Tuesday, 9 September 2008

Javier & Penelope's Sexy Getaway


The yoke that vacations together girdle together! Spanish hotties Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem are manifestly still going strong after a late week-long trip to the super-exclusive Cayo Espanto, a private island resort off the coast of Belize (Tiger Woods is some other famous node.)



The Vicky Cristina Barcelona co-stars unbroken to themselves, went scuba diving, had a picnic for two on the beach and used a helicopter to get to and from their excursions.



"They enjoyed their privacy," a source tells OK!.



Although the sizzling brace have never confirmed their romance, they've been coupled since last year. They had tongues wagging even more when they were spotted acquiring close on a holiday in the Maldives in October. Since then they've been snapped being romanticistic everywhere from NYC to Nice, kissing, holding workforce and playing like, well, a duet.



While all questions related to their romance were off-limits during press appearances for Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona, their offscreen performance as a duo in beloved seems to be mirroring the white chemistry they share onscreen.



Muy caliente!










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Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Amy shaken, not deterred

AMY Winehouse is convinced her rejected James Bond theme is better than the one chosen by movie bosses, and is plannig to release her own song to prove her point.


Winehouse - who worked on the track with super producer Mark Ronson - is keen to show her effort is better than Alicia Keys and Jack White�s collaboration, which was eventually chosen as the theme tune for Quantum of Solace.

Winehouse told Britain�s New! magazine: �I want to prove they have made a big mistake. I don�t think they could have waited a bit. If they want a worldwide hit, I have them all up here.

�I guess they are going for clean-cut and boring. When I do release mine - and I am tempted to do it on the same day - this would be the bigger hit. If they change their minds, I am waiting!�

Winehouse was the original choice for the prestigious honour, but sessions between the troubled singer and Ronson broke down, with Ronson saying she "wasn't ready to record music�.

The Rehab star then went into the studio with producer Salaam Remi, but her managers later admitted it was "unlikely" she would perform the Bond track.

Ronson recently revealed their pair were upset after failing to land the Bond song.

He said: "It's really disappointing, of course it is. But at the time Amy was going through some s**t, and now she's doing great, so who cares if we missed the Bond boat.

"It's fantastic to see her back on track again. We're both gutted we missed out on 007, but there will be other great opportunities for us."


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Sunday, 10 August 2008

"Shrek" reaches a new stage

You may well be among the hordes world Health Organization have seen the blockbuster movie "Shrek," the first in a series of popular DreamWorks animated films about an antisocial monster who finds love and friendship.



And peradventure you likewise read "Shrek!" the whimsical storybook by the inimitable cartoonist and author William Steig, which the picture show was based on.



But Shrek's fairy-tale world is organism retooled and transformed one time again, this time into a fully grown Broadway musical.



The well-hyped production begins previews for its world-premiere run at Seattle's 5th Avenue Theatre on Thursday, and it moves on to the Great White Way in November. And theatrical designer Tim Hatley promises that, dissimilar some extravaganzas in the long parade of alive movie-musical knockoffs aimed at Broadway, DreamWorks Theatricals' live "Shrek" will not be a submissive replica of its celluloid ancestor.



"Theater is a identical distinct thing," stresses the lanky, gregarious Brit, world Health Organization is in Seattle working exhaustively on the musical. "It happens live, in front of an audience, in a finite space. My job is to reinvent the 'Shrek' history for the theater � not to copy the film."



Big ol' Broadway eyeglasses take a long time to pull together, and Hatley has been labouring for 2 years on devising costumes and sets for "Shrek." He swears that to stay on track with his own ideas, "I haven't regular gone back to look on the motion-picture show in the last sestet months."



But he and his collaborators ar not reconstituting "Shrek" from whole cloth, so to speak. The lead fictional character is still the swelled, bald, green guy (played here by Tony Award nominee Brian D'Arcy James) with sticking out, tubular ears.



And he's the same fussy swamp puppet who falls for a princess, and pals up � reluctantly at first � with a smart-mouthed but loyal donkey.



Retooling a big-screen hit



If you're inquisitive whether Broadway really of necessity another radio set culled from another make animated G-rated flick, you're not alone.



But as a movie and book, "Shrek" exerted astonishingly wide invoke among adults and children. And, contends Caro Newling of Neal Street Productions (DreamWorks' theatrical co-producer), the live show aims to bridge the gap betwixt faithful court and saucy, new composition � while further "illuminating" the beloved characters via music.



The musical has a hot lester Willis Young theater music director (Jason Moore, of "Avenue Q"), a new script more faithful to Steig (written by playwright David Lindsay-Abaire) and a xII original songs composed in a variety of styles by Jeanine Tesori ("Caroline, or Change"). Meanwhile, Hatley's trans-Atlantic squad of artisans has concocted hundreds of new costumes and scenic elements.



Hatley has been gloomy this screen-to-stage road ahead. Topping a design r�sum� that includes operas, movies ("Closer," "Notes on a Scandal") and plays in London and New York (he won a Tony for design a revival meeting of Noel Coward's "Private Lives"), he contributed right to the Broadway smash "Spamalot," based on the film comedy "Monty Python and the Holy Grail."



His eye-popping howler of cutout landscapes, pissed sight gags and gloriously fake Middle Ages geared wheel helped typeset the zany tone of "Spamalot," which came to Seattle's Paramount Theatre final year.



It was also an effective audition for the role of "Shrek" room decorator, notes Newling. "We cherished someone from the set-and-costumes school, world Health Organization could give us the whole picture. Tim is a very creative homo who does both things brilliantly."



Hatley calls the sophisticated computer life in the "Shrek" films "gorgeous, but it's non theatrical." It was his charge to envision the same characters being played credibly by live actors, who take the air, talk, peach and dance in real time.



The retooling included Shrek himself. "He needs to be lovable, human, agile," suggested Hatley. "It's a big terrain he has to cover onstage, and it wouldn't work if we made him super-big, with the actor wear stilts."



Instead, he and his team crafted a "film-quality prosthetic device" � a head mask that transforms James into the ogre.



For Donkey (played by Chester Gregory II), a full-body costume was in order. It lets the role player "go down on all fours, or stand erect," points out Hatley. "And the fur is textile threaded with venetian-blind corduroys, to make it swing and go, giving it more life."



For Princess Fiona (Sutton Foster, a co-star of Broadway's "Young Frankenstein," which had its pre-Broadway premiere in Seattle), Hatley retooled the film's casual green dress (made in different sizes to accommodate the lady's quick-changing girth) and a wedding gown.



"The green dress has a beautifully detailed velvet bodice," Hatley reports. "But this is not fashion, it's theater. So it's all about textures and how it moves under the lights." (The show's lighting designer is another respected Brit, Hugh Vanstone.)



Another challenge: garb for the sawed-off rival Lord Farquaad. It has to accommodate an actor (Christopher Sieber, a "Spamalot" alum) who plays the entire part on his knees.



Not exactly a monster budget



The level of labor-intensive detail Hatley canful lavish on the "Shrek" visuals is rare, beyond the world of Broadway and opera. But spell this is an expensive venture (the producers won't specify, simply say the budget is "south" of the $20 million exhausted on "Young Frankenstein"), the designer still had to economize.



"It was fine, because I care simplicity and I hail from a philosophy of creating good theater that doesn't let to toll gazillions," says Hatley, world Health Organization has worked frequently with the leading British data-based troupe Theatre Complicite, and at the esteemed, nonprofit organization Royal National Theatre.



But zilch looks bargain basement in the atomic pile of colored costume and puppet sketches for the dozens of characters in the musical, played by a draw of about two twelve performers.



Since Shrek's turf is "invaded" by exiled song and dance figures, Hatley also created fanciful togs for a Peter Pan; a Pinocchio; a gelt plum sprite (with a tutu of sparkly blue leaves); iII blind mice ("they're a bit 'Dreamgirls,' in evening gowns"); and a classic, pointy-nosed wicked witch.



As for the scene (built, part by piece, by artisans in London, Seattle and New York), it includes an flowery, 16-foot mirror; a enceinte tree decorated with fluorescent spiders; and a giant, fierce and flirtatious dragon.



The latter is a creature (constructed from carbon-fiber basketball covered with a semitransparent pink material) that can buoy belch smoking. And it takes trine actors lurking inside to manipulate her.



Overall, praises Newling, "Tim has come up with a fluency of stage spoken communication that isn't just about bringing a lot of set pieces on and off. The design truly morphs, it moves. It is truly light on its feet."



But the London-based Hatley says he has another agenda, too. "My main goal as a designer is always to support the story and the actors," he emphasizes. "For me, the level of 'Shrek' is simple, but it has a lot of meaning and a bunch of marrow. What I do has to be part of that."



Misha Berson: mberson@seattletimes.com










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Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Razorlight Working On Third Album

Razorlight have started working on their third long-player and already have an albums worth of material written.


Speaking to the Daily Star, bassist Carl Delamo says: "We've got 12 songs that we could easily lay down now. Two or three months ago we didn't really have any of the songs written properly, nor had we played the ideas together. Now it's coming together really well."


One new song, named 'Frequency', was previewed at a solo show by drummer Andy Burrows, this weekend at London's Union Chapel.


The last album from the band was 2006's 'Razorlight' and the follow-up - which will be their third full-lengther - will be released later this year.




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Thursday, 19 June 2008

Tony-winner Patti LuPone working on memoir

NEW YORK — Broadway star Patti LuPone, known for her Tony Award-winning roles in "Gypsy" and "Evita," is working on a memoir, tentatively scheduled to be released in 2010 by Harmony Books, an imprint of Random House Inc.



The book is currently untitled. Financial details were not available.



According to the publisher, the actress will write about her whole life, "From her beginnings in Northport, Long Island, where she discovered that being onstage was the one place she couldn't get into trouble, she takes us on the roller-coaster of professional highs ... and emotional lows (her humiliating firing from 'Sunset Boulevard,' nightclub work in the Catskills to pay the bills)."



LuPone won her first Tony in 1980 for playing Argentine leader Eva Perón in the Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice musical "Evita." She won her second Tony on Sunday night for her performance in the Broadway revival of "Gypsy." She plays Madame Rose, the driven stage mother who pushes her daughters into show business, particularly the ugly duckling Louise who becomes the legendary stripper Gypsy Rose Lee.



LuPone's other stage credits include the original London company of "Les Miserables" and Broadway revivals of "Sweeney Todd" and "Anything Goes." She has also appeared in such films as "Witness," "Driving Miss Daisy" and "Summer of Sam," as well as the television series "Life Goes On."








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Saturday, 14 June 2008

Doherty spends $10,000 on a portrait of ex girlfriend

Washington (ANI): British rocker Pete Doherty has splashed out 10,000 dollars on a portrait of ex girlfriend Kate Moss. The Babyshambles frontman was snapped buying the oil painting from artist Sam Shaker in London. Shaker was commissioned by Doherty to make the painting back in 2007 when he and the British supermodel were still together and very much in love, reports Contactmusic. However, he never paid the 600 dollars that Shaker charged for the painting titled 'Beauty' and the painter decided to put it on auction. That's when Doherty stepped in and decided to pay off the artist to claim the portrait.


Sunday, 8 June 2008

Dina & Ali Watching 'Lindsay Lohan Sex Tape' Angers Fans

Viewers of the show Living Lohan have complained after Dina Lohan showed her younger daughter Ali a sex tape of a Lindsay look-a-like doing some naughty things.

The reality show, which chronicles manager Dina trying to break her 14-year old into the industry, premiered this past weekend.

However, footage of Mama Lohan watching explicit material when Ali walks in and asks, "Is that Lindsay?" has outraged many viewers on various internet chat rooms.

One wrote: "Last time I checked, allowing a child to watch porn is against the law."

Another asked, "Does anyone besides me think it's weird that Dina showed her daughter (such images)?"

Pat Truman, the former Justice Department Chief of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, tells Page Six: "It's inappropriate but probably not illegal.

If there was a situation where a mother was regularly exposing her child to pornography, it would be a concern for state child welfare agencies."