Posts archive for: 5 July, 2006
  • It's official: Keith Richards to Be in 'Pirates' Movie

    Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards is lined up to play the swashbuckling father of a pirate in the third installment of the "Pirates of the Caribbean" series, star Johnny Depp said Tuesday.

    Producer Jerry Bruckheimer said Richards would have a cameo role as the father of the flamboyant Captain Jack Sparrow, played by Depp, in the third "Pirates" movie, which is due to resume filming next month in California.

    Depp, 43, has said he adopted the body language and mannerisms of the veteran guitarist to create Captain Jack's character.

    "We're all looking forward to the idea of Keith coming in and doing a cameo," Depp told a London news conference to promote "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest," which opens in Britain on Thursday.

    "You never say it's definite until the guy steps on the set and the camera is rolling. But it's looking very, very good," he said.

    Co-star Orlando Bloom said he was similarly enthusiastic about working with Richards — provided the rocker is in good health.

    "I can't wait to see him — well, if he doesn't kill himself falling out of coconut trees," Bloom said. "Very rock and roll."

    Richards, 62, suffered a head injury in late April, when he reportedly fell out of a palm tree while vacationing in Fiji.

    Having made a full recovery, Richards will join the Stones for their rescheduled European tour, beginning Tuesday in Milan.

  • US stars align in anti-Iraq war hunger strike

    Hollywood actor-activists including Sean Penn and Susan Sarandon and anti-war campaigners led by bereaved mother Cindy Sheehan plan to launch a hunger strike, demanding the immediate return of US troops from Iraq.

    As Americans get set to fire up barbeques in patriotic celebration of US Independence Day on July 4, anti-war protestors planned to savour a last meal outside the White House, before embarking on a 'Troops Home Fast' at midnight.

    "We've marched, held vigils, lobbied Congress, camped out at Bush's ranch, we've even gone to jail, now it's time to do more," said Sheehan, who emerged as an anti-war icon after losing her 24-year-old son Casey in Iraq.

    The hunger strike was the latest bid by the US anti-war movement to grab hold of American public opinion, after numerous marches, vigils and political campaigns.

    Despite polls which show the Iraq war is unpopular and many Americans are skeptical of President George W. Bush's wartime leadership, peace protests have not hit the opinion-swaying critical mass seen during Vietnam War.

    "We have been continually sheltered from the actual cost of war from the beginning," said Meredith Dearborn, of human rights group Global Exchange, explaining how anti-Iraq war protests have stuttered.

    While 2,526 US soldiers have died since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, according to an AFP tally based on Pentagon figures, the impact of the deaths has rarely dominated headlines.

    While it is not unusual to see an Iraq-war veteran or amputee in an airport for instance, or newspaper features on horrific injuries inflicted by roadside bombs in Iraq, the United States hardly feels like a nation at war.

    Some protestors and experts in public opinion put that down to the absence of the Vietnam War style conscription draft, which means only professional soldiers or reservists can be sent off to war.

    "We have done everything we could think of to end this war, we have protested, held marches, vigils ... lobbied, written letters to Congress," said Dearborn.

    "Now it is time to bring the pain and suffering of war home. We are putting our bodies on the line for peace."

    Perhaps the only time the anti-Iraq war movement captured lasting coverage was in August 2005, when Sheehan and supporters pitched camp outside Bush's Texas ranch, where the president habitually stays in high summer.

    Even then, the fiercely partisan debate unleashed may have harmed Sheehan, who faced fierce fire from conservative groups and radio talk show hosts, as much as it hurt the Bush administration's image over Iraq.

    The hunger strike will see at least four activists, Sheehan, veteran comedian and peace campaigner Dick Gregory, former army colonel Ann Wright and environmental campaigner Diane Wilson launch serious, long-term fasts.

    "I don't know how long I can fast, but I am making this open-ended," said Wilson.

    Other supporters, including Penn, Sarandon, novelist Alice Walker and actor Danny Glover will join a 'rolling" fast, a relay in which 2,700 activists pledge to refuse food for at least 24 hours, and then hand over to a comrade.

    Though the anti-war movement is trying hard to puncture public perceptions, some experts believe such protests have little impact on how Americans view foreign wars.

    Ohio State University professor John Mueller for example, argued in the Foreign Affairs journal in December, that only rising US casualties could be proven to erode public support for a conflict.

    Anti-war movements during the Korean and Iraq wars have been comparitively invisible, but public support had eroded in a similar way to the Vietnam conflict, in which the peace movement played a dominant role, he wrote.

    Recent polls reveal public scepticism over Iraq, and damage to Bush's personal ratings.

    In a poll in Time magazine published Friday, only 33 percent of respondents approved of Bush's leadership on Iraq while 64 percent said they disapproved his handling of the campaign.

    A Pew Research Center poll released on June 20, found that only 35 percent of Americans approved of Bush's handling of the Iraqi conflict -- though that was up five percent from a similar poll in February.

  • Morgan Fairchild has found work

    Morgan Fairchild has joined the cast of My Network TV's upcoming drama strip "Fashion House." The actress joins Bo Derek in the Twentieth Television-produced show, which takes an in-depth look at the glamorous yet unscrupulous world of the fashion industry.

    Fairchild will portray Sophia Blakely, a long-standing enemy ready to exact revenge on fashion mogul Maria Gianni (Derek) as a result of the two power-hungry women's tumultuous past. Fairchild has numerous TV credits on her resume.

    She earned a Golden Globe nomination for her role on the NBC series "Flamingo Road" in 1981 as well as an Emmy nomination for her guest-starring role on CBS' "Murphy Brown" in 1990.

  • Keira Knightley: I'm not anorexic

    Keira Knightley says her family has a history of anorexia but insisted Tuesday that she does not have an eating disorder.

    The slender 21-year-old, in London to promote "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest," rejected suggestions that she was anorexic or had another eating disorder that came after she appeared in the film's premiere in a revealing gold Gucci gown.

    "I've got a lot of experience with anorexia -- my grandmother and great-grandmother suffered from it, and I had a lot of friends at school who suffered from it," Knightley said. "I know it's not something to be taken lightly and I don't."

    She said she was surprised by any suggestion that she had an eating disorder.

    "(The press) said to me yesterday 'How does it feel to be called anorexic?' and I had no idea that I was," Knightley said. "I'm not saying there aren't people in the film industry that suffer from it, because I am sure that there are. But I'm quite sure I don't have it."

    Knightley, who was nominated for best actress for her role in "Pride and Prejudice," still welcomed discussion about the illness.

    "In a way, it's good that it's out there and that people are talking about it," she said.

  • magazine pays for lindsay lohan birthday party

    HOW do you score exclusive pictures of Lindsay Lohan partying the night away? Just pick up the $100,000 tab for the freckled phenom's 20th-birthday blowout. Life & Style  magazine paid for Sunday night's bash at the Polaroid Beach House in Malibu, which drew Lohan-lovers Courtney Love, Nicole Richie, Kate Bosworth, Woody Harrelson, Owen Wilson, Jeremy Piven, Eva Mendes, Jamie-Lynn Sigler and Ivanka Trump. Security shooed away several dozen paparazzi hiding under the house, on the beach or bobbing in boats in the ocean, in order to protect Life & Style's scoop. The snappers missed out on Lohan warbling songs by Madonna and Journey on a karaoke machine and alternating with Dustin Hoffman's son Jake and Samantha Ronson in the deejay booth. Shaggy-haired chef Kerry Simon, who has previously fed Lohan at his restaurant in the new Sofitel in L.A., catered the affair, which was organized by Fingerprint Communications and lawyer/club promoter Mike Heller.

  • Cheryl Tweedy: WAGs too flash

    The Girls Aloud singer scoffed: “It’s like a comedy — everyone’s so flash. “It’s like, ‘Who’s got the best watch on, who’s got the best bag, which wife is dressed the best, which wife’s got the best hair? I’m like, ‘I’ve got my own career’.”

    Cheryl, who weds World Cup player and Arsenal star Ashley Cole a week on Saturday, criticised footballers’ wives and girlfriends for “living off their man’s money”. Her verbal volley came days after she returned from three weeks with the WAGS in Germany during England’s flop World Cup campaign.

    The 23-year-old pop star was snapped in Baden-Baden socialising with Wayne Rooney’s lover Coleen McLoughlin, Michael Carrick’s missus Lisa Roughead, Joe Cole’s partner Carly Zucker, Theo Walcott’s girl Melanie Slade and Elen Rives — sweetheart of Frank Lampard. Jermaine Jenas’s partner Sabrina Keogh and Wayne Bridge’s girl Vanessa Perroncel also joined the fun.

    But Cheryl tore into top footballers’ better halves for burning holes in the aces’ credit cards.

    She said: “It really annoys me when people try to call me a footballer’s wife. Footballers’ wives have no careers and live off their husbands’ money. I was in Girls Aloud before I met Ashley and have my own successful career. I’m not going to quit the band and sit around in the sun all day or go shopping with Ashley’s plastic. If I’m going shopping I’ll pay with the money I’ve worked hard for. I’d die of embarrassment if I had to resort to taking boyfriends’ cards. You see girls in clubs making a beeline for the footballers and it makes me sick.”

    Her comments are likely to infuriate the WAGS, hailed in Germany as the world’s prettiest footballers’ wives. But Cheryl DID admit she uses Ashley’s credit card — while keeping hers as back-up. She told a magazine: “I’ve got my own money, so if my husband’s card is declined I whip out mine.” Victoria Beckham dodged a tongue-lashing from Cheryl — because she was a singer too. Cheryl said: “I love Victoria. She’s very ambitious, so we have a lot in common.”


    The Geordie star’s no-career criticism does not apply to many WAGs.

    Coleen, 20, has just signed as the new face of Asda’s George range and runs her own PR company.  Carly, 24, is a personal fitness instructor and 29-year-old Elen is a supermodel and mum. Meanwhile Lisa, 25, teaches pilates and 20-year-old Michaela Henderson-Thynne — Stewart Downing’s girl — is studying law. Coleen and sent-off striker Wayne, 20, visited London for a shopping trip yesterday. They then caught a train back to Cheshire where Wayne helped carry the bags.

  • Avril and Deryck move up wedding

    Avril Lavigne and Deryck Whibley have apparently sped up their wedding plans.

    CTV's eTalk reports that a California ceremony is imminent for the punk princess and the Sum 41 front man.

    Friends and family of the pair were reportedly notified days ago of the plan and told to book their tickets immediately for Santa Barbara, where the Canadian rockers have a house together.

    Earlier reports had suggested the wedding would take place Aug. 26, but media scrutiny apparently spurred the couple to move up the date.

    Lavigne's publicist Sean Cordner would not confirm the reports.

    "I cannot comment on the personal lives of our artists,'' said Cordner.

    Lavigne's bridal shower was last Friday. The racy gifts were said to include a sexy red bra, a thong and some handcuffs.

    Other reports suggest wild days may soon be over for the Complicated songstress and her party boy fiance Whibley, once linked to Paris Hilton.

    Lavigne, 21, of Napanee, Ont., and Whibley, 26, of Toronto, are said to have put a nursery in their home.

  • Doherty on Moss: 'She's had enough, I think'

    Pete Doherty said he will always love Kate Moss, but acknowledged their relationship was "up and down" in comments released Wednesday.

    "It's right and wrong, up and down," said Doherty, 27, when asked by a British Broadcasting Corp. interviewer about the status of the relationship.

    But he added: "She's had enough, I think."

    "I love her bones, I always will," the British rocker said.

    In an interview with BBC talk-show host Jonathan Ross, set to air Friday, Doherty also said Moss pressured him to kick his heroin habit.

    "She said, 'Give up the smack, and never go on Jonathan Ross again!' " the Babyshambles frontman joked.

    Excerpts from the interview were released Wednesday by the BBC.

    The relationship between Moss, 32, and Doherty hit the headlines in September, after pictures of the supermodel allegedly using cocaine appeared in British tabloid The Daily Mirror. Moss was photographed in the west London music studio where Doherty was recording with his band.

    Last month, British prosecutors announced that Moss would not be charged over the tabloid claims, saying there was insufficient evidence.

    Doherty also discussed his drug addiction in the interview.

    "For the first time in my life, I'm upping the stakes in my battle against (heroin)," he said. "Being clean means I can sit down and rediscover writing. My songwriting suffered, being on drugs."

    Doherty recently signed a deal with Orion Books to publish poetry, memoirs and drawings culled from 20 volumes of his diaries.

    He is undergoing drug treatment at the order of a British court, following a December arrest in which police said they discovered marijuana, heroin and crack cocaine in his car and clothing.

    "I get tested twice a week for crack and heroin, that's part of my court order," Doherty said in the interview, adding that he was trying to stop. "Being skint (broke), drunk, paranoid -- no, I don't wish that for myself."

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