Archive for the ‘Entertainment’ Category


Sameera Reddy: Actresses can’t be friends

Asked if there were any cat fights on the set of Tezz, Reddy said: "Nothing like that happened.

"I keep to myself a lot and I don’t get over-friendly. I don’t believe two actresses can be best friends. It’s an absolute myth. I will never say anybody is my friend! But we are absolutely good to each other."

In Tezz, directed by Priyadarshan, Reddy tried her hand at action. She says the genre is scary.

"Action is not easy. It is scary and has been a real challenge. On the last day of the shooting, when I fell and got hurt, I didn’t tell my parents. I tried to keep quiet and not tell anyone, but everything came up in the media and my parents were like, ‘Please don’t do this,’" she said.

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© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)


Lady Rizo: ‘Lowbrow Is Where It’s At’

Story By: by NPR Staff

Lady Rizo is a Grammy-winning cabaret and burlesque performer.

The word “cabaret” is taken from the French to describe small, intimate spaces where performances take place. New York cabaret star Lady Rizo fills those small, intimate spaces to the rafters with a signature mix of elegance, blue humor and a voice that has been described as “the product of a night of unrestrained indulgence between Peggy Lee, Mel Brooks, Nina Simone, Dean Martin and Janis Joplin.”

Lady Rizo performs at Joe’s Pub in New York City in 2012.

“I exist between boundaries — because I am a comedian, and I consider myself a chanteuse and a singer. It’s really an equal mix,” Rizo tells NPR’s Scott Simon. “I like to not only sing songs but explore them in ways that tweak the dark humor of things.”

Born Amelia Zirin-Brown, Rizo co-created the cult performance troupe Lady Rizo & The Assettes in 2005. She coined the term “caburlesque” to describe her aesthetic.

“We thought about doing something highbrow,” Rizo says. “Then we were like, ‘Let’s forget about highbrow — lowbrow is where it’s at.’ And so we decided to make a burlesque show with live music, and I would host and get to explore this comedic side.”



Cowell team plays down tensions at ITV, revelations


LONDON |
Fri Apr 20, 2012 11:49am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) – Reports of a falling out between Simon Cowell and ITV, partners on ratings juggernauts “Britain’s Got Talent” and “The X Factor”, have been blown out of proportion, his spokesman said on Friday.

Cowell’s televised talent competitions are among the commercial channel’s biggest draws, generating millions of pounds in advertising income and helping it compete with rival BBC’s increasingly aggressive reality TV drive.

According to Tom Bower, whose unauthorized biography of Cowell has been serialized this week in the Sun tabloid and hits the shelves on Friday, ITV bosses failed to respect Cowell and properly appreciate what he had done for the channel.

“He (Bower) admitted revelations in his book … risked pushing to crisis point relations between the station and the man behind their most successful shows,” the Sun reported.

The newspaper valued the multi-year partnership at 100 million pounds ($160 million).

But Max Clifford, Cowell’s publicist, played down any rift.

“Simon and ITV have had a very close and hugely successful relationship for many years,” he told Reuters, when asked about Bower’s comments.

“Inevitably they don’t agree on everything all the time, but the overall situation is as healthy, good and mutually beneficial as it’s ever been.”

ITV, which has signed up both shows until 2013, issued a statement in response to the reports.

“We’re continuing to work closely with Simon and the production teams to ensure that the shows are the very best they possibly can be and we are looking forward to the remainder of the run and the exciting week of live shows.”

Clifford said he did not think Cowell should have spoken to Bower, who was given hundreds of hours of access to the 52-year-old when writing “Revenge: The Intimate Life of Simon Cowell”.

“EMBARRASSING, BUT FALLOUT LIMITED”

The Sun, Britain’s best-selling daily, has splashed details of Cowell’s private life across its pages for several days, causing embarrassment to the parties involved but also ensuring the impresario remains in the public eye at a time when Britain’s Got Talent ratings are lower than expected.

Clifford said some of the stories, including an affair with a fellow TV judge, had undoubtedly knocked Cowell’s image.

“Is it embarrassing? Yes,” Clifford said. “Did he realize he made a mistake (in talking to Bower)? Yes. But in a month’s time, how much damage will have been done? Providing Britain’s Got Talent gets big ratings, then very little.

“It’s more a question of personal embarrassment to Simon as a man than damage to his image and commercial success and standing in my view.”

According to the Sun, one bone of contention between Cowell and ITV has been the choice of The X Factor judge Gary Barlow.

Earlier this week ITV confirmed the Take That singer would be returning to the hit series this year, despite Cowell’s reservations about his performance in 2011.

Cowell, a major global celebrity thanks to his acerbic judging style, left the show last year in order to launch a U.S. version of “The X Factor”.

He is already a familiar face in the United States thanks to his starring role on the panel of “American Idol”, created by his one-time partner and now arch-rival Simon Fuller.

That personal rivalry is a major driving force behind Cowell’s North American ambitions, according to a source familiar with the situation.

A second series of the U.S. X Factor has been commissioned, and Cowell will be hoping to improve on 2011 ratings which, while solid, were only about half those enjoyed by “Idol”.

In a typically blunt admission, Cowell said in December that he had been a “little too cocky” when he brought the show to the United States but vowed the second season would be better.

Even in Britain Cowell’s dominance is under threat, with the BBC’s “Strictly Come Dancing” last year and new show “The Voice” this year putting a serious dent in audiences for The X Factor and Britain’s Got Talent respectively.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)

© 2011 REUTERS (www.reuters.com)


Lion King reigns on Broadway

A new king reigns on Broadway.

Revenue figures indicate that The Lion King has swiped the title of Broadway’s all-time highest grossing show from The Phantom of the Opera.

As of Monday, the cumulative gross for The Lion King was $853,846,062 (Dh3.13 billion). The total for Phantom is $853,122,847.

What makes the achievement all the more remarkable is that The Lion King grabbed the title despite Phantom having almost a full 10 years’ head start.

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© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)


Kristen Wiig says leaving ‘SNL’ will be ‘hardest thing’

Saturday Night Live and Bridesmaids star Kristen Wiig said on Monday that leaving the TV sketch show "will be the hardest thing" but that everyone has to leave the things they love.

Wiig, 38, would not confirm media reports that she would be moving on from Saturday Night Live when her contract ends later this year after seven years on the popular late-night program as a comic actress and sketch writer.

However, she told actor Alex Baldwin in his Here’s The Thing twice monthly radio podcast for WNYC.org that she would be sorry to part company with the cast and writers on the show.

"I’m going to miss that camaraderie and I’m going to miss seeing all those faces every day, and what the people bring out in me, creatively. That creative muscle that you have when you’re at ‘SNL,’ you know, it’s so fast-paced," said Wiig, whose ‘SNL’ characters include hard-to-please movie critic Aunt Linda. "I will say that when I do leave it’s not because I’m sick of it and not because I see something better or anything like that. It’s just that it’s time. When I do leave, it will be the hardest thing … But you have to leave the things you love," she added.

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© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)


Randy Travis sued by ex-wife and former manager

Tennessee: Randy Travis is being sued by his ex-wife and former manager.

Travis says the lawsuit filed last week by Elizabeth Travis lacks merit and that it’s "unfortunate that it’s come to this."

However, the country music star in the statement from his publicist doesn’t address her claim that he hired men to strip her office of records and memorabilia related to his career.

Elizabeth Travis claims her ex-husband made it impossible for her to do her job and terminated their management agreement without written warning.

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© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)


Get Your Geek On With ‘Comic-Con Episode IV’

Story By: by Kenneth Turan

Movie maker Morgan Spurlock, director and star of Supersize Me and The Greatest Story Ever Sold, has a documentary opening on the West Coast this weekend: Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan’s Hope. It introduces a group of determined popular culture enthusiasts who’ve come to San Diego’s enormous convention in the summer of 2010 to pursue their different but connected dreams.



Anushka Sharma teams up with Shah Rukh Khan

Anushka Sharma has been roped in for Yash Chopra’s next film, in which she teams up with Shah Rukh Khan again. The model-turned-actress says she never imagined she would get another chance to work with him.

Sharma made her debut opposite Khan in Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi.

"I didn’t think I will get a chance to work with Shah Rukh again after my first film, but I did. So, I am the lucky one. I look forward to it. Mr Yash Chopra is an institution in himself, literally. I guess I would get to learn a lot from that film," Sharma said.

"I have not started the shooting yet. I will be joining the crew from May onwards, right after my birthday, which is on May 1. So I will start shooting from May 2. I am very excited. I think it is any actor’s dream to work with Yash Chopra," she added.

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© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)


Get Stranded on The World from April 13

The final arrangements have been made and now party-goers are invited to get Stranded.

Every Friday starting April 13, the Royal Island Beach Club — the only island on The World open to the public — will have its beach-themed chill-out party, Stranded, presented by the Must Have Group, who promise local and international DJs.

The open-air decks run from 2pm Friday until 2am on Saturday morning.

Water taxis will leave both Dubai Marina and Jumeirah Open Beach at regular intervals throughout the day, but journeys cannot be operated on demand.

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© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)


Art is “world’s greatest currency”, says Hirst


LONDON |
Mon Apr 2, 2012 2:33pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) – Some artists prefer not to talk about the value of their work. Damien Hirst clearly revels in it, going so far as to call art “the greatest currency in the world”.

On the eve of Hirst’s first major retrospective in his native Britain, he hit back at a leading critic who dismissed him as a conman and advised anyone owning his work to sell it fast.

Julian Spalding, a curator and critic who has just written a short book called “Con Art – Why you ought to sell your Damien Hirsts while you can”, went on the attack last week with articles in at least two national newspapers.

They were designed to coincide both with the release of his book and the opening this week of an exhibition at Tate Modern tracing Hirst’s journey from a student at Goldsmiths College to the world’s most commercially successful living artist.

Spalding questioned whether Hirst, known for his shark suspended in formaldehyde, a diamond-encrusted skull, spot paintings and medicine cabinets, was an artist at all and described his works, which fetch millions at auction, as “worthless financially”.

Hirst, speaking on Monday to a small group of journalists at the Tate Modern gallery overlooking the river Thames, was clearly used to such jibes and brushed Spalding’s criticism aside with a grin.

“It’s like, you say ‘sell your Hirst’. I say ‘don’t sell your Hirsts, hang on to them.’ If you look at the numbers …

“It’s always healthy to have both views — people love it, people hate it. I once said as long as they spell my name right I don’t mind. As I’ve got older I don’t really mind if they spell my name right either.

“Andy Warhol said that great thing didn’t he? ‘Don’t read your reviews, weigh them’.”

SMELL OF DECAY AND MONEY

The fact that Hirst quoted Warhol was hardly surprising — both artists have been commercially canny and saw the value of their works as inextricably linked to the art itself.

Hirst’s spot paintings, for example, are made by employees and untouched by the artist, a fact that did not prevent them becoming status symbols for the rich and famous.

The artist has come to embody the spirit of 1990s London where his works, often given intriguing titles, appealed to hedge fund managers and oligarchs as well as an art world clamoring for new ideas.

Championed early on by collector Charles Saatchi, Bristol-born Hirst personifies conspicuous consumption, yet the 46-year-old, with a fortune estimated at over 200 million pounds, insisted that the art came first.

“I’m one of those lucky artists that makes money in their lifetime, and makes lots of money,” he said. “I’m not afraid of that but I think the goal’s always been to make art and not money. Making money is a by-product, a very happy by-product.

“I think art’s the greatest currency in the world. Gold, diamonds, art — I think they are equal … I think it’s a great thing to invest in.”

The show itself focuses on some of Hirst’s most important early works with a view to putting his later series into context.

The first spot painting, for example, was made in 1986 and, instead of the precise grid of equally spaced, equally sized circles of different hues comes a slap-dash affair with paint dripping down a canvas of rows of irregular shapes.

Two years later Hirst conceived and curated the “Freeze” exhibition of his work and that of fellow students, an early and important step towards establishing him as the leading figure in the influential “Young British Artists” (YBA) movement.

By 1995 he was a famous artist, winning the coveted Turner Prize and, in his acceptance speech, reminding the world of his humble academic background and rebellious spirit.

“It’s amazing what you can do with an E in A-Level art, a twisted imagination and a chainsaw,” he said.

The chainsaw referred to “Mother and Child, Divided”, a bisected cow and calf which went on display at the Turner show and provoked widespread criticism.

Another Hirst work featuring a rotting cow and bull was banned in New York because of fears it would “prompt vomiting among visitors”.

It was leading U.S. dealer Larry Gagosian who showcased Hirst in the United States, presenting the “No Sense of Absolute Corruption” show in New York in 1996.

Hirst’s mother encouraged his passion for drawing as an adolescent, but was less tolerant of his taste in music and fashion — she melted one of his Sex Pistols albums into the shape of a fruit bowl, according to online biographies, and cut up his “bondage” trousers.

INSECT-O-CUTOR

Hirst’s famous “pickled” shark, entitled “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living” stands in the middle of the Tate show, a reminder of how death has been a dominant theme throughout Hirst’s 25-year career.

Also familiar will be cabinets filled with medicine and his “spin” and butterfly paintings, but new to many will be “In and Out of Love”, a room in which butterflies hatch, live and die as the public passes through.

Visitors are asked to check they are not unwittingly carrying a part of the art work with them when they leave.

It shares some of the themes with “A Thousand Years” from 1990 in which maggots hatch inside a glass vitrine, develop into flies, feed on the severed head of a cow and meet their end on an “insect-o-cutor”.

A whiff of decaying flesh escapes from the glass container, to go with the odor of stale cigarette butts in his giant ash-tray “Crematorium” and the inescapable smell of money.

That is strongest towards the end of the show in a gold wallpapered room dedicated to Hirst’s record-breaking auction at Sotheby’s in 2008 where he raised 111 million pounds ($177 million) from over 200 new works.

Called “Beautiful Inside My Head Forever”, it was a groundbreaking event, conceived as a single work of art that bypassed the dealers — and their hefty fees — altogether.

The Golden Calf, a bull in formaldehyde adorned with horns, hooves and a disk above its head made of 18-carat gold, raised 10.3 million pounds alone.

In the Tate’s gift shop is a limited edition plastic skull decorated in “household gloss” paint priced at 36,800 pounds, while a roll of Hirst-designed wallpaper cost 675 pounds.

There is also the chance to see his diamond-encrusted skull “For the Love of God” displayed in a blacked-out box in the cavernous Turbine Hall lit only by spotlights shining on the 8,601 flawless gems set in a platinum cast of a human skull.

The sculpture fetched the then equivalent of $100 million in 2007, when it sold to a consortium of investors that included Hirst himself.

The artist has long avoided a retrospective, deeming it “more OAP” (old age pensioner) than YBA and worrying that his life’s work would “amount to nothing” once it went on display.

But Hirst finally accepted the idea and the exhibition is one of the highlights of the Cultural Olympiad which is based around this summer’s Olympic Games in London.

“I feel honored to be given this slot and hopefully I’ve done it justice,” he said. “I definitely hope that more people walk away liking it than hating, but I’m not under any illusions that everyone’s going to love it.”

* “Damien Hirst” runs from April 4 to September 9 and is sponsored by the Qatar Museums Authority. Admission is 14 pounds.

($1 = 0.6259 British pounds)

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

© 2011 REUTERS (www.reuters.com)