|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
People: Sep. 22, 1997
GUESS WHO ELSE IS COMING TO DINNER?
There will never be another SIDNEY POITIER. But there is, in fact, a SYDNEY POITIER, and she's coming to a TV screen near you sometime next year. Sydney, 23, is Sidney's youngest daughter. (He has six, three of whom are actresses.) When he was cast in the Showtime movie Free of Eden as a former schoolteacher turned big-shot businessman, he asked the producers to look at his daughter's audition tape for a small part. "He called me at the record company where I was working as an assistant and told me they wanted me for the lead," says Poitier fille. "I said, 'What are you talking about?' He said he couldn't believe it either." While her father and mother have always been supportive of her career choice, "I definitely got the vibe that other things were more stable," Sydney says. The movie, in which she plays a high school dropout trying to turn her life around, wrapped last week. She has no new work lined up, but she's optimistic. After all, her dad probably still has a copy of that tape. If that doesn't bring new offers, "the record company said I could always come back."
WOMEN WHO USED TO RUN WITH O.J.
She's not sure about those murders in Brentwood, but PAULA BARBIERI thinks O.J. Simpson is guilty of one thing--being a very bad boyfriend. Not that Barbieri's choice in menfolk is all that shrewd. In her new book, The Other Woman, she reveals that on the night of the murders she was on a date in Las Vegas with Michael Bolton. She had previously lived with Dolph Lundgren and hung out with Roman Polanski and George Hamilton. Barbieri, who says her support of Simpson during the criminal trial led to the loss of all her money, her career and her apartment (although she reportedly got $3 million for the book, which should ease the sting a touch), now claims O.J. was a liar--especially about other women--but that she still loves him. In another new book, I'm Not Dancing Anymore, O.J.'s niece Terri Baker expresses her own doubts about O.J.'s innocence. She also writes that he wasn't such a great uncle either.
SEEN & HEARD
Of all the celebs in the world, whose image is protected most fiercely? Barbie's. Now ever vigilant Mattel, which makes the toy, is suing MCA records for trademark infringement over Barbie Girl, a bubble-gum dance song by the Danish band Aqua. It doesn't help that the song has lyrics like "You can brush my hair/ Undress me everywhere."
Can a director win against a studio? Maybe. Robert Altman's cut for The Gingerbread Man didn't get the response at test screenings that PolyGram wanted. So, although Altman threatened to take his name off the film, the studio had a new editor chop off eight minutes. But the new cut tested only a little better. The studio chose to keep the Altman version--and his name.
SHAKUR BOOTY
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Jenny Sanford: The Savviest Spurned Wife in History
- Can Golf Survive Without Tiger Woods? And Vice Versa?
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- The Top 10 FAILs of 2009
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- Disney's Princess: A Breakthrough for Curly Hair
- The Alleged Chicago Jihadi: Key Role in the Mumbai Attacks?
- Essay: IN PRAISE OF MAY-DECEMBER MARRIAGES
- For Africans Seeking Asylum in Israel, Dangers Abound
- Jenny Sanford: The Savviest Spurned Wife in History
- How Tiger Woods Can Survive the Scandal
- After a Court Ruling, Berlusconi's Legal Woes Resume
- Can Golf Survive Without Tiger Woods? And Vice Versa?
- Parents' Sex Talk with Kids: Too Little, Too Late
- The Top 10 FAILs of 2009
- Should Wild Animals Become Pets to Ward Off Extinction?
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- Disney's Princess: A Breakthrough for Curly Hair
- Humanure: Goodbye, Toilets. Hello, Extreme Composting





RSS