Quantcast
Channel: Celebrity - The Huffington Post
Viewing all 15269 articles
Browse latest View live

Jane Krakowski Doesn't Care That Tina Fey Always Casts Her As A Narcissist

$
0
0
"My motto is: In Tina Fey I trust," Jane Krakowski told HuffPost Live on Wednesday. And so when Tina Fey came calling to offer a part in the new series "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt," Krakowski didn't think twice -- even if it meant playing a frivolous narcissist, not unlike her "30 Rock" character Jenna Maroney, also penned by Fey.

"I was very flattered when Tina Fey and Robert Carlock asked me to come be on the show and I said yes without knowing anything about the role at all," Krakowski admitted. "I had no idea what they had in store for me. I just wanted to work with their brilliance again."

Reading the script, Krakowski was overwhelmed with gratitude and had no qualms with the similarities to her prior role.

"I was like, 'Thank you for this juicy part that you have given me!'" she recalled. "'Thank you so much! I hope I can pull it off and make you proud.'"

But the actress added that she didn't want to think too hard about why Fey thought she was perfect for the role.

"Yeah, there are some questions you don't want to ask," she laughed. "Like why does she [Tina Fey] think I am like these people? There are just some questions you don't want to know the answers to!"

Watch more from Jane Krakowski's conversation with HuffPost Live here.


Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

Liam Neeson Might Not Be An Action Star For Much Longer

$
0
0
"Taken" fans, looks like your luck of getting installment after installment of the action franchise will run out pretty soon.

We've all had the pleasure of watching Neeson look for people, find people and kill people in "Taken," "Taken 2" and "Taken 3," but the 62-year-old actor reportedly said he'll probably be done with action movies in two years.

“Maybe two more years. If God spares me and I’m healthy. But after that, I’ll stop [the action] I think," he said, according to The Guardian.

So while he might have time to squeeze in a "Taken 4" (and 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 -- he's Liam Neeson, after all), we're going to bet that we won't ever see a "Taken 10" starring the most badass fictional dad on the planet.

Dang it.




Going Clear: Why Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman Had to Part

$
0
0
If Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief, Alex Gibney's new documentary, only illuminated the outsized personality of L. Ron Hubbard, the founder of the Church of Scientology, it would be a fascinating study of one of the most compelling figures of the mid-twentieth century. But this film, based on Lawrence Wright's book of the same title, is so much more, exposing the secretive society that Hubbard founded within our broader society. Given to bizarre behavior, tantrums, and self-aggrandizement, Hubbard wrote the best-selling Dianetics and with that invented an ideology. Hubbard found a way to avoid taxes by naming this phenomenon a church, and he understood that the one thing Americans truly worshiped was celebrity: John Travolta and Tom Cruise were cultivated to lure a populace to its ranks. When Hubbard died of a stroke in 1986, his reign fell to David Miscavige, who expanded the empire; his speeches to the fold -- footage shown through fair use -- are done on a spotlit stage with Nazi-esque imagery crossed with Who Wants to be a Millionaire extravaganza.

The worst offense to the church is to leave it, but several high-level parishioners have. Some interviewed in Going Clear tell tales of harrowing punishment, prison-like conditions, slave wages, and other abuses. Those who leave, among them Paul Haggis, Mike Rinder, and Sara Goldberg, tell stories of daring escape, many having to give up their families. "Spanky" Taylor, whose task was to mind high-profile Scientologists at the Hollywood Celebrity Centre, most particularly Travolta, fled, baby in arms, in a non-church friend's car. Their reasons for joining in the first place are equally fascinating. The film goes far to show Scientology as instrumental in breaking up Tom Cruise's marriage to Nicole Kidman, her children turned against her.

This particular detail was new to Lawrence Wright, he said at lunch last week at HBO -- the network will air the film on March 29 after a brief theatrical run. The New Yorker writer learned the truth about the tabloid breakup in the making of the film, well after he had researched his book. Katie Holmes' story, outside the film's purview, is yet to be revealed. Scientology does not tolerate criticism, this we know, as they took out a full-page New York Times ad attempting to discredit the film's veracity before anyone saw it. Would the lawyers at HBO allow untruths in their programming, particularly with a scrutiny-averse organization? And Alex Gibney, the gutsy filmmaker who took on abuses in the Catholic Church in his Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God -- what does he think of this negative publicity? He said his only problem was they did not print the play dates.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

How Billy Idol Made Leeza Gibbons Turn Bright Red In An Interview (VIDEO)

$
0
0
Leeza Gibbons has always been such a pro at interviews that not even a pant-less rock star could throw her off her game.

As a co-host on "Entertainment Tonight" for more than a decade, Gibbons interviewed some of the biggest celebrities in television, film and music. From uncomfortable moments with Bette Davis to joking around with Burt Reynolds, Gibbons has always held her own. In fact, as she tells "Oprah: Where Are They Now -- Extra" in the above video, her favorite interview subjects were some of the most unpredictable ones.

"I used to really enjoy the rock 'n' roll interviews because it's so not my world," Gibbons says with a smile. "I'm kind of this good girl from the South."

When you put a self-described "good girl" in a room with a wild rock legend, of course, there's bound to be a good story. Gibbons' encounter with Billy Idol was certainly a memorable one.

"We were backstage with Billy Idol and he just proceeded to get undressed," she recalls. "I thought, 'Well, that's fine. Go ahead. Take everything off then. That's fine.' And he did!"

Nowadays, this move might not seem shocking, but as Gibbons points out, it was considered quite risqué at the time. "This was back when things were a bit more tame than they are now," she says. "We weren't airing things like that. This was the early days."

Gibbons remained professional, but couldn't help feeling her cheeks flush when Idol's pants hit the floor.

"I'm blushing, and I think I had my hair up in a side ponytail with mall bangs and shoulder pads, and Billy Idol is taking his pants off in front of me," Gibbons says. "I was pretty sure my mother was going to talk to me about that! It was great."

"Oprah: Where Are They Now -- Extra" is a web-based spinoff of OWN's "Oprah: Where Are They Now?", which airs an all-new episode this Sunday, March 15, at 9 p.m. ET.



Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter

Kerry Washington Compares Fashion To Fine Art In Marie Claire

$
0
0
"Scandal" fans, rejoice! Your queen has landed yet another magazine spread.

Kerry Washington looks absolutely stunning as Marie Claire's April cover star. Inside the glossy, new "co-star" Lena Dunham interviewed her for a story fittingly titled, "Why We All Want To Be Kerry Washington."

marie claire

The 38-year-old is widely regarded for her keen sense of style both on screen and off, but revealed in the mag that wasn't always the case. "I just put myself in a boot camp of figuring it out, and realized that I really loved it," she said. "I guess because I came to it later in life, I realized, 'Oh, going to a fashion show is like going to the opening of Degas at the Met or going to see Swan Lake.'"

marie claire kerry 2


Click here to see more from the interview, and pick up your copy of Marie Claire's April issue, which hits newsstands March 24.

Pamela Anderson And Son Brandon Hit The Red Carpet

$
0
0
Pamela Anderson brought her son, Brandon Thomas Lee, as her date to the premiere of "The Gunman" in Los Angeles Thursday.

Anderson donned a plunging gold wrap dress and rocked a bob hairstyle for the event at Regal Cinemas L.A. Live. Brandon, her 18-year-old son with ex-husband Tommy Lee, wore an all-black outfit with sneakers.

In January, Anderson talked about raising sons Brandon and Dylan Jagger Lee during an interview with Parade in January.

"I want them to respect women. I say even if it’s just for mom. I haven’t given them too many shining examples in our personal life. I still struggle with self worth and trying to fix people. I’m surrounded by broken toys," she said, adding that her sons give her so much in return: "Respect, love, admiration. They believe in me like no one else. They know me. And laugh at my flaws. We are a close family. The three of us -- the magic triangle."

pamela anderson

pamela anderson

pamela anderson

Will Ferrell Ends Remarkable Dodgers Career With 0.00 ERA

$
0
0
Famed MLB superstar and sometimes-comedian Will Ferrell ended his illustrious career with the Los Angeles Dodgers Thursday. He left the team with a memorable 0.00 ERA.

Ferrell pitched all of one-third of an inning during his time with the Dodgers, facing the San Diego Padres minor leaguer Rico Noel, who, obviously fearing Ferrell’s simultaneous possession of skill and power, decided to bunt the ball back to Ferrell, who then threw him out at first. Perfection.



"Is there life in this 47-year-old arm?" Ferrell asked. There certainly was. Yet despite an essentially perfect pitching performance, Ferrell was told by the team after the at-bat that he had been traded away to another team: the San Diego Padres.




"Ruth, Musial, Mantle, Will Ferrell," Ferrell said that night, according to the Associate Press. "Who would have thought that one day those names would be synonymous? Show of hands -- scratch that, never mind."

Ferrell played nine positions with 10 teams in five different ballparks on Thursday. His one-of-a-kind career will be made into a HBO special set to air later this year. Some of the memorabilia from his historic day will be auctioned off and the proceeds will be donated to Cancer for College and Stand Up to Cancer.

"When I embarked on this journey way back at breakfast," Ferrell said, "I thought to myself, 'Could I do it?' The answer is yes."

Dylan Gelula Explains How 'Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt' Celebrates Women Like No Other Show

$
0
0
Dylan Gelula is still kind of shocked that you're watching her on Netflix. The 20-year-old from the Philadelphia suburbs plays Xanthippe, the wealthy teenage stepdaughter of Jacqueline Voorhees (Jane Krakowski), on "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt," Tina Fey and Robert Carlock's half-hour comedy about a woman (Ellie Kemper) who escapes from a cult. Xan is often the butt of the joke, the cynical side to Kimmy's sunny coin. But with acidic delivery, Gelula shines in the show's excellent supporting cast, which includes Tituss Burgess and Carol Kane.

At first it seems Xan's intent on finding out Kimmy's secrets, but as the season unfolds, we learn she's the kind of teen who pretends to pop pills to fit in with her friends, even though she really wants to go bird watching in Central Park. It's a distinct change from Gelula's arcs on shows like ABC Family's "Chasing Life" and TV Land's "Jennifer Falls." We talked to Gelula about playing a girl with a name no one can pronounce, working with your idols and finding roles that are more than just "the love interest."

How do you feel now that "Kimmy" has been out in the world?
It’s crazy. I forgot anyone was ever going to see it. It’s really weird that other people know the jokes that I thought were really funny. It's like I thought they were going to stay inside jokes.

What was your casting process like?
I was in Los Angeles and they were only casting in New York, and I put in a tape because I wanted it, obviously. A month later I heard they were interested in me.

Did you have to read with Ellie or Jane?
It was actually crazier than that. They were like, "We don’t know if it’s yours yet, but we’re starting the show and the table read is tomorrow. Could you come read Xan at the table read and we’ll see how it goes?"

Was there another person there who was up for the role?
I felt kind of better because I was the one doing the table read, but there were still other girls reading for Xan there.

Do you know the story of why Tina and Robert wanted to name her Xanthippe?
I have no idea. I did my own pronunciation research before going there, but I think until the fifth episode people were like, "How do you say it?” I said it one way, Jane said it another way.

xanthippe

How did you feel working with Tina and Jane going into this?
I mean, it’s Tina Fey. I’ve seen every episode of “30 Rock.” I think everyone who’s my age who likes comedy has.

Did you watch the show again to prep for the role?

I actually went back and binge-watched most of “30 Rock” again because it’s such a specific cadence, it’s such a specific style of comedy.

People have been having so much fun finding “30 Rock” easter eggs in “Kimmy.”
It’s such a machine gun too. If you don’t get one joke, there’s another one right behind it.

I’m starting to watch it for the second time and you just pick up on so much stuff you didn’t realize before.
Oh yeah, I want to do that. I watched the entire thing without moving. I watched it with my boyfriend and we just watched the entire thing and I’m really just a fan. The best part was watching the ones I’m not in, that I didn’t get to read the scripts for. I could genuinely watch without knowing what was going to happen.

What do you hope to do in the next few months, career-wise?
That’s something I’m really trying to figure out. It’s a weird thing to navigate. How do I balance that I want to work with also wanting to do good things? “Kimmy” was such an artistically-fulfilling experience for me. How many things is that true for? How much of working is actually going to be “Kimmy” level? I’m trying to figure out how I’m going to do more things that are amazing.

Do you have another project in the works?
No. I get to do more work on another show that’s really fun to work on called “Chasing Life” on ABC Family. I’m coming back to the second season of that.

xanthippe xanthippe

Do you know if you’re going to be on the second season of “Kimmy?”
I don’t know. I hope to God.

Is there a dream role in mind?
My feminism does matter to me in that I don’t really want to be the “daughter” or the girl that inexplicably thinks the guy is really cute. I don’t want to be “the love interest” or “the daughter.”

That’s what was so cool about Xan on “Kimmy.” There were so many layers to her! She’s not really the bad girl, she's doing things to fit in, but really likes to bird watch.
I think also it’s a great study in women of all ages. If you write jokes for them, they’re going to land them. They were jokes written for women, which you don’t ever get to see.

Did you ever have a conversation with Tina where you talked about that?
I can imagine she’s so sick of talking about, like, “Let’s talk about women in comedy!” I’m not yet, and I’m still thinking about it. What I’m thinking about, she thought about 25 years ago.

Blonde Kim Kardashian Bears A Striking Resemblance To Serbian Singer

$
0
0
You've heard of Kim Kardashian, but have you ever heard of Jelena Karleusa?

No? Well she's a Serbian pop star, who seems to think she may have inspired the reality star's new platinum blonde makeover.

On Thursday, the 36-year-old singer took to Instagram and posted a side-by-side photo of herself and Kardashian sporting similar hairstyles and outfits, captioning the snap, "Will the real slim shady please stand up! Ps( I am on the left ) #Illtakeitasacompliment ❤️."

Will the real slim shady please stand up! Ps( I am on the left ) #Illtakeitasacompliment ❤️

A photo posted by Jelena Karleusha/JK OFFICIAL (@karleusastar) on






Kardashian does bear a striking resemblance to the singer now that she's bleached her tresses, and to emphasize just how much the two look alike, Karleusa posted a collage with a mix of photos of herself and Kardashian that she captioned, "Let's play a game - FIND ME!" And at first glance, it's not that easy:

Lets play a game-FIND ME!

A photo posted by Jelena Karleusha/JK OFFICIAL (@karleusastar) on






And while imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, the pop star tells Us Weekly she doubts Kardashian even knows who she is.

"I think that her stylists are inspired by my [Instagram] page, not her," she said.

Find us on Pinterest!

Follow Huffington Post's board Hollywood on Pinterest.



'It Follows' Started As A Nightmare, And Now It Will Haunt You, Too

$
0
0
Imagine sleeping with your significant other for the first time, only to learn he's passed on the most terrifying STD imaginable: stalker zombies who can only be expelled by handing off the curse via intercourse. The new horror movie "It Follows" will show you what happens, and the results are terrifying.

The indie film premiered to raves at the Cannes Film Festival last May. It was picked up for distribution the following month and screened at a bevy of other festivals in the lead-up to this weekend's limited theatrical release. Written and directed by David Robert Mitchell, who made the 2010 coming-of-age drama "The Myth of the American Sleepover," "It Follows" was worth the wait -- it's a rare must-see for all horror fans.

The idea sprung from a recurring nightmare Mitchell had when he was about 9 and 10 years old. It didn't involve sex, of course, but it contained the film's other trappings, namely a monster that took on other identities -- sometimes people he knew, sometimes not -- and lethargically followed Mitchell wherever he went. He could always evade it, but the fact that no one else could see the shapeshifting creature fostered perpetual dread. When Mitchell thought he might like to make a horror film, he recalled the nightmares. All he needed was a source for such hauntings.

Some have read "It Follows" as an allegory for STDs. Mitchell and the movie's lead, 21-year-old Maika Monroe ("The Guest"), acknowledge that as a possible interpretation but don't submit to it as the film's ultimate metaphor.

"I wanted it to be something that could be shared between people and something that could come back to you," Mitchell told The Huffington Post. "If we use sex to do that, it’s a way of connecting people -- not just physically, but also emotionally -- which sort of tied into some of the other themes in the movie. I had several themes in the back of my head when writing this. Any interpretation is valid. Especially for a horror film, I think that’s part of the fun of it."

Also part of the fun is the cast of 20-somethings who took to sleepy neighborhoods in and near Detroit to film the movie across five weeks. Jay (Monroe) is joined by a small group of friends (including one played by "United States of Tara" alum Keir Gilchrist) determined to help extinguish the haunting that only she can see. Together, they devise escapes and attempts to vanquish the monsters.

"You realize once you're on set that it’s actually very difficult to make a horror movie, which is something you don’t really think of prior to doing it," Maika said. "One day we’re shooting some of the beginning scenes where everything is fine and great at the house, and then we’re into where I’m running for my life."

The finished product makes it look simple. The suburban setting and Disasterpeace's pulsating synth score recall the work of John Carpenter, particularly "Halloween," which is among many films Mitchell cites as lifelong influences. (Others include "Creature from the Black Lagoon," "Night of the Living Dead," "The Thing," "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," "The Shining" and those of David Cronenberg, David Lynch, Brian de Palma and Alfred Hitchcock.) Employing 360-degree pans and sinister perspective shots that direct viewers toward the characters' peril, "It Follows" inverts the 1970s' and 80s' virgin-dies-last horror trope with chilling results.

"Sex is also the thing that temporarily frees you," Mitchell said. "I think sex is simply representative of life itself. It’s literally simply the act of living -- it is in contrast with our mortality, on some level. That’s one of the ways I like to look at it. So, again, I think it’s fair to look at it in terms of the STD comparison. I’m not putting that down, but I also think it’s maybe more complicated than that."

Whatever symbolism you find, "It Follows" is an anomaly within today's horror landscape. The lo-fi production values underscore its terror, and the idea that there's more than torture, gore or unexplained mysticism at hand aligns the thriller with 2014 darling "The Babadook" and Sundance breakout "The Witch" -- both of which relied on atmosphere rather than cheap scares to create suspense. Carrying their torch, "It Follows" is the right way to do horror.

"It Follows," released via RADiUS-TWC, opens in limited release on March 13.

Dog Nails Critical Part Of Katy Perry's 'Roar'

$
0
0
Sacha just understands pop music on a deeper level, you guys.

Sure, the dog's "Roar," may be more of a lazy howl, but what did you expect? You can't be "louder than a lion" all the time, no matter how much Katy Perry implores you.



You do you, Sacha.

H/T Caitlin Buckingham via Tumblr

Kristen Bell Says She'd Come Back For 'Frozen 2' 'In A Heartbeat'

$
0
0
"Frozen 2" is definitely worth melting for, according to Kristen Bell.

Just hours before the "Frozen" sequel was officially announced, Bell told HuffPost Entertainment how excited she would be for a full-length sequel. The actress said, "I certainly hope there will be a 'Frozen 2,'" adding, "Should my phone ring, I will be there in a heartbeat."

Nowadays, Bell is teaming up with Crest and Oral-B on a new line of "Frozen"-themed toothpaste and brushes in an effort to engage kids to have better oral health. In addition, the actress is currently reprising her role as Anna in the new short "Frozen Fever," which comes out Friday with "Cinderella." And, well, she just can't hold back her excitement anymore:


Image: Giphy

What can fans expect from "Frozen Fever"?
I think it’s going to be just as good as the movie, except you only get 6 minutes of it. The song is fantastic that Bobby and Kristen Lopez wrote for the short. I certainly wish it was longer, but I think that they can expect the same quality and excitement from the characters that they did in the full-length film.

Is "Making Today a Perfect Day" the new "Let It Go"?
I don’t know that anything will be the new "Let It Go." You can’t mess with perfection. "Making Today a Perfect Day" is an awesome song, but "Let It Go," man, nothing can top it.

You've said your kids haven't seen "Frozen," but have they heard the songs?
Yes! Although, we listen to a lot more classic rock than we do Disney music in the household.

Have you and Adele Dazeem talked about, you know, "Adele Dazeem"?
We laughed about it initially after it happened because Adele (Idina Menzel) is such a good sport, and it was sort of, I guess, just something to giggle about right after it happened. There were never any hard feelings. It was just, "Well, that happened." So I kind of loved the fact that they presented together this year. I thought it was really sweet.

tv show gifs
Image: Tumblr


In "Frozen," Anna gets engaged right away. Should anyone marry someone they just met?
I think it’s pretty ridiculous to marry someone that you don’t really know, period. I think that I wasn’t even married when we had our first kid. (NOTE: Bell is married to Dax Shepard). And I knew it was forever because we were already having a kid. I think marriage should be entered into when you’re pretty confident that there are no more surprises.

Do you want to build a snowman?
Always! And forever.

Have you built one since the movie?
Oh, yes! I have actually. I saw some show in Oregon this year, and I did build a little mini snowman.

What was Elsa doing in her room all those years?
Her nails? I have yet to figure it out. She wasn’t doing anything fun with me in the halls. I can tell you that much.

So she wasn't building snowmen without Anna?
She would never!


Image: Giphy

Does the cold never bother you anyway?
I prefer the cold. Being from the Midwest, I actually prefer the chilly weather.

Will Olaf ever get a warm hug?
I hope not. I don’t think he realizes what will happen after that warm hug. I don’t think he realizes how dangerous warm hugs are.

What do you think about the theory that "Frozen," "Tarzan" and "The Little Mermaid" are connected?
I saw something about that online, some fan fiction page I think. I don’t know if that’s coming from Disney writers or just fans of the projects, but it's an interesting theory.

Do you have any insider info on that?
I wish I did. I could do some digging. I should do some digging!

What do you think about "Frozen" going to Broadway?
I’ll be there opening night whether I'm cast in the production or not. And what I mean by that is, I’ll be on stage whether I'm removed by security or not. I would love to be a part of it. I think it would be so much fun to do with the original cast since all five of us are Broadway veterans. So I'm really hoping that they ask us to be involved.

Security never bothered her anyway.


Image: Giphy

Marvin Gaye's Family May Challenge Pharrell's 'Happy' Next

$
0
0
A court is awarding Marvin Gaye's family $7.3 million in the "Blurred Lines" lawsuit, and now another chart-topper might come under fire: Pharrell Williams' "Happy." YouTube videos have pointed out similarities between the track and Gaye's 1965 single, "Ain't That Peculiar," for months, but now the family says there may be grounds for legal action.

"I'm not going to lie. I do think they sound alike," Gaye's daughter, Nona Gaye, told "Entertainment Tonight" correspondent Nischelle Turner in an interview. His ex-wife Janis also said, "I heard the mash-ups -- but I didn't really need to hear them. I know 'Ain't That Peculiar' and I've heard 'Happy.'" No charges have been filed.



Since the verdict was announced, music and legal critics have said the decision set "a horrible precedent" in the music industry when it comes to writing songs inspired by earlier artists. LA Weekly's Andy Hermann came out with a story headlined, "'Blurred Lines' Has Ruined the Entire Music Industry," while Slate claimed it "may end up cutting off a vital wellspring of creativity in music."

For reference, listen to a mashup of "Happy" and "Ain't That Peculiar":

From 'Hell' And Back, Madonna Lives To Tell

$
0
0
madonna 2015





With mere hours until the release of her new album, Madonna sits behind a closed door in a suite at Interscope Records’ office near Times Square. A stylist darts into the room for a few touch-ups. “She wants to look good for you,” Liz Rosenberg, Madonna's longtime publicist, tells me. I pass a pair of security guards, then wait to be beckoned into the makeshift chamber. Not much has changed since 1984, when Madonna promised to “rule the world” and subsequently invented modern pop stardom. She is still the one to decide when, where and, most importantly, how we see her.

Over the past few months, however, a hacker challenged Madonna’s right to govern her own image. “Living hell” is how she describes the multiple Internet leaks that plagued her 13th studio album, “Rebel Heart." For someone who approves every thread of her dancers’ costumes before a performance, this was Madonna losing control, the very thing that made her the star she is. So it makes sense that the singer, who did almost no press for her previous album because its release was sandwiched between a Super Bowl halftime show and a world tour, has been ubiquitous in her promotion of “Rebel Heart,” which was released March 10. The high priestess of reinvention maintains her relevance with the headline-making narratives that grow from each hit album, single, video, film and performance -- distinct story lines that expand Madonna's brand. Like the sexual dare of “Erotica,” the spiritual-enlightenment yarn of “Ray of Light” and the political racket of “American Life,” the new album now carries with it another chestnut to add to Madonna’s biography. It’s just not one she invited.

To create “Rebel Heart,” the 56-year-old collaborated with the likes of Diplo, Avicii, Kanye West, Nas, Nicki Minaj, Chance the Rapper, Mike Tyson, Toby Gad, DJ Dahi, Ariel Rechtshaid and Ryan Tedder over 18 months. Two days after Thanksgiving, a pair of demos leaked online. Then, a week after other journalists and I previewed 13 tracks one evening in early December, the full album leaked as well. What can the most exacting and famous pop icon on the planet do when hackers threaten her power? What she’s always done: reclaim control.

It’s not dissimilar from what I glean during our 30 minutes of face time, which Madonna begins by offering me a Red Vine. She may not know what questions she’ll be asked, but Madonna asserts herself simply by making it clear which ones she likes and which ones she does not. She’s cognizant that even professionals flinch in her presence. Coy smiles give way to skeptical frowns as the conversation unfolds, underscoring the art of Madonna’s protracted self-awareness.

madonna collage 2
Stars in Madonna's orbit (L to R): Michael Jackson (1991), David Letterman (1994), Rosie O'Donnell (1998), Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera (2003), then-husband Guy Ritchie with son Rocco and daughter Lordes (2007)

In an age when pop stars feel like ephemera -- Britney Spears turns into Katy Perry, John Mayer gives way to Ed Sheeran, Janet Jackson yields to Rihanna -- Madonna is the only one to promote a persona that demands every move become another indelible page in the story she’s writing about herself. That’s tougher nowadays, when trends don't last as long. So, as usual, Madonna concocts her own tale: She releases mastered versions of six leaked songs with no announcement, becomes the first major artist to premiere a video on Snapchat and runs a contest that allows fans to chat with her on Grindr. Just don’t think the leaks somehow benefited Madonna -- she scowls when I imply there's solace in their prompting her to stretch “Rebel Heart” from 13 tracks to 19, meaning she eliminated less from what at one point might have become a double album.

“It was really hard on everybody,” she says of the leaks. “Everybody became very paranoid. It was like, ‘Oh, it could be anybody. It’s got to be somebody close.’ I was worried it was an engineering assistant or somebody that had access to everything.” (It was a 39-year-old man from Israel. He has been arrested and indicted.)

Celebrity image control has evolved wildly since Sire Records president Seymour Stein signed Madonna after listening to her debut single, “Everybody,” from his hospital bed in 1982. That Madonna has molded herself for the Instagram era despite having cut her teeth before social media was conceivable is a chief source of the "she's irrelevant" potshots her critics sling. Before she leapt onto the social-media bandwagon, which has served devotees-turned-counterparts like Beyoncé and Taylor Swift well, Madonna’s control was born in the music-video era, when performers molded their personas primarily through MTV rotations. In Kanye West’s eyes, for example, she is “the greatest visual musical artist that we've ever had.” Instagram, then, is another visual platform where Madonna can craft her career narratives.

I tell Madonna that West has paid her such a compliment and ask whether she agrees. She looks at the floor, chuckles knowingly and looks back at me. “That is a trick question,” she smirks. “Um. I think Kanye is a ...” -- and here she morphs into an exaggerated English accent -- “... brilliant man. Brilliant, brilliant. He says some very pithy things sometimes.” (In an interview with the New York Daily News, Madonna tried her hand at pithiness, too: "Kanye is the black Madonna," she said.)

Others say things Madonna doesn’t find quite so amusing. Case in point: Giorgio Armani. The designer fashioned the cape that led to her nasty tumble at last month’s Brit Awards. A week after Madonna took to Instagram to thank Armani for the costume, he told the Associated Press she is “very difficult to work with.”

“That was kind of disappointing because I don’t think I was difficult to work with,” she tells me. “I never blamed my cape for not being able to untie it. In fact, the day after it happened, I posted a drawing, a beautiful drawing, of the cape and thanked them for my costume. I didn’t blame what happened on anyone, so I don’t really know why they did that. I think that was a knee-jerk reaction on their part thinking they were going to get criticism, so they just had to make me the bad guy. Not very elegant, I don’t think.”

This pendulum -- a tick-tock between fierce loyalists and unforgiving detractors -- swings with every major moment in Madonna’s career. Out of the reactions, the narratives are born. With the post-breakup anthem “Living for Love,” the lead single from “Rebel Heart,” Madonna fell down (literally and figuratively) and carried on, just as the lyrics promise. A “tumultuous” few months led to many sleepless nights as Madonna tied bows on the album, now according to her hacker’s schedule. As a result, “Living for Love” emerges with the type of potent backstory the singer hasn’t seen since 2005’s “Hung Up,” the heralded dance canticle whose John Travolta-influenced video marked a return to form after the departure of “American Life."









Throughout these recent obstacles, Madonna used Instagram to reach the fans who rallied behind her. That instant-access culture has taken interesting turns for the singer, though. In January 2014, she posted a photo of son Rocco, then 13, with a caption that included the hashtag "#disnigga." The backlash was swift and ended in a rare apology from the very woman who has a new song called “Unapologetic Bitch.” After refusing to douse infernos involving alleged religious blasphemy (“Like a Prayer”), nude streetwalking (the Sex book) and smooches planted on Britney Spears’ and Christina Aguilera’s lips at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards, why cave now?

Madonna explains that she only apologizes “when I see that there’s a huge fire that’s about to blaze through the center of the universe and I have to put the fire out -- especially if it comes to my children.”

As with everything in the second half of her career, Madonna has straddled motherly enlightenment and relentless envelope-pushing, ensuring that we see her as an evolved artist who remains true to her initial priorities, even in the face of ageism and sexism. In the case of the N-word gaffe, Madonna says it was Rocco who told her how to caption the photo. “It was the one time that I listened to my son," she says. "It was his idea. I was like, ‘What caption do you want me to put on it?’ And I did. I wasn’t thinking.”

This controversial Madonna is a theme on “Rebel Heart,” with songs that probe some of the more audacious moments of her 33-year career. On the title track, she sings about “all the things I did just to be seen,” echoing criticism predating the time she rolled around on the VMA stage in 1984, when hardly anyone had even heard “Like a Virgin.” It also reminds us that almost all of those contentious moments, whether she regrets them or not, contain layers that most pop stars are lucky to achieve once or twice in their career. Still, it pays to be meditative, and that’s the chief tune Madonna has sung since the mid-’90s, when she made “Evita,” began studying Kabbalah and had her first child, Lourdes.
"Sometimes I just did shit, you know? Just to, like, throw a firebomb in the room."

“There’s a part of my character that’s on automatic, that just likes to be a provocateur. And to a certain extent, maybe some of the things that I did didn’t really have any thought process behind them necessarily, but they got attention,” Madonna says. “I wasn’t really thinking of anything specific. I mean, I could even think of shows that I did on the Lower East Side, when I was first starting in punk-rock bands. I can’t say that every creative decision I made was altruistic or came from the deepest part of my soul or with the best intentions or was really well thought-out or anything like that. Sometimes I just did shit, you know? Just to, like, throw a firebomb in the room.”

Times have changed: We don’t see those firebombs from today’s biggest pop star, Beyoncé, whose carefully curated image does not allow for the same spontaneity. Instead of subscribing to a traditional, interview-based press strategy, the “Flawless” singer perpetuates her offstage persona primarily through Instagram and Tumblr. Madonna says she’s unaware of Beyoncé’s PR tactics, in part because Bey is not among the 57 people she currently follows on Instagram. A more obvious pop comparison may be Miley Cyrus, whose Robin Thicke-accompanied twerking at the 2013 VMAs faced minstrel-show accusations and electrified the cultural conversation for weeks. Cyrus seemed like she could become the decade’s biggest star by courting controversy in a very Madonna-esque manner. Two years later, we're not paying much attention to Cyrus -- something you can never say for Madonna, whose doggedness stokes incomparable intrigue and avoids pop-culture limbo.

We don’t like our pop stars to thrive for too long, anyway. Instant castigation awaits those who try too hard, seem insensitive or appear to appropriate other cultures for their own gain. Out of that came another Madonna apology, in January, after she reposted fan-made Instagram photos of Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela and Bob Marley with the same thin black cords that envelop her head on the cover of “Rebel Heart.” Detractors accused the images of conjuring the chains of slavery. She acknowledges the political-correctness policing that has materialized over the past few years but was unaware that Cyrus, too, attracted such backlash after the VMAs. Way back in 1998, when Madonna opened her own VMA appearance with the Hindu ode “Shanti/Ashtangi,” she surrounded herself with East Asian dancers and donned the religion’s traditional facial markings. A quiet protest from the World Vaishnava Association ensued, but the Internet was nascent and the controversy -- tame compared to the Blonde Ambition Tour's simulated masturbation or a coffee-table book containing near-pornography -- barely registered. Today she wouldn’t be so lucky, as we saw with the troublesome Instagram posts.

“Oh, they can kiss my ass,” she says of critics who might accuse her of borrowing other cultures’ fixtures. It's a topic she seems interested to discuss. “I’m not appropriating anything. I’m inspired and I’m referencing other cultures. That is my right as an artist. They said Elvis Presley stole African-American culture. That’s our job as artists, to turn the world upside down and make everyone feel bewildered and have to rethink everything.”
"That’s our job as artists, to turn the world upside down and make everyone feel bewildered and have to rethink everything."

But the fact is that Madonna can get away with more than anyone else, not only because of longevity, but because her entire image has been manicured to remind us that her outlandishness always contains a story. Well before the hackers interceded, she made a calculated decision to expand her ubiquity to the Instagram audience. (And she does maintain her own account. When I mention that some celebrities hand off their phones for others to post on their behalf, she knowingly says, “Yes, they do.") Now, in between that mass networking and the exhausting press tour she's conducted since the start of the year, Madonna will "fine-tune," over just one week, four different performances for next week's “Ellen DeGeneres Show" residency. Then she'll continue to craft the various themes she’ll incorporate on the “Rebel Heart” tour, which launches in August. In a few years, no doubt, she'll do it all over again, and a new narrative will rise.

At this point in the interview, Liz Rosenberg tells me I have two minutes remaining. Over a lightning round of quick hits, I ask Madonna to pick her favorite Instagram filter (X-Pro) and five most iconic songs ("Like a Prayer," "Like a Virgin," "Ray of Light," "Express Yourself" and "Vogue"). She thinks Katy Perry's Super Bowl halftime show looked "exhausting" ("That drunk shark!" she says) and would "rather not" list which musical acts she's listening to at the moment. I tell her it’s David Letterman's final year on the air (she wasn't aware), and Rosenberg interrupts to say Madonna will be making an appearance because “she loves him.” With one question left, I inquire about the best party she's ever attended -- excluding her famed Oscar soirée. Her answer: "None."

Thirty-three years ago, she extended to the world an invitation. Times have changed, but we haven't left the dance floor.

"Only I throw good parties," Madonna says.

Bella Thorne: 'I'm A Teenager And I'm Still Going To Make Mistakes'

$
0
0
Bella Thorne got her big break starring on Disney Channel’s “Shake It Up” with bestie Zendaya, and since then she’s managed to shake up what it means to be a teen celeb.

The actress has acting credits alongside Hollywood veterans Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore for the movie “Blended” and took on high school stereotypes by starring in “The DUFF.” She’s dabbled in music and released her first book while also becoming an inspiration for her Bellarinas by openly discussing her struggle with dyslexia.

Now, the 17-year-old is giving us some major ~enchanted garden~ vibes on the cover of Teen Vogue’s April issue where she opens up about her role model status, her encounter with a famous Hollywood hunk and that (hilarious) time she stuffed her bra.

Teen Vogue’s April issue hits stands on March 24. Scroll down to check out Bella’s cover and head over to TeenVogue.com for more.

On dealing with problems just like every other teenage girl…
"I've always been flat-chested. It is only this year, at 17, that I started to develop boobs. I mean, finally!"

On having an embarrassing moment on set…
"I was working on a film, and they wanted me to look older. The wardrobe person was like, 'Put padding in your bra.' I'm walking on set. The director picked something off the ground and -- in front of everyone -- he goes, 'I think this fell out.' I was mortified. It was literally a pad from my bra."

On meeting a major celeb at a film premiere...
"I was at a movie premiere, and Mark Wahlberg came up to me. He was like, 'I'm so sorry to bug you. I feel so bad.' I was like, 'Oh, my God! Mark Wahlberg! Of course I will take a photo with your daughter.' I mean, why wouldn't I? And let me tell you -- he's beautiful no matter what he does."

On being famous at a young age…
“I’m not afraid to be myself. I know that people are looking up to me, but I’m a teenager and I’m still going to make mistakes.”

bella thorne

bella thorne

Follow HuffPost Teen on Twitter | Instagram | Tumblr | Pheed |

Here's The Michelle Obama-Ellen DeGeneres Dance Party You Wish You Were Invited To

$
0
0
They may not agree on who won their push-up challenge in 2012, but Michelle Obama and Ellen DeGeneres put their differences aside this week to engage in another, funkier competition.

In a sneak-peak clip released Friday of Obama's upcoming appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, the First Lady challenged the talk show host to perform the #GimmeFive dance with her and some of the cast from "So You Think You Can Dance." #GimmeFive, Obama explained, is a new social media campaign she's launching to celebrate the fifth anniversary of her anti-obesity "Let's Move!" initiative.

"We’re asking folks all across the country to #GimmeFive ways their leading a healthy life," she told DeGeneres in her fourth appearance on the show. "We’ve got a lot of celebrities involved. Beyoncé gave me five, and Ryan Seacrest and Nick Jonas and even the astronauts on the space shuttle."

The full episode will air Monday, March 16, but you can watch Obama and DeGeneres break it down to Bruno Mars' "Uptown Funk" in full-fledged mom-dancing mode now. Somewhere, Sasha and Malia are probably totally humiliated.

Watch the clip above.

Oprah And Common Will Appear On 'Empire' Season 2

$
0
0
Oprah and Common are coming to "Empire."

Shortly after co-creator Lee Daniels said he hoped to recruit Oprah Winfrey -- whom he directed in 2013's "The Butler" -- to play a role on the show, the director revealed to "Access Hollywood" on Thursday night that she would indeed appear.

"Yes. Yeah, she's gonna be on it," he said.

Daniels also said Common, who appeared alongside Oprah in the Oscar-nominated film "Selma," would have a guest spot as well.

"Common, you heard that first," he said to the camera.

This is all very dance-worthy news.

cookiegif

H/T Vulture

Penn Badgley Talks 'Amicable Silence' With Ex-Girlfriend Blake Lively

$
0
0
It was a love story too good to be true.

From 2007 to 2010, "Gossip Girl" fans watched Penn Badgley and Blake Lively romance each other onscreen, as Dan Humphrey and Serena van der Woodsen, and off, with a real-life relationship regularly chronicled by the paparazzi. Alas, the two young stars ultimately parted ways -- even as their characters' love affair continued.

Today, Lively is happily married to Ryan Reynolds, with whom she just had a child. Perhaps that's why Badgley and she haven't been in touch as of late.

"We haven't spoken in a while," Badgley told HuffPost Live's Alyona Minkovski in a Wednesday conversation. "But, you know, there's an amicable silence, if that makes any sense."

Those seeking more details on the former couple should not refer to the music of Badgley's band, Mothxr. While the "Cymbeline" actor said he uses his romantic foibles as material for lyrics, his relationship with Lively predates any of their songs.

"That was a long time ago. When I was writing music then, [none of it] stands today," he said.

Watch more from Penn Badgley's conversation with HuffPost Live here.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

Freida Pinto Gave An Impassioned Feminist Speech Every Woman And Man Needs To Hear

$
0
0
"Being a female in today's world is at best an exercise in subtle injustice and at worst a living hell."

That's one of the many stirring lines from a speech Freida Pinto delivered this past Monday, March 9 at the New York premiere of "India's Daughter." The BBC documentary, which was banned from airing in India, tells the story of the brutal 2012 gang rape of Jyoti Singh in South Delhi, India that resulted in 23-year-old Singh's death. In her speech, Pinto discussed the movement to combat violence against women across the globe and men's roles in this fight.

"Today in 2015 despite the vast improvements in the lives and rights of women across the world in the last century. There still seems to exist this very complex network of ideological and cultural norms that still plague our society and that make global misogyny, in my opinion, a great scourge and most pressing issue of our age," Pinto said. "But really our pride is misplaced when there is one gender on this planet that is yet to be emancipated.”

Pinto told the audience that gender inequality is not limited by country, but manifests across all cultures and societies. She also discussed the importance of feminism as a shared understanding of mutual values. "I cannot wait for that day when this generation of women and men finally realizes that claiming to be a feminist is simply asserting that you share the same spiritual and economic value as your male counterparts -- as each other," she said.

freeeeeida



Men are an integral part of the feminist movement, Pinto said, particularly those who don't believe in gender equality. "We equally call upon men who do not believe in equal rights. This is your fight too," she told the men in the room. "Your fight to defeat and transcend your own mind sets. Women don't ask to be ahead of you or behind you, we just want to be by your side as equals."

She explained that we need to empower women in order to rid the world of violence against women and gender inequality. "The shame is not in admitting the existence of such violence, the shame is in the crime and not speaking out," Pinto said. "In this way, if not us, at least our grandchildren will grow up in a world that's free of gender discrimination."

Another route to gender equality is encouraging women to support other women. "And finally and most importantly I call upon women to raise each other up, to make each other’s welfare a priority and to never shame a woman for the choices she makes," she said. "Refuse to internalize and reject the centuries of woman hating as hard as that might be, with all of us doing these things and educating our children to do the same, we may finally have that chance to stamp on that opportunity to shift the paradigm that led despicable events of this film."

Head over to Examiner.com to read Pinto's full speech.

H/T Bustle

Russell Brand Apologizes For Skipping Premiere Of His 'Oddly Intrusive' New Doc

$
0
0
A new documentary about the life of Russell Brand, "BRAND: A Second Coming," is the opening night film at this year's South by Southwest Film Festival, but don't expect to see photos of Brand outside its premiere. The comic, actor and author announced on Friday that he would not attend the debut.

"You'd think a narcissist would like nothing more than talking about themselves and their 'rags to riches,' 'hard luck' story but actually, it felt like, to me, my life was hard enough the first time round and going through it again was painful and sad," Brand wrote on his website.

Directed by Ondi Timoner -- after, according to Brand, an apparent parade of other directors took a crack at the film over the course of seven years -- "BRAND" documents the life of the 39-year-old, including his battle with drug addiction, marriage to Katy Perry and current role as a political activist.

"Ondi is a very beautiful person and a director of peerless integrity, I suppose what I didn’t consider was that in letting go of the film, I was agreeing to be the subject of a biography," Brand wrote. "Posthumously this is a great honor but while you're alive, oddly intrusive and melancholy."

Brand closed the note with an apology to South by Southwest Film Festival organizers, including Janet Pierson, the head of SXSW Film.

Read the full letter over at Brand's website.
Viewing all 15269 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images