Make out sessions? For chemistry tests? Groundbreaking. And something Anne Hathaway is thrilled she doesn't have to deal with anymore. The Oscar winner—who rose to fame for appearing in Princess
Anne Hathaway revealed that, early in her career, she would have to make out with several actors for casting to ensure that they had chemistry, saying, "It was just a very different time."
t the Film Development Council of the Philippines' second annual "Parangal ng Sining" gathering on April 19, the national agency for film bestowed its highest honor — the Lifetime Achievement Award — upon an esteemed list of actors, scholars, and advocates championing the preservation and restoration of Philippine cinema.
Paul Rudd and Nicola Coughlan 🤝 being immortal ageless vampiresView Entire Post ›
Author, actor and activist Maulik Pancholy was disinvited from a speaking engagement at a Pennsylvania school over his ’lifestyle’
The Cumberland Valley School District school board voted to cancel the talk at Mountain View Middle School by Pancholy, who is openly gay.
The actress, 41, recalled being asked to make out with actors, which she said was considered 'normal' around two decades ago, for chemistry tests.
‘He labels himself as an activist who is proud of his lifestyle and I don’t think that should be imposed on our students,’ one school board member said
The 41-year-old rapper debuted her new line complete with various unique designs inspired by her debut studio album Pink Friday and latest release Pink Friday 2.
Nine years after Stuart Scott’s passing at 49 following a battle with cancer, his impact continues to be felt. Many have cited Scott’s remarkable impact on ESPN and on sports coverage in general. And an upcoming 30 for 30, directed by Andre Gaines (After Jackie, Stories We Tell), is set to cover Scott’s life and career.
EXCLUSIVE: ESPN Films today announced it has greenlit an upcoming 30 for 30 documentary to be centered around the extraordinary life of Stuart Scott. Andre Gaines will direct. Currently in production, the film tells the story of the broadcaster who shattered preconceived notions of how on-air figures were expected to look, talk, act, and think–and […]
Sheffield star Sean Bean has railed against the class system in television, in an interview to promote his latest role as a ‘baddie’. The Handsworth actor said there was a “wealth of talent” in the working class population that “you don’t see too often.” He spoke out in an interview in The Times to promote Disney’s four-part adaptation of CJ Sansom’s first Shardlake book, Dissolution. He plays Thomas Cromwell, who served as chief minister to King Henry VIII from 1534 to 1540. He said: “There was...