arms at us for 40 years and killing
> MILLIONS of it's own people, why can't we all be
> Communists and spread a Communist agenda? It frustrates
> me to the bone sometimes.
> about McCarthy, I seriously thought he was a bad guy.
> Because that is what I grew up seeing and learning in
> class and the television. This crap just plain infuriates
> me!
> fondle each other while stealing 2 hours of your
> lifetime.
> portrays history correctly. Many can not and will not
> read history books.
> is shall be fun. They have put themselves between a rock
> and upset gayboys. If it does not win they will be
> protesting that Hollyweird caved to the religious
> fanatics.
> have only been see by 10% of the population. Guess that
> shows the rest of us how out of sync we are with those
> great minds in Holleyweird.
> ("Peace" Through superior firepower.)
> never see will win the big awards? Will it be Crash or
> will Capote stun us all? How will I make it through the
> day?
> ("Dogs look up to us, cats look down on us and pigs
> treat us as equals" Winston Churchill)
> nominations, including best picture, director, best actor
> for Australia's Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger and best supporting role
> nods for Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal and Michelle Williams."
> nor sure I can ever watch it in the same light again .
> End of forwarded messages from:
> http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1590276/posts
> http://tinyurl.com/a5ljc
> http://www.mantra.com/jai
> Om Shanti
> http://www.mantra.com/holocaust
> http://www.hindu.org
> http://www.hindunet.org
> http://www.flex.com/~jai/satyamevajayate
> purposes of research and open discussion. The contents of this post may not
> have been authored by, and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the
> poster. The contents are protected by copyright law and the exemption for
> fair use of copyrighted works.
> o If you send private e-mail to me, it will likely not be read,
> considered or answered if it does not contain your full legal name, current
> e-mail and postal addresses, and live-voice telephone number.
> o Posted for information and discussion. Views expressed by others are
> not necessarily those of the poster who may or may not have read the article.
> which may or may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright
> owner. This material is being made available in efforts to advance the
> understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic,
> democratic, scientific, social, and cultural, etc., issues. It is believed
> that this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as
> provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title
> 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without
> profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included
> information for research, comment, discussion and educational purposes by
> subscribing to USENET newsgroups or visiting web sites. For more information
> go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
> If you wish to use copyrighted material from this article for purposes of
> your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the
> copyright owner.
Oscars tension mounts as 'Brokeback Mountain' rides
AFP
Sunday, March 5, 2006
Hollywood (AFP) - Tension reached fever pitch as
Hollywood began the final countdown to Sunday's Oscars,
with a posse of "serious" films, led by "Brokeback
Mountain," set to overrun the big night.
As workers frantically put the finishing touches on
preparations for the 78th annual Academy Awards, which
start with the legendary red carpet celebrity fashion
show, the anxious nominees are crossing their fingers.
In a year laden with small-budget movies packing weighty
political or social messages, Taiwan director Ang Lee's
film about gay cowboys is the frontrunner for the top
awards, including best picture and best director.
"We're almost there and I think 'Brokeback' is still
leading the race," said veteran Hollywood Reporter online
columnist Marty Grove.
But the aching story of two macho farmhands who fall in
love despite themselves and pursue an unfulfilled 20-year
romance faces a last-minute challenge from a dark horse,
Paul Haggis's racial drama "Crash."
"The buzz is that the threat to 'Brokeback' from 'Crash'
is now very real," awards expert Tom O'Neil of the
website theEnvelope.com said of the tiny independent
movie that may crash Ang Lee's party.
"'Brokeback' has a passionate following, but you also
have 'Capote' and 'Transamerica' this year and they may
have created a gay fatigue," he told AFP.
But like other pundits, O'Neil is still betting that the
offbeat Western which has swept Hollywood's awards season
and led the Oscars race from the start will still rope in
five statuettes Sunday.
It rides into the Oscars armed with a leading eight
nominations, including best picture, director, best actor
for Australia's Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger and best supporting role
nods for Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal and Michelle Williams.
The movie faces off against the six-times nominated
"Crash," about a group of ethnically diverse people whose
lives collide in a Los Angeles car accident, and George
Clooney's political drama Good Night, and Good Luck,"
which is also up for six awards.
Also competing for best picture are "Munich" -- Steven
Spielberg's epic about the aftermath of the Palestinian
massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics -- and
"Capote," about US author Truman Capote, both of which
are up for five Oscars.
"Capote" star Philip Seymour Hoffman is widely favoured
to win the best actor Oscar for his staggering title role
in Bennett Miller's biopic, facing off against the
Australian star of "Brokeback," Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger, 26.
Also vying for the award is Joaquin Phoenix, who played
country star Johnny Cash in the biopic "Walk the Line,"
nominated for five Oscars, David Strathairn, for his role
as newsman Ed Murrow in "Good Night," and Terrence Howard
for "Hustle and Flow."
"The Oscars upsets almost always happen in the supporting
actor categories, so we may see the jaw-dropper of the
evening be Jake or Michelle winning for 'Brokeback,'"
O'Neil said.
Most pundits predict that Briton Rachel Weisz will win
the women's award for her role as an activist fighting
the pharmaceutical industry in Kenya in "The Constant
Gardner," with Williams -- Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger's real-life
fiancee -- trailing for her portrayal of his cuckolded
wife in "Brokeback."
Also competing for best supporting actress are Frances
McDormand for "North Country," Amy Adams for "Junebug"
and Catherine Keener, who played writer Harper Lee in
"Capote."
Heartthrob Clooney is tipped to beat out Gyllenhaal and
win best supporting actor for his role as a CIA spy in
the oil industry thriller "Syriana."
Clooney, who is up for three Oscars, also faces
competition from Paul Giammati for "Cinderella Man," Matt
Dillon for "Crash," and William Hurt for "A History of
Violence."
Facing off against frontrunner Ang Lee for best director
are "Capote's" Miller, Haggis for "Crash," Clooney as
director of "Good Night," and Spielberg for "Munich," the
only big-budget film in the major categories.
The politically outspoken Clooney is also nominated for
his best original screenplay for "Good Night," the story
of newsman Ed Murrow's crusade against the repression of
the US and-Communist witch hunt of the 1950s.
The political current running through this year's Oscars
is further stoked by the Palestinian best foreign
language film contender "Paradise Now," about two friends
who become suicide bombers, a nomination that infuriated
many Israelis.
It competes against France's World War I story "Joyeux
Noel," Italy's story of sex abuse, "Don't Tell,"
Germany's "Sophie Scholl -- The Final Days" and South
Africa's crime drama "Tsotsi," by Gavin Hood.
"Oscar has gone very serious this year," Grove said of
the nominees. "In the past, the Oscars were only about
great filmmaking and entertainment, but now its about
passing on an important message."
- - - - - - -
"US and-Communist witch hunt of the 1950s."
Witch hunt? Yeah, I love Coulter and I will use her as a
reference, but hundreds of Communist spies within the
government is hardly a "witch hunt." Russia was only
pointing nuclear arms at us for 40 years and killing
MILLIONS of it's own people, why can't we all be
Communists and spread a Communist agenda? It frustrates
me to the bone sometimes.
I am a young guy, and I find it sad that up until I read
about McCarthy, I seriously thought he was a bad guy.
Because that is what I grew up seeing and learning in
class and the television. This crap just plain infuriates
me!
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:24:31 AM PST by albyjimc2
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-To: albyjimc2
Buttcrack Mountain: Where two grown men can kiss and
fondle each other while stealing 2 hours of your
lifetime.
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:31:25 AM PST by Emmet Fitzhume
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-To: albyjimc2
Great point, too many of our young believe Hollyweird
portrays history correctly. Many can not and will not
read history books.
However, back to Brokenbutt Mountin and where Hollyweird
is shall be fun. They have put themselves between a rock
and upset gayboys. If it does not win they will be
protesting that Hollyweird caved to the religious
fanatics.
By the way have you heard the top five movies nominated
have only been see by 10% of the population. Guess that
shows the rest of us how out of sync we are with those
great minds in Holleyweird.
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:32:26 AM PST by GBoettner
("Peace" Through superior firepower.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-To: albyjimc2
Brokeback, John Stewart, Clooney.
Think I'll watch Russian Cable, in Russian.
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:36:58 AM PST by Semper Paratus
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-To: albyjimc2
> Tension reached fever pitch
Gosh, the suspense is killing me. Which film that I will
never see will win the big awards? Will it be Crash or
will Capote stun us all? How will I make it through the
day?
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:40:03 AM PST by jalisco555
("Dogs look up to us, cats look down on us and pigs
treat us as equals" Winston Churchill)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-To: Semper Paratus
"It rides into the Oscars armed with a leading eight
nominations, including best picture, director, best actor
for Australia's Heath Ledger'>Heath Ledger and best supporting role
nods for Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal and Michelle Williams."
As much as I loved OCTOBER SKY and Gyllenhaal in it , I'm
nor sure I can ever watch it in the same light again .
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:40:15 AM PST by sushiman
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-To: albyjimc2
"Tension reached fever pitch"
Boring crap, as far as I am concerned.
Posted on 03/05/2006 3:44:07 AM PST by Ninian Dryhope
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
End of forwarded messages from:
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1590276/posts
Jai Maharaj
http://tinyurl.com/a5ljc
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti
Hindu Holocaust Museum
http://www.mantra.com/holocaust
Hindu life, principles, spirituality and philosophy
http://www.hindu.org
http://www.hindunet.org
The truth about Islam and Muslims
http://www.flex.com/~jai/satyamevajayate
o Not for commercial use. Solely to be fairly used for the educational
purposes of research and open discussion. The contents of this post may not
have been authored by, and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the
poster. The contents are protected by copyright law and the exemption for
fair use of copyrighted works.
o If you send private e-mail to me, it will likely not be read,
considered or answered if it does not contain your full legal name, current
e-mail and postal addresses, and live-voice telephone number.
o Posted for information and discussion. Views expressed by others are
not necessarily those of the poster who may or may not have read the article.
FAIR USE NOTICE: This article may contain copyrighted material the use of
which may or may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright
owner. This material is being made available in efforts to advance the
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic,
democratic, scientific, social, and cultural, etc., issues. It is believed
that this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included
information for research, comment, discussion and educational purposes by
subscribing to USENET newsgroups or visiting web sites. For more information
go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
If you wish to use copyrighted material from this article for purposes of
your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the
copyright owner.
"Thanatos" wrote in message
news:atropos-5602CE.21455318032008@news.giganews.com...
> In article
> ,
> TranslucentAmoebae wrote:
possession"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/11/mary-ann-busted-with-mary-jane/
responsibility"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/12/it-wasnt-mary-anns-mary-jane/
> difference?
He can't tell you...too drunk.
http://jam.canoe.ca/Movies/2006/01/05/1380146-ap.html
'Brokeback' leads SAG film noms
By DAVID GERMAIN
Screen Actors Guild award nominees
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The cowboy love story Brokeback Mountain led nominees
Thursday for film prizes from actors and directors unions, including
performers Heath Ledger, Michelle Williams and Jake Gyllenhaal and filmmaker
Ang Lee.
Brokeback Mountain earned four Screen Actors Guild nominations: lead actor
for Ledger and supporting actor for Gyllenhaal, who play old shepherding
buddies concealing their homosexual affair from their families; supporting
actress for Williams, who plays Ledger's wife; and best overall performance
by its entire cast.
Lee, whose films include Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon and Hulk, was among
best-filmmaker nominees by the Directors Guild of America. Other directing
nominees were George Clooney for the Edward R. Murrow tale Good Night, and
Good Luck; Paul Haggis for the ensemble drama Crash; Bennett Miller for the
Truman Capote story Capote; and Steven Spielberg for Munich, a thriller
centred on the massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics.
Clooney also earned a supporting-actor nominee from SAG for his role as an
undercover CIA agent in the oil-industry thriller Syriana.
Along with Brokeback Mountain, SAG nominations for best film cast went to
Capote, Crash, Good Night and Good Luck, and Hustle & Flow, the story of a
pimp and drug dealer forging a career as a rap singer.
Joining Ledger in the lead-actor category were Philip Seymour Hoffman as
author Capote in Capote; Russell Crowe as Depression-era boxer Jim Braddock
in Cinderella Man; Joaquin Phoenix as singer Johnny Cash in Walk the Line;
and David Strathairn as newsman Murrow in Good Night and Good Luck.
Lead-actress nominees were Judi Dench as a society dame who starts a nude
stage revue in 1930s London in Mrs. Henderson Presents; Felicity Huffman in
a gender-bending role as a man preparing for sex-change surgery in
Transamerica; Charlize Theron as a woman leading a sexual-harassment lawsuit
at a mining company in North Country; Reese Witherspoon as Cash's soulmate
and eventual wife, June Carter, in Walk the Line; and Ziyi Zhang as a poor
girl who becomes a belle of Japan in Memoirs of a Geisha.
Huffman also was nominated for best actress in a TV comedy series for
Desperate Housewives, a role that earned her an Emmy last year.
Desperate Housewives co-stars Teri Hatcher, Marcia Cross and Eva Longoria,
who along with Huffman took four of the five TV musical or comedy
nominations at the upcoming Golden Globes, all were shut out for guild
nominations. The show's entire cast was honoured with a nomination for
comedy ensemble, along with Arrested Development, Boston Legal, Curb Your
Enthusiasm, Everybody Loves Raymond and My Name Is Earl.
Nominated for TV drama ensemble were The Closer, Grey's Anatomy, Lost, Six
Feet Under and The West Wing.
Policeman roles in Crash - Don Cheadle as a devoted detective, Matt Dillon
as a racist beat cop - earned them supporting-actor nominations. Along with
Gyllenhaal and Clooney, the other nominee was Paul Giamatti as boxer
Braddock's manager in Cinderella Man.
Joining Williams as supporting-actress nominees were Amy Adams as a southern
waif in the comic drama Junebug; Catherine Keener as Capote pal Harper Lee,
author of To Kill a Mockingbird, in Capote; Frances McDormand as an ailing
miner in North Country; and Rachel Weisz as a slain humanitarian-aid worker
in The Constant Gardener.
SAG awards will be presented Jan. 29 in a ceremony televised on TNT and TBS.
The Directors Guild will present its awards Jan. 30. -
On the Net:
Screen Actors Guild: http://www.sagawards.org
Directors Guild of America: http://www.dga.org -
Nominees for Screen Actors Guild Awards
Nominees for the 12th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards:
Movies:
Actor: Russell Crowe, Cinderella Man; Philip Seymour Hoffman, Capote; Heath
Ledger, Brokeback Mountain; Joaquin Phoenix, Walk the Line; David
Strathairn, Good Night, and Good Luck.
Actress: Judi Dench, Mrs. Henderson Presents; Felicity Huffman,
Transamerica; Charlize Theron, North Country; Reese Witherspoon, Walk the
Line; Ziyi Zhang, Memoirs of a Geisha.
Supporting actor: Don Cheadle, Crash; George Clooney, Syriana; Matt Dillon,
Crash; Paul Giamatti, Cinderella Man; Jake Gyllenhaal, Brokeback Mountain.
Supporting actress: Amy Adams, Junebug; Catherine Keener, Capote; Frances
McDormand, North Country; Rachel Weisz, The Constant Gardener; Michelle
Williams, Brokeback Mountain.
Ensemble cast: Brokeback Mountain, Capote, Crash, Good Night, and Good Luck,
Hustle & Flow.
-
Television:
Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries: Kenneth Branagh, Warm Springs;
Ted Danson, Knights of the South Bronx; Ed Harris, Empire Falls; Paul
Newman, Empire Falls; Christopher Plummer, Our Fathers.
Actress in a Television Movie or Miniseries: Tonantzin Carmelo, Into the
West; S. Epatha Merkerson, Lackawanna Blues; Cynthia Nixon, Warm Springs;
Joanne Woodward, Empire Falls; Robin Wright Penn, Empire Falls.
Actor in a Drama Series: Alan Alda, The West Wing; Patrick Dempsey, Grey's
Anatomy; Hugh Laurie, House; Ian McShane, Deadwood; Kiefer Sutherland, 24.
Actress in a Drama Series: Patricia Arquette, Medium; Geena Davis, Commander
in Chief; Mariska Hargitay, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit; Sandra Oh,
Grey's Anatomy; Kyra Sedgwick, The Closer.
Actor in a Comedy Series: Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm; Sean Hayes,
Will & Grace; Jason Lee, My Name Is Earl; William Shatner, Boston Legal;
James Spader, Boston Legal.
Actress in a Comedy Series: Candice Bergen, Boston Legal; Patricia Heaton,
Everybody Loves Raymond; Felicity Huffman, Desperate Housewives; Megan
Mullally, Will & Grace; Mary-Louise Parker, Weeds.
Drama ensemble: The Closer, Grey's Anatomy, Lost, Six Feet Under, The West
Wing.
Comedy ensemble: Arrested Development, Boston Legal, Curb Your Enthusiasm,
Desperate Housewives, Everybody Loves Raymond, My Name Is Earl.
Some tidbits from Jeffrey Wells site (linked to THE DRUDGE REPORT):
Universal's "let Munich speak for itself" campaign...which of course
was Steven Spielberg's concept to begin with (and thereafter conveyed
by his spokesperson Marvin Levy to Universal publicists and Uni's Oscar
consultant Tony Angellotti) was obviously a mistake. Munich doesn't
open until 12.23 and won't have its Academy showing until this weekend,
but the flatline reactions from critics groups and the failure to score
a Best Picture (Drama) Golden Globe nomination means it's all but dead
as a Best Picture Oscar contender. And yet Munich could have fared
better if Spielberg had agreed to make the rounds and spar in the ring.
Oscar prognosticator and Maxim critic Pete Hammond'>Pete Hammond says that "you
really can't just sit back any more...it's a different world and a
different game these days. It's not your father's Oscar campaign any
more. Oscar runs are like Presidential campaigns, and if everyone's
taking a shot at you every five minutes and you don't respond and if
[contrary views] get out there and they hold, it's going to hurt.
Munich is a political film about a political situation, and you've
gotta react. You don't let those kind of things go unanswered." Levy
says "we don't feel in any way that our not getting a Best Picture
nomination from the Golden Globes makes it less likely that we could
[succeed] with the Academy...we could still get that nod." Is Spielberg
going to come out of his shell and start campaigning and mixing it up?
Levy says "we haven't talked to him about that, and we're now
evaluating where we are."
Steven Spielberg is allegedly going to start talking to the press about
Munich (there's an L.A. Times piece in the works) and making the
rounds. And it's not going to make any differ- ence. Spielberg could
stand at the corner of Wilshire and La Peer every night at 7 pm passing
out Munich leaflets and it wouldn't matter. A film-critic friend said
yesterday that "a let-the-movie- speak-for-itself campaign can work for
the right film. The movie just needs to speak to people. Munich didn't.
Million Dollar Baby did. I think Pete Hammond'>Pete Hammond saying 'it's not your
father's Oscar cam- paign any more' is ultimately just excuse-making.
Eastwood did very little press leading up to the nominations last year.
Yeah, he's Clint. He doesn't have to glad-hand. But Million Dollar Baby
copped seven Oscar nominations and four major Oscars last year simply
by being a great movie. If Munich had delivered the goods, we wouldn't
be having this conversation."
[from an item about Paramount purchasing DreamWorks-
I mean, I really don't get it, especially considering the growing
belief that Spielberg is past his prime (Munich certainly doesn't argue
against this thesis) and the fact that he's been talking to friends
about wanting to downshift out of directing down the road and putting
more of his time and energy into altruistic pursuits, like improving
the opportunities for education among third-world peoples.]
"The trouble [with King Kong] is that Jackson, an exuberant director,
fresh from his triumph with the Lord of the Rings trilogy, likes to
shoot up a storm, and here his exuberance spills over into
senselessness," writes David Denby in his New Yorker review. The
Depression background, just a few shots in the original [Kong], is
stretched out here with a montage of shantytowns and strikes; the black
"natives" in Skull Island -- filthy, grotesque and vicious -- seem like
escapees from a sideshow. In the original, Kong defends his blonde
against dinosaurs for just a couple of scenes, but here the fights go
on forever. Repeating what Spielberg has already accomplished in the
Jurassic Park series, Jackson has fallen into a trap. Spectacle must be
more and more astonishing or it creates as much as boredom as wonder,
yet it's not easy, as filmmakers are finding out, to top what others
have delivered and stay within a disciplined narrative."
I know we're all taking off for the holidays, but the failure of major
entertainment reporters to step up and face the reality of the Great
Middle-American Ho-Humming of King Kong is amazing. This is a hugely
surprising story and....zzzzz. Joseph Jones , a reader, says he "saw
King Kong last night at an AMC multiplex here in Tampa. We arrived an
hour prior to the show, expecting a line (I remember arriving an hour
before a showing of Jurassic Park back in 1993 -- and still ending up
near the back of the line and in dreadful off-to-the-side seats) but we
were the first ones there. We were let into the theater a half-hour
before the show, and, by this time, there were maybe 10 people. By the
time the show started, there were plenty of empty seats...still. I
can't say I share your enthusiasm for the film -- I found that first
hour pretty much intolerable, the second hour ok, and the third hour
fantastic. Yet, by that time, I was grateful for this bombastic flick
to finally end. Audience reaction seemed good but not great. I
overheard the group behind me saying that they'd enjoyed other films
this year more (Batman Begins was mentioned as a preferred film). My
companion commented that while there was some truly amazing stuff in
the film, there was also a lot of bad stuff in the film. I imagine
word-of-mouth is going to be mixed."
Reese Witherspoon will win the Golden Globe (Musical Comedy) award for
her Walk the Line performance, and that's cool. But the also-nominated
Sarah Jessica Parker delivers a more skilled and
much-more-difficult-to-pull-off performance in The Family Stone, and
the HFPA members should really think this over before voting.
Witherspoon's June Carter is all about spirit and buoyancy...the
sincerity and level-headedness of a good country girl. But Parker's
performance is a trapeze act, and the more I think about it the more
exceptional it seems.
DreamWorks is seriously pulling out the stops to push Match Point into
Best Picture contention. The more this first-rate moralistic drama gets
seen and talked up, the higher it moves up on everyone's list. (Most
Best Picture nominees say something about life that everyone knows to
be bottom-line true, and Match Point obviously delivers in this
respect.) The key to getting nominated will be whether DreamWorks'
marketing honcho Terry Press and Allen's publicist Leslee Dart can
convince Allen to attend the Golden Globes show on 1.16.05. If he shows
and does the dance (he's an absolute pro at winning people over) and
submits to the process, it could happen.
The San Francisco Film Critics agree with my feelings about Kevin
Costner and his loose-shoes performance in The Upside of Anger (voiced
in the current lead story) by giving him their Best Supporting Actor
award. (Yes!) They also went for Brokeback Mountain for Best Picture,
Heath Ledger for Best Actor, Walk the Line's Reese Witherspoon for Best
Actress, and Junebug's Amy Adams for best Supporting Actress. They also
gave their Best Dcoumentary award to Werner Herzog's Grizzly Man,
which, as mentioned earlier, the Academy's Documentary committee
diodn't even include on its preliminary list of twelve. Grizzly Man
will have its DVD debut on 12.26.
The Producers will earn a projected $159,000 at six theatres this
weekend, or $26,000 a print. Trackers are saying this is D.O.A.
business...finito. A guy keeping tabs on the numbers at New York's
Ziegfeld theatre told a friend he knew The Producers was dead after
Friday's first matinee. Too many bad reviews, too cornball, no under-25
attendance to speak of and Susan Stroman can't direct with any pizazz
or sense of style...down for the count and off to DVD.
Mark L. Falconer-film and video links at
http://hometown.aol.com/mfalc1/links.html
Recent films seen:
KING KONG 2005 ***
THE FAMILY STONE ***
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA **
NARNIA EPISODE ONE ***
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE ***
Some tidbits from Jeffrey Wells site (linked to THE DRUDGE REPORT):
Universal's "let Munich speak for itself" campaign...which of course
was Steven Spielberg's concept to begin with (and thereafter conveyed
by his spokesperson Marvin Levy to Universal publicists and Uni's Oscar
consultant Tony Angellotti) was obviously a mistake. Munich doesn't
open until 12.23 and won't have its Academy showing until this weekend,
but the flatline reactions from critics groups and the failure to score
a Best Picture (Drama) Golden Globe nomination means it's all but dead
as a Best Picture Oscar contender. And yet Munich could have fared
better if Spielberg had agreed to make the rounds and spar in the ring.
Oscar prognosticator and Maxim critic Pete Hammond'>Pete Hammond says that "you
really can't just sit back any more...it's a different world and a
different game these days. It's not your father's Oscar campaign any
more. Oscar runs are like Presidential campaigns, and if everyone's
taking a shot at you every five minutes and you don't respond and if
[contrary views] get out there and they hold, it's going to hurt.
Munich is a political film about a political situation, and you've
gotta react. You don't let those kind of things go unanswered." Levy
says "we don't feel in any way that our not getting a Best Picture
nomination from the Golden Globes makes it less likely that we could
[succeed] with the Academy...we could still get that nod." Is Spielberg
going to come out of his shell and start campaigning and mixing it up?
Levy says "we haven't talked to him about that, and we're now
evaluating where we are."
Steven Spielberg is allegedly going to start talking to the press about
Munich (there's an L.A. Times piece in the works) and making the
rounds. And it's not going to make any differ- ence. Spielberg could
stand at the corner of Wilshire and La Peer every night at 7 pm passing
out Munich leaflets and it wouldn't matter. A film-critic friend said
yesterday that "a let-the-movie- speak-for-itself campaign can work for
the right film. The movie just needs to speak to people. Munich didn't.
Million Dollar Baby did. I think Pete Hammond'>Pete Hammond saying 'it's not your
father's Oscar cam- paign any more' is ultimately just excuse-making.
Eastwood did very little press leading up to the nominations last year.
Yeah, he's Clint. He doesn't have to glad-hand. But Million Dollar Baby
copped seven Oscar nominations and four major Oscars last year simply
by being a great movie. If Munich had delivered the goods, we wouldn't
be having this conversation."
[from an item about Paramount purchasing DreamWorks-
I mean, I really don't get it, especially considering the growing
belief that Spielberg is past his prime (Munich certainly doesn't argue
against this thesis) and the fact that he's been talking to friends
about wanting to downshift out of directing down the road and putting
more of his time and energy into altruistic pursuits, like improving
the opportunities for education among third-world peoples.]
"The trouble [with King Kong] is that Jackson, an exuberant director,
fresh from his triumph with the Lord of the Rings trilogy, likes to
shoot up a storm, and here his exuberance spills over into
senselessness," writes David Denby in his New Yorker review. The
Depression background, just a few shots in the original [Kong], is
stretched out here with a montage of shantytowns and strikes; the black
"natives" in Skull Island -- filthy, grotesque and vicious -- seem like
escapees from a sideshow. In the original, Kong defends his blonde
against dinosaurs for just a couple of scenes, but here the fights go
on forever. Repeating what Spielberg has already accomplished in the
Jurassic Park series, Jackson has fallen into a trap. Spectacle must be
more and more astonishing or it creates as much as boredom as wonder,
yet it's not easy, as filmmakers are finding out, to top what others
have delivered and stay within a disciplined narrative."
I know we're all taking off for the holidays, but the failure of major
entertainment reporters to step up and face the reality of the Great
Middle-American Ho-Humming of King Kong is amazing. This is a hugely
surprising story and....zzzzz. Joseph Jones , a reader, says he "saw
King Kong last night at an AMC multiplex here in Tampa. We arrived an
hour prior to the show, expecting a line (I remember arriving an hour
before a showing of Jurassic Park back in 1993 -- and still ending up
near the back of the line and in dreadful off-to-the-side seats) but we
were the first ones there. We were let into the theater a half-hour
before the show, and, by this time, there were maybe 10 people. By the
time the show started, there were plenty of empty seats...still. I
can't say I share your enthusiasm for the film -- I found that first
hour pretty much intolerable, the second hour ok, and the third hour
fantastic. Yet, by that time, I was grateful for this bombastic flick
to finally end. Audience reaction seemed good but not great. I
overheard the group behind me saying that they'd enjoyed other films
this year more (Batman Begins was mentioned as a preferred film). My
companion commented that while there was some truly amazing stuff in
the film, there was also a lot of bad stuff in the film. I imagine
word-of-mouth is going to be mixed."
Reese Witherspoon will win the Golden Globe (Musical Comedy) award for
her Walk the Line performance, and that's cool. But the also-nominated
Sarah Jessica Parker delivers a more skilled and
much-more-difficult-to-pull-off performance in The Family Stone, and
the HFPA members should really think this over before voting.
Witherspoon's June Carter is all about spirit and buoyancy...the
sincerity and level-headedness of a good country girl. But Parker's
performance is a trapeze act, and the more I think about it the more
exceptional it seems.
DreamWorks is seriously pulling out the stops to push Match Point into
Best Picture contention. The more this first-rate moralistic drama gets
seen and talked up, the higher it moves up on everyone's list. (Most
Best Picture nominees say something about life that everyone knows to
be bottom-line true, and Match Point obviously delivers in this
respect.) The key to getting nominated will be whether DreamWorks'
marketing honcho Terry Press and Allen's publicist Leslee Dart can
convince Allen to attend the Golden Globes show on 1.16.05. If he shows
and does the dance (he's an absolute pro at winning people over) and
submits to the process, it could happen.
The San Francisco Film Critics agree with my feelings about Kevin
Costner and his loose-shoes performance in The Upside of Anger (voiced
in the current lead story) by giving him their Best Supporting Actor
award. (Yes!) They also went for Brokeback Mountain for Best Picture,
Heath Ledger for Best Actor, Walk the Line's Reese Witherspoon for Best
Actress, and Junebug's Amy Adams for best Supporting Actress. They also
gave their Best Dcoumentary award to Werner Herzog's Grizzly Man,
which, as mentioned earlier, the Academy's Documentary committee
diodn't even include on its preliminary list of twelve. Grizzly Man
will have its DVD debut on 12.26.
The Producers will earn a projected $159,000 at six theatres this
weekend, or $26,000 a print. Trackers are saying this is D.O.A.
business...finito. A guy keeping tabs on the numbers at New York's
Ziegfeld theatre told a friend he knew The Producers was dead after
Friday's first matinee. Too many bad reviews, too cornball, no under-25
attendance to speak of and Susan Stroman can't direct with any pizazz
or sense of style...down for the count and off to DVD.
Mark L. Falconer-film and video links at
http://hometown.aol.com/mfalc1/links.html
Recent films seen:
KING KONG 2005 ***
THE FAMILY STONE ***
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA **
NARNIA EPISODE ONE ***
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE ***
GoldenDally wrote:
> catmom wrote:
> Amy Adams from last season is pregnant. She was on Family Fued a
> couple of weeks ago with other Idol contestants.
Amy had her baby, a boy named Harrison, almost 3 months ago. Julia
DeMateo, the hairdresser from season 2, is pregnant and due in July.
Maybe it was her? Bo Bice's girlfriend is pregnant, but I don't think
they showed her.
Amanda
catmom wrote:
> are those eliminated finalist in the front row? One of them looks
> pregnant...
I haven't seen it yet because I'm on the West coast, but I know that
Amy Adams from last season is pregnant. She was on Family Fued a
couple of weeks ago with other Idol contestants.
gd
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1487985/20040527/american_idol_12_finalists
.jhtml?headlines=true
Clay Aiken proved you don't have to win "American Idol" to succeed in
entertainment, and now a number of former contestants are showing you don't
even need to make the final two.
From the first season, Tamyra Gray, who co-wrote what will be Fantasia
Barrino's first single, released her long-awaited debut album Tuesday. RJ
Helton has a hit Christian album and just signed with Beyoncé's father,
manager Mathew Knowles. Vanessa Olivarez, meanwhile, is playing the lead in
the Toronto version of the Broadway musical "Hairspray."
Kimberley Locke, from season two, is climbing the charts with her debut LP,
Joshua Gracin has a June release scheduled and Kimberly Caldwell recently
signed with Randy Jackson and songwriter Diane Warren's new label.
Complete 'Idol' Coverage
" 'American Idol' is a great vehicle to get you in front of people," Gray
said backstage at Wednesday's finale, where she was ushered from one major
media outlet to another. "You don't really lose. There's no such thing.
That's the beauty of it."
The finalists from season three (minus Matt Rogers and Leah LaBelle) will
spend their summer on the "American Idol" tour (see "Don't Expect To Hear
'She Bangs' On This Year's 'Idol' Tour"), but you can bet Fantasia and Diana
DeGarmo won't be the only ones sneaking in studio time and auditions.
In fact, each of the contestants has something up their sleeve.
Jasmine Trias is interested in acting, but will make a record first. "I want
to do a little bit of pop and R&B, like a Tamyra Gray type of thing," she
said. "I want to go international with it."
La Toya London will audition for movies and record an album. "I don't really
want to put a label on it, R&B, pop or anything," she said of her music. "I
just want to do music that really hits the soul. I love Sade's style, the
different musical instruments and the mellow vibe, music that you can just
ride in the car and sit with your loved one and make some babies to."
George Huff will hit the studio. "I'll do classic soul type of music," he
said. "I even thought about doing what I've been doing in the competition,
that is to do classics of every [genre] that [soulful] way. It's really
weird, but it's a good idea."
John Stevens is splitting his meetings between jazz labels and colleges. "I
could see myself on [Blue Note, Norah Jones' label], but for right now I'm
concentrating on school and hopefully getting accepted into college, like
Berklee College of Music or something like that."
Jennifer Hudson wants to follow in the footsteps of a solo Beyoncé. "I do
not do groups," she said. "I would like [my album] to be something
inspirational, gospel or something sentimental, something that means
something, something with a message."
Jon Peter Lewis has Broadway and big-screen aspirations, but his first
priority is finishing an album. "I'm doing a lot of songwriting," he said.
"And I'm laying down some tracks, mostly in my own home recording studio for
now. And then later on, who knows, we'll see."
Camile Velasco is moving to Los Angeles with hopes of hitting the club
circuit, possibly with a hip-hop group a la the Fugees. "I definitely will
do more of a hip-hop or urban song style," she said. "I'd like to make it as
an artist onstage, but if I can't do it onstage, then definitely behind the
scenes."
Amy Adams is contemplating making a country record. "It's something I'm
looking into because I felt good doing [the Dixie Chicks' 'Sin Wagon']," she
said. "It was something right up my alley where I didn't even feel afraid.
... I feel like I'm on top of my game and when I do come around it's going
to be a bigger and better thing."
Matt Rogers is auditioning for TV and movie roles, including a movie
starring Samuel L. Jackson and Eugene Levy. "My plans were to get enough
publicity where I could use it as a stepping-stone into acting," he said. "I
have several readings ... and someone even said that I might be up for Bob
Barker's job on 'The Price Is Right' when he retires. If I do music, it
would be in country music, which is pretty freaking ironic that I got
eliminated during country week. But country music has always been my first
love and I would say I see more promise for me in acting and less promise in
music."
Leah Labelle is keeping her options open. "Paula and Randy both told me that
this is just the beginning and that so much is gonna come out of this for
me," she said. "So many doors have opened. ... I'm going to see what I can
do to start making my dream come true."
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
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