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Rachel Weisz Lucky Magazine October 2011
Rachel Weisz lights up Lucky's October 2011 issue cover. She's the thinking woman's movie star with very--very--strong opinions about footwear. Newlywed Weisz opens up to Lucky about having more children, her upcoming film Dream House and growing up in a "freaky place."
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August 30, 2011
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Angelina Jolie Vanity Fair October 2011 - not pregnant, I'm not adopting at the moment
Angelina Jolie appears on Vanity Fair's October 2011 issue cover.
The "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" actress talks about her life and new film.
Angelina Jolie assures Vanity Fair contributing editor Rich Cohen that there is "no secret wedding" in the works for her and Pitt. "I'm not pregnant. I'm not adopting at the moment," the star tells Cohen.
"Brad thinks I'm going to be a nightmare," Jolie jokes, telling how directing her new movie, In the Land of Blood and Honey, has changed the way she will approach her acting career. "I had such a good experience he thinks I'm going to be impatient with directors, which I already am. I get impatient with people working on a film that have their head in their hands like it's the most complicated thing in the world."
"I've never felt more exposed. My whole career, I've hidden behind other people's words," Jolie tells Cohen of her screenwriting and feature directorial debut. "Now it's me talking. You feel ridiculous when you get something wrong."
"I had the flu," Jolie says of how she came to write the script. "I had to be quarantined from the children for two days. I was in the attic of a house in France. I was isolated, pacing. I don't watch TV and I wasn't reading anything. So I started writing. I went from the beginning to the end. I didn't know any other way." She says she then let Brad take the script to read on a trip: "He called and said, 'You know, honey, it's not that bad.'"
Jolie admits she did not initially intend to direct the film. "It was something I didn't trust out of my hands," she explains. "So by default I ended up putting myself in as director." Of her decision to use all unknown actors from the region, she says, "It couldn't be anybody else. It's their story. It was important that they were willing to do it. If none of them were willing, I wouldn't have made it."
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August 30, 2011
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Jennifer Aniston, Demi Moore and Alicia Keys are Glamour's October 2011 Cover Stars
Hollywood mega-stars Jennifer Aniston, Demi Moore and Alicia Keys open up about the crucial women's health crusade that brought them together--the three actresses directed a series of short films for Lifetime entitled Five, about women and breast cancer that show how breast cancer affects women's lives, families and friendships--oh, and they dish about husbands, boyfriends, and babies, too!
Glamour's October issue is available on newsstands nationwide September 6, 2011 and digitally (iPad and Barnes & Noble Nook Color) on August 30, 2011.
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August 29, 2011
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Twilight's Kristen Stewart on growing up, getting married, and giving birth - W Magazine September 2011
Twilight's Kristen Stewart is the cover girl of the September 2011 issue of W Magazine. Lynn Hirschberg interviews Stewart .
Lynn Hirschberg: Everyone knows you as Bella Swan, the heroine of the Twilight series, whose penultimate installment, Breaking Dawn Part 1, premieres on November 18. What audiences may not know is that you've been acting since you were a child. How did you get your start?
Kristen Stewart: It's weird, because I would be the last person in my school to be in plays, but I was forced to sing a song in a school thing. I sang a dreidl song, which is funny for me. I've never celebrated Hanukkah--it wasn't in my upbringing, but it was one of those deals where everybody has to pick a song or participate somehow in the chorus. It wasn't the normal dreidl song; I can't really remember the words, but it was a more serious dreidl song. The dreidl was huge, it was really honored. And that's how I met my agent, who was in the audience. I was eight. I was nine when I did my first movie, The Safety of Objects.
Did you do any commercials, or did you go straight into films?
I did two commercials, one for Porsche, but I was definitely not the type of child one would cast in a commercial or any TV that you'd typically go out for as a young kid. I wasn't the type of kid who would be in stuff that kids watch. I wasn't cutesy.
In 1999 David Fincher cast you as Jodie Foster's daughter in Panic Room. He likes to do dozens of takes for each scene. Was that difficult, as a child?
I didn't realize that 80 takes wasn't normal. But it's funny: Some of my proudest moments from film sets are in Panic Room. My character had seizures. Just being able to say, I was 10 years old and I broke all the blood vessels in my eye on that take, is cool. It was fun.
You had a tomboy quality, which was unusual.
I have brothers, and that so-called boyish quality was something that I was deathly self-conscious about when I was younger. I was, like, No, I'm a girl. Actually, I'm still embarrassed to say that.
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Hollywood Hunk Brad Pitt took his kids to a screening of Mr. Popper's Penguins on Monday (August 29) at the Odeon Theater in the Richmond neighborhood of London, England.
The 47-year-old actor held hands with 3-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne. Zahara, Pax, and Shiloh were in front.
Brad Pitt is in London filming "World War Z."
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Brad Pitt rescues Extra
Brad Pitt was real life-saving hero on the set of his new movie in Scotland.
Brad Pitt stars as Gerry Lane in "World War Z." Pitt was in the midst of shooting a scene in which fearful masses rush through Glasgow's George Square. One woman, involved in the stampede fell and was in danger of being trampled. According to the Scottish Sun newspaper, Pitt rushed over and carried the woman off to safety.
"He didn't have time to speak to her as it was mid-shoot. But she said afterwards how grateful she was, despite having a badly-grazed knee," an onlooker told the newspaper.
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