1/24/13

Heidi Klum Shakes Up Jay Leno’s Desk


Heidi Klum Shakes Up Jay Leno’s Desk


It’s nice when Jay Leno shows some concern, especially when it involves a pretty lady like Heidi Klum.
The supermodel appeared on “The Tonight Show” Wednesday night, and the host kindly inquired about her reportedly dancing on tables at Harvey Weinstein’s Golden Globes after party following a bet with “Castle” star Nathan Fillion. “Have you ever fallen trying to get on the table? Has that ever happened?”
And then, the 39-year-old mother of four and her revealing black dress proceeded to show Leno just how to get up and dance on a table.
“No, because I got skills,” she declares as she rises from her seat and stands on it in her black stiletto boots. “If you have a good person holding your hand,” she says, extending her arm for some support.
Voila! The “Project Runway” host is standing on “The Tonight Show” desk. Thankfully, the band kicked it into high gear, playing Rihanna’s “Only Girl” so Klum could shake, rattle and sashay across the desk to show those skills.
But “skills” isn’t exactly what we saw. Nope. Thanks to that sheer dress, all we saw were long legs that went all the way up.
Not that we were wondering what ex-husband Seal or current boyfriend Martin Kristen ever saw in her.

"Cloud Atlas" cut by 38 minutes for China audience


"Cloud Atlas" cut by 38 minutes for China audience
























BEIJING (AP) — Nearly 40 minutes have been chopped from the Hollywood film "Cloud Atlas" for Chinese audiences, deleting both gay and straight love scenes to satisfy local censors despite a movie-going public that increasingly chafes at censorship.
It premiered Tuesday in Beijing in a red-carpet ceremony with actor Hugo Weaving and China's own Zhou Xun, but won't start running in Chinese theaters until next Thursday. The filmmaker's Chinese partners have slashed that version from the U.S. runtime of 172 minutes to a pared-down 134 to expunge the "passionate" episodes.
"The 172-minute version can be downloaded online ... so I am sure some people will prefer that to going to the cinema," said movie fan Kong Kong, 27, who lives in Shanghai.
Chinese citizens have recently become more outspoken, especially on social media, with complaints about censorship of imported films as well as the home-grown movie industry and news media, much of it imposed over elements that might make China look bad. Awkward cuts by the censors to the most recent James Bond offering "Skyfall," which opened here Monday, prompted calls for a review of the film censorship system.
"Even these kinds of movies are getting censored, for what?" wrote Wei Xinhong, deputy editor in chief at Shanghai Literature and Art Publishing Bureau, on his Twitter-like Sina Weibo. "What kind of era do we live in today! Still want to control people's minds?"
He said he was left confused after watching China's version of the 007 movie, which deleted a bloody scene showing a French hitman killing a Chinese security guard. It also changed the subtitles of Bond's conversation with a young woman in the Chinese territory of Macau about her past — references to her as a teenage prostitute morphed into a mention of her membership in the mafia.
The "Cloud Atlas" filmmakers say they are confident their movie will retain its "integrity" despite being 38 minutes lighter.
Executive producer Philip Lee said Thursday that the filmmakers knew they would have to "follow the censorship requirements" to have the movie shown in China. He said he hadn't yet seen the censored version that will come out next week, but that he was confident that the Chinese distributor, Dreams of Dragon Pictures, had made the right changes.
"We have very strong belief in our partner Dreams of the Dragon Pictures," Lee said. "They have been extremely helpful and collaborative and I am sure they will protect the integrity of the film makers, our creativity and vision."
A woman surnamed Su in charge of propaganda for Dreams of the Dragon Pictures refused to comment Thursday. Phone calls to the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television rang unanswered.
China allows only 34 foreign films to be shown in its movie theaters each year and 14 of those have to be in 3D or IMAX format. However, pirated DVDs of Hollywood blockbusters are widely available in China, sometimes the result of recording films as they are shown in American or European movie theaters.
"I'm kind of surprised that the directors or the film's producers would accept such a hefty edit on this," Florian Fettweis of Beijing-based media consultancy CMM-I said of "Cloud Atlas." Usually if Hollywood movies encounter heavy censorship, the makers change their mind about showing it in China, he said.
Fettweis said that happened with the 2008 Batman movie "The Dark Knight."
"Commonly big Hollywood directors are the ones who don't accept edits to their films," said Fettweis.
China's authoritarian government strictly controls print media, television, radio and the Internet. China doesn't have a classification system, so all movies shown at its cinemas are open to adults and children of any age. This has led to calls for a tiered classification that would give clearer guidelines to filmmakers and allow some films to be less heavily censored.
There are two strands to the Chinese censorship — prudishness and political sensitivities, said Steve Tsang, an expert on contemporary Chinese studies at the University of Nottingham in Britain.
The censoring of gay love scenes in "Cloud Atlas" falls into the first category while cuts to "Skyfall" are in the second, broadly defined as anything that portrays China or the Chinese in a negative light. "Shooting a Chinese officer in uniform, they don't want to encourage that," said Tsang.
The screen time of a pirate played by Hong Kong actor Chow Yun Fat in the 2007 "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" was slashed in half by censors for "vilifying and defacing the Chinese," according to the official Xinhua News Agency at the time.
The changes made to Skyfall were widely reported in state-run media. Xinhua quoted Shi Chuan, a professor from Shanghai University's film department, as saying: "Movie regulators should respect the producers' original ideas, rather than chopping scenes arbitrarily." He renewed calls for the establishment of laws and norms for movie censors to follow.
Cinema-goers who saw the censored version were confused by the cuts, which also deleted a character's line about having been tortured by Chinese security agents.
"Now I know why I was so confused when I watched it, and not able to connect each scene," a movie goer, Gao Yuan, who works for a cultural publishing company in Beijing, said on her Sina Weibo. "It's not worth watching any good movies if they cut them like this. Maybe just don't import it."






Andrea Bocelli & Jennifer Lopez Team Up For Spanish Duet


Andrea Bocelli & Jennifer Lopez Team Up For Spanish Duet


Andrea Bocelli, Jennifer Lopez --

Step aside, Marc Anthony - J.Lo has recorded a new Spanish duet with another international singer!
The stunning superstar collaborated with classical music legend Andrea Bocelli on a new song, "Quizas, Quizas, Quizas" (Spanish for "Maybe, Maybe, Maybe").
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The ballad will be included on Andrea's upcoming album, "Passione," (along with a duet with pop sensation Nelly Furtado) -- set to hit stores on Tuesday.
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Jennifer released a Spanish album, "Coma Ama una Mujer," in 2007, and sang a Spanish ballad, "No Me Ames," with now-ex-husband Marc Anthony on her 1999 debut album, "On the 6."
-- Erin O'Sullivan

ROLL CALL: Penelope Cruz Walks Red Carpet With Acupuncture Needles In Her Ear!


ROLL CALL: Penelope Cruz Walks Red Carpet With Acupuncture Needles In Her Ear!

Penelope Cruz, wearing a Chanel Vintage dress and (four acupuncture needles!) , attends 'Venuto Al Mondo' (Volver A Nacer) premiere at Capitol cinema on January 10, 2013 in Madrid --

Dispatch of Celebrity Shenanigans
Pierced Penelope! : Is Penelope Cruz starting a new trend or just enjoying some Eastern medicine on the red carpet? The Spanish beauty was spotted (first by E! Online) walking the red carpet earlier this month with four acupuncture needles in her ear. No word on what the actress was getting help with, but acupuncture has been known to help of variety of issues including chronic pain, detoxification, nausea relief, the struggle of quitting smoking, weight loss and fertility issues. Anything you'd like to share Penelope?
PLAY IT NOW: Amanda Seyfried Brings Lovelace To Sundance
"Toxic" Brit & "Les Mis'" Javert Separated At Birth? : Kudos to Team Britney for spotting the "Les Miserables" connection to her "Toxic"-era fashion! "LOL. Cute hat @RussellCrowe. You wear it well. Maybe we should perform a Toxic/Work Song mashup," Britney (or we're guessing her social media team) Tweeted. Check out fashion faceoff, HERE! Who wore that little blue beret better?
In More Separated At Birth Fun : Jennifer Lawrence in 2005 and Justin Timberlake in 1997 - same person? Discuss! See the (almost) proof! Gaga-Bennet Album Confirmed : Lady Gaga is about to get her croon on! The pop star is teaming up with music legend Tony Bennett and has confirmed the news on Twitter, writing, "And here's me and my handsome date, I simply cannot wait for our album together, he's my darling!" Check out the wonderfully odd duo performing together at a private inauguration party for Obama's staff, HERE!
VIEW THE PHOTOS: 2013 Sundance Film Festival
Whoa! "Whoa" Explained!: Whoa! "Whoa" Explained! : Joey Lawrence has revealed the origins of his (dare we say) iconic "Blossom" catchphrase, "Whoa!" The actor said the word was originally supposed to sound more surfer-esque, but was not making people laugh. "The executive producer came up to me and said, 'Can you try something else? ... People aren't finding it humorous,'" the actor told HuffPo. "I don't know where that came from! I just tried it once and did this weird thing and people laughed. They laughed tremendously long. We did a second take and they laughed again." Adding, "It's so weird that word has transcended 20 years... I can only imagine what that word would have been had social media been what it is today. It took off in the course of one night once it hit the airwaves, but with social media, it probably would have been twice as fast." #Whoa!

Conference asks: What is the best Broadway can be?


Conference asks: What is the best Broadway can be?


FILE - This Jan. 19, 2012 file photo shows billboards advertising Broadway shows in Times Square, in New York. The TEDxBroadway conference will be help Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, at the off-Broadway complex New World Stages. The one-day event is bringing together more than a dozen producers, marketers, entrepreneurs, academics, economists and artists. All will try to answer the question: "What is the best Broadway can be?" (AP Photo/Charles Sykes, file)


NEW YORK (AP) — Before long plane flights, Thomas Schumacher likes to download talks from some of the world's brightest and creative minds speaking at TED conferences, watching them on his iPad while thousands of feet in the air.
"I marvel at the range of stuff. I like the passion of the speakers and love the content," says the president of the Disney Theatrical Group about the various conferences dedicated to technology, entertainment and design. "I am a giant TED freak."
The downloader will become the downloaded after Monday when Schumacher joins more than a dozen speakers for the second TEDxBroadway conference at the off-Broadway complex New World Stages.
The one-day event is bringing together more than a dozen producers, marketers, entrepreneurs, academics, economists and artists. All will try to answer the question: "What is the best Broadway can be?"
Schumacher's string of hits — including "The Lion King," ''Mary Poppins" and "Newsies" — hasn't made him impervious to a bout of nerves ahead of the conference.
"I'm confident that somebody will be worse than me, and I'm really confident that people will be better than me," he says, laughing. "There are no rules about doping for this, so I'm going to do whatever I can. I'm going to have a blood transfusion Sunday night."
He'll join a wide assortment of speakers, including "Star Trek" actor George Takei, producer Daryl Roth, Schmackary's Cookies CEO Zachary A. Schmahl, playwright Kristoffer Diaz, critic Terry Teachout, ethnographer Ellen Isaacs and Erin Hoover of Starwood Hotels & Resorts.
There will also be performances, this being Broadway, after all. Magician Steve Cohen will wow the crowd with tricks, and there will be music from Rasputina, the all-female cello-driven band.
TEDx events are independently organized but inspired by the nonprofit group TED, which started in 1984 as a conference dedicated to "ideas worth spreading." Video of the Broadway event will be made available to the public.
The annual gathering centered on Broadway is the brainchild of three men: Ken Davenport, a writer, director, producer and industry pioneer; Jim McCarthy, the CEO of ticket discounter Goldstar; and Damian Bazadona, the founder of Situation Interactive, an online marketing firm.
Last year, the organizers asked speakers to peer into their crystal balls and try to predict what Broadway would look like in 2032. This year, they dropped the forecasting to focus on current issues.
"I think by taking the time frame off of it, we've actually retained the imagination part and kind of liberated the speakers a little bit more," said McCarthy. "I think it's been a more constructive framework for them to work with."
The speakers will include Tony Award-winning set designer Christine Jones, who will discuss how to make the Broadway experience more intimate. She's an expert on the subject, having created Theatre for One, a 4- by-8-foot portable theater that fits just one audience member and one actor.
One returning speaker is Vincent Gassetto, the principal of a high-performing public middle school in a tough area of the Bronx who urged those in attendance last year not to overlook his diverse and enthusiastic talent pool as arts funding shrivels. His passion triggered several school visits to Broadway shows.
One hot topic will be on the future of live theater. David Sabel, from the National Theatre of Great Britain, producer Randi Zuckerberg and Internet pioneer Josh Harris will each talk about how theater can be freed from the stage, whether that means more immersive experiences or employing more broadcasts of plays and musicals on movie screens.
"Our goal at the conference is not necessarily to walk out with a list of things we're going to do tomorrow and say, 'This is going to solve the problem,'" said Bazadona. "The idea is really just to discuss what the different ideas and directions are. For me, the more open-ended it is, the more excited I am to see where it goes."
The three organizers have seen the event grow and hope to keep it an annual event. Last year's TEDxBroadway attracted some 200 people; this year it is expected to double that.
"I think of the conference as a steroid shot to everyone's imagination. It just stirs everyone up," said Davenport. "It's a jolt to everyone's system and gets everyone thinking in a new and exciting way."

Glam Slam: Stylish Star Sightings


Glam Slam: Stylish Star Sightings


Glam Slam's Ryan Patterson and Pitbull --
When I went back East for the holidays, I was plied with questions about various star sightings. Who is the nicest? Who looks best in person?
It reminds me that while we may be jaded out here because we see famous people pretty much everywhere... the folks back home do not and this whole Hollywood thing is very exciting for them.
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One person I was asked about was Pitbull. He came into our control room after his interview on Access Hollywood Live while we were still taping. He started kidding around with Billy Bush, talking in his earpiece while Billy was doing an interview on-air. We could see Billy smiling during the interview, but no one at home had any idea.
"What is Pitbull like?" I was asked. He's a charmer... a real ladies man. I bet he can smooth talk his way into or out of just about anything. He was very polite and a gentleman. He made a point to introduce himself to everyone (by his given name) and shake everyone's hand or give them a hug. (I got a hug!)
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We all know he dresses impeccably, but you may not know he smells good too. Really good. I asked him what he was wearing and he was coy telling me he mixes up a few things. Sounds like a cologne in the works?
I also got a lot of questions about a star sighting I posted on Facebook. I saw Jack Nicholson shopping in the WOMEN's shoe department at Barneys New York. It was right before Christmas and I had the day off to go to my daughter's school show. Afterwards, I met a friend for our annual holiday lunch at Barneys. Of course, we had to stop by the shoe sale!
My friend Stefanie was trying on some gorgeous Celine boots, when all of a sudden, you could feel a change in the store. JACK! It's not that unusual to see celebs in the store... but this was different. People were buzzing around and checking Jack out. He looked just like you would expect him to. He had on his signature thick rimmed glasses, his hair looked windblown and he was wearing a tweedy blazer and slacks. Kind of an absent-minded professor type of look. He was with an older lady and an assistant type guy and they browsed the department including the sales racks!
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Further proof that the stars, even the big-time stars, love a deal.

The Following Exclusive Video: Meet Annie Parisse's FBI Agent Debra Parker


The Following Exclusive Video: Meet Annie Parisse's FBI Agent Debra Parker

Annie Parisse, Kevin Bacon | Photo Credits: David Giesbrecth/Fox

Viewers who tuned in to the pilot episode of Fox's new serial killer drama The Following know that former FBI agent Ryan Hardy (Kevin Bacon) has plenty of demons to battle — alcoholism, a pervading sense of guilt, and escaped serial killer Joe Carroll (James Purefoy), to name a few. And now he has a new professional counterpart to tussle with.
Monday's episode introduces Agent Debra Parker, played by Law & Order's Annie Parisse, who's tracking Carroll but is also up to speed on all of Hardy's issues.
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"Joe Carroll has cast you as the main character in his psycho sequel, so I can't just kick you to the curb," she tells a defensive Hardy.

Booker winner Mantel says play next "logical step"


Booker winner Mantel says play next "logical step"


Author Hilary Mantel poses with her book "Bring up the Bodies", after winning the 2012 Man Booker Prize, at the Guildhall in London October 16, 2012. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor
LONDON (Reuters) - Double Booker prize-winning author Hilary Mantel said the characters in her historical novels about the rise of Thomas Cromwell will take the next "logical step" to a stage adaptation at the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) this year.
Mantel said in a video interview on the RSC website this week that she has always longed to give "solid form" to her depictions of Cromwell, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn in her "Wolf Hall" and "Bring Up the Bodies" books.
"From the moment I started writing Wolf Hall the characters were fighting to be off the page," Mantel said in the video.
The 60-year-old Mantel said she was delighted to have playwright Mike Poulton, whose works have garnered some of the theatre world's top awards, recreate her novels for the stage.
"He's the man who knows about the stagecraft," she said. "I'm the one who knows the characters inside out."
The first woman and first Briton to win the Booker twice for her novels set in Henry VIII's court said she has been inspired by the RSC since the age of 15 when she went alone to its Stratford-upon-Avon home and watched four plays in three days.
"It was a shaping experience, so it really is a dream come true for me to have the opportunity to see the RSC present my plays," she said.
Mantel is working on a third novel in the trilogy.
The RSC also said on Wednesday that David Tennant will star in the title role of "Richard II" in winter 2013, making his return five years after a turn as Hamlet which earned him a best Shakespearean performance trophy at the Critics' Circle Theatre Awards in 2009.
"Both plays will be directed by Royal Court Associate Director Jeremy Herrin, making his RSC directing debut," RSC Artistic Director Gregory Doran said.
The world premiere of "Wendy & Peter Pan" by Ella Hickson and directed by Jonathan Munby will round out the winter season, the RSC said.
Tickets for the RSC's winter 2013 season, which begins in October 2013 and runs until March 2014 will go on sale for members on February 11 and for the wider public on March 18, the RSC said.
(Reporting by Paul Casciato; editing by Patricia Reaney)

Country Singer Chely Wright Expecting Twins


Country Singer Chely Wright Expecting Twins


Lauren Blitzer, Chely Wright | Photo Credits: Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic
Country singer Chely Wright and her wife, Lauren Blitzer-Wright, will be seeing double this summer.
The couple, who married in August 2011, are expecting twins. They made the announcement on Howard Bragman's YouTube series,Gwissues, Wednesday.
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The babies are due in July, but Wright, who is carrying them, expects she'll have to deliver a month early, as is often the case with twins.
"We're excited to be parents," she told Bragman. "We hope we don't mess it up too badly."

Robin Roberts Returns to 'GMA' Studio


Robin Roberts Returns to 'GMA' Studio

Robin Roberts Returns to 'GMA' Studio

Good Morning America co-host Robin Roberts returned to the show's studio on Thursday for the first time since taking a leave of absence last September to undergo a bone marrow transplant. 
The 52-year-old Roberts was on the show's New York set for a behind-the-scenes test run this morning, ABC News announced. "What a thrill to be back at GMA's Times Square Studio this morning and see the best folks in the world, my GMA family," Roberts said. "I can't wait to get back to the anchor chair in a few weeks."
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During a live interview from her home last week, Roberts explained that she'd be doing a series of "dry runs" of the show to make sure she's ready to return to work full-time. "My doctors want me to see how many people I actually come in contact with. How my body reacts to the stimulation -- that's code word for stress -- of being in the studio environment," she said
Roberts began her leave of absence from GMA on September 20 to undergo a bone marrow transplant in an attempt to combat Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), a rare blood disorder that she contracted after undergoing treatment for breast cancer.

Seen and heard at Sundance


Seen and heard at Sundance


Actress Mariel Hemingway from the film "Running From Crazy" poses for a portrait during the 2013 Sundance Film Festival on Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013 in Park City, Utah. (Photo by Victoria Will/Invision/AP Images)

Associated Press journalists open their notebooks at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah:
MARIEL'S SALAD DAYS
Mariel Hemingway says she got kicked out of Overeaters Anonymous because she was hooked on salad.
Hemingway came to Sundance with the documentary "Running from Crazy," which recounts her family history of mental illness and suicide, including the deaths of sister Margaux and grandfather Ernest Hemingway.
In her own periods of depression, Hemingway says she found herself eating too much — but not the typical high-calorie foods most overeaters chow down.
When she went to an overeaters meeting, "they went through this litany of things they ate," Hemingway says. "Chinese food and this and that, and like, for days. Then they went and got doughnuts. And I was like, 'Hi, I'm Mariel Hemingway. I'm an overeater. I know you're going to think this is crazy, but I eat bowls and bowls of lettuce.' And they were like, 'You need to leave.'"
Hemingway says she's over her own depression now but that her salad benders were among the signs of her own emotional problems.
"People don't realize that obsessive behavior is just obsessive behavior, even if it's green," she says.
— David Germain
_____
BFFS FOR REAL
Dakota Fanning and Elizabeth Olsen play best friends in "Very Good Girls," which premiered this week at the Sundance Film Festival, and the two young actresses are close friends in real life.
"We know each other from being Valley kids in L.A.," Olsen said, adding that she and Fanning have many friends in common.
"All of our best friends are mutual best friends," said Fanning. "We have known each other, and obviously got closer making this movie, as you do. So I think a lot of the scenes of us together are half Lilly and Gerry and half Dakota and Lizzie. I think that just adds another layer to the movie, that it's real friends playing real friends."

White, Underwood, Lumineers to perform at Grammys


White, Underwood, Lumineers to perform at Grammys


This Jan. 18, 2013 photo shows members of the American folk rock band The Lumineers, from left, Jeremiah Fraites, Neyla Pekarek and Wesley Schultz at the Dream Downtown Hotel in New York. Grammy nominees the Lumineers, Jack White and Carrie Underwood will perform at the Feb. 10 awards show. (Photo by Dan Hallman/Invision/AP)

NEW YORK (AP) — Grammy nominees Jack White, Carrie Underwood and the Lumineers will hit the Grammys stage next month.
The Recording Academy announced Thursday that those acts will join previously announced performers including fun., The Black Keys and Taylor Swift at the Feb. 10 awards show in Los Angeles.
White is nominated for album of the year and the Lumineers are up for best new artist.
U.K. newcomer Ed Sheeran and Elton John will perform together. Sheeran's "The A Team" is nominated for song of the year.
Country singers Miranda Lambert and Dierks Bentley will also join forces onstage.
The Black Keys, Rihanna and Mumford & Sons are also set to perform.
Frank Ocean, Jay-Z, fun., Kanye West, Black Keys' Dan Auerbach and Mumford & Sons lead with six nominations each.

Ray Romano to perform at Garden of Laughs event


Ray Romano to perform at Garden of Laughs event

FILE - This June 4, 2012 file photo shows actor Ray Romano arrives for the Classic Television/Today's Stars: Live Stage Reading Of

NEW YORK (AP) — While everybody loves Raymond, it's stand-up comedy that Ray Romano loves most.
The 55-year-old actor-comedian says performing live is his passion, so he jumped at the chance to participate in the "Garden of Laughs" event at The Theater at Madison Square Garden on Saturday.
"It's great to see some of the guys that I started doing stand-up with, like Brian Regan and Wanda (Sykes)," Romano said. "And Bob Costas is hosting."
Adam Ferrara and Darrell Hammond are also scheduled to perform in the comedy event, which will benefit the Garden of Dreams Foundation.
Romano, who starred in the long-running TV series "Everybody Loves Raymond" and the short-lived "Men of a Certain Age," says he feels more comfortable onstage.
"Yeah, I love to act and explore different characters, but I'm still learning and finding out if I'm good at all," Romano said of his work in front of the camera.
"When I do stand-up, I'm in my element. This is what I am a pro at doing."
Romano joked about the upcoming benefit: "I want to know when I'm going on. Because I don't want to go last."
He calls performing with old friends a "win-win situation."
"I'm a fan of all of them. I started with Brian. If I was going to pick one guy whom I have the most in common, it's him. Brian and I are friends. We both started around the same time," he said.
That experience dates back to their days at the Comedy Cellar in New York's Greenwich Village.
"I did 15 shows a week when I lived in New York. I did five shows on a Friday and seven shows on a Saturday. It was everything I did and it was my sole source of income," Romano said.
Then came "Everybody Loves Raymond," in which Romano played a sportswriter and family man. The sitcom wrapped up in 2005 after nine seasons and is now widely seen in syndication around the world.
"It's pretty baffling to hear how successful it is in Australia and Israel. Mainly because I was in it," he said. "It's because the story was very relatable because it's family. Family is the same no matter what language you speak."
Romano feels that same theme shines through in the animated "Ice Age" film series, in which he voices a wooly mammoth named Manny. Romano says he's proud to have each of his children perform a speaking line in each movie in the series.
But now it's back to the stage, and Romano couldn't be happier.
"A ballplayer reaches a certain age that he can no longer hit the ball out of the park. Then he retires. But with stand-up he can keep doing it. Yes, you have to learn to adjust and you have to be more current and hopefully you hold up for some time."
Madison Square Garden President and CEO Hank Ratner says the Garden of Dreams Foundation has conducted events and programs for more than 215,000 children and their families, including those facing homelessness, extreme poverty, illness and foster care.

Seyfried delves into dark material in 'Lovelace'


Seyfried delves into dark material in 'Lovelace'

Amanda Seyfried from the film "Lovelace" poses for a portrait during the 2013 Sundance Film Festival at the Fender Music Lodge, on Tuesday Jan. 22, 2013 in Park City, Utah. (Photo by Victoria Will/Invision/AP Images)

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — It took a French revolution to pull Amanda Seyfried away from her role as '70s porn star Linda Lovelace.
Seyfried delved deep into her character in the biopic "Lovelace," which premiered this week at the Sundance Film Festival. The 27-year-old actress says she was only able to shed the dark role by playing Cosette in the Oscar-nominated "Les Miserables."
"I had a hard time letting go of Linda at the end of the movie," she said. "I had a really intense time with (co-star) Peter Sarsgaard. I think we both had a hard time letting go because we went to these places.
"He played a man who consistently beat his wife. And I played a woman who was raped and abused, psychologically and physically. I was constantly taking my clothes off. I didn't have an issue with that. She had an issue with that. So it was a lot. And the only thing that helped was getting onto 'Les Mis.'"
"Lovelace" tells the story of the unlikely porn star and the abusive relationship she shared with her husband, Chuck Traynor.
Seyfried was grateful her musical part in "Les Mis" came just three weeks after "Lovelace" wrapped.
If not, she said she might have "carried Linda for a long time, and it could have been unhealthy," even though she knew from the start the role would be risky — and risque.
"It is risky and people did not stop reminding me of that. But I also really wanted a challenge. It appealed to me in that way," she said. "And this woman had a fascinating story. There are things that a lot of people don't know. People have an idea of her. It's very one-dimensional."
Directed by Oscar-winning documentarian Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, "Lovelace" was based in part on Lovelace's memoir, in which she recounted her entrance into pornography as the star of "Deep Throat," which brought porn to mainstream audiences.
Seyfried said Lovelace was "exploited."
"She was coerced into the porn industry," said the actress, who was accompanied by her mother at Sundance. "Yes, she enjoyed parts of it because parts of it made her feel safe because she was around so many people. But there's so much to say."
Born Linda Susan Boreman, Lovelace died in 2002, but Seyfried spoke to two of her children as part of her research. She said that while she doesn't feel like she has much in common with the pioneering porn star, there are similarities.
"Being in the public eye now, people can make assumptions about me, I'm sure. And no one really knows what's really going on. So I can relate in that way," Seyfried said. "She comes from a place of innocence. And I definitely did as well at one point coming into this business, which is nothing like the porn industry. People try to exploit me all the time. You've got to know your boundaries and you've got to know how to speak for yourself. But unfortunately she didn't have that freedom like I do. She had a husband that literally wouldn't allow her to go to the bathroom without asking."
Seyfried said she took "the responsibility very seriously of portraying and giving her validation and being her voice," especially after meeting her children, "which is why I was so nervous about releasing it into the wild."
Still, she's delighted the film premiered at the annual independent-film showcase.
"I just am so, so happy and proud to be able to say that this is our premiere," she said. "It's here and it feels safe here almost for some reason, I don't know why. Maybe because it's just really cozy and everybody is really friendly."
But she acknowledged she's still frightened about how the film will be received when it reaches a wider audience. Earlier this week, it was acquired by the Weinstein Co.'s Radius label for North American distribution for a reported $3 million.
"It's scary. I'm really scared," Seyfried said. "I don't know what's going to happen after it comes out. But I would never take it back. I'm really happy that I was able to give her the voice that she never got to have."

Exclusive: See New Key Art for Body of Proof Season 3


Exclusive: See New Key Art for Body of Proof Season 3

Dana Delany, Mark Valley | Photo Credits: Michael Desmond/ABC
Megan Hunt, the medical examiner played by Dana Delany on ABC's Body of Proof, isn't afraid to get her hands dirty — bloody, even — to solve a case. And by the look of the show's new key art, she'll continue that approach in the show's upcoming third season.
Returning winter shows: Where we left off with Body of Proof and more
The procedural is taking a more "high octane" approach in its revamped third season, which picks up a few months after Season 2 ended, according to executive producer Matthew Gross. Megan has been on a sabbatical in the wake of Peter's (Nicholas Bishop) death at the hands of serial killer Wilson Polley (Peter Stormare) but at the start of Season 3 she's back in action — and on the trail of another killer.
Check out the exclusive first look at the key art below:

Joe McGinniss has cancer, but feels 'terrific'


Joe McGinniss has cancer, but feels 'terrific'

NEW YORK (AP) — Author-journalist Joe McGinniss says he was diagnosed in May with advanced prostate cancer but is responding well to treatment and feels "terrific."
The 70-year-old McGinniss is best known for controversial works such as "The Selling of the President" and "Fatal Vision." On Wednesday, he posted on his Facebook page that he had "inoperable, terminal, metastatic prostate cancer." He confirmed the diagnosis in response to an email from The Associated Press and in a subsequent Facebook posting.
McGinniss told the AP that he has no symptoms and is eager to write more books and magazine articles.


Chely Wright, Country Singer, Pregnant With Identical Twins


Chely Wright, Country Singer, Pregnant With Identical Twins

Chely Wright, Country Singer, Pregnant With Identical Twins


Chely Wright andLauren Blizter-Wright are going to be parents -- to identical twins! The couple made the exciting announcement Wednesday, Jan. 23 during an interview onHoward Bragman's YouTube series,Gwissues.
PHOTOS: Babies of the year
"They are due in July, but with identical twins you typically have to deliver a month early," country singer Wright, 42, who is carrying the twins, explained. "So, we're anticipating that I will be as big as a . . . bus or A-frame house by June."
PHOTOS: Out and proud
Wright married Blitzer, 31, the Director of Marketing at Sony Music Entertainment, in August 2011. "When gay couples have babies it's logistically a little different than when straight people have babies as we all know," Wright, who came out as gay to the public in 2010, explained to Bragman. And Blitzer-Wright added that it's been an "amazing learning experience."
PHOTOS: Celebrity LGBT allies
"We're excited to be parents," Wright added. "We hope we don't mess it up too badly."
"We feel like God blessed us with twins," she said. "We feel our entire relationship has been blessed. We feel lucky and ready to take on the challenges."

Are Hollywood awards by gender out of touch?


Are Hollywood awards by gender out of touch?




LOS ANGELES (AP) — Do Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway and Helen Mirren really need a category just for women — a singular kind of affirmative action — to snare one of Hollywood's favorite accessories, an Oscar, Emmy or Screen Actors Guild trophy?
In a society tilting steadily toward gender neutrality, the separate-but-equal awards that divide actors into one camp and actresses into another have the whiff of a moldy anachronism.
True, the Association for Women in Science gives honors to encourage female success in male-dominated fields. But to mark enduring achievements, would its members ever yearn for a Women's Nobel Prize in physics?
In contests of intellect or artistry, should gender ever matter?
"It's not like it's upper body strength," Gloria Steinem dryly observed of the requirements of acting.
The separate labeling of male and female performers is losing favor in the industry. Actresses often swat the distinction away by calling themselves "actors," standing shoulder to shoulder with their male counterparts.
Usherettes are long gone from movie theater lobbies, after all. And defense officials said Wednesday the Pentagon will be lifting its ban on women in combat.
SAG, which holds its awards ceremony Sunday, edged toward neutrality with its trophy dubbed the Actor, although the guild gives separate honors to best performance by a male actor and by a female actor.
That cracks the door open, but only slightly. Fling it wide so that Daniel Day-Lewis' majestic performance in "Lincoln" and Jessica Chastain's steely turn in "Zero Dark Thirty" vie for the grand prize!
"That's a great idea," said Mark Andrews, writer-director of the animated film "Brave." ''At the end of the day, we're all storytellers, and I don't think when we're defining a character that the gender is the major defining factor."
In all other awards-eligible fields, including directing, writing or cinematography, everyone is "going for it," male and female alike, Andrews said.
That may be progress in theory for performers but not in practice, according to Sally Field, a SAG and Oscar best supporting actress nominee for "Lincoln."
"If you do that you won't see any actresses up there (on stage) at all," she said. "The percentage of roles is so weighted toward actors. That's the way it's always been."
Exactly, concurred Naomi Watts, "The Impossible" best actress SAG and Academy Award nominee.
"There's so much competition in life and I do think we are different," she said. "Yes, we should be able to have the same things as much as possible ... (but) life's a battle already and there's so many great roles written for men. Women are definitely at a disadvantage when it comes to volume."
Rapper Nicki Minaj, who's considering launching an acting career, has a pragmatic take on the issue.
"You see all those divas in the audience looking so pretty, and they all want to beat each other out," she said. "It's entertainment."
Hathaway, in the running for SAG and Oscar supporting actress honors for "Les Miserables," considers the gender split "an awesome question worthy of an awesome debate."
"Can I conceive of a world where performance becomes a genderless concept? Absolutely. Do I think it's going to happen anytime soon? No," she said.
As Fields pointed out, the bedrock challenge is that women get fewer substantive roles than men. Ironically, that's obscured by the artificial parity on stage each year at awards shows. Five women compete, five men compete, two winners are crowned.
So what's the problem? A quick numbers check makes it clear: Females comprised about a third of the characters in the 100 top-grossing films in 2011, according to the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University.
This, despite the fact women make up slightly more than half of the U.S. population and, according to the center's previous research, the finding isn't an anomaly.
In this context, feminist leader Steinem sees legitimate reason to retain separate acting awards. When two unequal groups are combined it's the less-powerful one that loses, she said, as when 20th-century U.S. school desegregation lead to mass layoffs of black principals and administrators.
Tom O'Neil, editor of the Gold Derby awards prediction site, said strong forces are arrayed against any such change in Hollywood.
Awards shows routinely try to add celebrity-driven categories, not drop them, to increase a show's "glamor and glitz" quotient, he said, as well as mask the industry's unequal treatment of women.
"It's criminal," he said, bluntly.
In the behind-the-scenes film and TV categories in which the sexes compete, women rarely make it on stage at awards ceremonies. The Oscars started in 1929, but it wasn't until 2010 that the first woman, Kathryn Bigelow, was honored as best director (for "The Hurt Locker"). Statistics again provide clarity: Women made up a paltry 9 percent of the directors on 2012's top-grossing films, a new San Diego State University study found.
Let's give two-time Oscar winner Field the last word in this debate.
Actresses "should be in their own category because they ARE in their own category," she said. "They face their own specific kind of difficulties surviving in this business that actors, bless their hearts, don't face."

FILE - In this Jan. 13, 2013 file photo, Actress Sally Field arrives at the 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Actors and actresses compete separately at awards shows, a tradition some in the industry consider vital for women but others question. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP, File)

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, Gloria Steinem, left, and Marlo Thomas, from the program "Makers: Women Who Make America," pose together for a portrait during the PBS Winter TCA Tour at the Langham Huntington Hotel, in Pasadena, Calif. Actors and actresses compete separately at awards shows, a tradition some in the industry consider vital for women but others question. Steinem and Thomas weighed in on the issue during a TCA press tour interview. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)


FILE - In this Jan. 8, 2013 file photo, Nicki Minaj arrives at the Winter TCA Fox All-Star Party at the Langham Huntington Hotel, in Pasadena, Calif. Actors and actresses compete separately at awards shows, a tradition some in the industry consider vital for women but others question. Minaj weighed in on the issue during a TCA press tour interview. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

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