Archive: January 2009 (31-40 of 75)

Jan 28 2009 10:38 PM ET

Joaquin Phoenix's publicist says his music act is the real deal

Categories: Movies, Music

Joaquin Phoenix’s publicist insists that the actor’s recent foray into rap music is no hoax. Responding to growing speculation (including an EW.com story in which two people close to Phoenix say that his plans to retire from movies to focus on a music career may be an elaborate put-on), Susan Patricola told MTV News, "The transition from one career to another is never seamless. It shouldcome as no surprise to anyone that Joaquin came from a musical family,in addition to winning a Golden Globe for his portrayal of JohnnyCash…. He intends on exploring hismusical interests despite speculative, negative or positive reactions."

Jan 28 2009 10:28 PM ET

'Dancing With the Stars': No Donny Osmond...yet

Categories: Television

Despite what seemed like a carefully planned announcement that Donny Osmond would be joining the cast of Dancing With the Stars, People.com reports that the former teen idol will not be embracing sequins and spray tan just yet. "I’m definitely not doing this upcoming season," he said. "If there was an offer on the table, I’d do it in the fall. I would make room for it. Absolutely!"

Jan 28 2009 01:10 AM ET

John Updike dies at 76

Categories: Books

Johnupdike_lPulitzer-prize winning American novelist John Updike, author of The Witches of Eastwick, Couples, Rabbit is Rich, and Rabbit at Rest, died today of lung cancer. He was 76. His most recent novels were last year’s The Widows of Eastwick, the follow-up to Witches, and 2006′s Terrorist. His short story collection, My Father’s Tears and Other Stories, is due out later this year.

Updike grew up in small-town Pennsylvania, the only son of his math-teacher father and aspiring-novelist mother. As a kid, he tore through mysteries and sci-fi novels, and admired the illustrations and humor writing in The New Yorker. While attending Harvard, he published his first story in The New Yorker at age 22.After a two-year stint living in New York City and reporting for The New Yorker’s Talk of the Town section, he moved his first wife, Mary, and their children (they eventually had four, before they divorced in 1976) to Ipswich, Mass., in 1957, when he was 25.

Along the way, Updike wrote the one book that deserves to be called the Great American Novel. It’s Rabbit Angstrom, a 1,500-page single volume from Everyman’s Library that consists of the four Rabbit novels Updike penned at 10-year intervals between 1960 and 1990. They follow Harry ”Rabbit” Angstrom, a former high school basketball star from a fictional Pennsylvania town (based on Updike’s own), as he lives his quintessentially American life through the ’50s (Rabbit, Run), ’60s (Rabbit Redux), ’70s (Rabbit Is Rich), and ’80s (Rabbit at Rest). When Rabbit at Rest came out in 1990, it was a grand ending to Updike’s American epic. As Martin Amis wrote at the time: ”With Rabbit, Run (1960), Rabbit Redux (1971), and Rabbit Is Rich (1981), John Updike loaded the bases. Rabbit at Rest is the home run.” EW named it the best fiction book of the 1990s. To the chagrin of anyone holding out hope for a fifth novel, Rest ended with Rabbit getting felled by a heart attack.

Both Rabbit Is Rich and Rabbit at Rest won Updike a Pulitzer Prize(William Faulkner and Booth Tarkington are the only other writers to wina pair of Pulitzers for fiction). –Additional reporting by Gregory Kirschling

More John Updike:
John Updike can’t stop writing
John Updike, TV critic
John Updike lends an anthology a hand
Review: ‘The Widows of Eastwick’

Jan 27 2009 12:24 PM ET

Daniel Craig, Jamie Bell in Steven Spielberg's 'Tintin'

Categories: Movies

Daniel Craig and Jamie Bell (Billy Elliot) have been cast in the Steven Spielberg-directed The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn, according to Variety. Bell will play the young reporter Tintin in Unicorn, the first movie in a three-part, 3-D motion-capture series, and Craig will star as the pirate Red Rackham. The film series based on the comic strips created by Belgian artist Georges Remi (also known as Herge). Spielberg is also producing along with Peter Jackson and Kathleen Kennedy. Jackson will direct the second installment. Production is underway for a scheduled 2011 release.

Jan 27 2009 12:11 PM ET

Hilary Duff starring in 'Bonnie and Clyde' adaptation

Categories: Movies

Hilary Duff and Kevin Zegers (Fifty Dead Men Walking) will star in Cypress Moon Studios’ indie The Story of Bonnie and Clyde, according to Variety, which Tonya S. Holly (When I Find the Ocean) will direct from her own script. The project is an adaptation of the Bonnie and Clyde gangster story, not a remake of the 1967 film starring Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty.

Jan 27 2009 05:02 AM ET

'Milk,' Tyra Banks among nominees for 20th GLAAD Media Awards

Categories: Movies, Music, Television

The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation has announced the nominees for its 20th GLAAD Media Awards, which honor works across multiple media platforms. In TV, ABC led the broadcast networks in total nominations with six, while cable outlet Logonabbed five; The Tyra Banks Show scored three alone. Nominated films include Milk, Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, and Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Awards will be presented this spring at three different ceremonies in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New York. Thecomplete list of English-language nominees is after the jump. 

READ FULL STORY »

Jan 27 2009 04:01 AM ET

SAG's chief negotiator Doug Allen is out

Categories: Movies, Television

Is this finally the beginning of the end of Hollywood’s ongoing labor troubles? On Monday, moderate members of the Screen Actors Guild national board managed to oust Doug Allen, the union’s controversial national executive director and chief negotiator. The moderates, who enjoy a slim majority on the board, also broke up the negotiating committee and put a task force in its place — a development that could mean an end to the stalled talks with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. In response, the union appointed David White, a former guild general counsel, to replace Allen as interim national executive director, while John T. McGuire, a longtime guild senior adviser, will assume the role as chief negotiator.

"This is a difficult time for SAG and a particularly challenging period for working actors," said White in a statement released by SAG. "I am deeply committed to the guild and its members and I believe that, working with the national board, we can help guide this transition."

The actors have been working without a contract since June and Hollywood has been in limbo ever since, especially given the threats by Allen and SAG President Alan Rosenberg to seek a strike authorization vote from paid-up members. The vote was supposed to occur last week, but SAG ended up doing nothing. Instead, word surfaced that Allen was considering whether to just ask members to consider the latest (and apparently, final) offer from the conglomerates.

Fortunately, the union got to be the bearer of good news Sunday at its annual Screen Actors Guild Awards celebration in Hollywood, though the labor negotiations did manage to seep into the conversation. While collecting one of two awards for 30 Rock, creator and star Tina Fey joked about an ongoing thorn in SAG’s side — namely, the lack of Internet residuals. "I want to thank [my daughter] for her patience," she said. "Some day she’ll be old enough to watch 30 Rock reruns on the Internet and understand where mommy was going at 6 a.m. every day for all that time. And she’ll look up at me and say, ‘What do you mean you don’t get residuals for this?’"

Jan 26 2009 11:19 AM ET

SAG and AFTRA renew partnership

Categories:

Hollywood’s two largest actors’ unions, the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television &Radio Artists, confirmed to members on Sunday that they have renewed their bargaining partnership, Variety reports. Last year, the unions ended a 27-year-old joint-bargaining relationship after years of bitter dispute between the two groups. AFTRA members inked a new contract with the major studios in July, while SAG has is still trying to hammer out its new deal. Yesterday’s announcement, however, marks a return to solidarity between actors in their negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.

Jan 26 2009 10:55 AM ET

Mickey Rourke doing WWE's 'Wrestlemania 25' (aka real-life pro wrestling)

Categories: Movies

Thewrestler_lAt last night’s SAG Awards, Mickey Rourke, star of The Wrestler, told Access Hollywood that he’s set to participate in the WWE’s Wrestlemania 25, which will take place in Houston on April 5. "The boys from the WWE called me and asked me to do it," Rourke toldAccess Hollywood. "I said, ‘I want to.’ I’m talking with [WWE wrestler]Rowdy Roddy Piper about it." The actor also hinted at a potential opponent by saying, "Chris Jericho, you better get in shape. Because I’m coming after your ass."

addCredit(“Niko Tavernise”)

Jan 23 2009 02:13 PM ET

Senate likely to pass bill delaying digital TV transition

Categories: Tech, Television

The Senate is expected to pass a bill delaying the transition to digital television broadcasting to June 12, according to the Associated Press. Broadcasters were originally supposed to switch from analog to digital signals on Feb. 17, but legislators have expressed concern that too many Americans still rely on analog TV sets. More than 6.5 million U.S.households are still not prepared for the digital transition, according to Nielsen, and would be left without TV if the switch happens next month. If the bill pushing the transition to June passes the Senate next week, it would then move onto the House, where a quick vote is expected to meet the looming Feb. 17 deadline.

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