Lynda Carter’s Wonderful Recovery

Lynda Carter

On television, she had an invisible jet, a lasso of truth and indestructible silver bracelets, but in real life, Wonder Woman Lynda Carter has her own secret weapon: sobriety.

The 56-year-old actress is opening up about her longtime battle with the bottle and 10 years of sober living.

“I needed help,” Carter told The Insider, explaining she was “brilliant” at hiding her alcoholism. “I begged God in heaven to help me figure this out.”

She said she finally entered rehab in Washington, D.C. after her husband, attorney Robert Altman, pleaded with her to stop drinking for the sake of their family. The couple married in 1984 and have two children, Jamie, 20, and Jessica, 17.

Now, 10 years sober, the former Miss World USA  hopes she is “a stellar human being” who enriches the life of her family and friends.

Clint Eastwood admits Scorsese may win first Academy Award

Eastwood and Scorsese

Clint Eastwood believes that Martin Scorsese will finally claim the Academy Award he so rightfuly deserves, and beat him to the Best Director prize.

Two years ago Eastwood’s Million Dollar Baby beat Scorsese’s The Aviator.

“He [Scorsese] probably has a good chance, there is a lot of sympathy for him, but I have no control over any of that. I always feel sorry … for the others, because there are other nominees and they’ve worked very hard on their projects, too. I don’t think any two people should be singled out.”

Scorsese has seven Oscar nominations but has yet to win a Best Director Oscar. This factoid is one of the most told jokes in Hollywood. But there are more than a few great directors who have been nominated but never won a competitive Oscar for directing:

Altman, Hitchcock, Fellini, Bergman, Welles, and Lucas have all been awarded honorary Oscars.

Scorsese’s editor Thelma Schoonmaker claims that Scorsese often says “We should feel lucky we even get to make movies anymore,” of his lack of Academy recognition.

But this year may be the year. Scorsese is 1-5 favorite to win his first Academy Award, as well as Best Motion Picture.

Jennifer Jason Leigh Biography

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Movie critic Rex Reed accurately described the characters in Jennifer Jason Leigh’s gallery as a collection of “sluts and nuts,” but the soft-spoken actress affectionately refers to the hookers, drug addicts and head cases she has played as a group of vulnerable, injured women she is thrilled to get to know on-screen, but grateful she doesn’t encounter in real life. A versatile young actress, Leigh possesses intelligence and candor, which have made her one of the leading talents of her generation.

She first garnered critical attention as Casey Powell, the anorexic teenager in the TV-movie “The Best Little Girl in the World” (ABC, 1981), and made her feature film mark as a young teen who gets an abortion in Amy Heckerling’s finely observed teen comedy “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” (1982). Despite critical acclaim for “Fast Times”, it was eight years before Leigh’s next notable role, as the prostitute Tralala in Ulrich Edel’s grim adaptation of Hubert Selby Jr.’s novel, “Last Exit to Brooklyn” (1990). Her uncompromising performance was followed by two more gritty films in which Leigh portrayed ostensibly fragile women with unsuspected reserves of strength: “Miami Blues” (1990), as another woman of ill repute; and “Rush” (1991), as a narcotics cop-turned-addict.

Leigh portrayed yet another unhinged character in Barbet Schroeder’s “Single White Female” (1992). As Heddie, Leigh transformed herself from a frowsy seemingly supportive woman into the sleek “roommate from hell” who attempts to overtake Bridget Fonda’s identity. She followed with the small role of a woman who works as a phone sex operator from her home in Robert Altman’s episodic “Short Cuts” (1993). In the Coen brothers’ “The Hudsucker Proxy” (1994), Leigh essayed an award-winning journalist who goes undercover and romances the new president of an industrial company. Some critics faulted Leigh’s use of Katharine Hepburn-inspired accent while others compared her work with that of such 1940s stars as Rosalind Russell and Barbara Stanwyck. Her eccentric yet powerful portrayal of writer Dorothy Parker in Alan Rudolph’s “Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle” (1994) won her citations as the year’s best actress from the National Society of Film Critics and the Chicago Film Critics Association but not the expected attention from the Academy. Her performance was not without controversy; some found her accent indecipherable, yet Leigh claimed to have studied recordings of Parker and patterned her speech on them.

In 1995, Leigh again displayed her versatility, first in “Dolores Claiborne” as the title character’s haunted careerist daughter and then as a drug-addicted singer wannabe in “Georgia”. In the latter, her character was scripted by her mother, Barbara Turner, and was reportedly based in part on Leigh’s older sister Carrie. Again, critics were divided over her emotionally vivid depiction of a character constantly living on the edge. Leigh ventured into lighter territory in 1997 playing a plain-Jane heroine who falls in love with a handsome gold digger in the film version of Henry James’ “Washington Square”. Leigh’s take on the role differed greatly from Olivia de Havilland’s interpretation in the 1949 film “The Heiress”, which was also based on James’ book, in that her performance is much quieter and her bashful, innocent character takes a spiritual journey to independence that is a far cry from the one de Havilland takes to revenge and bitterness. Leigh followed that film up with another bittersweet romance, this time re-teaming with her “Mrs. Parker” co-star Campbell Scott for the TV-movie “The Love Letter” (CBS, 1998). Here, she played a lonely, young Civil War-era woman who develops a passionate correspondence with a man who lives in the 20th Century via a magical roll-top desk. Unlike most of Leigh’s movies, this one had a happy ending.

The actress returned to playing tortured souls in 1999, replacing Natasha Richardson as miserable nightclub performer Sally Bowles in the Broadway revival of “Cabaret” opposite Alan Cumming. The part not only proved she was a compelling presence on stage, but also showed she was an adequate singer and dancer as well. The following year saw the actress star as an isolated computer game designer who is more comfortable playing a character in a game than she is dealing with people in real life in “eXistenZ”, David Cronenberg’s bizarre sci-fi flick. It was a role she acknowledged was one to which she could relate as in her mind acting offered a similar escape.

Leigh continued to add to her gallery of misfits throughout 2000, acting in the fourth Dogme 95 film, “The King Is Alive” (screened at Cannes), which focused on a group of passengers on a broken down bus who pass the time by staging “King Lear”. She went on to essay an unhappily married woman whose affair with a Native American raises eyebrows in “Skipped Parts”. Leigh then took on a very ambitious project with Alan Cumming, her “Cabaret” co-star and real-life friend. The pair agreed to write, direct, produce and star in the comedy-drama “The Anniversary Party” which examines what happens when a newly reconciled couple throws an anniversary bash that quickly deteriorates into a drug-fuelled rehashing of the couple’s problems. The film was shot entirely on digital video and was lauded not only for its rich appearance but its clever writing direction and often improvised acting. It was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award in 2001. Leigh next went back to her acting full time, appearing briefly in “Road to Perdition” (2002) as Tom Hanks’ wife, and director Jane Campion’s “In the Cut” (2003), in which she played Meg Ryan’s sister (at Campion’s behest, the two actresses spent much time prior to filming interacting as if they were real siblings).

Leigh next appeared in the psychological thriller “The Machinist” (2004) opposite a gaunt Christian Bale, playing a hooker and sometime girlfriend of a machinist (Bale) whose severe insomnia causes the serious injury of a co-worker. He falls into a fit of madness, fearing everyone around him and imagining unseen enemies—including Leigh. In “Palindromes” (2005), director Todd Solondz’s screed against abortion activists, fundamentalist Christians and pedophiles, Leigh was one of eight actors to portray a 13 year-old girl who longs for a baby, gets pregnant, has an abortion forced upon her, runs away from home, finds a Christian commune full of disabled children and joins a plot to murder an abortion doctor. Critics generally panned the film as being cruel, mocking and misanthropic—typical refrains for the director’s work.

Leigh clearly relishes difficult, unglamorous roles and inhabits them with conviction. She dieted down to 86 pounds for both “The Best Little Girl in the World” and “Georgia” and is famous for the research she does before filming. Her work is intimate and richly detailed and often painful to watch, but there is no denying the talent that drives it.

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Kathy Ireland Biography

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Kathy Ireland was born March 8th, 1963, in Santa Barbara, California. Her adolescence foreshadowed her future busy career as a wife, mother, businesswoman, humanitarian, actress, and model.

A shy teenager, Kathy kept busy with a slew of after-school jobs, including a newspaper courier (she was named Courier of the Year three years in a row), a waitress, a hostess, and a department store saleswoman. Her good nature was evident early on in her career, with her work at a convalescent home.

At the age of 17, Kathy was discovered by an Elite Modeling scout (the beginning of practically every model’s career). By the time she had finished high school, with original hopes of working in education, marine biology, or journalism, she was jet-setting to Europe for photo shoots.

Her modeling career reached its peak after she snagged the highly coveted 1984 cover of Sports Illustrated’s Swimsuit Edition, which only marked the beginning of her relationship with the popular “swimsuit” magazine.

Kathy could be seen on the cover of Sports Illustrated three more times, and has since appeared in the magazine a record-setting thirteen times, including the magazine’s 25th Anniversary Special. Her incredible physique graced the covers of many more magazines throughout her career, including Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Mademoiselle, Shape, Seventeen, and Harper’s Bazaar.

If men couldn’t get enough of Kathy after all her magazine appearances, they could get a daily dose of Kathy in her own annual Swimsuit Calendar (which is one of the highest selling calendars in the world).

In the midst of her illustrious modeling career, Kathy was appearing on the silver screen, the boob tube and on stage. Among her list of film credits reads Mr. Destiny, Necessary Roughness, Robert Altman’s The Player (as herself), Loaded Weapon 1, Amore!, and Backfire!

As for television roles, she appeared in Danger Island, Perry Mason: The Case of the Wicked Wives, Melrose Place, Miami Hustle, and Suddenly Susan. She also starred in the play Three Tall Women

And her career doesn’t end with modeling and acting either. Kathy is the designer of her own line of clothing, the “Kathy Ireland Brand”, promoting style and quality at reasonable prices. Her line has expanded into a women’s swimwear collection, exercise apparel, maternity line, home collections, and even watches, shoes, and handbags.

In her goal to promote fitness, health and well-being, Kathy became a certified fitness instructor in 1994, and has since released her best-selling fitness videos, which include: Kathy Ireland’s Total Fitness, Kathy Ireland’s Body Specifics, and Great Buns in 12 Minutes. Partly fulfilling her journalistic interests, Kathy is a contributing editor to Fitness Magazine.

Kathy has practically had the career of several women combined, with the long list of non-profit organizations she is involved with. She is the Entertainment Industry Foundation’s Ambassador for the National Women’s Cancer Research Alliance, the Honorary Chairperson for the March of Dimes WalkAmerica program, and the National Chairperson of Family Services and Parenting for Athletes and Entertainers for Kids.

She is also active in the Special Olympics, Feed the Children, Casa Julia de Burgos in Puerto Rico (for battered women and children), the Santa Barbara Rescue Mission, Project Inform in San Francisco (disseminates HIV/AIDS treatment information nationwide), among many other charities and important causes.