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8 Ruth Bader Ginsburg Quotes To Celebrate 82 Notorious Years

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg has had quite a year. Legal junkies and feminist disciples alike have long admired the Justice's badassery since she took her seat in the court in 1993. But it was her scathing dissent of the Supreme Court's decision to allow private businesses to refuse certain forms of birth control coverage to their employees that launched her OG status into public consciousness. From the only slightly ironic Notorious R.G.B. meme to musical remixes of her dissents, pop culture reverence of the Supreme Court veteran seems here to stay.

Ginsburg turns 82 on March 15. In response to the question of whether she has considered stepping down, she has said: "As long as I can do the job full steam. I think I'll recognize when the time comes that I can't any longer. But now I can." In other words, she's literally too legit to quit.

On R.B.G.'s birthday, we honor her 21 years on the Supreme Court and 82 years of general badassery with just a few notable quotes showing just how brightly that candlepower burns.


ruth bader ginsburg
Speaking to law students in February 2015, via PBS. Image: Getty

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In Ginsburg's Senate confirmation hearings in 1993. Image: Getty.

trueequality
In conversation with ABC correspondent Lynn Sherr before the New York State Bar. Image: Getty

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Interview with Yahoo News in July 2014. Image: AP.

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Interview with the ACLU Women's Rights Project. Image: AP

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Interview with Yahoo News in July 2014. Image: Getty.

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In conversation with ABC correspondent Lynn Sherr before the New York State Bar. Image: Getty

greatdiva
Speaking to law students in February 2015, via PBS

Paul Feig Says It's Still Not Getting Better For Women In Hollywood

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Just before the release of "The Heat" in 2013, director Paul Feig lamented that the film industry hadn't grown enough for women following the global success of his "Bridesmaids."

"We're not advancing as much as we should be," Feig told The Huffington Post at the time.

Two years later, as Feig has continued to put funny women front and center in his films, the director is still waiting for Hollywood to catch up.

"I don't think it is getting better," he said in an interview with The Huffington Post on Saturday at the South by Southwest Film Festival. "It's not as terrible as it was, but look at the number lady directors. I have guilt that I'm a man doing these movies. Women should be doing them, too! The studios aren't giving them the opportunity for whatever reason, and the roles still aren't there for women like they should be."

Yet the lack of films with women in lead positions seems antithetical to what the audience actually wants. "Bridesmaids," which starred Melissa McCarthy and Kristen Wiig, earned $288 million worldwide; "The Heat," with McCarthy and Sandra Bullock," clocked in with $229 million in global grosses. Feig's latest feature "Spy," with McCarthy and her "Bridesmaids" co-star Rose Byrne, could follow a similar path to success.

The comedy, which will premiere in Austin, Texas on Sunday night before its wide release on May 22, is the third film Feig has made with McCarthy in a central part. And it's expected the pair will reunite again for his reboot of "Ghostbusters," which will feature four women in lead roles (Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon and Leslie Jones are expected to join McCarthy).

"People got on me about 'Ghostbusters' and said that it should be a mixed cast," Feig said of the sexist backlash the film faced after it was announced. "It's hard enough to pick four actresses! There are so many funny women out there and they need these roles. I hate that. I hate that there isn't more opportunity."

As a result, Feig himself has tried to create opportunities, all while subverting the expected gender norms about movies with women as a focal point.

"That's why I love doing these genre movies. Because there are women in it, but it's not about all my lady problems," Feig said. "But they're not acting like men. They're acting like women would. I love the theme of female friendship. I've seen it with my wife, and how important and difficult it is. So I enjoy that. To me, that's more interesting than trying to work out a relationship with a man. There are plenty of those movies being made, so I don't have any interest in doing them."



"Spy," for instance, was inspired by Feig's love of Ian Fleming's James Bond novels, and his long-held wish to make a Bond film himself. ("But who would ever hire the guy who made 'Bridesmaids' to direct a Bond movie?" Feig said, before laughing. "I wouldn't!") It was after the director saw Sam Mendes' "Skyfall" that he had an epiphany. "I was sitting there at my desk one day and I thought, 'I know all these funny women, why don't I write a female spy movie?'" Feig said. "I had a bazillion ideas. My brain exploded."

But "Spy" is not "Austin Powers." As he did with "The Heat," which included scenes of heavy violence mixed in with laughs, Feig sought to make the comedy with a strict commitment to reality.

"If you don't get the tone right, then you're just going joke to joke, and you have to have the funniest jokes in the world," Feig said. "And even if you do, the audience kind of zones out -- they're not engaged. If you're not engaged with the characters and the stakes, then it disappears. There's a lot of violence in 'Spy,' but it's in service of the idea that Melissa's character could be killed at any moment."

While "Spy" owes a great debt to 007, it's not as if Feig made a canonical version of James Bond with an actress in the lead role. Would the director have faced less backlash from "Ghostbusters" fans if he were to make a film about four women ghost hunters without the brand's stamp? Quite the opposite, Feig noted.

"For some reason, 'Ghostbusters' is such a specific thing that it would be really weird if I made 'Spirithunters.' I think I'd get more shit for that," Feig said. "I just think it's a great franchise that's been sitting dormant for 25 years, other than ancillary stuff like cartoons, toys and video games. But I loved the original one so much that I want to have that experience again, and I want a new generation to have that experience too."

This year's South by Southwest Film Festival runs through March 21.

Dave Rubin, Whitney Mixter Sound Off On The New Lesbian 'Star Wars' Character

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Whitney Mixter of "The Real L Word" sounded off on news that a lesbian character was joining the official "Star Wars" canon on an installment of The Rubin Report this week.

On the show, Mixter joked to host Dave Rubin that the new character's name, Moff Mors, could be a tongue-in-cheek reference to the female anatomy.

"I want it to be like a giant muff," she quipped. "The whole hot lesbian thing has been done so much. I want this to be like a menacing muff that eats things!"

Earlier this week, Big Shiny Robot reported that Moff Mors, described as "an Imperial who has made some very serious mistakes" who "also happens to be a lesbian," would feature prominently in Paul S. Kemp's new "Star Wars" novel, titled Lords of the Sith.

Mixter joked that Moff may not actually be that unique in a galaxy far, far away: "C3P0 was a total queen! I think [he and R2D2] had a relationship."

After several successful years with The Young Turks, The Rubin Report has a new home on RYOT News.

For more on The Rubin Report, head here.


Jessica Alba Chops Her Hair Into A Sleek Bob

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Jessica Alba debuted a new 'do Friday at an event for The Honest Company. The mother of two, who went blonde in November, cut her formerly long locks into a stylish bob. Alba shared the hair transformation on her Instagram account, thanking her stylist for the new look:


Uh oh someone chopped off her hair!

A photo posted by Jessica Alba (@jessicaalba) on





Thnk u @giannandrea1 4 the cute cut! Love it!

A photo posted by Jessica Alba (@jessicaalba) on





Alba's stylist, Gianna Andrea, who has also done hair for Chrissy Teigen, Reese Witherspoon and more, reposted a photo of her new bob, adding, "Spring forward makeover! A true pleasure being around this joyous woman with an honest view on life."

Disney's 'Cinderella' Debuts With $70.1M At Box Office

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NEW YORK (AP) — "Let It Go" may be Walt Disney's anthem these days, but "Everything's Coming Up Roses" might be the more accurate theme song for the Disney juggernaut.

Disney's recent streak continued over the weekend with the $70.1 million North American debut of its traditional, sumptuously costumed fairy tale adaptation "Cinderella," according to studio estimates Sunday. Interest in the film, directed by Kenneth Branagh and starring Lily James of "Downton Abbey," was boosted by a "Frozen" short, "Frozen Fever," that played before the feature. Disney's box-office surge has been propelled partly by the so-called "halo effect" of "Frozen," a sequel to which Disney announced last week. But it's also been driven by the appeal of seeing Disney cartoon classics turned into live-action fantasies. "Cinderella" follows previous live-action hits like "Maleficent" (whose May 2014 debut of $69.4 million "Cinderella" narrowly bested) and "Alice in Wonderland."

The holiday release "Into the Woods," from the Stephen Sondheim musical, added to the live-action trend, and many more are on the way. "The Jungle Book," ''Beauty and the Beast" and "Dumbo" are all coming in live action, as is a sequel to "Alice in Wonderland."

Disney has also found big profits in capitalizing on female moviegoers, who made up the largest chunk of "Frozen" and "Maleficent" fans. The audience for "Cinderella" was 66 percent female, Disney said.

"There is seemingly a lot of appetite for these stories to be told, I think, in part because many of them have a female protagonist and we've seen there's significant box-office success that can come by featuring female-driven stories," said Dave Hollis, head of distribution at Disney.

"'Frozen Fever" was certainly part of why we're seeing the kind of success that we did this weekend," Hollis said. "In and of itself, 'Cinderella' is absolutely a great stand-alone experience. But it ends up being a one-plus-one-equals-three thing for the consumer."

The success of "Cinderella," which cost about $95 million to make, was international. It made $62.4 million overseas, including $25 million in China. Disney could also celebrate "Big Hero 6" becoming the top-grossing worldwide animated release of 2014; the Oscar-winner has made $633 million globally.

With Disney's high-priced but lucrative ownership of Marvel, Lucasfilm and Pixar, the studio will be flexing its strength throughout 2015 with releases like "The Avengers: Age of Ultron," ''Inside Out" and "Star Wars: The Force Awakens."

"Disney is just a well-oiled machine that is firing on all cylinders right now," says Paul Dergarbedian, senior media analyst for box-office data firm Rentrak. "It's about this Disney umbrella which encompasses these incredible crown jewel brands they have. 'Cinderella' is just the latest example."

While Disney was flexing its might, the powers of another box-office force, Liam Neeson, were checked. Neeson's latest thriller, "Run All Night," a New York crime saga co-starring Ed Harris, opened with $11 million for Warner Bros.

The film's poor performance marks the weakest debut for the "Taken" star as an action film lead. Dergarbedian noted Neeson's appeal is strongest in PG-13 rated films (all three "Taken" films, "Non-Stop"), while weaker in R-rated releases like "Run All Night" and last year's "A Walk Among the Tombstones."

Last week's top film, the sci-fi thriller "Chappie," from "District 9" director Neill Blomkamp, slid to fifth with $5.8 million for Sony Pictures.

In limited release, the critically acclaimed independent horror film "It Follows" earned a robust $163,000 on just four screens.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Cinderella," $70.1 million ($62.4 million international).

2. "Run All Night," $11 million ($6.6 million international).

3. "Kingsman: The Secret Service," $6.2 million ($13.7 million international).

4. "Focus," $5.8 million ($13.5 million international).

5. "Chappie," $5.8 million ($13.6 million international).

6. "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel," $5.7 million ($4.1 million international).

7. "The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water," $4.1 million ($4.3 million international).

8. "McFarland, USA," $3.7 million.

9. "American Sniper," $2.9 million ($8 million).

10. "The DUFF," $2.9 million.

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Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada), according to Rentrak:

1. "Cinderella," $62.4 million.

2. "Big Hero 6," $17 million.

3. "Kingsman: The Secret Service," $13.7 million

4. "Chappie," $13.6 million.

5. "Focus," $13.5 million.

6. "Jupiter Ascending," $8.7 million.

7. "Fifty Shades of Grey," $8.3 million.

8. "American Sniper," $8 million.

9. "Run All Night," $6.6 million.

10. "From Vegas to Macau II," $5 million.

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Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by 21st Century Fox; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

A Woman Proposed To Her Girlfriend During Ryan Gosling's Directorial Debut

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Hey girl, will you marry me?

That's what one woman asked her girlfriend during the U.S. premiere of Ryan Gosling's directorial debut, "Lost River," at South By Southwest this weekend.

During the Q&A section of the screening of the polarizing film -- which briefly took Gosling away from acting -- a woman used the opportunity to ask her girlfriend of 11 years to marry her.

Instead of asking a question about the film, the woman turned to her girlfriend for a spontaneous proposal. "I want the rest of my life to be with you," she said after Gosling handed her the microphone.

Her girlfriend said yes, and Gosling congratulated them as "Lost River" co-stars Eva Mendes and Saoirse Ronan applauded the two on stage. Gosling clearly inspires a flood of romance, as a man's "The Notebook" proposal proved earlier this year.

Let's just hope the couple can convince Gosling to perform his child star dance moves at their wedding. Watch the proposal below.


Max Greenfield Is Still Too Nervous To Say Hi To Peter Gallagher

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Long before Max Greenfield played Schmidt on "New Girl," he was cast on the Fox series "The O.C." as a young version of Sandy Cohen.

"It was actually a transitional moment in my career. I hadn't worked in a while," Greenfield told The Huffington Post last year. "I remember that it was quick and easy. Then the way they had cut it together, and with the music they chose, it ended up being a really nice scene. It was one that my mom loved. [...] It was a very big confidence-building moment for me."

But despite the positive memories, Greenfield said he really never had the chance to talk with star Peter Gallagher, who played the adult version of Sandy on the popular teen series.

"I met him once, and I was like, 'Hey, man, I played the young you!'" Greenfield recalled last year. He said Gallagher was a bit flummoxed by the comment. "I don't think he gave a shit," Greenfield joked. "I suppose if someone played the young me, I probably wouldn't give a fuck either."

But now the two men are co-stars again in Michael Showalter's new film, "Hello, My Name Is Doris." The comedy, which stars Greenfield and Sally Field as a pair of unlikely friends, premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival on Saturday night. Gallagher appears briefly as a self-help guru, but does not share the screen with Greenfield.

"There was a part of me who thought I should go say hi," Greenfield told The Huffington Post on Saturday about seeing Gallagher on the film's set. "But I'm going to divulge something to you: I got too nervous."

Greenfield said he was sure Gallagher would have been lovely if they had chatted, but his nerves won out. "I get nervous around very few people. I don't know why, but he's one of them," Greenfield said. "I feel like the only thing I have to say to him is, 'I played the young you.' I think that's a fucking weird way to open up."



Fortunately, Greenfield had no such problem becoming close to Showalter. The pair grew friendly while filming David Wain's "They Came Together," which Showalter co-wrote. "I think I became a secondary assistant to him," Greenfield said. "At one point, I was cleaning his phone."

While the "New Girl" star was filming the drama "About Alex" in 2013, he was offered the co-leading role in "Hello, My Name Is Doris." But it was almost a full year before the film would begin shooting. "It was cool when it started coming together with all the different actors," Greenfield said. Cast members include Beth Behrs, Rich Sommer, Natasha Lyonne, Tyne Daly and "Bleachers" lead singer Jack Antonoff. Field, whom Showalter had held up as an ideal version of Doris, came aboard as well. It's the actress' first leading role in a film in almost 20 years.

"I've worked with a lot of people, but Sally is definitely on a different level," Greenfield said of his Oscar-winning co-star. "But I knew that if I treated her as such, it was going to fuck me. I have to do scenes with her, and I can't be fanning out or so precious around her."

The onscreen relationship between Field and Greenfield spurs a coming-of-age for Field's Doris, an office worker struggling to cope with life after the death of her mother. As Field said after the film's premiere on Saturday night, Showalter balances heavy dramatic moments with ridiculous screwball comedy in a way that feels fresh and almost subversive.

"We had a lot of fun," Greenfield said of his time with Field. "I think we walked away from this with a nice friend."

Now if she can only introduce him to Peter Gallagher.

"Hello, My Name Is Doris" does not yet have distribution. More on the film can be found here.

Mila Kunis Supports Ashton Kutcher At SXSW

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Mila Kunis stepped out in Austin, Texas to support Ashton Kutcher at South by Southwest as he promoted his new tech investment fund, Sound Ventures.

Kunis posed for photos with Kutcher and other famous attendees, like T.I. and Mark Cuban, on Saturday. The actress was dressed down in a black sweater with white hearts and a slicked-back bun. The former "Two and a Half Men" star kept it casual, too, in a zip-up sweatshirt and hat.

Kutcher and longtime investment partner Guy Oseary celebrated the launch of Sound Ventures with a party at the Copper Restaurant and Lounge in downtown Austin, according to TechCrunch. The fund will invest in tech startups. The two have previously invested in brands like Uber, Spotify and Airbnb.

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5 Stories You Didn't Know About 'The Sound Of Music,' As Told By Julie Andrews

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This year marks the 50th anniversary of "The Sound of Music," and in part of the remembrance and celebration, The Huffington Post was able to interview Julie Andrews about what it was like to actually film the now-iconic movie.

Dame Julie is as sweet and dignified as you'd expect, even while discussing the veracity of old drinking legends and how she'll never live it down that she actually made fun of the von Trapp family singers with Carol Burnett at Carnegie Hall, years before starring in "The Sound of Music." Andrews shared a few of the best behind-the-scenes stories with The Huffington Post:


1. Julie Andrews was repeatedly thrown hard to the ground by a helicopter's down draft as it passed too close while filmmakers tried to capture the iconic aerial scene.

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As Tom Santopietro details in his new book, The Sound of Music Story, Julie Andrews was knocked down for about half of 10 takes where she'd walk up the mountain, start spinning and lip-syncing, only to have the helicopter's down draft push her into the grass and mud.

Andrews further explained to HuffPost that it was a jet-engined helicopter and she actually attempted to signal for a wider path that would avoid knocking her down. Unfortunately there was no luck:

It approached me from one end of the field with a very brave cameraman hanging outside of it with his camera and no door. I came from the other end of the field and we approached each other. When we had achieved one take, the helicopter would go around me and go back to the beginning and I'd go back to the other end of the field and we'd do it again, but every time he went around me ... the down draft from a very close helicopter just leveled me into the grass. That kept happening and I couldn't understand why he wouldn't pull away and make a wider circle. I kind of signaled to him, "Could you try to do that," after about four attempts. Every time I bit the dust and all I got was a thumbs up, and, "Let's do one more. Great, great. You're doing fine."


According to Andrews, the helicopter knocked her down just as she turned into the camera, so there's a chance that the footage that makes it into the film of her spinning is right before she was leveled. To top it off, the weather was generally "pretty cold a lot of mornings" during the shoot at altitude in the Austrian Alps.



2. The cast was given authentic Austrian schnapps by a farmer after a long day of shooting. (Christopher Plummer may have been drinking while filming parts of the movie.)

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It's a bit of a legend that Andrews was struggling to play guitar and lip-sync at the same time, as she had never played the instrument before. She would occasionally take a shot of Austrian schnapps before a scene in an attempt to accomplish both at once. Asked about this, Andrews exclaimed, "Oh no! That's a little bit glamorized." She continued:

No, I'll tell you exactly what happened. Learning the guitar and making sure that I got the fingering right -- because it was in the camera's face, as was I -- and lip-syncing also, that was, you know, I'd never played the guitar before, but I learned. And then the schnapps was at the end of one day shooting -- it wasn't necessarily that one, but we were way up in the Alps on a really blustery cold day and the farmer made his own schnapps and very generously handed out a small measure to the people that were on the camera and to all of us. I tell you, for that one moment, we were so grateful because we were so cold. So I think those two rumors got melded into one story.


Andrews denied rumors that Plummer was drinking for much of the time on set and was even possibly drunk during the Austrian music-festival scene:

I don't remember that he was tipsy, because he certainly didn't appear that way. I think in the early days [Plummer] was inclined to say, "Oh, this musical, with songs and love story, it's a little bit saccharine," and so on. But today he's an absolute pussycat about it and says how thrilled he is that he was a part of it. We've stayed tremendously good friends all these years.




3. Andrews was told at the last minute to fall forward during the boat scene in order to catch the youngest von Trapp child, who couldn't swim. She fell backward and the young actress swallowed so much water she got sick.

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Unable to swim, Kym Karath has said she sank and swallowed so much water that she threw up on Heather Menzies, the actress who played Louisa von Trapp. In an earlier take, Andrews successfully fell off the boat forward and caught Karath, but the shot in movie features Andrews' authentic stumble backward. Andrews further explained:

She was only about 5 years old. We were doing the boat scene where we all fall out of the boat and just as we were about to roll cameras ... that's when the assistant director came up to me and said, "I just want to ask you something. Could you fall forwards because the little one doesn't swim? We'd like you to get to her as quickly as you can and we will be doing the same thing off-camera." The boat rocked in such a way that instead of going forwards I went backwards. And there was such panic in my heart because that little girl had gone under a couple times, but everybody got to her, of course. She was very brave and she is with us today as we speak.


Talking about her own fall, Andrews said, "It was very real, believe me."



4. Plummer and Andrews didn't socialize much on the set because Plummer spent little time in Austria and Andrews had a newborn daughter.

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Andrews feels that much of the myth that Plummer didn't enjoy his time on the set and that the two didn't get along was created by the actor at a young age. Andrews said:

I think [Plummer was] trying to be a bit of a curmudgeon. That's his personality and he cultivates it. But in fact he's a darling. And I think maybe [he was] a little nervous perhaps about doing a musical which he may not have done before. And then, you know he was a legitimate, wonderful Shakespearean actor and perhaps he thought that this might be a wrong choice. Of course it turned out to be a perfect one for all of us.


Andrews did say, however, that the two didn't hang out together all too much on set:

In fact, he was not on the film that much in Austria, and we didn't socialize while I was there because I was so busy and I had my new little daughter with me and I had to get up incredibly early. So there wasn't much socializing in that sense.




5. The real Maria von Trapp visited the set and appears as an extra.

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"The Sound of Music" is very loosely based on the autobiography of Maria von Trapp, The Story of the Trapp Family Singers. Although elements of the love story, the children's lack of musical inclination before Maria's arrival and most of the plot line involving Nazis was fiction, Julie Andrews said the real von Trapp expressed her appreciation for the portrayal of her character while on the set. Von Trapp appears as an extra in the background of the "I Have Confidence" number. Andrews said of von Trapp's visit:

She came and said hello to our director and to all of us. We were introduced. And I believe she said to me something like, "I'm glad you are playing her as a tomboy, because that's the way I was when I was young." A lot of people in Austria wear their traditional costumes and she came in hers and [Robert Wise] said, "Just go in the background and walk across as we're shooting this shot." She very sweetly did and so she's in the movie.


During the early '70s, Andrews had her own show on ABC. In one episode, she had von Trapp on the program to teach her how to yodel. (Apparently, yodeling in the movie was dubbed.) Andrews said:

She came on my television show, a couple of times actually. She really yodels gloriously and I don't think I did at all, so she sort of tried to teach me a little bit. She was a very sweet lady.




BONUS: Due in part to an extremely rainy season, the film went over budget enough for studio execs to think "The Sound of Music" would be a colossal failure. Of course, it enjoyed a happy ending.

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There was a brief time when it seemed that the movie might be a monetary failure for the studio due to the bloated production costs, unaided by constant rain in Austria that continuously delayed shooting. Andrews remembered:

There was a lot of rain. Nobody mentioned to the producers that Salzburg has one of the highest average rainfalls in Europe and so we were somewhat unprepared. [...] We ran three weeks late on the movie and I think the Hollywood moguls were very worried about how much money we were spending over there.


"The Sound of Music" would go on to become the third highest-grossing film of all time (with adjustment for inflation) and an iconic part of Hollywood history.

"I think it all had a happy ending," Andrews said.

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The anniversary is also tied to the Blu-ray and Digital HD release of "The Sound of Music" by Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment.

All images Getty unless otherwise noted.

Jermaine Dupri On The 'Blurred Lines' Fallout: Sampling Songs Is The Nature Of The Business

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NEW YORK (AP) — As the music industry debates the fallout from the "Blurred Lines" copyright verdict, Grammy-winning producer Jermaine Dupri finds himself sympathetic to both Pharrell and Marvin Gaye's family.

Dupri, who helped Usher reach superstar status, aided in Mariah Carey's ultra-successful comeback a decade ago and produced for the diva in 1990s, remembers his days as a budding producer who drew inspiration from the artists who came before him — but also says there is a startling similarity between a new single and a hit he co-wrote more than a decade ago. "Younger producers like myself and Pharrell, we make records that are influenced by other records that are out there," Dupri said in an interview Thursday. "That's how hip-hop has always been created — it has some kind of element of something (from) the past. Or sometimes we just take the entire sample and we give the artist the credit for that sample."

"We've all been in a position where it could go like this or we can give the producer the credit," he added.

Pharrell and Robin Thicke were ordered to pay nearly $7.4 million to three of Gaye's children after a jury determined the performers copied elements of the R&B icon's 1977 hit, "Got to Give It Up."

"Blurred Lines," which also featured rapper T.I., was the biggest hit of 2013: It sold more than seven million tracks in the United States alone, topped the pop charts for months and earned top Grammy nominations. Attorneys for the collaborators filed a pre-emptive lawsuit in August 2013 asking a judge to determine the hit didn't copy other songs.

"My first time hearing it, I was like, 'This might be a problem.' I kind of felt like that," Dupri said. "Them going to court was really more shocking than anything."

The 42-year-old Dupri, who has co-written and co-produced No. 1 hits such as Carey's "We Belong Together" and "Always Be My Baby," Usher's "Burn" and Monica's "The First Night," said he is "50/50" about the "Blurred Lines" case because he understands both sides. He says he's currently in a similar situation: Dupri claims R&B singer Ciara's latest song, "I Bet," is too close to Usher's "U Got It Bad" — the massive 2001 hit that Dupri also co-produced — for comfort.

"Ciara's new single is a complete rip-off of Usher's 'U Got It Bad,'" Dupri said. "I'm clear on what I made and I'm clear on how music influences people and I'm clear on chord changes and how people move things. ... It might not be as evident as the 'Blurred Lines' situation, but I believe the same thing happened to me."

Dupri said he, Usher and producer Bryan-Michael Cox all noticed the similarities immediately. And he said "I Bet" also sounds like R&B singer Tamia's "Still," another song he produced.

Dupri said he plans to contact Ciara and the producers of "I Bet," which was released in January and has peaked at No. 27 on Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop songs chart, and ask that he, Cox and Usher be properly credited.

A personal representative for Ciara referred questions to a label spokeswoman. That spokeswoman did not return email and text messages seeking comment.

The Associated Press reached out to several performers, songwriters, publishers and record executives about the effect the "Blurred Lines" case would have on the industry; most declined to comment.

Keith Urban said he had "mixed feelings" about the verdict.

"I was shocked, honestly. Because it seems more like a sound and a feel and style and a genre and an era, none of which can be copy written," he said.

He added that because "Blurred Lines" was such a ubiquitous song, "you've got a bigger target on your back."

The Gaye family will seek an injunction against "Blurred Lines," giving them possible control to negotiate for royalties and other concessions. Millions more in potential future profits for "Blurred Lines" are also at stake.

Though Pharrell and Thicke are billed as the writers of "Blurred Lines," Thicke told jurors he didn't write the song and Pharrell testified he crafted it in about an hour in 2012. Pharrell also testified that Gaye's music was part of the soundtrack of his youth.

Two years ago, the song marked a breakthrough for Thicke, a successful R&B singer at the time, and helped Pharrell continue to reach new heights as a producer but, more importantly, as a solo act. The success came around the time he co-starred on Daft Punk's "Get Lucky" and launched his single, "Happy," last year's top track.

Dupri, who has overseen the careers for acts including Kris Kross, Bow Wow, Da Brat and R&B groups Xscape and Jagged Edge, said whenever he had thoughts of releasing a song without properly giving credit to an older tune, his label stepped in.

"It's crazy because I've tried to get away with records like that, where I was influenced by something, and the record company wouldn't budge; they wouldn't put the record out until I got whatever they thought they heard in the song cleared. That's the most amazing part about this whole case to me period," he said.

Dupri said they almost had trouble with sampling before they released Carey's latest album, "Me. I Am Mariah... The Elusive Chanteuse."

"(Producer) Hit-Boy used a Tupac sample that I couldn't even hear, and somebody at the label, Def Jam, they found the sample and they were like, 'This (sample) got to come out,'" he recalled. "That would have put Mariah in a crazy situation and she didn't even know the sample was on the record."

"I'm sure now people are really going to really be paying a lot more attention to it," he said.

___

AP entertainment producer Ryan Pearson contributed to this report.

Ansel Elgort On Why He Loves Being Romantic: 'It's Like You're Living In A Movie'

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Ansel Elgort first caught our eye in “Carrie” before completely stealing our hearts in “The Fault in Our Stars.” Next, he landed a role in the popular "Divergent" movie series and presented at the Oscars last month all while being adorable as heck on Twitter and Instagram. Now, he's showing off charm on Seventeen.

As Seventeen's April cover star, Ansel gets real about all things romantic and even gives readers a glimpse of what he was like at 15. Keeping it simple with some messy hair and a denim button-up shirt, Ansel opens up about his perfect date, his gifts for the women in his life and his high school run-in with the police.

Seventeen’s April issue hits stands on March 24. Scroll down to see photos from Ansel's shoot and head over to Seventeen.com for more.

On whether a guy and girl can be just friends…
“If a woman is really pretty, it’s kind of hard. I’m not going to lie. Actually, that’s not true. Me and Shailene [Woodley] have a really platonic relationship. I’ve never once wanted her sexually, which is nice. But for me, if a person is someone I’m attracted to, and she’s my best friend, hopefully we’re dating.”

On his perfect date…
“I like romantic dates -- going on a long walk in Central Park and then taking the subway downtown and going out to eat and ordering oysters. After that, you walk around again and talk. Morning dates are nice, too. I love doing romantic s***. It’s fun. It’s like you’re living in a movie.”

On what he buys the lucky women in his life…
“I like to buy girls shoes and jewelry. I buy stupidly expensive shoes. I got Louboutins for my mom and my girlfriend before. My mom was like, ‘I can’t wear these; they’re too high.' I was like, ‘Mom, you have to try them -- they’re so cool. They’re red snakeskin!' She still wears them every so often, but she can’t walk in them."

On his high school shenanigans…
“[My friend] Jordan and I used to throw eggs off my roof and hit cars. We got in trouble with the police when I was 15. They came to our door. I told my dad, ‘We were throwing eggs off the roof and you were out of town and they got really mad at us and said if we did it again we would get in trouble, but we’re never going to do it again.’ I said it all in one sentence. He was like, ‘Okay.’”

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ansel elgort

ansel elgort

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Snoop Dogg Shares 'Empire' Finale Preview On Facebook

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Snoop Dogg is set to appear in the two-hour "Empire" Season 1 finale, and now we have the first look at his performance. The rapper shared an exclusive preview of the episode on his Facebook page on Monday. In it, he promotes his new album, "Bush," at a fictional press conference. (The album, however, is real and due out via Doggystyle Records on May 12. The track featured on the show, "Peaches N Cream," is already out.)





The finale will also feature appearances from Jennifer Hudson, Rita Ora and Patti LaBelle.

The "Empire" Season 1 finale airs Wednesday at 8 p.m. on Fox.

Shonda Rhimes Says She Isn't 'Diversifying' Television, She's 'Normalizing' It -- There's A Difference

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Shonda Rhimes proved long ago that she is a force to reckon with.

The growing influence she has had in television has not gone unrecognized and has resulted in a major boost for ABC’s Thursday night network ratings. However, more importantly, Rhimes -- who is the mastermind behind shows like "Scandal," "Grey's Anatomy" and "How To Get Away With Murder" -- has increased onscreen representation of diverse roles that were once overlooked and in doing so, has raised further awareness on issues related to LGBT, women and people of color.

Because of her stellar contributions to the medium, Rhimes was honored with the Ally for Equality award at this year’s annual Human Rights Campaign Gala in Los Angeles on Saturday.

After accepting the award, she delivered a searing speech and discussed why she decided to tell such a wide range of stories and how the direction she has taken with her shows is one that goes far beyond just diversifying television.

"I really hate the word 'diversity,' it suggests something…other. As if it is something…special. Or rare," Rhimes said. "As if there is something unusual about telling stories involving women and people of color and LGBTQ characters on TV."

"I have a different word: NORMALIZING. I’m normalizing TV."

Rhimes - who also received a Diversity Award during last year’s Directors Guild of America Awards -- went on to share why her approach to "normalizing" television speaks to her larger mission at hand: "Making TV look like the world looks."

"Women, people of color, LGBTQ people equal WAY more than 50% of the population. Which means it ain’t out of the ordinary. I am making the world of television look NORMAL," she said.

"The goal is that everyone should get to turn on the TV and see someone who looks like them and loves like them. And just as important, everyone should turn on the TV and see someone who doesn’t look like them and love like them. Because, perhaps then, they will learn from them."

Well said, Shonda, well said.

Read more of Shonda Rhimes' speech here.

Twiggy, 65, On Why She's Not Hanging Up Her Leather Pants Any Time Soon

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She may be in her 60s, but fashion icon and designer Twiggy says she won't be hanging up the leather pants any time soon.

"I refuse to say women of certain ages should not wear certain things. It’s all about how you wear it," the 65-year-old model said last week, The Daily Mail reports. Twiggy was on hand at a reception for the launch of a new report outlining how the British government can help keep post 50s in work.

"Women, generally, when they reach a certain age, have accepted that they’re not allowed to behave a certain way. But I don’t follow the rules. I never did, and I’m not going to start," Twiggy said.

Twiggy started her own career as a teen, after dropping out of school at age 15, and is a bit of an anomaly in the modeling world, having a career spanning several decades. She recently collaborated on -- and modeled for -- a clothing range for British retailer Marks & Spencer, and has been the face of skincare products for Olay.

Twiggy's sentiments have been echoed by other post-50 celebrities, who feel women are unfairly judged for being sexy and provocative after a certain age.

Last week Madonna also spoke out against her critics, saying it's her prerogative to stay in shape and "show my ass" at any age. "Who’s to say when I can show my ass? It’s sexism. It’s ageism. And it’s a kind of discrimination," Madonna told The New York Daily News.

Twiggy also says she'll be a trailblazer for older women everywhere. "If I have to be the person who opens the door for women to believe and understand and embrace the idea that they can be sexual and look good and be as relevant in their fifties or their sixties, or whatever, as they were in their twenties, then so be it," she says.

You go, girl.





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'Fashion Police' Will Reportedly Hire New Co-Hosts Contrary To Rumors Of Cancellation

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Despite losing co-hosts Kathy Griffin and Kelly Osbourne, the show will reportedly go on for "Fashion Police."

Sources told TMZ that executives at E! plan to recast the open spots to possibly create a new show with the same concept.

It's a different story from what "multiple sources" were reportedly telling the New York Daily News after Griffin suddenly quit on Thursday. Despite the fact that the network issued a statement saying "'Fashion Police' will return as scheduled, on Monday, March 30 at 9pm," with co-hosts Giuliana Rancic and Brad Goreski and Executive Producer Melissa Rivers, it didn't stop sources from claiming that Griffin's sudden exit had E!'s execs considering canceling the show altogether.

As for reports of recasting, before Griffin's departure there were rumors that NeNe Leakes, Khloe Kardashian, Chrissy Teigen and Amber Rose were being considered for Osbourne's job. There's currently no word on who could replace Griffin.

Reps for E! were not immediately available for comment.

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'Bieberhood' Is The Film That 'Boyhood' Could Never Be

Suki Waterhouse Heats Up GQ With Steamy Spread

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If you haven't seen her on the red carpet with beau Bradley Cooper or you're not one of the 597,000 people who follow her on Instagram, meet Suki Waterhouse, the 23-year-old model who also stars in the upcoming installment in the "Divergent" series, "Insurgent." Waterhouse heats up the pages of GQ's April issue in a beachside photo shoot, donning a high-cut swimsuit and a sheer T-shirt:

suki

The model told GQ that, inadvertently, she's been training for her action-packed role in "Insurgent" ever since childhood:

"I studied karate growing up -- I'm a brown belt -- and me and my sister used to beat the crap out of each other," she said.

For more with Suki Waterhouse, pick up the April issue of GQ, on newsstands March 31.

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How Gina Rodriguez Is Surviving Her First Wild Year As 'Jane The Virgin'

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Gina Rodriguez carries a heavy burden.

I'm not referring to her schedule, which has her working long days at an unassuming film and TV studio on the outskirts of Los Angeles. And I'm not referring to the many, many things she does when she's not playing the pregnant Miami resident Jane Villanueva on "Jane the Virgin," a role that garnered her a Golden Globe award (the CW's first) in January.

On a recent Monday morning, I sat in a trailer with Rodriguez as she got her hair and makeup done before shooting scenes in an upcoming "Jane the Virgin" episode, and by the time she finished recounting everything she had done the previous weekend -- which happened to be the weekend of the Academy Awards -- I needed a nap. With genuine excitement and self-deprecating humor, she recounted a non-stop schedule of photo shoots, dress fittings, meetings, red carpets and multiple interviews. The finale of the weekend of hoopla could have been a trip to the swanky Vanity Fair party, to which she was invited. She didn't go because she was busy working on a treatment for a documentary she wants to do about the representations of Latinos in the media.

It doesn't sound like she will slow down once "Jane" wraps its first season in a few weeks. During her break, she hopes to shoot a movie and plans to write a book of advice for young people, something along the lines of Eckhart Tolle's "The Power of Now."

"It’ll be a story of my life and all the different sayings my father gave me growing up and how I navigate through this crazy society we have, and how I don’t allow it to bring me down or make me feel less than but instead empower me and lift me up," Rodriguez said. "Ideally I’d be able to give that to young kids, because 'The Power of Now' I love, but it’s so hard to get through, and I don’t think a teenager is going to pick that up in our day and age, when they can pick up an iPhone and watch TMZ."

There are so many things on Rodriguez's plate, and yet she carries none of it as if it's a heavy load. On the show's set, her energy never flagged; she buzzed around chatting with crew members and happily dove into an impromptu mid-afternoon buffet of Chinese food, but was completely focused when working with director Debbie Allen and the rest of the show's cast.

She wears all those ideas and responsibilities lightly; the burden I spoke of never appears to weigh her down, even though it is literally on her body. The thing is, the pregnancy prosthesis she wears under her costume is really heavy. I picked it up before she changed into Jane's waitress outfit, and it was so dense and weighty I almost felt pregnant again myself.

How does she do all she does and not get tired, especially given that she's literally carrying a huge weight around? The secret is … she does get tired. And she has a new appreciation of what her sisters went through when they were pregnant.

"Before, I used to be like, you guys complained so much when you were pregnant!" Rodriguez said with a laugh. "Now I'm like, 'Oh my God! I commend you, mothers.'"

Rodriguez and I spoke about the tricky balance of the real and the surreal in "Jane the Virgin," the "fight" that she and executive producer Jennie Snyder Urman bring to television and the relationship between Jane and Rafael in the Q&A below. The entire conversation with Rodriguez is available in podcast form; these excerpts from our conversation has been edited and condensed.

Do you remember reading the pilot script for this?
Oh yeah. I remember the day I auditioned, February 6. Yeah, I remember everything. Tested February 19. Tested again the 20th. Tested again the 25th. I tested a lot of times.

Why?
Well, this was my assumption. Obviously I can’t speak for [CW executives], but it was really important to [CW president Mark Pedowitz]. He was branching out. It was a new genre for the CW they hadn’t seen on the network yet, and it was really important to him. I could imagine -- it’s really important to me. So I was okay testing a bunch of times, because I wanted to be a part of a project that it meant that much to them. Everybody put so much time and care into this. It mattered a lot and I hope it continues to matter.

There's a leap of faith an actor has to make in a new project, because you can read a pilot script and talk to the creative team, you can do all the due diligence in the world, but you never really know if it’s going to be …
... if it’s going to be anything good. You sign that first contract for the next seven years of your life. You do take a chance, same way they take a chance on you. You take a chance that the writer is going to lead you in a direction that [allows you to be] artistically creative, that you’re going to be able to fly, that you’re going to be able to really show people what you can do.

But you’re not necessarily in control of where it goes.
Actors talk about it sometimes, because not only do we have the writers kind of creating our destiny, but we have the editors who, God willing, bring out the best in your performance, and that’s huge. That’s humongous for me, that ["Jane the Virgin"] editors are phenomenal. But then, you have directors that come in every seven days. You have to trust that director is going to also guide you in the same kind of tone that you’ve been going in. And so there’s a lot of trust you’ve got to put into other people and trust in your fellow peers. Ultimately it’s just [about] putting your best work out there, because then you’re proud of everything. That’s the only thing in your control.

But I remember when I read this script, I could hear the brilliance of this woman. I mean, that pilot was so strong. I thought it was so good. I could hear that Jennie had a clear idea of this girl, and that’s what mattered to me. Her clarity on Jane wasn’t skewed by the misconceptions we have from society on Latino culture, Latinos in America. To finally read a script where I was just a girl, and everything that was the byproduct of being Latino was just part of it. It wasn’t something you had to explain. It wasn’t something you had to dive into. It wasn’t something you had to blow up so that everybody knew that she was brown.

Jennie had a very clear vision of who this girl was and that was who I was going to play and that’s who I fell in love with. Did I know I was going to go on this crazy roller coaster? God, no. Every week is like "Whoa, where do you guys come up with this?" But Jennie created a staff of people that she trusts and Jennie is my soul sister. I feel so lucky that we have the relationship we do.

You obviously have a vested interest in who Jane is because you’re playing her every day. Do you have input?
Jennie and I, we’re very close. It’s a beautiful relationship that we have. My input is my art. What she writes on the page, I never felt like I needed to touch. I have got luck beyond belief. I never have ever had to be like, "Jennie, really?" or like, "Come on, guys, let’s not do that." Never once. I don’t think that’s common.

Jennie’s aware, she’s listening. She’s listening when we’re hanging out. She’s listening when we’re talking. She knows my heart when it comes to minorities in the media, when it comes to women, when it comes to beauty image. You know, I remember when we were getting ready for the upfronts [i.e. spring presentations to advertisers] after the pilot, and I got influenza and I lost like 15 pounds in like three days. I was hospitalized. It was awful.

And this was the week before we went to upfronts. I got super, super ill, and I have Hashimoto’s disease. I’m not naturally skinny to save my life. Nor do I want to be. I love my body, I love my curves. And when we went to upfronts, she saw me and she pulled me to the side and she said, "You know I love your body. You know I think you are gorgeous. Please don’t …" Like, "Let’s talk about this."

I’m like, "No, I’m just sick. It’ll come right back in a few weeks." She was like, "Oh, thank God." She also was invested in changing the way women were portrayed onscreen. She is a very strong, brilliant, intelligent, independent woman that is a mother to a daughter, and she wants that daughter to feel that way and a world where every beauty type is celebrated and every women can be whatever she wants to be. That lines up so much with the way I feel about life, so that’s why I’m saying we’re soul sisters. Like, we both have that kind of fight in our art.

I could have felt like I had no control or I was lost or I don’t love my character anymore or [question] "Why does my character do this?" Because it is somebody else’s story you’re telling. Somehow I got lucky that I am in love with my creator, I am in love with the story she’s telling. I’m in love with the character she gave me. I’m too lucky. There's not a day that goes by that I don’t appreciate what’s been happening to my life.

You’re playing a character who’s had this new responsibility placed on her. This seems to be parallel to your life.
A hundred percent.

And not only are you the lead of this show, the show is also, as you said, something that's very different for this network and for network television in general. It’s a mixture of telenovela, drama, comedy.
It's kind of a new format. And we’re talking about social commentary that people have never touched on. Pro-life, pro-choice and not making a [judgment]. I commend all the writers. It has nothing to do with me, but to be a part of it is so great. The social-commentary thing they make with no judgment is brilliant. Talk about immigration reform. They're not saying, "It’s terrible. You guys are awful!" Just, "Educate yourself."

Do you ever think of yourself as being in a position like Jane, in that you were both given this unexpectedly large responsibility?
At times. You know, it’s funny, because I welcome it. At first it was very daunting and scary, that moment of, "Wow, this is happening. My dreams are coming true and I’m in a position where I can hopefully create some change or even just start talking about it or scratch the surface of it." Because it’s already been talked about -- I’m not [the first]. Just like Shonda Rhimes said in her beautiful speech about not breaking ceilings, I’m not breaking any ceilings. But I’m continuing to hopefully move the glass aside so other people can come in.

I’ve been praying for this. And now it’s here. "Oh my God, can I do this?" But the same way Jane [has] that moment of, "I don’t know, this is so much," she also is like, "I can do this."

I’m not alone. I have an amazing cast around me and amazing writers that are leading me. I have an amazing Latino community that supports me. I have amazing other artists, other women that have come before me. Rita Moreno who I was so blessed to work with [Moreno is an upcoming guest star]. Ivonne Coll who is my grandma everyday. So I’m not alone. But I found that parallel [between Jane and myself] not too long ago and I was like, "This is where I relate to Jane." Because there’s so much about Jane that I don’t know if I know how to relate to.

Really?
I’m a little tougher. I have a little bit of a bigger bite. But this [responsibility] is where I relate to her. Because in this storm, I have to stay calm.

Jane is clear about wanting to remain a virgin, but at no point do I feel like the show is judgmental or trying to rein in the character’s sexuality, per se.
Yes. It’s beautiful. Jennie really [walks] that line with temptation that we all have and we all own and the sexuality which we all have and own. I mean, Jane is 23 years old. Of course she’s not only intrigued and interested, but she gets turned on like any other human being. It’s instinctual. It’s natural. And I think that shying away from that would then implement that other part that I kind of also grew up with, which is guilt. And we don’t want to put that out there because I think that there is a need to explore the natural urge for a woman, a man, for intimacy, for touch. That is real and we don’t want somebody to refrain from doing that because of the fear. And I think that Jane [walks] that line of getting close and maybe finding that thing of guilt.

But in the coming episodes, especially now when Jane and Rafael have been together longer, you’re going to see Jane have those moments of, "I’m ready -- or so I believe." Because she is ready. You know, at this point she thought she would have been married to Michael. After saving it for 23 years, she is ready to give it to the man that she loves. But then that got derailed. So the urge and the desire of like, "It’s about that time" -- that exists.

I love that that Jane-Rafael relationship is romantic and has many ups and downs in believable ways. One of the most believable things about it is that they’re very different people.
Yeah.

And he’s going through a lot right now. He’s lost his father. The business is suffering. He's got all kinds of challenges. It’s not inconceivable that these people don’t necessarily work together long-term. Even as a fan of the couple, I sit there and go, "Well ...
"... Maybe it’s not the best idea."

Maybe it’s not.
I like the way they set that up, because this scenario has probably happened to every single one of us, where we’re in a relationship for a long amount of time and then somebody new comes in, presents a newness or a dream or a fantasy that we’ve desired at some point to live out. We’re going to keep diving into the differences between Jane and Rafael, and then what’s beautiful is they bring Michael back to remind Jane of what she did have. We do this as human beings. We forget what we have and we go after something that seems like it’s about to fulfill a fantasy, and sometimes that doesn’t always work.

When Jane got pregnant, I think Jane’s natural instinct is that she wanted the family unit to exist. The mom, dad and the child, because she lacked that in her upbringing. We all make decisions based off of our past, situations that happen, how we see the world, how we’ve been taught to see the world. And sometimes that’s not conducive to the time that we’re in.

And it can be very, very tempting to …
To try to force that.

To stick to, "This is my plan. This is what I thought would happen. So I have to do this."
You have to make it work.

Even when every sign in the universe is telling you …
No. I’ve done this before -- I’ve ignored the signs. At least, thank God, I didn't test that out with my career. But what I’ve realized in my career is that it does pay to be patient. It does pay to stick to the things that do feel right in your gut and in your integrity and align with your morals.

For Jane, trying to make this family unit work is where she’s actually taking her first risks. Because Jane doesn’t take risks. Jane’s by the book. "Don’t do that because that hurts. Don’t touch it because it burns. End of story." That’s logic. But for the first time Jane is taking risks to make that idea work. And it’s very awesome that they are showing the [desire] to fight, to make something work and sometimes it’s out of your control.

That’s really the success of the show -- everybody has multiple dimensions, everybody has flaws. And they all keep creating obstacles for each other, sometimes with the best of intentions. So as much as it can be a soap opera, as much as it can be heightened and melodramatic and comedic, it’s based in these realistic dynamics among the characters.
Yeah, exactly. That’s where success lies, that grounded nature, because that’s where we connect. That’s where we connect with the audience. [The show has] that catharsis, that moment, that lesson. You need to have that grounded authenticity in order to fly high in that comedy or else you’re just like, "Ah, you’re a joke. I don’t want to listen to you anymore."

Without that, it just tips over into parody or something.
Yeah. And we border campy sometimes, but that’s where we get our kicks.

If it’s intentionally bordering campiness, that’s different.
Yeah. I definitely commend the cast -- we know when we’re going there. And we go there and it’s nice and we have all committed to going to the heightened comedy, but also to saying, "Okay, here’s [a grounded] moment. We’re real. We’re real people that feel. Let’s go there."

What are some of your favorite scenes on the show?
I love seeing my parents together on screen when I’m not in it. Every interaction. I love watching Andrea [Navado, who plays Jane's mother Xiomara]. She’s so subtle and so fun to watch. And she’s so not like that character. She’s shy and she’s not really as outgoing and she’s not flirtatious. To see her put on Xiomara, I’m like, "Wow!" And I love Jaime [Camil, who plays Jane's father, Rogelio de la Vega]. He’s always been by far my favorite character to watch. Everything he does is phenomenal and I just absolutely love watching the two of them together.

I miss working with Brett [Dier, who plays Jane's ex, Michael]. The first five episodes, we were together all the time. I also love working with Justin [Baldoni, who plays Jane's boyfriend, Rafael]. Our love together on the show is so romantic, where me and [Michael] were very naïve and young and youthful and light. With Rafael there’s so much passion.

[In Monday's episode] there’s an epic dance scene with me and Rafael. It’s a dream, it’s magical realism. It’s a full-on performance, a minute-and-a-half song. It is epic and dreamy, and they set up tracks where the camera goes around us and then he spins me at the end and he keeps spinning me and I keep turning. And then I open my eyes and he’s gone.

You know, all of our romantic scenes where the petals are falling and and we’re kissing under that tree. When young girls to have their first kiss, I want them to have a moment like that. And I would want my daughter to have a moment like that. They’re so sweet. They’re so sweet to put out into the world, where now we just have sex scenes left and right.

My entire interview with Gina Rodriguez is available as a Talking TV podcast that you can find here, on iTunes and below. A previous interview with "Jane the Virgin" executive producer and showrunner Jennie Snyder Urman is here.



Bella Thorne Ends A Prank-Filled Day By Reenacting That Iconic Scene From 'Titanic'

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Seeing Bella Thorne on TV and in movies is normal. Seeing her behind a counter in an apron? Not so much.

In a video from Teen Vogue, the actress pulls some pranks at The Grove in Los Angeles by trying out some different jobs.

Working at the doll hair salon at American Girl Place, she trades name tags with another girl behind the counter and tries to persuade fans she’s not “the Disney person,” as one woman called her. After a little girl asks if her doll could get her ears pierced, Bella dishes out some advice that is pretty much every mother’s nightmare.

“You can always heat up a needle on a fire and then pierce them,” she said in the video.

Later, Bella takes on crying kids as she works as one of Santa Claus' helpers and takes some selfies with jolly old St. Nick before testing her skills at Sprinkles Cupcakes. That’s where the tables turn.

After a day of pranking people, Bella gets fooled by a Leonardo DiCaprio lookalike. Well, almost.

“You didn’t get me, people, okay?” she said after he tries to convince her he’s the real Leo. “I know exactly what Leonardo DiCaprio looks like. I’ve studied him.”

Luckily, the two patched things up with an adorable reenactment of the classic bow scene from “Titanic.”

We’ll never let go, Bella -– especially of that hilarious time you told a little girl she could pierce her ears with a needle.

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David Lynch Doesn't Know If The 'Twin Peaks' Reboot Is Happening

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The "Twin Peaks" reboot was officially announced last October by Showtime with nine new episodes expected to premiere in 2016. Kyle MacLachlan confirmed he would return as Agent Dale Cooper, along with co-stars Sheryl Lee and Dana Ashbrook. But now co-creator David Lynch is uncertain if it's officially happening.

Lynch spoke at a panel for his new exhibit "Between Two Worlds" at the Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, Australia last weekend. According to Welcome to Twin Peaks, when the filmmaker was asked whether or not the reboot was still happening he responded, "I don’t know. There are complications.” Vice also attended the panel and said that the filmmaker's response suggested the reboot was "still up in the air." A Brisbane-based writer also tweeted that Lynch said he was "not sure" about the series' upcoming limited run on Showtime.

In an interview with Australian arts and culture program "The Mix" after the panel, Lynch was asked about the reboot again. "I haven’t returned yet and we’re still working on the contract," Lynch said, "but I love the world of 'Twin Peaks' and I love those characters." Watch a clip from the interview, courtesy of Welcome To Twin Peaks, below:





When the reboot was first announced, "Twin Peaks" co-creator Mark Frost discussed the project, revealing that it would be a continuation and pick up where the series left off. Lynch was expected to direct all nine episodes.

Showtime and Lynch's representatives did not immediately respond to The Huffington Post's requests for comment. In the meantime, let's keep meditating on the hope Laura Palmer left us with:



For more, head to Welcome To Twin Peaks.
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