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PostPosted: 14 Jun 07, 11:16 
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Bob Dylan wins Spanish arts prize


Dylan topped the US chart again last year
US rock star Bob Dylan has won Spain's Prince of Asturias Arts Award - one of the country's most prestigious honours.

The 66-year-old - considered one of the most influential popular music artists of recent decades - will receive his award at a ceremony in October.

Jury chairman Jose Llado called Dylan a "living legend of popular music and the guiding star of a generation that dreamed of changing the world".

Previous winners of the annual prize include US film-maker Woody Allen.

Hit record

The Asturias jury said Dylan was "one of the greatest figures of song, magisterially combining the beauty of his poetry and morality".

In 2006 Dylan topped the US album charts for the first time in 30 years with Modern Times, making him the oldest living person to go straight into the chart at number one.

The release was Dylan's first US number one album since Desire in 1976.

He is still best known for his so-called protest songs of the 1960s, including Blowin' in the Wind and The Times They Are A-Changin'.

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Lily Allen's..
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Julia Roberts Welcomes a Baby Boy people


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Sinéad O’Connor talks music, mental illness and men timesonline


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Simply Red's Mick a dad at 47 Sun


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Mel B Says DNA Proves Eddie Murphy Fathered Her Baby www.people.com


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PostPosted: 24 Jun 07, 10:59 
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CORRIEVENGE
Bosses fear he'll expose 10 years of fights and feuds. People


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Victoria Beckham wins payout over 'bitch' claims



Richard Desmond's Star magazine has apologised and paid substantial damages to Victoria Beckham for publishing an article it now accepts was untrue, in which it was alleged she acted like a "grade-A bitch".

A lawyer representing Star's publisher, Mr Desmond's Northern & Shell, apologised to Beckham in the high court today and undertook not to repeat the defamation.

In April, gossip magazine Star, owned by Mr Desmond's Northern & Shell, published a story headlined: "Posh breaks down - Why does everyone hate me?".

The article claimed that Beckham "is hugely unpopular in the US - and now even the crew from her TV show there have revealed they can't stand her".

The magazine alleged that an "insider" from her upcoming reality TV show told it: "We think she is full of herself and not very nice.

"She's very picky, demanding and rude. And she was mean to the assistants, too."

It also claimed that when David Beckham calls she "shouts orders at him on the phone, like he's one of her kids".

The magazine alleged that the crew laughed at Beckham behind her back because of incidents where doormen and waiters did not recognise her.

"She's coming off as a grade-A bitch," claimed a source quoted in the Star piece.

Beckham's lawyer, Gerrard Tyrrell of Harbottle & Lewis, told the high court that the article was untrue and unfounded.

"The true position is that when the article was published filming had not yet commenced on Ms Beckham's US TV show and accordingly nobody on the crew could have possibly commented on her alleged behaviour," Mr Tyrrell said.

"The defendant did not contact Ms Beckham or her representatives before the article was published in order to check the accuracy of the allegations," he added.

Mr Tyrrell said Star magazine had agreed to pay substantial damages and Beckham's legal costs and undertaken not to repeat the defamation.

Lawyer Salayha Hussein, acting for Northern & Shell, told the high court that her client accepted that all the allegations to which Mr Tyrrell referred were untrue.

Ms Hussein added: "The defendant apologises to Ms Beckham for the distress and embarrassment caused to her and are happy to give the undertaking referred to above."
guardian


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60 Seconds: Tracey Emin
Monday, June 25, 2007


Artist Tracey Emin is currently representing the UK at the Venice Biennale, the prestigious art exhibition held every two years. She was also recently made a member of the Royal Academy of Arts. This is quite a surprise for Emin, whose 1999 Turner Prize entry, the condom-strewn My Bed, saw her dubbed 'the bad girl of British art'.

■ You're not a conventional choice to represent us at the Venice Biennale, are you?

I would have gone to William Hill and put £1,000 on the fact that it would have been someone a damn sight more conservative than me. I'm very pleased that it's me at Venice for all the other artists in Britain who aren't conservative and don't toe the line.

■ Do you see it as a competition?

It is a competition because I'm in contention to win the Golden Lion but it's a bit like the Olympics – just to get there and represent your country is a really nice thing. I've never won anything. I take part and play really hard but I'm not your average winner. It's not that I don't stand any chance, it's just not what I'm about.

■ Describe your average day.


I wake up at 8am, make a pot of tea, watch something I've recorded the night before – I've been loving the Great British Menu – then I'll talk to my cat and sod around the house for a couple of hours. After that, I'll go to my studio. I'll start working at maybe 4pm, until 7pm, or perhaps last until 2am. I often can't concentrate for that long but sometimes I'll do two days' worth of work in a day.

■ Did losing your tent in Momart's fire hurt you on a personal level?

Yes, I'm still upset about it. It's a seminal piece of art that's gone down in art history and now I can't show it. It's gone.

■ How has success changed you?

You feel more comfortable with yourself because success proves you weren't wrong. Everything you fought for seems worthwhile. You were right to follow your convictions and that's a brilliant feeling.

■ You're often criticised in the press. Does the biennale feel like vindication?

No, because people are still going to criticise me. People should get behind me for once. It's like the England football team – I'm all you've got.

On the other hand, art critics have their opinions and I don't expect them to be any easier on me. A lot of these bitchy art critics are very educated people who have done PhDs in art history, written books and studied philosophy.

And that's what's quite hurtful, when you get a complete slagging off from someone like that.

■ How bitchy is the art world?


I've hung around on the fringes of the fashion world – and the art world is pretty nice and friendly by comparison. Artists are quite supportive.

■ Does being a member of the Royal Academy make you 'establishment'?


Well, that was completely unexpected. I said 'yes' straight away. Some people worry how it will affect their career.

I thought: 'This is brilliant.' Actually, I think maybe the Royal Academy just wants its parties to be a bit more lively.

■ Do you still party?

About once every six months, I'll stay up all night and go from place to place and suddenly realise it's 8am. I've never done drugs – never have, never will. I hate it.

So I'm out on my pure energy. If I go out dancing until late, it'll take me two days to recover.

■ Have you mellowed with age?

My life is the same as it was 20 years ago except I can find a way out of a lot of my problems. I've worked hard on myself but I still drink too much and say things I regret. I still behave in a way I shouldn't.

■ What's your Venice show?

Painting, needlework, lots of different kinds of work. Every show I do has a different angle. There's a lot of new stuff. I'm not resting on my laurels and the pavilion is big – you've got a lot of space to fill.

■ Is losing the 1999 Turner Prize still a regret?

I very dramatically didn't win the Turner – that's all I'll say. It was upsetting because my work was literally trampled on, taken out of the show.

Then I had to deal with being hounded by the press and being sent hate mail. Times were different then. It's only eight years but it feels like a different era. Things are better now. People are much more open to stuff.

■ Did you lay the foundation for the current climate?


Yes. Now anything goes.
http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/article.htm ... _page_id=7]Metro[url=[/url]


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PostPosted: 28 Jun 07, 10:44 
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Paris: The strip search was 'humiliating'

Paris and Larry
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Paris Hilton has told Larry King that being strip-searched was 'the most humiliating experience of my life' and said her time inside was a 'new beginning' for her.

She said that being jailed was a 'traumatic experience' which saw her curled up in the foetal position crying hysterically.

But the 26-year-old told CNN's Larry King that she believed God made 'everything happen for a reason' and that her time behind bars had changed her.

The hotel heiress said she wanted to cut down on her 'superficial' life of partying and use her fame to create a halfway house for her fellow inmates and to support children's, breast cancer and multiple sclerosis charities.

Hilton was released from her Californian prison cell on Tuesday after serving 23 days of a 45-day sentence for a probation violation.

A subdued Hilton, who was dressed in white lace and spoke softly during the interview, said: 'It was a very traumatic experience, but I feel like God does make everything happen for a reason.

'And it gave me a time-out in life just to really find out what was important and what I want to do and find out who I am.

'I have a new outlook on life.

'The beginning was really hard, really hard for me, it's a bit of a blur it was so traumatic.

'But after being there for a while I had to accept I could either make the best of it or the worst of it, so I lived by the motto, 'Don't serve the time, let the time serve you'.'

'It was a journey to figure out myself and who I am and what I want to do. There's so much more to me than what people think,' she said.

She said partying would no longer be the 'mainstay' of her life.

Hilton said all the sheriffs were 'very professional" and treated her "like any other inmate, no better, no worse'.

She described her 8ft by 12ft cell, in which she spent 23 hours a day in an orange jumpsuit, as a small room with metal bunk beds, a toilet next to the bed connected to the sink, and a small desk.

She said she 'sat in bed reading all these letters' from fans and had no idea she had so much support.

Hilton vowed she would never drink and drive again.

'I will never make that mistake again. I take full responsibility,' she said.

Asked if she thought she had got a raw deal, Hilton said: 'Yes, I do.'

But she added: 'Even though I hated it, I'm glad it happened in a way. It changed my life forever. I feel stronger than ever.'

She also defended Sheriff Lee Baca's decision to release her with an electronic ankle tag.

She said she was suffering from claustrophobia at the time and when she was returned to court in handcuffs the following day it was 'one of the most terrifying days' of her life.

Asked if she had 'danced' through her time in jail, she said: 'What do you mean by that? I was locked in a cell for three-and-a-half weeks.

It was a horrible experience. I did my time.'

In her first broadcast interview since being released, she said she just wanted to let people know what she went through and that she had never expected that she would be sentenced to jail.

Hilton said when she was released it was 'one of the happiest days of my life'.

'It's hard to even describe,' she said.

'It was so exciting. It was just pandemonium, and then as soon as I saw my mum I just ran to her to go give her a hug.'

Hilton, who has said she had found God, paused when asked what her favourite bible passage was before she said: 'Mmm... I don't have a favourite part.'

The hotel heiress was released from jail after a bizarre, three-week stay in which she was briefly released to her Hollywood Hills home, then sent screaming and crying back to a county prison.

The Simple Life star walked out of the all-women's jail in Lynwood to a horde of cameras and reporters just after midnight local time.

She was taken to her grandparents' Holmby Hills mansion where she prepared for the interview.

The celebrity socialite's path to jail began on September 7, when she failed a sobriety test after police saw her weaving down a street in her Mercedes-Benz.

Hilton, who said she was hungry and on the way to get a hamburger when she was let out, pleaded no contest to alcohol-related reckless driving and was sentenced to probation for three years.

In the months that followed she was stopped twice by officers who discovered her driving on a suspended licence. The second stop saw her sent to court and then jail.

In an exclusive interview with US showbiz magazine People, due out on Friday, Hilton says she was 'in the foetal position, basically in hysterics' during her first few days behind bars.

'Thank God I'm free!" she tells the magazine.

'I was basically in the foetal position, basically in hysterics.

'All of the inmates were very supportive. There were girls next to me. We could talk through the vents and they were just really sweet.'

Asked about her release, she says: 'Just being able to hug my mum felt so great, and I really needed it 'cause I haven't had a hug in a long time.'
Metro


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PostPosted: 02 Jul 07, 21:57 
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60 SECONDS: Josh Holloway


Actor Josh Holloway, from Atlanta, Georgia, stars as heart-throb Sawyer in kooky cult TV drama Lost. Originally a model, Josh turned to acting and appeared in numerous made-for-TV movies. He returns to his advertising roots with the new campaign for Davidoff's Cool Water. Josh currently lives in Hawaii with his wife Yessica.

Was going back to modelling a bit strange?

It had a good concept and I was able to act within the commercial. It was all swimming and cliff diving, so it was a lot of fun.

How did you get into modelling to begin with?

I was working in construction and got my hair cut. Someone asked me to do a hair show and I said sure. That’s where it started. I did some basic modelling in Atlanta and then moved to New York. I was 18. Back then they were using real men for ads. Today, they use younger, more androgynous, models but back then it was beefcake guys. I didn’t work for a while.

What’s the oddest shoot you’ve done?

It was for a pyjama campaign. The pyjamas had different animal prints and our hair was styled to look like the animal. I ended up with a cow print hairdo with little horns. It only appeared in Europe, luckily, so my friends didn’t see it. They thought it was great I was having success. They still took the piss, though, but that’s what good friends are for.

It’s a cliché for models to want to become actors. Did that put you off?

It nearly did, I had to get over it. It was very difficult to get into acting and that stereotype didn’t help. I gave up on my acting ambitions three times but kept getting back into it. It’s a tough industry but I never lost my love for the craft. I felt I wanted to move on in life, possibly get married and have a family, and I had nothing to provide. Those issues played a part in my considering giving it up. Maybe that’s why you make it sometimes though. You quit trying to please and just be. I was about to get into selling real estate, I had just got my licence when I got the part in Lost.

Do women throw themselves at you?

Occasionally. The most forward woman was over 60. She threw her arms around me out of nowhere. She was enthusiastic, ha ha. It was during the day and I’d seen her around at a couple of events. I wasn’t exactly being stalked but she definitely keeps up with Lost.

I was about to quit and get into selling real estate. I had just got my licence when I got the part in Lost

Is it good there’s finally a date for Lost to end?

Yes and it’s a testament to the writers’ creativity and their commitment to the integrity of the story. It’s unprecedented in television. It might have become a bit ridiculous without an end date. It’s an industry based on ratings, so the fact they were able to negotiate an ending says a lot about their commitment. I’m sure it wasn’t easy.

What’s the most ridiculous thing you’ve had to do in Lost?
It wasn’t ridiculous but the most exhilarating and frightening thing was the episode where I was on a raft that blew up. I was wearing steel-toed boots and jeans. I was supposed to be shot in one arm and had to swim quite a way through the ocean and then drag Michael [Harold Perrineau] back on to a raft. It was in the middle of the night. I thought I was going to sink and I felt like shark bait.

What do you want to do after Lost finishes?

I want to do everything. I’d like to learn some different dialects and do some more diverse character roles, the way Johnny Depp and Daniel Day Lewis do it. I really respect their work. I love diversity.

A polar bear roams the island in Lost. Have you ever been attacked by a wild animal yourself?
No. I thought I was being attacked once though. Me and my wife were camping and we heard movement all around us in the forest and it kept getting closer and closer. We ran to the car and flipped the lights on – I was using a burning marshmallow on a stick as my weapon. It turned out to be five raccoons. They were surrounding our camp. We put the lights on and they disappeared but they were very bold. Metro


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PostPosted: 02 Jul 07, 22:00 
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60 SECONDS: Antonio Banderas


Spanish actor Antonio Banderas had his big break in Pedro Almodovar's Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! in 1990. He then moved to Hollywood, where his acting credits include Philadelphia, The Mask Of Zorro and Interview With The Vampire. He is the voice of Puss In Boots in Shrek The Third, which is on general release today.

This is your second Shrek film as Puss In Boots. Was it fun coming back?

Yes and, of course, if the cat wasn’t a success I would have been out of the picture. It’s funny because when they offered it to me, I was really surprised. I would never have thought I’d get offered an animated movie in America, for obvious reasons. I came here 17 years ago without speaking the language so why would they ever call on me to use my voice?

Puss In Boots gets what he wants by being charming. Do you rely on charm?
I work a lot too. I don’t know if it’s about being charming. You have to sweat a lot to be charming all the time and I’ve been sweating since 1974. Back then, I was on stage in independent theatre going from village to village in the south of Spain, acting on soccer fields. Then I went to Madrid and met Pedro Almodóvar and so many things have happened since. I’ve done theatre and been an action hero. I’ve done musicals such as Evita, horror movies, social movies, films for children and I’ve directed. It seems to me you cannot have fun with your life as an actor if you put yourself in a tube and say: ‘I can’t do that because the audience won’t like it.’

You directed your wife Melanie Griffith in Crazy In Alabama but the pair of you have never played a couple on screen. Is that deliberate?

I have never liked movies where a husband and wife performed together on screen. For me, it’s like I’m looking at a National Enquirer moment, seeing them kissing and doing things they do in private. I don’t like it. Probably in the time of Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, it made some sense but ever since then, I have never liked to see that. Melanie agrees with me. I would love to direct her again – not just because she is my wife but because she is a magnificent actress.

Is she working?

No. She’s a victim of what many women in Hollywood are victims of. It’s called ageing. When you have certain wrinkles, it seems that you stop being an actress. It’s very unfair. And it’s not only happening to her but also to actresses such as Jessica Lange and Michelle Pfeiffer. There are many actresses like them.

How does she deal with that?

I would be totally depressed but she’s not. She has immediately filled those empty spaces with things such as family, relationships, happiness and life.

You have to sweat a lot to be charming all the time and I’ve been sweating since 1974

Do you worry about getting older?

No, it’s not so much a problem for men. I remember when I finished the first Zorro film – Cathy Zeta Jones went to do a movie with Sean Connery [Entrapment]. They were a couple at the end of the movie and it was kind of normal. You wouldn’t see that the opposite way round in a Hollywood film. I don’t know if it’s so much a Hollywood problem as a problem of the structure of society in general.

You’ve been married for nearly 11 years – an eternity in Hollywood. What’s your secret?

We were very unsuccessful in our previous marriages so we had opportunities to learn from that. You have to love the person you love all the time, through everyday life. That is very important. Not everything is the red carpet and the beautiful moments. There are other aspects of life when you have to love too and there are things we have now which have only come to us after 13 years in the relationship. You can get other stuff but I got a lot of that back in the 1980s [dirty laugh] – that rush of a new relationship. There is a moment where you say ‘I need stability’ and then you discover this really long tunnel full of surprises and ups and downs.

Where do you live these days?

To be absolutely truthful, we have a beautiful house in LA but I am not too much into the rest of the place. We bought a house in New York and we may move there eventually. I want to go back to Broadway and do more theatre so I would prefer to live in New York – it’s more my place. I feel more European there. You can walk in the street and people insult you. That’s more natural to me. People complain, suffer and scream: ‘F*** you!’ I love it.
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PostPosted: 02 Jul 07, 22:28 
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Chris Evans To Marry

Radio 1 presenter Chris Evans has reportedly proposed to girlfriend Natasha Shishmanian on a recent holiday in Portugal, and is now planning an August wedding near his villa in the Algarve.

According to the News Of The World, a friend of Evans said: "This is the real thing for Chris and Natasha -they're so much in love and want to be together for ever. It's all very sweet.

“They're planning to marry locally and will hold their reception at the same place. Chris owns an amazing villa nearby and is absolutely enchanted with this part of the Algarve."

Evans is now free to marry again after officially divorcing his second wife Billie Piper last month, despite being separated from the young actress for some years.

waveguide.co.uk


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£2.8M IN INMAN WILL

ARE You Being Served actor John Inman left £2.8million to his boyfriend in his will.

Inman, 71, who died in March of liver problems, gave almost his entire estate to his partner of 35 years Ron Lynch.

Mr Lynch, 53, has avoided paying £1million in inheritance tax because the pair were civil partners after their gay marriage in December 2005.


Inman was famous for playing camp salesman Mr Humphries in the cult BBC comedy, watched by up to 22 million in the 70s.

Although he won TV awards, his stereotypical portrayal of a theatrical homosexual was attacked by gay groups.
Mirror


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Morrison death theory challenged


Morrison (right) is widely believed to have died of heart failure in Paris
A nightclub manager has challenged the belief that Doors singer Jim Morrison died of heart failure in a bath.

In a new book Sam Bernett claims Morrison died in a toilet cubicle in his Paris club in 1971 after what he believed was a heroin overdose.

Two drug dealers then took Morrison's body back to his apartment and dropped it in his bath in an unsuccessful bid to revive him, according to Mr Bernett.

Paris prosecutors said they were not likely to re-examine Morrison's death.

In his book The End: Jim Morrison, Bernett says he asked a doctor to examine the 27-year-old singer in the toilet of his Rock and Roll Circus nightclub on 3 July 1971.

'Felt ill'

He writes: "When we found him dead, he had a little foam on his nose, and some blood too, and the doctor said, 'That must be an overdose of heroin.'"

Bernett went on to become a radio personality, rock biographer and vice president of Disneyland Paris.

He said he was pestered for years by reporters investigating Morrison's death but kept his story quiet until his wife suggested writing a book last year.



Morrison's late girlfriend, Pamela Courson, told police a different story.

She said the couple went to the movies and out for dinner on the night of the singer's death, before they listened to records and fell asleep.

According to her testimony, Morrison awoke in the night feeling ill and took a hot bath. Courson said she found him dead in the bath.

Stephen Davis, author of biography Jim Morrison: Life, Death, Legend, said he would not rewrite events because of the new book.

Davis believes Morrison did overdose at Bernett's nightclub but that he survived the experience.

"It just seems likely that if he died in the toilet of a nightclub it would have come out before now," Davis said.

BBC


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