‘It says a lot that, at 69, I can still wear a jumpsuit on stage.’ Photograph: Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo‘It says a lot that, at 69, I can still wear a jumpsuit on stage.’ Photograph: Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy Stock PhotoThe look I loveFashionThe rock legend on the look that defined her in the 70s – and is still going strong todayThis is the look I wore when I was 23, when Can the Can [Quatro’s second solo single and her first to reach No 1 in the UK] was about to be released.
Joaquin Phoenix in Beau Is Afraid, giant balls not pictured. This piece was originally published in April. We are recirculating it now that Beau Is Afraid is available on digital. Warning: Spoilers ahead for the plot and ending of Beau Is Afraid.
How stunted is the titular man-child at the heart of Ari Aster’s Beau Is Afraid? So much so that, despite Joaquin Phoenix’s Beau being well into middle age, he apparently has never had an orgasm, neither with a partner nor by his own hand.
Lou Diamond Phillips finalized his divorce from ex-wife Kelly, agreeing to pay $14,000 a month in spousal and child support and to share custody of their three children, court papers show. The 45-year-old actor, who appears on TV’s Numb3rs, also agreed to pay a $216,000 lump sum and share with Kelly and his children a portion of any future increases in his current $600,000 yearly salary, the papers show. The final judgment was filed July 30 in Los Angeles Superior Court and made public on Tuesday.
Oleg Mitnik filed the $20million lawsuit in Manhattan Supreme Court
A millionaire shipping executive has sued his estranged wife and father-in-law, claiming they were behind a plot to hire a notorious mobster to kill him.
Oleg Mitnik filed the $20million lawsuit against his socialite wife Ronit Mitnik and father-in-law Anatoly Potik in Manhattan Supreme Court, claiming emotional distress and defamation.
Mitnik was the target of a hit-turned-extortion in 2015, when one-time Russian mafioso Boris Nayfeld, now 70, told him a contract had been taken out on his life.
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11. The stunt guys got the brunt of it, though. "Literally, three or four times while shooting Home Alone and Home Alone 2, I thought those guys were dead," Columbus admitted to Chicago. "There was no CGI. It was kind of terrifying to watch. Only after they got up and came to the monitor to watch playback did we actually laugh." Agreed Stern, "The stuntmen were the unsung heroes of the show. Whenever people tell me moments they like, I say, 'Oh, that was Leon [Delaney].