One of the last images taken of Anthony Bourdain shows him riding a tandem bike through eastern France with the chef who would find him, days later, dead in his hotel room. The photo was taken 2 days ago in the town of Colmar. We know Bourdain had been out there filming an episode of 'Parts Unknown' with pal and fellow chef Eric Ripert. Ripert is at the helm of the bike with Bourdain,...
- 6/8/2018
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
A week before the 65th annual Primetime Emmy Awards rock the entertainment industry, nearly 80 awards were scheduled to be presented at the Creative Arts Emmys ceremony Sunday (Sept. 15) at the Nokia Theatre. Fxx will air an edited version of the Creative Arts Emmys ceremony on Sept. 21 at 9 p.m. Et.
HBO's "Behind the Candelabra" unsurprisingly took home a number of awards, while Bob Newhart won his first career Emmy for guest-starring on CBS' "The Big Bang Theory."
Here is the full list of winners:
Outstanding Guest Actress In A Drama Series - 2013: Carrie Preston, as Elsbeth Tascioni on "The Good Wife"
Outstanding Guest Actor In A Drama Series - 2013: Dan Bucatinsky, as James Novack on "Scandal"
Outstanding Guest Actress In A Comedy Series - 2013: Melissa Leo, as Laurie on "Louie"
Outstanding Guest Actor In A Comedy Series - 2013: Bob Newhart, as Arthur Jeffries/Professor Proton...
HBO's "Behind the Candelabra" unsurprisingly took home a number of awards, while Bob Newhart won his first career Emmy for guest-starring on CBS' "The Big Bang Theory."
Here is the full list of winners:
Outstanding Guest Actress In A Drama Series - 2013: Carrie Preston, as Elsbeth Tascioni on "The Good Wife"
Outstanding Guest Actor In A Drama Series - 2013: Dan Bucatinsky, as James Novack on "Scandal"
Outstanding Guest Actress In A Comedy Series - 2013: Melissa Leo, as Laurie on "Louie"
Outstanding Guest Actor In A Comedy Series - 2013: Bob Newhart, as Arthur Jeffries/Professor Proton...
- 9/16/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
By Sean O’Connell
Hollywoodnews.com: Martin Scorsese, Peter Dinklage and the cast of ABC’s hit comedy “Modern Family” walked away as big winners from the 63rdr Primetime Emmy Awards, which were held Sunday night in Los Angeles.
“Family” led the evening with five Emmy wins, including Best Comedy, Best Supporting Actor (Ty Burrell) and Actress (Julie Bowen), direction and screenwriting.
“Welcome back to the ‘Modern Family’ awards,” host Jane Lynch (“Glee”) joked coming out of a commercial break.
But “Family wasn’t the only winner. AMC’s period drama “Mad Men” walked away with the Best Drama Emmy. Scorsese took home a trophy for directing the pilot episode of HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire.” And Peter Dinklage earned a well-deserved Emmy for his outstanding work on “Game of Thrones.”
Below, a complete list of last night’s winners:
Outstanding Comedy Series
Modern Family (Winner)
Outstanding Drama Series
Mad Men...
Hollywoodnews.com: Martin Scorsese, Peter Dinklage and the cast of ABC’s hit comedy “Modern Family” walked away as big winners from the 63rdr Primetime Emmy Awards, which were held Sunday night in Los Angeles.
“Family” led the evening with five Emmy wins, including Best Comedy, Best Supporting Actor (Ty Burrell) and Actress (Julie Bowen), direction and screenwriting.
“Welcome back to the ‘Modern Family’ awards,” host Jane Lynch (“Glee”) joked coming out of a commercial break.
But “Family wasn’t the only winner. AMC’s period drama “Mad Men” walked away with the Best Drama Emmy. Scorsese took home a trophy for directing the pilot episode of HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire.” And Peter Dinklage earned a well-deserved Emmy for his outstanding work on “Game of Thrones.”
Below, a complete list of last night’s winners:
Outstanding Comedy Series
Modern Family (Winner)
Outstanding Drama Series
Mad Men...
- 9/19/2011
- by Sean O'Connell
- Hollywoodnews.com
It's a good day for funny people, especially if your name is Tina Fey or Seth MacFarlane.
Fey's series, 30 Rock, was handed 22 Emmy nominations this morning, which stands as a record for a comedy series. She and Alec Baldwin were also nominated for acting awards. Plus, for the first time some of the other actors on NBC's laffer were recognized. Jane Krakowski, Jack McBrayer and Tracy Morgan all picked up supporting nominations.
MacFarlane's Family Guy was also nominated for best comedy series, the first time an animated show has cracked that category since The Flintstones in 1961. Two years ago MacFarlane decided to pull his show from contention in the animated series category to have it considered for best comedy.
Mad Men, the drama about the advertising world in the sixties, picked up 16 nominations in the drama categories, including a best actor nod for Jon Hamm. Hamm is also nominated as...
Fey's series, 30 Rock, was handed 22 Emmy nominations this morning, which stands as a record for a comedy series. She and Alec Baldwin were also nominated for acting awards. Plus, for the first time some of the other actors on NBC's laffer were recognized. Jane Krakowski, Jack McBrayer and Tracy Morgan all picked up supporting nominations.
MacFarlane's Family Guy was also nominated for best comedy series, the first time an animated show has cracked that category since The Flintstones in 1961. Two years ago MacFarlane decided to pull his show from contention in the animated series category to have it considered for best comedy.
Mad Men, the drama about the advertising world in the sixties, picked up 16 nominations in the drama categories, including a best actor nod for Jon Hamm. Hamm is also nominated as...
- 7/16/2009
- CinemaSpy
A tip to all you men hanging out on city streets: If you spot a muscular woman in a tight sleeveless top toting a camera, do not, by all means, do not make any comments, whistles, catcalls, or any other overture.
If you do, you're likely to wind up with your mug plastered on art house screens across America. "War Zone", Maggie Hadleigh-West's documentary about such unwanted encounters, is receiving its theatrical premiere at New York's Film Forum.
Hadleigh-West's basic approach to making this film was to walk down the street, wait for the inevitable male overtures, and then reciprocate by confronting the aggressors. Of the more than 1,000 "incidents of harassments" that she says she encountered during a five-week period, roughly 50 or so are depicted in the film, which attempts to use these examples of street confrontations, as well as interviews with various female victims, to present a wider portrait of male aggression toward women. One particularly harrowing segment features the audio tape of a 911 call made by a woman as she is being attacked by a home intruder.
Although the filmmaker's argument is a provocative one, she undercuts its effectiveness by her heavy-handed approach. She makes no differentiation between the various levels of male attention, with sideways glances accorded the same contempt and criminality as obscene remarks.
The men, caught by surprise, react in a gallery of ways: sheepish and embarrassed, defensive, denying, hostile and argumentative. Many protest that they were simply trying to offer a compliment; others suggest that Hadleigh-West dress less provocatively. One older man claims that he was not staring at Hadleigh-West's breasts, but merely at the bandage she is wearing, as he is suffering from a similar injury.
The film, which is being presented by actress Susan Sarandon, should spark plenty of spirited debate, especially between men and women, but it proves repetitive in its series of confrontations in which the filmmaker basically repeats over and over her assertion that uninvited male attention is a form of aggression that fills women with fear. The delight and sarcasm she displays in turning the tables on her male subjects seem more like revenge than useful social commentary, but that is another topic.
WAR ZONE
Presented by Susan Sarandon
A Film Fatale Inc. and Hank Levine Film, GmbH production
Director-screenwriter: Maggie Hadleigh-West
Producer: Hank Levine
Director of photography: Todd Liebler with Eileen Schreiber
Editor: Kelly Korzan, Fernando Villena
Color
Running time -- 76 minutes
No MPAA rating...
If you do, you're likely to wind up with your mug plastered on art house screens across America. "War Zone", Maggie Hadleigh-West's documentary about such unwanted encounters, is receiving its theatrical premiere at New York's Film Forum.
Hadleigh-West's basic approach to making this film was to walk down the street, wait for the inevitable male overtures, and then reciprocate by confronting the aggressors. Of the more than 1,000 "incidents of harassments" that she says she encountered during a five-week period, roughly 50 or so are depicted in the film, which attempts to use these examples of street confrontations, as well as interviews with various female victims, to present a wider portrait of male aggression toward women. One particularly harrowing segment features the audio tape of a 911 call made by a woman as she is being attacked by a home intruder.
Although the filmmaker's argument is a provocative one, she undercuts its effectiveness by her heavy-handed approach. She makes no differentiation between the various levels of male attention, with sideways glances accorded the same contempt and criminality as obscene remarks.
The men, caught by surprise, react in a gallery of ways: sheepish and embarrassed, defensive, denying, hostile and argumentative. Many protest that they were simply trying to offer a compliment; others suggest that Hadleigh-West dress less provocatively. One older man claims that he was not staring at Hadleigh-West's breasts, but merely at the bandage she is wearing, as he is suffering from a similar injury.
The film, which is being presented by actress Susan Sarandon, should spark plenty of spirited debate, especially between men and women, but it proves repetitive in its series of confrontations in which the filmmaker basically repeats over and over her assertion that uninvited male attention is a form of aggression that fills women with fear. The delight and sarcasm she displays in turning the tables on her male subjects seem more like revenge than useful social commentary, but that is another topic.
WAR ZONE
Presented by Susan Sarandon
A Film Fatale Inc. and Hank Levine Film, GmbH production
Director-screenwriter: Maggie Hadleigh-West
Producer: Hank Levine
Director of photography: Todd Liebler with Eileen Schreiber
Editor: Kelly Korzan, Fernando Villena
Color
Running time -- 76 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 8/26/1998
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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