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REVISITING THE
STARS, THE GOSSIPS AND RUMORS OF THE YEAR.
MORE NEWS NEXT
By Shoshanna
Rosenstein, Shoshanna Rosenberg,
Josephine Leblanc,
Carmen Ortega, Louise
Bertrand, Alain Berger, Simone Leclerc, Sylvia Rodriguez,
and Roland de La Porte
Madonna
denies being anti-Bush
US star Madonna has denied accusations that
she is anti-George Bush.
The video
for American Life sees Madonna throwing hand grenades to the
beat of the music cut with images of victims of war. The sentiment
reflected in the video caused some commentators to say Madonna was
anti-Bush and pro-Iraq. "I understand that there have been reports
about my upcoming video American Life in the media - much of which is
inaccurate," she said in a statement on her website. "I am not
anti-Bush. I am not pro-Iraq. I am pro-peace," she said. She said she
felt "lucky to be an American citizen for many reasons - one of which
is the right to express myself freely, especially in my work". The
star is one of a growing number of celebrities who have expressed
their concern about the looming war with Iraq. She said her video
tried to depict the illusion of the American dream and the values held
by her country. "I don't expect everyone to agree with my point of
view," she added. "I am grateful to have the freedom to express these
feelings and that's how I honor my country."
Photo:
Madonna is married to director Guy Ritchie
The
American Life video was shot in Los Angeles and features Madonna
dressed as a superhero on a fashion show runway. "Starting as a runway
show of couture army fatigues, the fashion show escalates into a mad
frenzy depicting the catastrophic repercussions and horror of war,"
Madonna's spokeswoman Liz Rosenberg said. "This will be a stirring and
extremely controversial piece of work from the artist who created the
medium of the small film set to music," she added. The American Life
single is out in March and will be included on her forthcoming album
due for release in April. Madonna recently issued a denial that she
was expecting another child with husband Guy Ritchie after a UK
magazine reported she had been spotted at a birth clinic. She has
complained to a press watchdog over the inaccurate article.
Alanis denies gaffe in Peru
Rock
singer Alanis Morissette has denied saying "thank you Brazil" at the
end of a concert in Peru.
The Canadian star said it was "entirely untrue" that she had got the
countries confused and her words were misheard at the gig in the
Peruvian capital, Lima. On her website, she said she told 14,000 fans
last month: "Thank you, bless you" - not "thank you Brazil". The
singer previously blamed the slip on being drunk, saying "must have
slipped out". But now the star said she felt compelled to set the
record straight after the story traveled round "at such speed with and
such tenacity." The singer-songwriter admitted to fans on the site
that she "can be a flake like the best of them."
'Comedic':
"I can claim that I'm
disoriented, discombobulated, drunk, flakey and all of the cousins of
those words in moments throughout my life," she said. Morissette said
she had no intention of commenting on the issue at first "because it
was comedic to me". The 29-year-old has been touring South America
promoting her latest album Feast on Scraps. Critics made light of her
gaffe and praised the Peru show. "These are mistakes, that have
already been forgiven after a magical night on which we witnessed a
true rock star," said one local paper.
Triumphant
comeback for reunited Duran
Duran Duran were given a rapturous
reception at their first UK gig for 18 years, which featured the
band's original line-up.
Photo:
Duran Duran's John
Taylor (left) and Simon Le Bon in action at their UK comeback concert
Reunions often sound good in
theory, but don't always live up to high expectations. But as a loyal
Duranie, I had high hopes that my pop heroes from 1983 could pull it
off in 2003 - as did the other 1,999 people at north London's Forum on
Tuesday night. Despite rave reviews of their recent comeback shows in
Japan and the US, the UK would be the acid test.

Photo:
The
original Duran Duran line-up as they looked in the 80s.
The atmosphere was electric inside the venue - this was our chance to
see the real thing, the five of them back together on one stage. The
venue filled up with groups of nostalgic 30-somethings eagerly
flicking through shiny silver programs, and several had already put on
their newly acquired tour T-shirts. When the band finally came on
stage, it was just as I imagined it would be - helped since they have
aged gracefully and kept all their hair. Simon Le Bon was in nostalgic
mode too, kitted out in a white jacket and shoes, while Roger Taylor
seemed to be wearing the same style of short-sleeved white top I
remember from 20 years ago After the odd shaky moment early on - Le
Bon was almost drowned out by the rest of the band on a few songs - it
all clicked into place and the Duran magic of old was very much in
evidence. During the second half, which included Notorious, Wild
Boys, Careless Memories and Rio - each song greeted with wild cheers -
the boys were on a roll, to the crowd's delight. At the end, the band
beamed at each other as they took a bow. Le Bon seemed overwhelmed as
he held his hand to his chest, before waving to the audience one last
time. Even the most hardened critic would have to admit that although
they may never have been a fan of Duran's music, this was nonetheless
a triumphant return.
Marvin Gaye's most sensual release
gets a reappraisal with this special edition of his 1976 album I
Want You. This extended version includes previously unreleased
takes, alternate and instrumental mixes and snippets of the sensual
love songs that were becoming Gaye's forte in the latter half of the
Seventies. Many of the tracks on the original release had already been
recorded and released by label-mate
Leon Ware. Motown boss Berry Gordy
offered them up to Gaye, thinking they offered a suitable vehicle for
his singular vocal talents.
And make the material his own he surely did. The very real target of
his affections was his then wife Jan, whom he conspicuously refers to
on the record. It's near the knuckle, personal stuff; no surprise,
Marvin was never one to shy away from baring his soul. What delights
the most is the chance to hear familiar anthems from brand new
perspectives; the stripped down a cappella version of "I Want
You" makes the already suggestive grooves even more sensual. Marvin,
along with fellow love god
Barry White (and the frequent power
cuts of the decade), has been blamed for the 1970's pronounced spikes
in birth rates. Listening to this you can hear why. The oft quoted
myth of Marvin recording most of these vocals laid out on a studio
sofa gains further credence from the alternative version of "I Wanna
Be Where You Are." It features different lyrics from the original, and
is delivered in such a laid back & fragile manner that the great man
sounds on the verge of a very deep sleep. One criticism of this
'deluxe' release is that the instrumental versions of some of
the tracks, lacking Marvin's expressive voice, verge on the mildly
bland easy-listening. But, taken as a whole, this collection is a real
treat for aficionados and newcomers alike. It gives us a chance to
see Marvin's complex and contradictory character in even more detail
than before.- By Greg Boramann and J. Willson.

Photo: Sharon
Stone.
Sharon
Stone is a cougar on the war-path. The recently separated commando
queen is looking to jumpstart her sputtering career Demi Moore-style,
setting her sights on Goldie Hawn's 27-year-old son Oliver Hudson. A
friend claims "She's looking for her Ashton. She knows Demi has got
acres of coverage since taking up with her toyboy." Stone may have a
hard time duplicating Demi's hype. First of all, the reverse
May-December is already getting tired and secondly, Stone is older and
less hot than the newly-remodeled Moore. In order to make a bigger
splash, she needs to go bolder. Forget Hudson and make a play for
Dewey from Malcolm in the Middle.
Here's some completely useless and shallow information: If you want
hair like Jennifer Aniston's, just pick up a US$100 bottle of shampoo
that's made with a curious blend of champagne, caviar and truffles.
(Ironically, these are all things that are not allowed on any
celebrity's Zone diet.) If you don't make a million dollars an episode
and can't afford the shampoo, a cheaper alternative may be to just
stick your head into a supermodel's toilet bowl. Apparently this
concoction ensures rapid growth. Speaking of concoctions, it makes you
wonder if she ever puts it down Brad Pitt's pants. The shampoo, that
is.

Photo:
Enrique Iglesias
Enrique
Iglesias is on a roll. He recently padded his bank account by
beating out J.Lo and Justin Timberlake to become the
mole-less face of Pepsi and he's been well-received on the big screen
opposite Johnny Depp and Antonio Banderas in the
kick-ass blockbuster Once Upon a Time in Mexico. If recent quotes are
any indication though, his good fortune may be going to his mole-free
head. The spawn of Julio recently revealed, "I haven't found a
girlfriend I want to be with more than a week at a time and I haven't
had a steady girlfriend for the last five years." That may be news to
Anna Kournikova. What happens after one week? Does the Latin
lothario have his women removed like an unwanted mole? (Sorry, the
mole makes me
giggle.)
Photo:
Penélope Cruz.
Penélope
Cruz has recently been forced into spin duty to combat rumours
that her relationship with Tom Cruise is kaput. In a recent
interview Cruz assured inquiring minds with the soothing words
"everything is fine." Well, that's a ringing endorsement if I've ever
heard one. I don't want to seem skeptical but lately Tom and Penélope
have been seen together as often as Clark Kent and Superman.
Kevin
Costner raised a few eyebrows with a recent declaration that he
would never compromise his artistic integrity by making a sequel. "I
have not made Tin Cup 2 or Bull Durham 2 or Dancing with Wolves
Twice... I won't spit on my life to get a big fat hit." It's true --
Kevin's cinematic résumé boasts remarkable range. I mean he makes
sports movies AND westerns. (Please, Tin Cup was Bull Durham on a golf
course and Open Range should be called Dances Without Oscars.)
Photos:
Cindy Crawford.
Cindy
Crawford was recently asked to remove her US$900 Jimmy Choo shoes
while going through security at JFK airport. Somehow, amidst all the
metal detecting and whatnot, the high-priced heels went AWOL. While I
support stepping-up security in the fight against terrorism, this
instance seems to be a bit much. I can assure you that no woman would
ever try to set fire to $900 shoes
ANNE MURRAY CALLED
AND SHE WANTS HER HAIR BACK
Good news
for anglophones -- Céline Dion's next album will be en Français.
1 fille & 4 types will be her first French disc in four years. Also,
having suffered a hernia, Dion no longer does her flying stunt during
her Vegas show; a body double now takes flight. Actually, I'm not
surprised the songbird has grounded herself. Hell, I don't even buy
her when she belts out "I drove all night" in her Chrysler ads --
mainly because she didn't even walk down the aisle at her wedding. She
was carried Cleopatra-style behind a pair of camels. The zoological
allusion seems apt. I'm convinced she's morphing into one of Siegfried
& Roy's white tigers.
NEW RISING STARS OF THE
YEAR: SUSAN BARTH, JOAN BENDER
 Photos
from L to R: #1.Suzan Barth. #2. Joan Bender.
This year,
the pop music scene witnessed the ascension of new superb talents
who are on their way to fame and fortune: Susan Barth who has
just released her third CD "Wonderland", a bouquet of well crafted
songs on the bohemian side with a tender touch of romance and
nonchalant flair. Barth's sparkling talent is obvious. Expect to
hear a lot about this rising star. She is stormy, funky, upbeat and
down-to earth without relinquishing style and elegance; Joan
Bender, a classically trained singer, actress and musician
released a brand new CD "Stars Eyes", a collection of all time
standards, as well as Bender's own composition. The CD reflects
vocal virtuosity, elegance and a captivating human warmth.
Joan Bender arrived in New York with one suitcase and
plans to pursue musical theatre, but then it dawned on her that jazz
could be a full-time pursuit. In college, Joan had heard a CD by
the legendary Blossom Dearie, and when she got to New York, the
first performer she went to see live was Blossom Dearie. Hearing
Dearie live only confirmed what Joan had learned from the records –
that this was a great artist. Joan immediately bought every piece
of product Dearie was selling on the gigs, and Dearie was intrigued
by this young girl who was so taken by her work. Blossom took Joan
to dinner, and the two have been friends ever since. And now, the
stunning and multi talented Joan Bender is taking New York by storm.
Joan is a sweet and considerate person. But watch out, this young
star is a volcano, for Joan is also an activist in the cause of
women's rights in the music world. Joan organized the first protest
of the policies of Jazz at Lincoln Center with regards to the hiring
of women (or lack thereof) in the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra.
Cites Bender, "Some people misunderstood what the rally meant and
thought of it as an attack against Wynton Marsalis. If we didn't
like Wynton, why would we want to play with him in the band then? It
is true Wynton decides who gets to be in the band, and we hope he
will consider our message, as well as every other bandleader in the
country! Our message is that women musicians, be it if they're a
trumpet player or saxophone player, want to be included in the world
of professional big bands and jazz everywhere. We held a rally at
the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra's fifth annual benefit gala
because it was appropriate.
CLEAN UP YOUR ACTING
Photo:
Tara Reid. Tara Reid has lashed out at what she sees as a
Hollywood double standard. While Reid has been forced to work
desperately to reform her (rather well-deserved) party-girl image,
she's annoyed to see Colin Farrell's roguish behaviour rewarded. "You
watch that guy smoking endless cigarettes, every other word is f**k,
f**k, f**k, 'I'll screw any girl in the world.' If I did that I'd be
blackballed out of the industry." You know, Reid may have a point. Of
course Tinseltown's selective prejudice is based on talent, not
gender. Farrell is a gifted actor whereas Reid's last two credits are
National Lampoon's Van Wilder and My Boss's Daughter. Tara, make a
decent movie and you too can sleep with as many women as you want.
Speaking of
Demi, the dark angel has decided to furnish her new US$4.8
million love palace with furniture from IKEA. While this may sound
like she's going cheap on the décor, I think Demi's just a hopeless
romantic. Flipping through the IKEA catalogue must remind her of
Ashton -- pages and pages of unpolished wood.
IS HE USING
JAILBAIT ON THAT HOOK?
At my
editor's behest, I've made a conscious effort to stay away from all
things MJ, but I just had to share this little nugget. The onetime
King of Pop was recently spotted arriving at an airport in Santa
Barbara wearing pyjamas and carrying an umbrella, a hand fan and a
fishing rod. It's as though the cast of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
got a hold of Huck Finn.
Photo:
Cuba Gooding Jr. Academy Award-winner (yes, it's true) Cuba Gooding
Jr. was recently spotted shopping at a Costco in Van Nuys, CA,
bragging to fellow bargain-seekers that his membership card was a
present from Jerry Maguire costar Tom Cruise. Hey Cuba,
maybe the cashier at Costco isn't the only one you should be reminding
that you once starred in an A-list blockbuster. While you're hauling
that lifetime supply of mayonnaise home to the wife and kids, you
might also want to give your agent a gentle reminder lest the
producers of Snow Dogs 2 or Another Boat Trip come a-calling.
SMALL THINGS
COME WITH BIG PACKAGES?
Verne
Troyer's little heart was broken after his engagement to 6-foot
tall model/yoga instructor Genevieve Gallen was abruptly called
off. Apparently the relationship fell apart because the mismatched
couple couldn't handle the scrutiny of the curious media. The media
aren't the only ones who are cu-rious. Let's see -- he's a mere 32
inches (vertically) and despite her amazonian stature she claims to
have been completely satisfied in the boudoir. How does that work? Was
she using him like a loofah?
Remake of a horror movie. Horror turns into
fun??

Photo:
Jessica Biel (R) stars in the 2003 remake of Texas Chainsaw
Massacre.
If
slasher movies have said it once, they've said it a hundred times:
When you're young, lost and weary and you need a helping hand ...
the other hand is going to be holding a hook, machete or chain saw.
It's the standard warning preached in most survival-horror flicks,
starting with The Texas Chainsaw Massacre in 1974 and retold in the
likes of Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Halloween and
the more recent Jeepers Creepers. The tale has been repeated so
endlessly -- and with so many sequels -- why would anyone want to
remake one of the originals? Marcus Nispel, the director of New Line
Cinema's 2003 version of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, has a simple
answer: repetition is part of the fun. He described the slasher
genre as modern folk tales, simple yarns meant to be told and told
again, adding detail and embellishment as they grow. So why not pass
the Massacre onto a new generation? "This is storytelling in the
vein of Hansel and Gretel. It's age-old," said Nispel, a first-time
feature director whose previous work includes music videos for Janet
Jackson and Faith No More. "The metaphor is a simple one," he added.
"If you're a kid or young adult in some hick town, some one-horse
town, and parents are suppressing you and all you can do is get
away, how do you rebel?" While the original was a $140,000 project
that built an unexpected cult following the remake, starring former
7th Heaven actress Jessica Biel, retains the low-budget flavour,
costing a low $9.5 million US. Biel plays one of five stranded
youths who become the prey of a deformed lunatic who repeatedly
fails to follow proper safety guidelines when utilizing
tree-trimming equipment. Bloody horror films remain so popular --
with the recent box-office success of Jeepers Creepers 2, Freddy vs.
Jason and Cabin Fever -- because teenagers and 20-somethings have a
seemingly primal fascination with death. "It just seems so lowbrow,
but there's a visceral thing to it. It hits you in the gut," said
producer Michael Bay, who is best known for directing Pearl Harbour
and Armageddon. Maybe these movies are metaphors for growing up and
breaking free from the horrors of adolescence ... or maybe they're
just excuses for two people to get close on a first date. "In the
movies, you watch these couples just grab onto each other," Bay
said, laughing. Most long-time horror fans acknowledge that slasher
films follow the same pattern. But Michelle Inman, a 24-year-old
slasher-film aficionado and student at California State University,
Northridge, said it's the little variations that make a thriller
great.
"I like
to see people get out of situations, because sometimes they do. And
then if they don't get out of it, I like to think 'What would I have
done differently?' " she said, adding with a laugh: "It's kind of
neat to take note in case you ever come across a psycho." Inman
loved the original Chainsaw, but said she wasn't interested in a
faithful remake. She was more curious about the alterations: in the
remake, the hitchhiker at the beginning is a victim, not a weirdo;
the audience gets to see Leatherface's real mug; and there's a
larger family of sickos. The original featured a gritty, gruesome
visage of deranged murder that lived up to its stark name. It helped
define the slasher genre and stunned unprepared sneak-preview
audiences -- some reportedly staggered out of theatres sick.
Capitalizing on Halloween and the new remake, a special edition DVD
release of the 1974 thriller debuted Tuesday. Tobe Hooper, the
original's director, refused to be interviewed for this story, but
has said previously that he too was inspired by folk tales -- and by
shopping in a hardware store. He fused his chain-saw motif to the
true-life story of Ed Gein, the Wisconsin grave robber and murderer
whose 1957 exploits, which involved cannibalism and sewing clothes
out of human skin, inspired the Alfred Hitchcock movie Psycho and
the Oscar-winning The Silence of the Lambs. Scott Kosar, the
screenwriter who adapted the remake Chainsaw script, said he had
reverence for the original's signature senselessness. "It's not
based on plot or clever construction. There was no attempt to
explain what was happening," Kosar said. "There's just a murderous
beast with a chain saw and he just keeps coming and coming and
coming." The same can be said of slasher movies.
Weiland
and wife split.
Former Stone Temple Pilots singer has filed for divorce
Photo:
Scott Weiland.
Stone
Temple Pilots lead singer Scott Weiland has
filed for divorce from his wife.
The 35-year-old singer said in
court documents filed Tuesday that he's divorcing Mary Weiland,
with whom he has two children, because of irreconcilable differences.
The couple has a prenuptial agreement. The two married in May 2000 and
separated in September 2002. Mary Weiland filed for divorce after
their separation, but dropped the matter in August. Scott Weiland was
sentenced to three years' probation in August after pleading no
contest to one count of possessing heroin. He's scheduled to return to
court Monday for a progress report. He had a prior drug arrest and was
jailed in 1999 after he violated probation and didn't complete drug
rehabilitation programs. In 2001, Weiland pleaded guilty to domestic
battery after a fight with his wife at the Hard Rock hotel and casino
in Las Vegas. The judge agreed to dismiss the charges as long as
Weiland underwent counseling.
Spears
Glad She Didn't Settle Down
Says she's quite
shy
Britney Spears, throwing away her old
sweet-as-pie image and most of her clothes, says she's relieved she
didn't settle down with fellow pop star Justin Timberlake.
Spears is quoted in the September edition of Elle magazine discussing
how the break-up made her a better artist and that she hated
Timberlake talking about their relationship because she's actually
quite shy. On the cover, the 21-year old star appears in a seductive
pose wearing nothing but tiny black briefs.
"I'll always have feelings for Justin," she said. "OK, not feelings
for him, but he'll always have a special place in my heart. "He was my
first love after all. I think I got way too serious, way too young.
It's very healthy to not be in that relationship right now." Spears
said she wasn't ready to join friends from Louisiana who had settled
down. "I'll call up a friend and say, 'Hey! What's going on? You're
pregnant? What? Already?' But that's where I come from and that's the
mindset I had all my life," Spears said. "Now I think 'Whoah, that
would have been the biggest mistake of my life. Y'know?" Spears split
with Timberlake in March 2002 after three years together.
"I've said goodbye. Seriously," she said. "You can love someone so
much, but then there are times when too much has been said. You can
forgive . . . but you can't forget." She said the breakup had made her
a better artist. "I know that for a fact," she said. "But because of
what happened when I went into the studio to make my new album, I sang
better. It's because you're feeling. It's all real. It's you." Spears
was unimpressed by Timberlake featuring a look alike of her in his
video Cry Me a River. "Freakin' horrible. You know what I mean?" she
said. "It was hard for me that he was so exploitative. Every interview
that he did, he was just talking about us in such an open way and I
just felt 'Is nothing sacred anymore'? It was weird. It was . . .
disappointing. "Now Spears is enjoying the single life. "At first it
was weird, but I don't know if I could be in a relationship right now.
And it's more exciting when you don't have a boyfriend," she said.
Spears says she's shy at heart. "When I'm in front of the camera, I
know what to do, but I get in a room, stuck with four guys, and I'm
like the shyest girl there."
RHE
DE VILLE: THE YEAR'S GREATEST CABARET JAZZ SENSATION
New Yorker diva, Rhe De
Ville made her mark on the world of Jazz Cabaret, this year. De
Ville, one of today's most glamorous and captivating
chanteuses captured the headlines of the American and international
media. Her CD" Echoes of my Heart" elevated her to stardom. Twice,
this year, De Ville's CD was nominated best Cabaret Jazz album of
the year. The International Herald Daily News called her "The
perfect Cabaret Diva", The London Monthly Herald added another
accolade, " Superb at many levels, Rhe De Ville is almost
perfect..." wrote the Herald. Without doubt, this woman can sing,
and her voice is out of this world.
Photo:
Cabaret diva, the fabulous Rhe De Ville. Photo credits:
Scott Schedivy.
Although, her repertoire
recaptured moments from the vanished golden era of Hollywood and
"ancient" Broadway, De Ville's astonishing originality, romantically
bursting voice blended with sensuality and extreme finesse, set her
apart from the avalanches of New York's leading cabaret singers. You
could sense in her voice, the maturity and sinful beauty of the
voice of a woman who breathes and explodes life. In addition to her
phenomenal stage presence and vocal virtuosity, De Ville mastered
the art and science of gracefully projecting the femme fatale aura
on stage, around the black piano, at the corner of each challenging
note and amid her adoring fans.

Photo: Femme Fatale of
New York Cabaret Jazz Scene, Rhe De Ville...
Watching this woman on
stage is a pure delight. After all, those who go to cabaret have
usually something on their mind: To forget the troubles of the day
or to fantasize about a world of beauty, music, fun and possibly
adventures...a world they wish to inhabit and enjoy. And De
Ville is the perfect tour guide of that world. She is phenomenal. Go
see her in action.
Adams's
photo picked for stamp
B.C. rocker says he is 'thrilled' his photo of Queen to
be used.
Rock singer
Bryan Adams, also a budding celebrity photographer, will have
one of his signature photographs posted across the country. Canada
Post has chosen one of Mr. Adams's informal photographs of Queen
Elizabeth as the new definitive, or mass-circulation stamp that
will be issued on Dec. 19 in preparation for next year's postage rate
change. The image was selected more than a year ago by Canada Post's
volunteer stamp advisory committee after its marketing department
found the picture when considering new "official" photographs of Queen
Elizabeth. The stamp, of which 10 million copies will initially be
printed, could conceivably be used by Canada Post for several years,
according to spokesman Tim McGurrin. "Bryan Adams, being a true
Canadian, realizes just how significant Canada Post using his image
for the Queen stamp is," he said yesterday. "It is something that will
be going to every door in Canada over the next year." Mr. Adams, who
lives in London, England, said the photograph was an unpublished
"out-take" from a session he did with the Queen in late 2001 in
preparation for her Golden Jubilee celebrations last year.
"I was thrilled and honored for my photograph to be chosen by Canada
Post," he said yesterday. The playful photograph breaks from Canada
Post's tradition of showing an unsmiling, regal-looking Queen; in this
sepia-toned image her back is to a wall, her face is creased with
laugh lines and she has a broad, toothy grin. A twinkle in her eyes
suggests she was sharing a joke with Mr. Adams as he snapped the
shutter. Mr. Adams, who has developed a following as a "celebrity
photographer of celebrities," was chosen as one of several "official"
photographers to the Queen, along with her cousin Patrick Lichfield,
Prince Andrew and Dazed & Confused magazine founder Paul Rankin. Mr.
McGurrin said Canada Post found the photograph when it began the
process of changing its most popular Queen stamp to reflect new rates
that go into effect in January. It will be used on the 49¢ stamp
placed on domestic mail. The stamp could conceivably be in circulation
for several years, depending on when Canada Post has to raise rates
again, Mr. McGurrin said. The rate is tied to inflation. At least 20
million of the stamps are expected to be issued next year. Mr.
McGurrin would not say how much Mr. Adams was paid, but described it
as a nominal fee. "They're [photographers] providing us with the
images because it is an honor to have them on a stamp."-Jef Lee
John
Ritter remembered
Photo:
Flower bouquets and photos of John Ritter are left at his star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles, shortly after his death.
Actor
John Ritter brought love and laughter not only to millions of
television viewers but to family, friends and colleagues, say those
who knew him well. About 1,000 people gathered Tuesday night at the El
Capitan Theatre to remember Ritter, who died Sept. 11 of an undetected
heart problem. He was 54. Ritter gained fame in the 1970s as the
bumbling but lovable Jack Tripper on the madcap comedy series Three's
Company. He staged a television comeback last year as loving dad Paul
Hennessy, in the ABC series 8 Simple Rules ... For Dating My Teenage
Daughter. He fell ill on the set of his new hit. At Tuesday's
memorial, Ritter's widow, actress Amy Yasbeck, stood with photos of
her husband as both Tripper and Hennessy. "Sorry, John," Yasbeck said,
"but tonight we are here to love you out loud." Tom Ritter described
his brother as "a pied piper of fun, filled with joy and love." Others
who spoke included actress Katey Sagal, who played Ritter's
wife on 8 Simple Rules and Michael Eisner, head of Walt Disney
Co., which owns ABC. Actor-director Peter Bogdanovich was a
guest star in the last 8 Simple Rules episode that Ritter taped. He
described Ritter as "loving, funny, warm hearted, kind, generous,
mischievous as a young kid, unpretentious." "What John seemed to be,
he was," Bogdanovich said.

VERONICA GUERIN: AMAZING
WOMAN!!
It's not surprising
Cate Blanchett was drawn to play the martyred Irish journalist.
The two have lots in common
.
In 1996 an
Irish journalist named Veronica Guerin pushed the drug peddlers of
Dublin a little too hard. She was shot dead in her car on a country
road, and became a national hero. A troubling kind of hero, to be
sure. She left behind her husband and small child,
who had been endangered by her
reckless prodding at powerful criminals. But she also shamed the
country into cracking down on them. Seven years later, the elite of
Dublin loudly applauded Australian actress Cate Blanchett's
performance in the film Veronica Guerin. Not everybody liked
the way the story was told. But they loved Cate Blanchett's flawless
imitation of a Dublin accent. They loved the ferocity of the
performance. "Imagine that," says producer Jerry Bruckheimer, who took
time out from his customary bloated action films (Pearl Harbor,
Top Gun, Beverley Hills Cop) to make a film about a
woman who "should be remembered. With Veronica's mom and dad and son
in the audience, Cate got a ten minute ovation. For a young Australian
girl to fool the Irish is really something." Only a powerful Hollywood
producer could think of Blanchett, who has a razor-edged intellect and
a prodigious talent, as a "young Australian girl" or imagine that her
intent was to "fool the Irish." But if that is just Bruckheimer's way
of saying that Blanchett stole the movie, he is entirely right. Early
reaction to Veronica Guerin has focused almost entirely on
Blanchett's performance, with a good deal of Oscar talk going on.
Taken together with her performance as the queen of England in
Elizabeth five years ago, Veronica Guerin has sealed
Blanchett's reputation as the most formidable of the new crop of
actresses. But when it's put to her that way, during a recent visit to
the Toronto film festival, she is surprised. "I don't think about the
evolution of the creature, the actress. I've been out of drama school
for eight or nine years. That's enough time for a lot to happen to any
one." Of course. Haven't we all done 14 films, two TV series and a
couple of dozen theatre performances in the last eight years? Right
after graduating?
Blanchett likes to seem insouciant about a career which
has clearly been built on a brutal amount of hard work. "I have to be
seduced back to acting every time, there are so many other things to
do in life. I don't know whether I'll..." she says, and then
hesitates, realizing that you don't really want to say "whether I'll
stay in this job" in a profession where lots of backup goddesses would
be happy to hip-bump you back to Melbourne. "I mean, I love what I
do," she continues. "I've been seduced back many times." Jerry
Bruckheimer, who thought she should have won an Oscar for
Elizabeth instead of just being nominated, sent her the script
for Veronica Guerin. Blanchett was curious right away about
the character. Guerin, it seemed, was a woman who had lived her whole
life in overdrive. When she pounded on the doors of psychopathic
killers who didn't want to talk to her, she did it with exactly the
same manic energy she brought to "playing football or flying to
Nicaragua," says Blanchett. "She loved being at the centre of things.
Fireball energy, that's what's behind the film." She doesn't need to
add that there is a clear affinity of personalities between herself
and Guerin, so far as being "enigmatic and passionate" is concerned.
But when Blanchett looked more deeply into Guerin's story she was,
like most people, increasingly troubled.
Guerin had
not only been warned to stop writing exposes of Ireland's drug lords,
she had actually been shot in the leg by a gunman who knocked at her
front door. Her response was to take intensive physiotherapy and get
right back to harassing the criminals. Having located the ringleader,
a murderous fellow named Gilligan who had set himself up as a pretend
aristocrat breeding race horses, Guerin went right to his palatial
home and knocked on the door. Gilligan stepped out and beat her
senseless. That didn't stop her either
Her husband and child
also begged her to stop, and she didn't. "You can say she was
cavalier," says Blanchett, "but she was trying to change the
environment her child was growing up in." She also cuts short any
suggestion that a mother has a greater responsibility to keep herself
alive than a father. "Lots of policemen with children risk their
lives." As an actress Blanchett is a superb technician, and she
deployed a variety of devices to approach the role. She listened to
tapes of Guerin being interviewed, including some that were made after
she was assaulted by Gilligan. "The linguistic process is a way into
the character," says Blanchett. "How they intonate, how they
breathe...the anger submerged in the voice." She talked to Blanchett's
mother, brothers and other relatives, "and they all described a
different person, the way people do." She spent a solid month in
Ireland hammering away at the accent until nobody could spot that she
was foreign. And then she contemplated the fact that Joel Schumacher,
the director, wanted Guerin's death to occur at the beginning, with
the rest of the film depicting the months before her death. The
audience would know that Guerin was heading toward death, but Guerin
herself did not. How to play a character who doesn't know that she is
going to die, when you the actor do? "It's part of the skill. You have
to have a childlike sense of concentration. They say you can be
infantilized in this industry, but you have to have the ability to do
imaginative play and pretend that what you're doing hasn't happened
before," she says. Especially difficult was the scene where Gilligan
attacks her. "The only way to play shock is to pretend it isn't going
to happen. She didn't knock on Gilligan's door expecting to be beaten.
Doing the scene wasn't pleasant. I had on a thin suit and I couldn't
pad it because of continuity (she had worn it in a previous scene).
And it was raining. Gerry (McSorley, who plays Gilligan) was nervous
in case he hit me. And then he did hit me. He hadn't intended it." So
here is Blanchett, the camera recording not-entirely-fake blood
spurting from her nose and mouth, continuing her plan: to become the
"rag doll" that Guerin had described herself as being in the same
moment. Never having been beaten up herself, she had prepped for the
scene by asking male friends what it was like. "They said an
unprovoked beating leaves you with humiliation that turns to rage. I
found that interesting."
Blanchett,
who is 34 years old, grew up in Melbourne. Her Australian mother and
American father were business people, and her grandfather, she
recalls, "was a mechanic and illustrator". She studied economics and
fine art at university, and with no actors in the family had no real
reason to think of herself becoming one. But while travelling in Egypt
she picked up a little money working as an extra on an Arabic film.
She returned to Australia and attended the National Academy of
Dramatic Arts. Straight out the door of the school, she became a
fixture of professional theatre in Sydney, a link she has never
forgotten (this spring she will return there to play Hedda Gabler
in a new adaptation written by her husband, film director Andrew
Upton). She hasn't always been fortunate in her choice of films. But
in every one that has received so-so reviews - Oscar and Lucinda,
Pushing Tin, An Ideal Husband - the critics have
been unanimous that her performance was better than the rest of the
film. It has been noticed that she can play characters totally unlike
each other with seamless and effortless conviction. "Cate isn't a
glamour star," says Bruckheimer, who accompanied her to Toronto. "She
becomes the character." It almost seems inevitable that, given a
non-human character like Galadriel the elf queen in Lord of the
Rings, Blanchett would be called on to bring her to life.
Veronica Guerin
looks like
another of those movies which will attract mixed reviews, in spite of
Bruckheimer's declaration that "we didn't want the character to be
candy coated. She was flawed." An Irish journalist who wrote a
critical biography of Guerin, Emily O'Reilly, was paid 130,000
pounds to be an adviser on the movie but now says that very little of
her research was used in it, and that she has no intention of seeing
it. Others, allowing that the film in the main is honest, regret what
one Dublin critic calls "the shocking dive into sentimentality at the
end." Like most actors, Blanchett will not let herself be put in the
position of having to criticize aspects of a movie she is in -
especially not those aspects, such as the script, over which she had
no control. All that she will say now is that "Veronica Guerin is not
a documentary, it is a work of fiction." She adds that there is never
unanimity about the character of a human being, and that she had to
settle on her own understanding of Guerin - "I had to make her three
dimensional" - even knowing that some people who knew Guerin would
disagree with those choices. We finished our conversation by
telephone, since she had to fly off to the west coast to star in
Martin Scorsese's upcoming film inspired by reclusive millionaire
Howard Hughes. It's called The Aviator, and Blanchett will play the
role of Katherine Hepburn, who had a long relationship with Hughes.
"And I'll tell you one thing," she says emphatically. "I'm not doing a
Katherine Hepburn imitation!"
WHO
IS VERONICA GUERIN?
Photo: Veronia
Guerin
A fearless investigative reporter, Veronica
Guerin’s daring coverage of Dublin’s criminal underworld exposed
corruption, angered organized crime figures and led to her
eventual assassination. Her death caused national outrage and led
to a government crackdown on organized crime that netted more than
150 arrests. |
|
Veronica Guerin
covered organized crime for Ireland’s best-selling newspaper, the
Sunday Independent. A household name, she was famous not only for
her fearless reporting about the murderers and drug lords of
Dublin’s criminal underworld but for her commitment to defending
the public’s right to know. As a result of her work, she received
numerous death threats, was attacked numerous times and ultimately
killed. Guerin was born in 1959 and came to journalism relatively
late. After studying as an accountant and political researcher,
she set up her own public relations company before joining the
Sunday Business Post and what was then the Sunday Tribune. In
1994, she joined the Sunday Independent and began her career as an
investigative reporter. Guerin knew that her life was put at grave
risk by her prize-winning reports on leading underworld figures,
whom she identified by nicknames because of Ireland’s libel laws.
In October 1994,
gunshots shattered the windows of her cottage north of Dublin. On
Jan. 30, 1995, the day after she published an article profiling
“The Monk,” a man suspected of masterminding the largest robbery
in Ireland’s history, Guerin was shot in the thigh by an
unidentified assailant who attacked her in her home. Undaunted,
she vowed to continue her investigations upon her release from the
hospital. “I vow that the eyes of justice, the eyes of this
journalist will not be shut again,“ she said. “No hand can deter
me from my battle for the truth.” Her employer, Independent
Newspapers, installed an expensive security system to protect her.
On Sept. 13, 1995, she was attacked again, this time by a
convicted criminal, John Gilligan, who viciously beat her when she
sought to interview him. According to Guerin, Gilligan called her
the next day and said, “If you write a word about me, I will find
your boy and kidnap him and rape him. I am going to kill you if
you write a word about me.” Following this incident, the police
provided her with a 24-hour escort, but she quickly dispensed with
this protection because she said it hampered her style. Guerin was
killed on June 26, 1996, when one of two men on a motorcycle fired
six rounds from a pistol at close range as she waited in her car
at a traffic light just outside Dublin. She was 37 and married
with a 6-year-old son, Cathal. She was murdered two days before
she was due to address a conference in London on “Dying to Tell a
Story: Journalists at Risk.” Guerin’s slaying, the first murder of
a journalist in the Irish Republic, sent shock waves throughout
the country. Prime Minister John Bruton called it “an attack on
democracy.” The Irish Parliament marked her death with a moment of
silence. In a joint statement, leading editors in Ireland and
Great Britain declared: “Veronica Guerin was murdered for being a
journalist. She was a brave and brilliant reporter who was gunned
down for being tenacious. This assassination is a fundamental
attack on the free press. Journalists will not be intimidated.”
Her death led to Ireland’s largest criminal investigation,
resulting in over 150 arrests and a crackdown on organized-crime
gangs that her assassins could never have foreseen. In November
1998 Paul “Hippo” Ward, a Dublin drug dealer, was convicted of
Guerin’s murder and sentenced to life in prison. Although not the
man who pulled the trigger, he had disposed of both the pistol and
the motorcycle used by two accomplices in the shooting. Another
man, Brian Meehan, was accused of driving the motorcycle and
sentenced to life imprisonment in July 1999. John “The Monk”
Gilligan, suspected of leading the gang, was also charged with
murder. In October 1999, he lost a three-year fight against
extradition from England, where he was being held on separate drug
charges, and was sent back to Ireland on Feb. 3, 2000, to face
proceedings in the Special Criminal Court. Veronica Guerin devoted
her career and life to exposing the drug barons and leading
figures in Dublin’s underworld. “I am simply doing my job,” she
said. “I am letting the public know how this society operates.”
She paid the ultimate price for her pursuit of truth. By Ray
Conloge |
Big Bad-boy actor has slowed down
It's been a
year of 'wonderful' changes for B.C.'s Jason Priestley, who says he's
found new priorities since being seriously injured in a race car
crash. But, as the thrill-seeking actor tells Michael D. Reid, he's
not quite ready to leave the driver's seat.
Photo: Jason
Priestley.
It's
amazing what a near-death experience will do to help you get back on
track. Just ask Jason Priestley, the Vancouver-born actor who
has been doing just that since he crashed his Dallara-Infiniti into a
wall at nearly 290 km/h at Kentucky Speedway in August 2002. It left
him with skull fractures, a broken back, nose and cheekbone, broken
feet and crushed vertebrae. "My life has changed, but in a wonderful
way," says Mr. Priestley, who was in Victoria this week filming scenes
for The Road Movie, a teen comedy about the exploits of three buddies
and two sexy hitchhikers on a cross-country trip from Tofino, B.C., to
Newfoundland. Mr. Priestley, 34, plays Swackhammer, a sleazy music
producer who gets his comic comeuppance in scenes opposite the film's
star, standup comic Ryan Belleville, and members of pop-punk band Gob
and hip-hoppers The Swollen Members. Teen singer Avril Lavigne
also appears in the movie. Spending three months in a hospital bed in
Indianapolis provided all the time he needed for reflection, said the
handsome, personable actor and director best known for his role as
heartthrob Brandon Walsh on the popular 1990s TV series Beverly Hills,
90210. "It's slowed me down a little and going through rough
experiences like that, they change you," says Mr. Priestley. "There's
no way around it, but I'm not wearing Birkenstocks and sitting around
the campfire singing Kumbaya. I'm still a very urban active guy."
Indeed, Mr.
Priestley, who has been described as a modern-day James Dean,
is a thrill-seeker whose exploits, including rehab after crashing his
Porsche in Hollywood and a powerboat in Miami, have been exhaustively
scrutinized in the tabloids. The actor, twice chosen by People
magazine as one of the 50 Most Beautiful People, says he has learned
to live with the fact his life is an open book, and how his "bad-boy"
image seems unshakable. He says his priorities changed after last
year's crash. "I'm finding I spend more time on things that are
important to me and less time on the tertiary things that don't really
matter," says Mr. Priestley. "There are certain times in everyone's
life, I think, where you kind of clean house. I want to change this, I
want to change that. I don't want to waste my time hanging out with
certain people anymore." The chain-smoking actor looks fit, relaxed
and free of any visible scars from his life-changing brush with death.
Charming and polite, he frequently breaks into laughter during an
interview before his "lunch break" that starts shortly after midnight.
Between takes of scenes he was filming with hundreds of extras, Mr.
Priestley also signed autographs and joked with members of Gob -- a
group for which he has directed a music video. Getting back to Canada
to work on indigenous productions is one of his newfound priorities,
he says. Last spring, Mr. Priestley returned to shoot a made-for-TV
movie on Baffin Island and in Halifax. Titled Sleep Murder, the film
stars Mr. Priestley as a Toronto lawyer who represents an Inuit man
(The Fast Runner's Natar Ungalaaq) with a sleep disorder who has been
charged with a pair of brutal murders. After shooting The Road Movie,
which he describes as "a very, very funny film," Mr. Priestley is off
to promote Die Mommie Die, a black comedy that pays homage to classic
Hollywood melodramas starring larger-than-life movie queens like Bette
Davis and Joan Crawford. Mr. Priestley will be back in Victoria in
November to film I Want to Marry Brian Banks, an ABC movie about a
resourceful manager who launches a reality TV show inviting women to
bid for marriage to his client, an actor whose career is on his skids.
"He's a washed-up teen idol. Funny they came to me," quips Mr.
Priestley. Although the actor may never realize his childhood dream of
racing in the Indy 500, he says he'd still like to get back in the
driver's seat. "I've had to take this year off so that the screws can
set in my spine but I'll do some testing this winter and see where I'm
at mentally, emotionally and physically." It was a good sign, says the
hockey buff, that he was able to lace up his skates and start playing
again. "My feet were broken so badly I didn't know if I'd ever play
hockey again," said Mr. Priestley-
Michael Reed
Michael
denies attack on Bush
Pop singer George Michael
has defended his new single, saying the satirical Shoot The Dog is
not intended as an attack on US president George Bush or the
American people.
Responding to criticisms of the song,
which has a cartoon video showing UK Prime Minister as a poodle on
the White House lawn, the star said it was meant to provoke debate
about Tony Blair. Michael, 39, told CNN's Talkback Live TV show:
"It's anti-Mr. Blair and anti-Mr. Blair's reluctance to challenge
Mr. Bush. It's not anti-American in any sense." And he confirmed
that the single would not be released in the US. The video was shown
for the first time on Tuesday on cable channels MTV and VH1.
It
also features a scene in which the singer, dressed in a
leopard-print thong, apparently tries to seduce Cherie Blair. But US
callers to the CNN show appeared to perceive the video as an attack
on the US, and there were reportedly boos from the studio audience.
Michael maintained he would never "disrespect" Americans' feelings
after the 11 September attacks. "There was no plan to release [the
song] in your country and I think it would have been disrespectful
to make this an issue in a country which obviously has suffered much
loss and very recently," he told CNN."
This was
absolutely an atta |