Marion Cotillard Wins Best Lead Actress Oscar

Marion Cotillard Wins Best Lead Actress Oscar

An Oscar statuette is the most coveted prize in acting. So it comes as little surprise that Marion Cotillard was nearly ecstatic after picking up Best Actress in a Leading Role for her work in La Vie En Rose.

The 32-year-old Frenchwomen broke down in tears when her name was announced - having a tough time gaining her composure as she took the podium.

Handed the award by past Oscar winner Forest Whitaker, Marion attempted to say: “Thank you life! Thank you love! It is true there are some angels in this city. Thank you! Thank you so much!”

The win at the Academy Awards follows trophies collected by Marion at the Golden Globes and the British BAFTAs.

Academy Awards To see the entire gallery from the 2008 Academy Awards (February 24) - !

Gwyneth and Mario sued over food/travel book

mario/gwynethBook? What book? That would seem to be the bone of contention, if you will. Ben Karlin, former headwriter for The Daily Show, has filed a lawsuit against TV chef Mario Batali and actress Gwyneth Paltrow claiming they did not pay him for work he did for a book on which they were collaborating. Karlin, who shared authorship of America (The Book) with Jon Stewart, says he was assigned to “conceptualize and oversee” a book to compliment a PBS series starring Mario and Gwyneth in which the stars take a cultural and gastronomic tour of Spain. The series, which may be called Spain…on the Road Again, will premiere this fall.

According to Karlin’s mouthpiece — er, lawyer — the production company, Frappe Inc. is also joined in the suit. In 2007, Frappe’s prez, Charles Pinsky, made the deal with him. Based on the deal, Karlin traveled to Spain twice on his own dime. When he pressed Pinsky for a signed contract and, presumably, his advance, neither were forthcoming. Karlin was then dismissed without pay. (Of course, if the deal had never been agreed upon, how could Ben have been dismissed?)

Now, Pinsky’s mouthpiece — er, lawyer — is talking. Leslie Ben-Zvi said Karlin was misrepresenting the facts. “We will vigorously defend this lawsuit, including the good name of Pinsky and Batali.” Perhaps Ben-Zvi doesn’t know about Paltrow’s good name, even with number one box office hit Iron Man still in theaters and that Best Actress Oscar for Shakespeare in Love.

Apparently, there were problems between Ben and Mario. Karlin clashed with Batali over who was directing the project. Batali thought Karlin was only a writer. Meanwhile, according to Karlin’s suit, “Batali, claiming preoccupation with other ventures, also refused to contribute substantial material to the book, despite Pinsky’s assurances otherwise, and there was no indication that any contribution from Paltrow was forthcoming.” The lawsuit was filed in New York state court for around $500,000 in damages and compensation. Nothing says yummy Spanish cuisine like a lawsuit, right?

Whale Rider’s Keisha Castle-Hughes Has Baby Girl

Whale Rider's Keisha Castle-Hughes Has Baby Girl | Keisha Castle-Hughes Whale Rider Oscar nominee Keisha Castle-Hughes and her boyfriend, Bradley Hull, welcomed their first child, a healthy baby girl, her rep tells PEOPLE.

The child, named Felicity-Amore, was born Wednesday at 6:35 p.m. and weighed 7 lb., 6 oz. Publicist Gail Cowan described the baby as “beautiful.”

Castle-Hughes, 17, and Hull, 20, have been dating for three years and are based in New Zealand.

The Australia-born actress first made waves playing the fiery Paikea in 2002’s Whale Rider – a role for which she became, at age 13, the youngest Best Actress Oscar nominee in Hollywood history.

“I thought I was still dreaming,” she told PEOPLE at the time.

Since Whale Rider, Castle-Hughes played the Queen of Naboo in 2005’s Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith and was Mary in last year’s The Nativity Story.

Sophia Loren Biography

Sophia Loren Biography.jpg

Extraordinarily beautiful actor who managed against formidable odds to rise from extreme poverty and obscurity in post-war Italy while struggling against typecasting and thankless roles that have been the fate of similarly endowed performers. The illegitimate daughter of a frustrated actress, the young Loren was so thin as a child she was nicknamed “the Stick”. With American film production companies arriving in post-war Rome, her mother took Loren north from Naples where they were then living. She managed to get irregular work as a print model, entered beauty contests and took extra work in such films as “Quo Vadis” (made in 1949 but released in 1951). In 1951 alone she had bits in nine films, the same year she met producer and future husband Carlo Ponti, one of a panel of judges presiding over a beauty contest in which she was competing. Under Ponti’s guidance she became one of Italy’s leading stars of the 1950s, an earthy, voluptuous figure.

By 1954 she was an established name, and vying with the well-established Gina Lollobrigida for roles and fans on both sides of the Atlantic. After appearing in several American productions shot overseas, Loren arrived in Hollywood in the mid-1950s, preceded by a huge press campaign. Her natural sensuousness was vulgarized by the artificial glamour treatment and with few exceptions like “Houseboat” (1958) with Cary Grant, Sidney Lumet’s “That Kind of Woman” (1959), and “The Black Orchid” (1958) for which she received a Best Actress Award at Cannes, she was woefully miscast. Nonetheless, over the next two decades, Loren occasionally demonstrated the talent and range needed to transcend her pin-up status. She once again won an award at Cannes as well as a Best Actress Oscar for her memorable performance in Vittorio De Sica’s “Two Women” (1960), giving the performance of her career in the portrayal of a mother protecting her daughter in war-torn Italy.

Loren worked steadily throughout the 60s in forgettable projects with some of the industry’s most celebrated directors, most of whom were unfortunately past their prime: Michael Curtiz (”A Breath of Scandal”, 1960) Anatole Litvak (”Five Miles to Midnight”, 1963), and Charles Chaplin (”A Countess From Hong Kong”, 1967). Some of her better vehicles were George Cukor’s off-beat “Heller in Pink Tights” (1960), the Vittorio De Sica section of the episodic “Boccaccio 70″ (1962) and Stanley Donen’s stylish thriller “Arabesque” (1966) which co-starred Gregory Peck. Her only true standout roles of the period, however, were in “Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow” (1963) with Loren doing the famous bedroom striptease scene, and “Marriage Italian-Style” (1964), both under the direction of De Sica and co-starring Marcello Mastroianni, a leading man with whom she appeared in 14 films during her career. Loren also made several autobiographical specials for US TV including “The World of Sophia Loren” (ABC, 1962) and “Sophia!” (ABC, 1968).

In the 70s, Loren continued to get work offers but performed primarily in Europe. Other than Ettore Scola’s “A Special Day” (1977), which featured fine performances by her and Mastroianni in distinctly unglamorous roles, she appeared mostly in uneven productions including the disastrous adaptation of the stage musical “Man of la Mancha” (1972) directed by Arthur Hiller. Loren also worked with Italy’s celebrated female director Lina Wertmuller in two films, “Blood Feud” (1978), with Mastroianni again, and “Saturday, Sunday and Monday” (1990).

During the 80s Loren made only a few feature films while she raised her teenaged sons by Ponti, but she did perform in several American TV-movies including “Courage” (1986), “Aurora” (1984), which also featured her son Eduardo, and the autobiographical “Sophia Loren: Her Own Story” (1980) in which she played both herself and her own mother. By then each appearance she made was promoted as an event and her gracious presence as an acceptor of affection became more important than any other role she played. Having worked hard for many years, her status as a “legend” and a “survivor” was unshakably secure, even to the point where, somewhat unexpectedly, she was awarded a second, honorary Oscar in 1990. In 1994 Loren returned to US films in Robert Altman’s much ballyhooed but disappointing take on the French fashion scene, “Ready to Wear (Pret-a-Porter)”. The film’s major highlight was the recreation of the famous striptease that Loren performed once again for Mastroianni, who also co-starred. She subsequently brought a warm, friendly presence and her sensuous, distinctive beauty to the middle-aged antics of the popular and unassuming if derivative sequel film, “Grumpier Old Men” (1995).

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