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Friday, January 4, 2008

Jessica Simpson

Debuting as an adorable, all-American-looking pop singer with a powerful vocal range and squeaky clean image, Jessica Simpson initially stood in the shadows of her equally young, equally blonde pop predecessors Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera in her early career. Routinely compared to the two divas—sometimes unfairly—Simpson has struggled to be nothing more than herself. Yearning to make her mark, Simpson found her true voice not in music, but on television. As the star of “Newlyweds: Nick & Jessica” (MTV 2003- ), a reality show co-starring husband Nick Lachey, formerly of the deflated pop band 98 Degrees, Simpson has become a household name. But because of her frequently naive, sometimes needy and often spoiled demeanor and near constant goof-ups on the show (a.k.a. “pulling a Jessica”), Simpson has propelled beyond mere celebrity into the realm of cultural zeitgeist. Born on July 10, 1980 in Dallas, Texas, Simpson was raised in a strict Christian home. Her father, Joe Simpson, was a minister at her local parish, as well as being a professional psychologist (and later Simpson’s manager). When she turned 12, Simpson received a purity ring as a gift from her dad--a silver band with a cross to be worn until her wedding day. According to Simpson, she indeed retained her virtue until she married Lachey. Simpson’s talents as a singer were apparent at an early age when singing gospel at her dad’s church. At 12, Simpson attempted to break into show business by auditioning for “The Mickey Mouse Club” (Disney Channel, 1988-1995), but lost the part to the likes of Spears and Aguilera--already, the two future stars were dogging Simpson’s career.
The following summer, after her failure with “The Mickey Mouse Club”, Simpson was discovered by the head of a small label, CCM, while singing at a church camp. Simpson spent the next three years recording her debut album, but the label folded before it could be released. Her grandmother funded a small pressing of the album, but it failed to make any impact in the mainstream. However, Simpson was a hit on the Christian Youth Conference circuit, where she sang with such gospel biggies as Kirk Franklin and Ce Ce Winans. In 1997, she made another push into the mainstream and was signed by Sony after singing an a cappella version of “Amazing Grace” in then-CEO Tommy Mottola’s office. Columbia Records later released her first official album, Sweet Kisses, in 1999. The album would go on to sell close to 2 million copies, and the single, I Wanna Love You Forever, almost went platinum as well. However, her follow-up albums, Irresistible and In This Skin, didn’t fair nearly as well.
Despite slumping record sales, Simpson kept her career alive in other mediums: the singer cameoed as herself in the Dana Carvey comedy "Master of Disguise" (2002) and in 2003, she landed a recurring role as Annette, a girlfriend of Kelso (Ashton Kutcher) on “That 70’s Show” (Fox, 1998- ) and also starred in an episode of “The Twilight Zone” (UPN, 2002-2003) called “The Collection”. As Miranda Evans, Simpson played a babysitter who looks after a young girl and her dolls, only to discover that she is slated to be next in the collection.
But Simpson’s greatest claim to fame emerged with her MTV reality show with hubby Lachey. Though the cable channel didn’t have high hopes at first, the show proved to be an instant hit, thanks in large part to Simpson’s routine gaffes. In one infamous episode, Simpson confused Chicken of the Sea with actual chicken; in another, she refused to have Buffalo wings because she didn’t “eat buffalo”. Upon learning that the Happy Hour favorite wasn’t made of actual buffalo, Simpson added to the confusion: “Why name it a Buffalo wing when it’s not buffalo?” But Simpson took the inevitable jibes at her intelligence in stride, even going so far make the dumb blonde routine a conscious part of her celebrity image. And it was Simpson who laughed last, as her show, once anticipated to be a ratings dud, was renewed for a second and third season.
Simpson’s third album, In This Skin, released amid heavy cross-promotion with the show, did not fare particularly well on the charts at first, but eventually became something of a sleeper hit upon re-release as her star continued to rise (Lachey's simultaneously launched solo album did not fare as well). As the couple's popularity skyrocketed, ABC inked them to host their own variety special, "The Nick and Jessica Variety Hour" (2004), which aired on Easter Sunday and drew sky-high ratings with 11.5 million viewers--high enough to prompt the network to sign the couple for a Christmas follow-up, "Nick & Jessica's Family Christmas" (2004), and "Nick & Jessica's Tour of Duty" (2005), a special in which they entertained U.S. troops in Iraq. The couple's high profile proved to be a marketing bonanza (Simpson launched cosmetic and clothing lines, and garnered commercial endorsements for the likes of Pizza Hut's Buffalo wings) and also fueled the career of Jessica's younger sister, singer/actress Ashlee Simpson, who also earned her own MTV reality show and album deal.
The downside of the young couple's newfound fame was that they were suddenly fodder for a seemingly endless array of cover stories among the weekly celebrity gossip magazines, usually weighing in on the state of their marriage. Almost as soon as Simpson was cast as cutoff-clad Southern Belle Daisy Duke in the big screen remake of the fondly recalled '70s series "The Dukes of Hazzard" (2005) her star was shining even brighter than ever, and even though Lachey had ventured into acting as well with a recurring role on The WB's "Charmed" in 2004, speculation ran rampant that her higher profile, compounded with extended periods apart and the availability of other partners, was taking its toll on his ego and her marriage. But even as coverage of their every outing reached critical mass on the verge of the "Dukes" premiere, the couple stood fast and insisted their bond was enduring. Meanwhile, Simpson shed a layer of her feminine "baby fat" and appeared leaner and more overtly sexy than ever, steaming up her Brett Ratner-directed music video "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" by washing the film's car the General Lee in Daisy's pink, barely there bikini. She took some flack for her more sexually provocative image from conservative Christian groups, but the tyro actress proved imminently charming and sunny in her big screen debut, though Meryl Streep had nothing to worry about.
Throughout the rest of the year the celebrity magazines dogged Simpson and Lachey, breathlessly reporting their every move and trumpeting the couple's alleged split, and after repeated denials the one-time "Newlyweds" did indeed formally announce their separation over Thanksgiving weekend in 2005.
Profession(s):singer, Actor Sometimes Credited As: Familyfather:Joe Simpson (Runs a record label, Papa Joe Records; executive produced his daughters MTV reality series, "Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica") husband:Nick Lachey (Lead-vocalist and founding of the boy-band, 98 Degrees; began dating Summer of 1999; separated briefly in 2001; engaged in February 2002; married on Oct. 26, 2002; announced separation Nov. 23, 2005; divorced in 2006) mother:Tina Simpson (Works with both daughters) sister:Ashlee Simpson (Born Oct. 3, 1984; released debut album, Autobiography in 2004; appeared in an MTV reality series "The Ashlee Simpson Show") Companion(s)John Mayer , Companion , ```..First spotted together in August 2006, but things cooled off when the public coupling sparked press attention; seen together again in November 2006, once again sparking rumors that they are dating; split in May 2007 Tony Romo , Companion , ```..Quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys; rumored to be dating as of November 2007

Education Richardson North Junior High Richardson, Texas J.J Pearce High School Richardson, Texas







Victoria Beckham


As a member of one of Britain’s best-selling pop music acts of all time, to being one-half of that country’s reigning power couple, shockingly lithe singer-turned-fashionista Victoria Beckham went from pop superstar to global media magnet in under a decade. She first turned heads as the resident glamour girl “Posh Spice” – she of the sultry looks and muted vocals –in the late 1990s pop creation, The Spice Girls, before setting England’s press ablaze as the wife of football (i.e., soccer) superstar, David Beckham. Such was the public and media fascination with “Posh and Becks,” as they were called in the press, that when Beckham announced his intentions to cross the pond and play for the L.A. Galaxy soccer team, all of Hollywood came knocking, offering up everything from reality TV shows to million-dollar endorsement deals.Born Victoria Adams on April 17, 1974 and raised in the affluent Goff’s Oak section of Hertfordshire, England, Adams was the oldest of three siblings that included younger sister, Louise, and brother, Christian. Her father, a former singer of the sixties group, The Sonics, supported the family with a profitable electrical business. As a child, Adams was somewhat of a loner at St. Mary’s High, self-conscious about her looks and in awe of her younger social butterfly sister. Adams instead focused on ballet, often immersing herself in dance classes after school. At the age of 16, she went off to study performing arts at Laine Arts Theatre College in Epsom, but unhappy there, left three years later. She headed instead to Birmingham, spending three months performing in the musical “Bertie.”
In 1993, Adams was singing with a promising group called Persuasion. While attractive onstage, however, Adams hardly had the pipes of her fellow singers. Five months later, she answered a splashy ad in The Stage trade paper that requested a need for career-minded female singer-dancers. Auditioning for manager Bob Herbert, she became one of five girls narrowed down from hundreds of hopefuls; effectively leaving Persuasion behind for a shot at the big time. Originally christened Touch by Herbert, subsequent producer Elliot Kennedy added “Spice” to the Quintet’s name and, after some tweaking, the Spice Girls came to the attention of 19 Entertainment mogul, Simon Fuller. Due to her wealthy upbringing and “to-the-manner-born” persona, Adams was dubbed “Posh Spice,” joining her new bandmates “Sporty Spice” (Melanie Chisholm), “Baby Spice” (Emma Bunton), “Scary Spice” (Melanie Brown) and “Ginger Spice” (Geri Halliwell). Signing with Fuller and Virgin Records in 1995, the Spice Girls stormed the charts one year later with a very danceable track called “Wannabe,” followed by the enormously popular album it stemmed from, Spice (1996). A homegrown phenomenon right out of the gate, the Spice Girls had yet to enjoy international success that year. But that was about to change.
In 1997, “Wannabe” hit number one in the U.S. as well, and like the Beatles before them, the Spice Girls invaded America, sparking “Spicemania.” All five girls became instant stars, adorning bedsheets and lunchboxes almost immediately. Young girls proclaimed “girl power!” and argued over just which Spice girl they were the most like while young boys embarrassingly admitted that “Wannabe” and its follow-up single, “Say You’ll Be There” were undeniably catchy tunes. While riding a wave of publicity and hype, Adams – who had never taken her musical aspirations all that seriously – had set her sights on Manchester United star David Beckham, whom she first met locally when she attended a Manchester United/Chelsea match. By April, the news had broken in the UK press that the two were a couple, but at that time, Adams was a bigger star than Beckham, so it was duly noted.
By the close of 1997, the Spice Girls were at their peak of their popularity, with a second album, Spiceworld released to great success and a movie of the same name modestly-received by the public in early 1998. Things came to a crashing halt, however, when unofficial group leader Gerri “Ginger Spice” Halliwell left the group in May. The remaining four took some time off to regroup, at which point Adams and Beckham, who were now constant tabloid fodder, had a son, Brooklyn, the following March – four months before their lavish July 4 wedding at Ireland’s Luttrellstown Castle.
Released in 2000, Forever – the third and final Spice Girls LP release – included their recent single “Goodbye,” but the album retained little of the original sound and petered out; a bittersweet finale to the group’s brief, whirlwind career. That year, the newly christened Victoria Beckham began weighing her options for a solo career. A new single, “Out of Your Mind,” led to a solo contract with Virgin, and she began working on album material. In September 2001, she released her autobiography, Learning to Fly, which traced her rise to international celebrity. Two months later, the solo album she had been working on with a team of producers, a 12-track collection of pop and funk tunes simply entitled Victoria Beckham, was released, but did little to further her solo music career. The album’s trajectory was hampered by marginal response to its two singles, “Not Such an Innocent Girl” and “A Mind of its Own,” and a UK media-created competition between Beckham and more seasoned Australian pop superstar, Kylie Minogue.
Though it seemed she was a part of a bygone era, in 2002, Beckham was determined to finish a second album, to be released on Telstar Records. At first, recording pop-oriented material to crack the charts, she decided to switch gears and move into a grittier sound. During the album sessions, she had amassed a fair number of songs, but in the wake of its ambivalent direction, halted work to concentrate on her second child, Romeo, born on Sept. 1, 2002. Telstar released a single, “Let Your Head Go/This Groove” in December 2003, but already on shaky financial ground at the time, was out of business only two years later.
By 2003, it seemed as though Beckham’s musical opportunities were taking a backseat to her husband’s celebrity – the frenzy of which had culminated with his defection from Manchester United for Real Madrid’s soccer team. The public fascination with the couple, predominantly felt mainly in Europe at that time, resulted in much drama for the couple. That November, five men were arrested and charged with hatching a plot to kidnap her for a ransom worth $8 million. In April 2004, Victoria Beckham stood by her man when her husband’s former assistant, Rebecca Loos, laid claim to an extramarital affair. The couple showed their resilience and expanded their family once again with a third son, Cruz, who was born in February of 2005. Rumors of anorexia plagued the singer, as she quickly lost weight, seemingly shrinking before the world’s eyes. As a final insult, her Telstar material was leaked to the internet in 2006, eliciting critical snickers for its lackluster quality. Knowing perhaps that the “gig was up,” Beckham moved on from her music career, preferring to focus on fashion with the launch of a fragrance line, “Intimately Beckham.”
In January of 2007, David Beckham announced he would sign with the Los Angeles Galaxy for a staggering $250 million contract, uprooting his family from England to the United States. Shortly after the announcement hear ‘round the world, the Beckhams began planting roots in California and making headlines for their quick immersion into Los Angeles’ celebrity culture – especially their out-of-nowhere friendship with Scientology’s favorite couple, Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes. Beckham fascinated the jaded L.A. paparazzi, who followed her en masse as she left lunch at the Ivy or house-hunted for a new home. Their overseas move was so dramatic, it was documented for a six-episode reality television show, produced by Victoria Beckham’s old management company, 19 Entertainment, and slated for NBC’s summer 2007 line-up.
Profession(s):n/a Sometimes Credited As: Posh Spice Victoria Adams





Jessica Biel



A flawless beauty with a down-to-earth attitude, Jessica Biel found success on the small screen portraying Mary Camden, the mostly level-headed eldest daughter of a progressive minister, on the long-running WB drama “7th Heaven” (1996- ) before taking on the big screen in films such as “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (2003) and “Blade: Trinity” (2004). Named one of People magazine’s “50 Most Beautiful People” in 1999 and Esquire magazine’s “Sexiest Woman Alive” in 2005, Biel’s stunning features and curvaceous figure made her one of Hollywood’s most sought-after young actresses. Receiving critical praise for her role opposite Edward Norton in “The Illusionist” (2006), Biel proved that she was more than just a pretty face.Born March 3, 1982 in Ely, MN to Jon and Kim Biel, Biel’s family moved around during her childhood, living in six different states. Spending most of her formative years in Boulder, CO, Biel would later call the Rocky Mountain town home. An active and adventurous child, Biel began taking dance and voice lessons as a young girl. Obsessed with the musical “Annie,” Biel landed a gig as an understudy for the role in a Connecticut production of the play at the age of eight. Signing with a Denver talent agency at the age of 11, Biel started modeling and attended an International Modeling & Talent Association convention in 1994, where she won an acting scholarship to attend the Young Actor’s Space in Los Angeles. Biel spent the next three years commuting between LA and Colorado, balancing acting classes and auditions with schoolwork. Her hard work on her craft eventually paid off; in the same week, Biel landed the part of Mary Camden on the WB series “7th Heaven” (1996- ), as well as a role in the feature film, “Ulee’s Gold” (1997) opposite Peter Fonda, in which she played his troubled granddaughter Casey – the polar opposite of Mary Camden. During her high school years being tutored on the set of “Heaven,” Biel bonded with co-star Beverly Mitchell in between scenes.
Raising eyebrows in 2000, Biel posed semi-nude for a cover and photo layout in Gear magazine in an attempt to shed her wholesome image and, reportedly, be released from her “Heaven” contract. Because the show was religious in nature and a big hit w/ conservative viewers, her Gear portfolio enraged some, but her alleged ploy worked. She ultimately negotiated a reduced, recurring role on the series, allowing her to attend college and focus on feature films instead. Biel enrolled at Massachusetts’ Tufts University in 2000, returning to LA at the end of her freshman year to finish out the show’s sixth season. Leaving school to focus on her acting career, Biel went on to find work in a number of feature films. Adding a bit of sexy zest, she portrayed Freddie Prinze, Jr.’s fantasy girl in the otherwise dreary baseball comedy, “Summer Catch” (2001) and took on her edgiest project then to date, appearing as promiscuous college student Lara Halleran in writer-director Roger Avary's blunt, sex-soaked adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’ “The Rules of Attraction” (2002).
Finding more mainstream box office success, Biel starred as Erin, the central scream queen, in the hit remake of the 1974 cult horror film, “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (2003), followed by her appearance in the supposed thriller, “Cellular” (2004). Biel played the spurned romantic interest of a man (Chris Evans) who gets thrown into a high-stakes chase after receiving a random call on his cell phone. Thankfully, her small part in this forgettable actioner went virtually unnoticed, with no harm done to her career. In “Blade: Trinity” (2004), the third installment in the popular B-movie franchise, her role of Abigail Whistler, leader of a group of human vampire hunters who team up with Blade (Wesley Snipes) to do battle with undead thugs, proved to be Biel’s most physical role to date. Not surprisingly, the athletic beauty was more than up for the challenge of months of pre-production training. Next, Biel starred opposite Jamie Foxx and Josh Lucas as a fighter pilot in the less-than-memorable CG action flick “Stealth” (2005), a lowbrow cross between "Top Gun" (1986) and "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968), followed by a part opposite her “Cellular” co-star and rumored boyfriend Evans in the critically-panned “London” (2005).
Faring better with her next film, Biel took on a supporting role in Cameron Crowe’s “Elizabethtown” (2005). Though the film itself was savaged by critics and did not make the usual Crowe bank that Hollywood had come to expect from the director, Biel was singled out for her performance as the beautiful girlfriend of a whiz-kid athletic shoe designer (Orlando Bloom) whose ardor cools when her boyfriend experiences a colossal failure. Taking on her first serious period role in 2006, Biel landed the role of Viennese princess Sophie in “The Illusionist” (2006), starring opposite respected actor Edward Norton and once again impressing critics with her abilities as a serious actress.
Profession(s):Actor, model Sometimes Credited As: Familybrother:Justin Biel (younger) father:John Biel (formerly employed by General Electric) mother:Kim Biel Companion(s)Adam LaVorgna , Companion , ```..born c. 1981; met while filming "I'll Be Home For Christmas" (1998); dated from 1999 to 2001; played Mary Camden's (Biel) boyfriend on "7th Heaven" from 1999-01 Chris Evans , Companion , ```..dated from 2001 to 2006; starred together in the films "London" (2005) and "Cellular" (2004) Derek Jeter , Companion , ```..plays with the New York Yankees; rumored to have briefly dated in the fall/winter of 2006 Justin Timberlake , Companion , ```..first linked at the Golden Globes in January 2007; rumored to be dating

EducationYoung Actors Space Los Angeles, California Tufts University Medford, Massachusetts




Anjalina Julie




From wild-child Hollywood brat to, Academy Award winner, to respected U.N. Goodwill Ambassador, actress Angelina Jolie underwent a series of metamorphic transformations over the course of her career. An exceedingly beautiful, strikingly talented performer, Jolie broke on to the scene in the mid-1990s, quickly gaining a reputation for both her on-screen work as well as her outrageous off-camera antics. Interestingly enough, however, within a decade, Jolie shed her reckless image and successfully managed to re-invent herself – not only as an artist, but also as a celebrity humanitarian of the highest order. Only half-chidingly dubbed by Esquire magazine as “the best woman in the world, in terms of her generosity, her dedication, and her courage,” Jolie seemed intent on remaking her image on her own terms, even as the tabloids struggled to scandalize it. In the mid-2000s, Jolie’s public profile exploded into another stratosphere when she became romantically linked with the sexiest man alive, Brad Pitt – before and after he and his then wife, Jennifer Aniston called it quits. After the scandalous divorce, Pitt and Jolie slowly came out as a couple to the delight of the world’s paparazzi. Now one half of the “most gorgeous couple on earth,” Jolie used her high profile and celebrity to bring attention to a number of worthwhile causes – winning the grudging respect of even the most cynical of her critics.The daughter of actors Jon Voight and Marcheline Bertrand, Angelina Jolie (Voight) was born on Jun. 4, 1975 in Los Angeles, CA. Like her older brother by two years, director James Haven (Voight,) Jolie seemed destined for a career in the arts. At the age of 11, she began studying at the famed Lee Strasberg Theater Institute in NYC. Even before commencing her formal training, Jolie made her screen debut as a tyke in a bit part in the Hal Ashby-directed comedy "Lookin' to Get Out" (filmed in 1980; released 1982). While reviewers savaged the movie (which was co-scripted and co-produced by her father, Jon), its littlest thespian fortunately emerged unscathed. The experience briefly turned young Angelina off of show business – she even briefly considered going into funeral directing for a time – but because it was in her blood, she eventually bounced back.
With two extremely photogenic parents, it came as no surprise that Jolie inherited gorgeous good looks – most striking of all were lush lips which made her a standout from all other young girls. Her comeliness allowed her to segue back into show business, first as a professional model, and later, as an actress in music videos. In addition to appearing in five student films directed by her older brother, Jolie became a member of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Theatre Company, where she honed her craft alongside such veteran players as Holly Hunter, Ed Harris and Amy Madigan. Jolie made her return to the screen playing a heroic human-machine hybrid in the above-average direct-to-video sci-fi actioner, "Cyborg II: Glass Shadows" (1993), but the entry went virtually unnoticed by critics. Luckily, her flashy role as Kate (a.k.a. 'Acid Burn') in the cyber-thriller "Hackers" (1995) garnered her more attention and better notices. Paired with rising young British actor Jonny Lee Miller, Jolie played a teen computer whiz battling an evil genius. “Hackers” fizzled at the box office, but the romantic leads sizzled – both on-screen and off. Jolie and Miller’s chemistry eventually culminated in their wedding in 1996. Though the two would divorce just three years later, Jolie and Miller would remain close friends even after their break-up.
More film work readily followed for Jolie, initially in small-scale character-driven indies. In an indifferently received adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates' novel "Foxfire" (1996), Jolie played a mysterious outsider named Legs Sadovsky –described in Variety as "sort of a female James Dean" – who helps some other teenaged girls stand up for their rights. In Renee Taylor and Joseph Bologna's romantic comedy-drama "Love Is All There Is" (1996), Jolie displayed a humorous and innocent light as half of a pair of star-crossed lovers divided by their families' feud. That same year, the actress appeared in the high-minded suspense drama "Without Evidence,” playing a drug-addicted teen, and "Mojave Moon,” opposite Danny Aiello. Next came "Playing God" (1997), in which Jolie capably essayed a woman torn between her gangster boyfriend (Timothy Hutton) and a discredited doctor (David Duchovny) in his employ. While the films remained largely unseen by most moviegoers, Jolie received strong notices for each of these projects.
Unlike many feature stars, Jolie showed no compunction about working on the small screen. Case in point: during the late 1990s, the actress appeared in a handful of exceptional made-for-TV productions that effectively allowed her to strut her stuff on her own terms. In 1997, Jolie received top notices for her co-starring turn alongside Annabeth Gish and Dana Delaney as Texas pioneers in the 1997 CBS historical miniseries, "True Women." Jolie then brought a fiery passion to her portrayal of Cornelia Wallace, the politician's first wife, in the biographical miniseries "George Wallace" (TNT, 1997). But it was her dazzling turn as another real-life figure – the late supermodel Gia Carangi – that catapulted Jolie into the public consciousness. Jolie’s brave, sensitive performance as the drug-addicted, AIDS-stricken title character in HBO's excellent biopic "Gia" (1998) brought the beauty widespread critical acclaim. For her efforts, Jolie was twice Emmy-nominated in the supporting category for "George Wallace" (which she lost to co-star Mare Winningham) and in the leading category for "Gia" (which she ended up losing to Ellen Barkin). Fortunately, Jolie received more-than-adequate consolation for her Emmy losses by picking up two back-to-back Golden Globe Awards for both performances.
After this spate of acclaimed television appearances, Jolie found her way back into in films, landing roles that similarly showcased her acting strengths. In 1998, Jolie received special notice for her work in the comedy-drama "Playing By Heart" (1998), as Joan, an outgoing club kid smitten with the sullen Keenan (Ryan Phillippe). Vivid and engaging, Jolie easily held her own among an ensemble cast featuring such luminaries as Gena Rowlands and Sean Connery. The following year, the actress joined John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton in Mike Newell's Big Apple-set comedy about air traffic controllers, "Pushing Tin" (1999). Jolie later got her feet wet in the increasingly crowded crime-drama pond playing a tough rookie cop assisting a quadriplegic detective (Denzel Washington) in "The Bone Collector” (1999), a flawed, but well-acted serial-killer thriller directed by Philip Noyce. Jolie finally rounded out the year by landing the much sought-after co-starring role of the disturbed Lisa Rowe in "Girl, Interrupted.” Based on author Susanna Kaysen's best-selling memoir of her own two-year stay in a psychiatric hospital, Jolie’s showy turn as the sociopathic inmate netted Jolie a Best Supporting Actress Oscar.
But public respect would come neither immediately nor easily for Jolie, even after winning Hollywood’s highest honor. Far more interested in her girl-gone-wild ways, the tabloids tended to dismiss her talents in favor of her more unorthodox personal life. Among the gossip fodder were her exotic tattoos, extensive collection of knives and her past “cutting” experiences, her provocative revelations and her intimations of a profoundly edgy sex life. The tabloids also made much hay out of Jolie’s close relationship with her look-alike brother, James Haven – a bond which raised many eyebrows after Jolie planted a passionate kiss on his lips in plain view of drooling paparazzi. It did not help matters when she declared she was “in love with her brother” upon accepting the Oscar. Media saturation would reach a boiling point, however, in mid 2000, when Jolie became the fifth wife of her “Pushing Tin” co-star – the equally eccentric and significantly older actor Billy Bob Thornton. A match made in tabloid heaven, the couple's constant declarations of love and erotic devotion to each other was capped by the wacky revelation that the two wore vials of one another's blood around each other’s necks and had sex in the car on the way to the “Pushing Tin” premiere.
Her off-screen quirks notwithstanding, the actress continued portraying tough young women on the big screen. In the flashy but unfulfilling car heist thriller "Gone in 60 Seconds" (2000), Jolie crackled in scenes even opposite notorious scene-stealing star, Nicolas Cage. Jolie’s next project was as the flesh-and-blood embodiment of the titular adventuress in "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" (2001). Based on the wildly popular “Tomb Raider” video game franchise, Lara Croft launched an Indiana Jones-style adventure series which failed to impress critics, but racked up a healthy box office take. The film also marked Jolie’s first adult collaboration with her father, Jon Voight, who played her character's father in the film. Shortly after their on-screen pairing, however, Voight made a series of disparaging comments regarding his daughter’s mental emotional stability (or lack thereof) to the American entertainment newsmagazine “Access Hollywood” (Synd., 1996-). Outraged by the insult, Jolie immediately responded by painting Voight as a philandering, self-righteous hypocrite who cheated on her mother. The resulting rift between father-and-daughter would last for several years and several on-camera pleas by Voight to give him another chance.
Meanwhile, back on the career front, Jolie – possibly distracted by her tumultuous personal crises – seemed a bit unfocused in her next two features. Starring opposite Antonio Banderas in the dismal noir-wannabe “Original Sin" (2001), Jolie came off less than committed, despite some steamy – and heavily hyped – erotic sequences. Her follow-up, the dramatic vehicle "Life or Something Like It" (2002) – in which she played a superficial, platinum blonde newscaster forced to examine her existence more closely – also died quickly. Jolie subsequently took a significant hiatus from film, but continued to make headlines in her personal life, divorcing Thornton in 2003 amid rumors of his infidelity (which he denied). It was also rumored that Jolie’s recent adoption of a baby boy from a Cambodian orphanage whom she named Maddox, did not help matters. The couple was allegedly at different points in their life and thus, split.
The actress returned to familiar territory for her comeback screen vehicle, the sequel "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life" (2003), a lackluster follow-up to a lackluster first outing. Reflecting their off-screen internecine tensions, Voight, did not reprise his role in this second follow-up. “Cradle of Life” was followed by a turn in the too-righteous political/romantic drama "Beyond Borders" (2003). After this came a dangerous foray into Ashley Judd territory with a starring role in the routine thriller "Taking Lives" (2004), in which Jolie played an FBI profiler caught up in dangerous and erotic intrigue. Signing up for another purely commercial vehicle, the actress adopted another rich accent as she winkingly played the eyepatch-sporting Captain Frankie Cook, the leader of an all-female amphibious attack squadron, in the retro action-adventure "Sky Captain & the World of Tomorrow" (2004). Cast opposite Jude Law and fellow Oscar-winner, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jolie joined the CGI-laden action-adventure battling giant robots in an Art Deco, 1930s-era environment. Jolie then lent her voice to the finny femme fatale, Lola, in DreamWorks' CGI-animated underwater underworld opus "A Shark’s Tale" (2004). Finally, Jolie closed out the year with a bizarrely seductive turn as Alexander's mother, Olympias, who raises her son to believe in his impressive destiny, in Oliver Stone's epic historical bomb, "Alexander the Great.”
Jolie's profile as both a movie star and public figure rose to even more epic proportions when she co-starred with the equally lovely actor Brad Pitt in the Doug Liman-helmed action-fest "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" (2005). In it, the actors played a bored married couple who are actually rival assassins, each hired to kill the other. Almost from the get-go, spurious rumors abounded of an on-set romance between Jolie and Pitt – innuendo that contributed to Pitt's subsequent split from his high-profile marriage to actress Jennifer Aniston. Though both Pitt and Jolie initially refuted the rumors – the two later took a coyer stance after being photographed together numerous times post-Aniston separation. The intense media and public interest in their possible romance propelled “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” to huge box office receipts, thanks in large part to their palpable on-screen chemistry. Needless to say, the "are they or aren't they?" nature of the Jolie-Pitt coupling captivated star watchers and quickly became the most written-about celebrity story of 2005 – even prompting the coining of the term "Brangelina."
Taking a page from the playbook of the late Audrey Hepburn, Jolie began using her celebrity status to bring attention to such humanitarian causes as the plight of violence-torn nations. As their relationship gradually emerged in the public eye, Pitt began to accompany Jolie on her missions of mercy to third world nations and grow ever more attached to her son, Maddox. Away from the screen, Jolie expressed a dedication and commitment to increasing awareness and aid to counties devastated by internal and external conflicts, disease and third world conditions. In 2001, after the actress made several trips to the war-torn nations of Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Pakistan, Jolie had been appointed Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. It was during one of these trips that in 2005, she adopted an infant daughter from an Ethiopian orphanage whom she named Zahara. Later that year, surprising the world at large, Pitt petitioned to adopt the two children as his own. A year later, on May 27, 2006, Jolie and Pitt welcomed their biological firstborn child into the world – a daughter named Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt. Clearly serious about starting a family, in March 2007 – Jolie and Pitt made headlines once again by adopting a fourth child – a three-year-old boy from Vietnam whom they named Pax.
Returning to the big screen later that summer, Jolie next starred as Marianne Pearl, the wife of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl, in the gripping drama “A Mighty Heart” (2007). Though Jolie’s casting initially sparked a furor of controversy among minority groups, as Marianne Pearl was of Afro-Cuban/Dutch ancestry, much of the complaints dissipated upon the film’s release. Hailed by many as quite possibly the boldest performance of her career, Jolie’s portrayal of Marianne Pearl was rooted in dignity and reflected a tragic truthfulness free of exploitative sentimentality. Unfortunately, the serious film was released during the summer box office season, rendering it lost amidst all the big-budget special effect movies.
Profession(s):Actor, model Sometimes Credited As: Angelina Jolie Voight Angie Familybrother:James Haven (Born c. 1973; studied filmmaking at USC; directed sister in five student films) daughter:Zahara Marley Jolie-Pitt (Born Jan. 8, 2005; adopted July 2005, from an Ethiopian orphanage at six months; mother died of AIDS and father is unknown; legally adopted by Brad Pitt in 2006) daughter:Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt (Born May 27, 2006 in Namibia; father is Brad Pitt; first pictures of baby Shiloh were sold to People Magazine for a reported sum of $4.1 million) father:Jon Voight (Separated from Jolie's mother when Angelina was one-year-old; estranged from father) husband:Jonny Lee Miller (British; met during filming of "Hackers"; married in March 1996; separated in 1997; divorced in February 1999; rumored to have dated again in 2002 and in 2004) husband:Billy Bob Thornton (Acted together in "Pushing Tin" (1999); eloped to Las Vegas on May 5, 2000; Jolie has a tattoo on her arm that reads "Billy Bob"; split in June 2002; Jolie filed for divorce on July 17, 2002; divorce finalized in May 2003) mother:Marcheline Bertrand (Born c. 1950; part-Iroquois; separated from Jolie's father when Angelina was one-year-old; died of cancer in 2007) son:Pax Thien Jolie-Pitt (Adopted at three years old from a Vietnamese orphanage in 2007; Jolie adopted the boy as a single parent because Vietnam's adoption regulations don't allow unmarried couples to co-adopt; name was legally changed to Jolie-Pitt three months after his adoption) son:Maddox Chivan Jolie-Pitt (Adopted at seven months from a Cambodian orphanage in 2002; legally adopted by Brad Pitt in 2006) Companion(s)Brad Pitt , Companion , ```..Met while filming "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" (2005); rumored to be romantically involved throughout filming, but this was denied by both parties; began being photographed together as a couple in spring 2005 Colin Farrell , Companion , ```..Rumored to have dated for a brief period during the filming of "Alexander" (2004) Timothy Hutton , Companion , ```..Dated c. 1998; co-starred together in "Playing God" (1997); Jolie was reportedly tattooed with an "H"; no longer together

Education The Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute New York, NY New York University New York, NY film

Eliza Cuthbert


Blessed with undeniable all-American good looks, despite hailing from Canada, this blond-haired, blue-eyed actress initially gained fame playing Kiefer Sutherland’s rebellious daughter, Kimberly Bauer, on the mega-hit series “24” (Fox, 2002- ). As the scion of counter-terrorism agent Jack Bauer (Sutherland), Cuthbert found herself the perpetual victim of kidnappers, terrorists, armed robbers, and, at one point, even a cougar. The constant perils that befell her character spawned a passionate fan following who watched every episode in anticipation of what might happen to her next, but also won the actress her fair share of detractors. Either way, the show successfully helped launch Cuthbert as one of the new millennium’s starlets on the rise – enough that she was able to launch a film career as well, starring in such hits as “Old School” (2002), “Love Actually” (2003) and “The Girl Next Door” (2004).The oldest of three children, Elisha Ann Cuthbert was born on Nov. 30, 1982 in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. A performer all her life, she was encouraged by her parents, Kevin and Patricia Cuthbert, to pursue her dreams. A successful child model from the age of seven, Cuthbert made the leap to television at age 15 when she landed a gig hosting “Popular Mechanics for Kids” (CTV, 1997-2000), a syndicated educational program on Canadian television. Two years later, the actress made her feature film debut in the indie drama, “Dancing on the Moon” (1997), the story of a young girl trying to deal with her dysfunctional family life. Unfortunately, the movie was scarcely seen outside of the lower-tiered film festival circuit.
Luckily, Cuthbert’s career got a boost when she began starring in a string of MOWs. At age 15, she landed the lead role in “Airspeed” (HBO, 1998), an adventure-thriller about a spoiled 13-year-old girl who is forced to fly her father’s private jet after a freak bolt of lightning incapacitates everyone else onboard. Next was “Time at the Top” (Showtime, 1999), where Cuthbert – then 16 – played another 13-year-old, but this time, one who discovers a time machine and travels back to 1881 in order to help a young girl and her family. Cuthbert enjoyed the presidential treatment for her next outing, “Mail to the Chief” (ABC, 1999), in which she played the daughter of the President of the United States.
As she got older, however, Cuthbert’s growing sex appeal became too pronounced to ignore. In response, the actress began branching out into more adult roles. In “My Daughter’s Secret Life” (Lifetime, 2001), Cuthbert played a 17-year-old girl living a privileged existence who suddenly develops a serious gambling addiction. Cuthbert’s performance won her a Gemini Award for Best Actress in a Dramatic Program or Miniseries – one of the highest bestowed by the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television.
Cuthbert’s breakthrough role, of course, would be on “24.” As Kim Bauer, Cuthbert not only filled the damsel-in-distress archetype on the show, but also lent a hand in developing storylines, especially after she became a trusted member of her father’s elite counter-terrorist squad at the beginning of season three. Fans who breathed a sigh of relief, thinking that this “desk job” would signal Kimberly’s days of peril were behind her, though, would be in for a rude awakening.
In 2002, Cuthbert dropped many a jaw when, after gaining attention for her breakthrough role on “24,” she posed for spreads in Maxim and FHM – thus completing her transition from little-known child actor to well-known sex symbol. Her appearance in the popular men’s magazines grabbed the attention of filmmakers, leading her to soon be cast in small, but noticeable roles in such movies as “Old School” (2003) –in which she played the sexually precocious daughter of the dean who beds an unwitting Luke Wilson – and “Love Actually” (2003) – as one of a trio of sexually charged American girls who make a wide-eyed Brit's improbable U.S. fantasies come true.
In 2004, Cuthbert got her chance to headline her first feature in “The Girl Next Door,” a teen comedy directed by Luke Greenfield. In it, she played the sexy housesitting neighbor of a horny high school senior (Emile Hirsch) who turns out to be a porn star. At first, the idea of playing a porn actress did not appeal to the Cuthbert, but when her agent encouraged her to read the script anyway, Cuthbert got hooked halfway through the read. After a rigorous back-and-forth negotiation with the filmmakers over exactly how much of the actress' nude body would be revealed on-screen, Cuthbert signed on. In the end, the film revealed more of Cuthbert's easy warmth and charisma than her skin. Ever serious about her craft, Cuthbert did extensive research by thumbing through volumes of Playboy and Hustler, while hanging out with stars of San Fernando Valley’s chief export.
Meanwhile, Cuthbert’s work on “24” continued through its third season, with the actress earning a nomination for the 2002 Teen Choice Award for Breakout TV Actress, but her character was not a part of 2005’s fourth season. This freed her to seek out more big screen roles. First up was the sub-par horror remake, "House of Wax" (2005), in which she played an all-too-typical slasher flick heroine – and adding insult to injury, her co-star, the non-actress party-hopping heiress Paris Hilton received the majority of the attention when the cast promoted the film. Her next film, “The Quiet” (2006), proved to be an emotionally trying experience – she played a sexually abused teenager whose familial secrets are divulged when her parents (Edie Falco and Martin Donovan) decide to adopt a recently orphaned girl (Camilla Belle). Cuthbert was next cast to star in “My Sassy Girl” (2007), a remake of the box office record-breaking South Korean romantic comedy of the same name about an awkward shy guy who falls in love with a free-spirited girl he meets on the subway.
In 2006, Cuthbert returned to “24” for two guest-star shots, reprising her role as Kim Bauer. For the most part, though, the majority of Cuthbert’s time was spent shooting “Captivity” (2007) for Lion’s Gate Entertainment. Under the vision of Oscar-nominated director, Roland Joffe, Cuthbert played a fashion model who takes off to New York for a photo shoot, only to be kidnapped and imprisoned by a stalker. The ads for the film alone stirred up controversy, as pictures involving the kidnapping, torture, and presumable murder of a female character – including one of Cuthbert being buried alive by sand. Suffice to say, the ads were pulled and the picture did not fare well at the box office.
Profession(s):Actor, model Sometimes Credited As: Elisha Ann Cuthbert Familybrother:Jonathan Cuthbert (Younger) sister:Lee-Ann Cuthbert (Younger) Companion(s)Andrew Keegan , Companion , ```..Dated; no longer togther Sean Avery , Companion , ```..Plays for the L.A. Kings Trace Ayala , Companion , ```..Began dating May 2003; best friend and personal assistant of Justin Timberlake; engaged as of May 2004; split in 2005





Emma Watson


One of 2001's most highly anticipated films was "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" and the casting process for the trio of young stars had some of the old-fashioned Hollywood feel, akin to the search for another literary figure--Scarlett O'Hara. Once Daniel Radcliffe had been set as the bespectacled young wizard, it became necessary to find a young girl to portray Harry's pal, the serious and dedicated Hermione Granger. Casting directors in the United Kingdom scoured primary schools and youth arts groups hoping to find the right youngster. Emma Watson, a fan of the J.K. Rowling books, thought it would be "a giggle" to audition for the role when the casting people visited her school in Oxford. But when she kept being called back to read for the part, the cute, light-haired pre-teen began to realize she really had a shot at it.Impressed with Watson's ability to be direct but still appealing, the producers settled on her for the part. It also helped that she shared an instant chemistry with Radcliffe and Rupert Grint (who was cast to play Harry's best friend Ron Weasley). While the youngster remains uncertain about pursuing acting as a full-time profession and was left with little time to pursue other roles due to the back-to-back nature of filming the franchise before the young actors outgrew their roles, Watson reprised Hermione in the sequels "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" (2002) and the slightly darker "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" (2004). She of course reprised Hermione for “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2005), the first installment to be directed by a fellow Brit (Mike Newell), and was set to star in the next sequel, “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” (set for release in 2007).
Profession(s):Actor Sometimes Credited As: Emma Charlotte Duerre Watson Familybrother:Alex Watson (younger) father:Chris Watson (divorced from Watson's mother) mother:Jacqueline Luesby (divorced from Watson's father)
Education Headington School Oxford, England The Dragon School Oxford, England 2003






Katie Holmes


A brunette beauty from a close-knit Catholic family in Toledo, OH, Katie Holmes accomplished what aspiring actors only dream of at the onset of their careers – she landed her first two professional auditions, resulting in her feature debut in the acclaimed "The Ice Storm" (1997) and a regular series role on the popular teen drama "Dawson's Creek" (The WB, 1998-2003). While such an accomplishment could easily have been written off as amazing luck, those who witnessed her work were not likely to discount her formidable talent and ease on camera.With a promising turn as Libbets Casey, Tobey Maguire's love interest in Ang Lee's swinging 1970s set "The Ice Storm," Holmes made the most of her supporting role, proving a compelling screen performer. While this big screen debut won the actress acclaim, television would soon make Katie Holmes a household name. Interestingly, the young actress' refreshing grounding in homespun values almost caused her to miss her auspicious small screen debut. Asked to audition for Kevin Williamson's smart teen drama "Dawson's Creek" on the same day she was to debut as Lola in her high school production of "Damn Yankees," Holmes politely declined, citing that her commitment to fellow castmates and friends was more important. Casting agents wisely rescheduled, and Holmes won the role on the new series.
As Joey Potter, Dawson's proverbial girl-next-door, she played the injured innocent, sweet, but with an edge, the product of a background far removed from the Holmes' own traditional and happy home. Faced with an imprisoned father, dead mother, and an overworked sister who is not only Joey's guardian, but has a new baby of her own, the character's everyday traumas were handled with grace by the actress. Holmes weekly gave a standout performance on the popular series, even among a cast of palpably gifted and more experienced young actors.
Her skillful performance in the disappointing thriller "Disturbing Behavior" (1998) could not elevate that film above its uninspired predictability, and while Williamson's "Teaching Mrs. Tingle" (1999) showcased Holmes' glowing presence and unmatched watch-ability, it became apparent that it was high time she moved past the tired teen scream genre. A move in that direction came with her turn as a supermarket checkout girl caught up in a drug-related hostage situation in Doug Lyman’s indeed ensemble film "Go" (1999). She was reunited with Tobey Maguire in "Wonder Boys" (2000), the Curtis Hanson-directed adaptation of Michael Chabot’s novel which chronicled a middle-aged author (Michael Douglas) plagued by writer's block.
With "Go" and "Wonder Boys," in which she played a student pursuing her much-older professor, Holmes smartly chose feature film roles that played against her well-established "Dawson's Creek" girl-next-door persona, a challenge she continued to meet as more films came her way. In Sam Ramie’s thriller "The Gift" (2000) she played a bitchy, man-eating Southern beauty who is brutally murdered, essaying a grown-up nude scene designed more to put the character of sweet-faced Joey behind her than to titillate. She took the lead in screenwriter-turned-director Stephen Gagman’s woman-in-jeopardy outing "Abandon" (2002), her first turn at carrying a picture in a mature leading role, and also joined the cast of director Joel Schumacher's 2003 action fest "The Phone Booth."
Further honing her post-TV craft as her series entered its last season, Holmes took the lead in the indeed gem, "Pieces of April" (2003) playing a headstrong young woman trying to reconcile with her dying mother – a role than earned her much critical acclaim – and appeared in a supporting role in "The Singing Detective" (2003), an adaptation of the Dennis Potter book starring Mel Gibson and Robert Downey, Jr. After that it was on to a role she had probably outgrown but sparkled in nonetheless, "First Daughter" (2004), in which she was cast as an independent-minded Presidential offspring off to college who falls for the Secret Service agent assigned to protect her by posing as a dorm advisor.
Holmes got her introductory shot at a big-screen action blockbuster when she was cast opposite Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne's childhood friend and love interest, Rachel Dawes, an incorruptible Gotham City district attorney – and a character created especially for the screen – in "Batman Begins" (2005). This effective re-launch of the popular film franchise focused on the character's shadowy origins, but minus the over-the-top gothic camp of the original Tim Burton/Joel Schumacher films. Just weeks before the film's debut, Holmes' private life was catapulted into the public eye when she and actor Tom Cruise announced that they were dating, an announcement met with some skepticism from the media and the public, given that word came prior to both having major summer movies poised to debut. Speculation that the relationship was a publicity stunt ran rampant, especially after some ill-advised public appearances – including their bizarre, love-professing visit to "The Oprah Winfrey Show" (Syndicated, 1986- ), in which Cruise jumped unashamedly on the couch with fist-pumping exuberance. Holmes also adopted Cruise's management team and began taking courses in Scientology, which the superstar had long championed and began touting much more vocally during his many press interviews while promoting his blockbuster, "War of the Worlds" (2005).
After only three months, Cruise announced his intention to marry his new girlfriend while doing a press junket in Paris in June, 2005. By October, she announced that she was pregnant with their first child, prompting her to drop out of her co-starring role in the drama "Shame on You" (lensed, 2005). The paparazzi kept a close eye on her ever-bulging belly until Holmes finally gave birth – presumably, a "silent birth" sanctioned by Scientology rules – to daughter, Suri, in April, 2006. Because the couple had been so forthcoming with all other details of their life together, the press and public were surprised when no photos were released of their baby daughter for months. This only served to fuel the media's fire, all of whom – be it bloggers or tabloid writers – imagined a variety of humorous, sometimes far-fetched scenarios as to why this was. Finally, Cruise, Holmes and their 4-month-old daughter posed for photographer Annie Leibovitz for a 22-page spread in Vanity Fair, receiving much publicity for that first peek in September, 2006.
Profession(s):Actor Sometimes Credited As: Katie Noelle Holmes Familybrother:Martin Holmes Jr (older) daughter:Suri Cruise (born April 18, 2006; father, Tom Cruise) father:Martin Holmes husband:Tom Cruise (began dating April 2005; became engaged June 17, 2005 atop the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France; married November 18, 2006 in a 15th-century castle outside of Rome in Bracciano, Italy; they had "officialized their marriage in Los Angeles prior to their departure for Italy") mother:Kathy Holmes Companion(s)Chris Klein , Companion , ```..began dating January 2000; became engaged in December 2003; announced split March 4, 2005 Joshua Jackson , Companion , ```..co-starred together on "Dawson's Creek"; dated briefly in 1998

Education Margaret O'Brien's Modeling School Toledo, Ohio Notre Dame High School Toledo, Ohio 1997






Jennifer Lopez


A Bronx-born actress-singer-dancer of Puerto Rican descent, Jennifer Lopez quickly went from a rising starlet to leading lady, with her sultry, intelligent eyes, luxuriant wavy hair, and fluid body of legendary voluptuousness coming across well on the big screen. Lopez first won attention as a "fly girl", one of the back-up dancers on the Fox variety series "In Living Color" and went on to act in several failed TV series before reaching the big time, leading in feature films and hitting the top of the Billboard charts. This daughter of a computer specialist and a kindergarten teacher always wanted to perform and began taking dance lessons at an early age. Lopez later danced in the European tour of "Golden Musicals of Broadway", in the chorus behind Hinton Battle in the Japanese tour of "Synchronicity" and in numerous music videos and TV variety specials.While she made her film debut in "My Little Girl" (1986), her real showbiz break did not come until she beat out 2,000 other aspirants, impressing choreographer Rosie Perez, and landing a spot in the chorus of "In Living Color". Lopez stayed with the show from 1991-1993, when she elected to branch out into acting. TV roles came quickly, although the vehicles were not all that successful. She made her TV-movie debut as a nurse among crash victims in the dense Mexican jungle in "Nurses on the Line: The Crash of Flight 7" (CBS, 1993). She went on to portray Melinda Lopez, a Latina maiden under the watchful eye of her father (Pepe Serna) in the short-lived CBS series "Second Chances" (1993-94), and repeated the role in "Hotel Malibu" (1994), an equally unsuccessful revamp of the former. She also appeared in "South Central" (Fox, 1994), as a co-worker of star Tina Lifford. In 1994, Lopez even co-hosted "Growing Up Roses" (CBS), a special recapping the best moments in Tournament of Roses Parade history.
TV proved too small a medium for Lopez, whose talent and charisma as well as hypnotic good looks cried out for the big screen. Her first feature success came with Gregory Nava's "My Family/Mi Familia" (1995), which found her cast as the youthful version of the matriarch of the Mexican-American family, a woman who survived illegal deportation and near-drowning to return to her husband in Los Angeles. That same year, she co-starred as the pistol-packing Gloria Santiago opposite Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes in the action blockbuster "Money Train". In 1996, she was Robin Williams' sympathetic fifth grade teacher, (a role not specifically written for a Latina) in "Jack", a fantasy by Francis Ford Coppola that starred Williams as a ten-year-old whose aging process is drastically accelerated.
Lopez was catapulted to prominence when she was cast in the title role of "Selena" (1997), the moving biopic about the beloved slain Tejano singer. Selena's influential life and tragic death made for a truly compelling film, and the actress' vibrant, intuitive portrayal set her apart from her peers and readied her for stardom. With strong reviews for her turn in the noirish thriller "Blood and Wine", Lopez was poised for greater things, as evidenced by her casting alongside Nick Nolte and Sean Penn in Oliver Stone's "U-Turn" (both also 1997). In 1998, Lopez solidified her leading lady status, starring opposite George Clooney in Steven Soderbergh's subtly steamy action thriller "Out of Sight". Displaying a winning sense of humor that added a down-to-earth charm to her undeniable sultriness, Lopez proved a good fit for heartthrob Clooney, and the two displayed the kind of onscreen fireworks that were notably missing in the actor's prior efforts.
Winning rave reviews for her performance, Lopez was well on her way to superstardom, and made the most of her fame by releasing her debut album, a decidedly NYC-flavored dance record entitled "On the 6" after the subway line that runs from her Bronx home into Manhattan. While the singles "If You Had My Love" and "Waiting For Tonight" tore up the charts and pumped out of nightclub speakers, Lopez was enjoying more screen success as the star of the odd sci-fi thriller "The Cell" (2000). Directed by famed commercial and music video visionary Tarsem, the film drew from various art influences, and made up for lagging plot devices with an sweet dose of eye candy. Lopez outfitted in ornate, elaborate and futuristic garb pleased audiences, though her courageous but slightly stilted performance as a child psychologist with a talent for probing the subconscious was less remarkable. In 2001, she tried her hand at fluffy romantic comedy, playing "The Wedding Planner" who quite literally falls for the groom (Matthew McConaughey). Lopez showed a surprising talent for the sillier side of things, and convincingly ditched her glamorous image for one of a frazzled workaholic prone to pratfalls and other embarrassing mishaps. Audiences flocked to the feel-good comedy, and the final week in January 2001 saw the film as well as her newly-released album "J.Lo" hit the top of their respective charts simultaneously.
Keeping up her career's positive momentum, Lopez starred as a policewoman who falls for Jim Caviezel in the romantic thriller "Angel Eyes"(2001). In 2002, Lopez starred in Michael Apted's thiller/drama "Enough". In this film, Lopez played an abused woman who realized that the only way to escape her abuser (her husband) was to kill him. Both "Angel Eyes" and "Enough" performed wanly at the box office, but Lopez, who also released the poorly reviewed but popular album "This is Me..." in 2002, remained one of the most talked-about performers of her generation and a perennial fixture on magazine covers and entertainment news shows--a status that went into overdrive following her 2002 engagement to actor Ben Affleck. Her next film cast her in a mild, "Pretty Woman"-esque Cinderella mode for "Maid in Manhattan" (2002), in which she played a housekeeper at a high class New York hotel who falls for a handsome politician (Ralph Finnes).
Lopez's public profile reached critical mass with the release of "Gigli" (2003), the mob-based action-comedy on which she first met (and presumably fell for) Affleck. After months of media hype surrounding the "Bennifer" relationship, public expectation of an on-screen romance between Lopez and Affleck was so high, the film was the subject of extensive reshooting and reconfiguring to accomodate the perceptions, although Lopez's character was written and initially shot as a confirmed lesbian. The film, a gangster action-comedy in which Affleck plays an incompotent mob thug, was the victim of bad buzz for months before its release and received a critical drubbing--possibly even an over-harsh response--when it finally hit theaters, giving it almost "Ishtar"-like bomb status. Lopez continued to exist at the eye of the media storm when she and Affleck called off their wedding in September 2003 and split for good in early 2004, followed by press reports that she sought solace with Latin singing sensation Marc Anthony. Meanwhile, the "Bennifer" backlash was so intense, the makers of the next Affleck-Lopez collaboration, writer-director Kevin Smith's middling romantic comedy "Jersey Girl" (2004) extremely downplayed Lopez's involvement (and indeed, her role was small and brief, playing Affleck's doomed wife in the film's opening sequences). The final shocker came five months after the Lopez-Affleck split when Lopez suddenly married the newly divorced Anthony in surprise ceremony that perhaps solidified her off-screen reputation as the Elizabeth Taylor of her generation--although the couple took eight months before officially confirming their marriage and refused to discuss it further.
In midst of her busy life as a celebrity, Lopez also continued to make films: she was paired opposite Richard Gere as an icy dance instructor who rediscovers her passions as she teaches Gere's obsessed family man how to move across the dance floor in the romance "Shall We Dance?" (2004), a role that made great use of her prowess as a dancer. In 2005 Lopez--who announced that she preferred it if the media dropped the "J-Lo" monicker--made headlines with her live duet with Anthony at the 47th annual Grammy Awards (their over-the-top, melodramatic performance of the song "Escapémonos" was snickered at by critics of her musical ability, though Anthony took home the Grammy for best Latin pop album for "Amar Sin Mentiras") and she demonstrated her continual entreprenurial spirit with a new fragrance launch, the debut of her Sweetface clothing line (which prompted protests from animal activists due to its use of fur), and a new album, "Rebirth," a return to club-style dance beats which launched to initially disappointing sales. Her next film, the comedy "Monster-In-Law" (2005), pitted her effectively against screen legend Jane Fonda (in her first role in 15 years): in the film Lopez's sweet-natured temp finds the man of her dreams, only to be menaced by his meddling, over-protective mother who hopes to drive her away. Candy-sweet on the outside at first, Lopez eventually reveals the inner steel that made her more than a match for the icon Fonda. Her next film, Lasse Halstrom's "An Unfinished Life" (2005) was released long after completion due to the complexities of the restructuring of Miramax following the departure of Bob and Harvey Weinstein, and while Lopez generally recieved good notices for her role as a widowed mother in an abusive relationship who seeks shelter with her estranged father-in-law (Robert Redford),
The actress also developed and executive produced the TV series "South Beach" (UPN, 2005 - ), an ensemble drama about three young adults whose dreams and aspirations lead them to Miami. She next was set to star in "Bridge and Tunnel" (lensed 2006), a romantic comedy in which she played a stock trader who depends on a suburban teen who day-trades on his home computer.
Profession(s):Actor, singer, dancer, clerical worker in a bank Sometimes Credited As: J Lo Familyfather:David Lopez (runs computer operations for an insurance company; born in Puerto Rico; separated from Lopez's mother) husband:Marc Anthony (dated briefly in 1999; began dating again in early 2004, soon after the her breakup with Ben Affleck; rumored to be engaged May 2004; married at her home in Los Angeles on June 5, 2004 in a private ceremony) husband:Cris Judd (born in 1969; dating from late 2000; went public with relationship at the Academy Awards; became engaged in June 2001; married on September 29, 2001 in Calabasas, California; seperated June 2002; filed for divorce on July 25, 2002; divorce finalized in January 2003) husband:Ojani Noa (married February 22, 1997 in Miami; separated in late 1997; divorced c. March 1998) mother:Guadalupe Lopez (separated from Lopez's father) sister:Leslie Lopez (born c. 1968) sister:Lynda Lopez (born on June 14, 1972) Companion(s)Ben Affleck , Companion , ```..reportedly seen kissing during her surprise birthday party July 2002; dating as of August 2002; rumored to be engaged; engagement confirmed in November 2002; wedding date rumored to be September 14, 2003; wedding postponed until a later date, reason was "excessive media attention"; Rumored to have ended relationship with Lopez in September 2003; reportedly reconciled in September 2003; reps for the couple confirmed that the engagement ended January 2004 David Cruz , Companion , ```..together from c. 1986 to c. 1996; began relationship when Lopez was 15 Sean Combs , Companion , ```..reportedly dated in early 1998 though both denied it; resumed relationship publicly in 1999; reportedly separated in late 2000; officially announced break-up on February 14, 2001

EducationBronx Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Bronx, New York Holy Family School Bronx, New York Preston High School Bronx, New York 1986 Baruch College Manhattan 1987






Jennifer Aniston


Thanks to a rare combiniation of winsome girl-next-door charm and vulnerability, wholesome sex appeal and whip-smart comic timing, Jennifer Aniston found TV stardom playing Rachel Green, the spoiled rich girl making her way in life as a waitress and fashion buyer who relies on her "Friends" in the hit NBC sitcom, becoming one of the most popular actresses of her era. The petite, attractive actress grew up around show business; her godfather was actor Telly Savalas, her mother was a model and actress and her father had a career as a soap opera player. After graduating from NYC's famed High School for the Performing Arts in 1987, Aniston embarked on her career which consisted of TV commercials and a handful of Off-Broadway productions. At age 20, she headed west and soon landed roles in a string of short-lived sitcoms, generally cast as spoiled or bratty siblings as in "Molloy" (Fox, 1989) and "Ferris Bueller" (NBC, 1990-91). A stint on the Fox variety sketch series "The Edge" (1992-93) further honed her comedic skills; she is perhaps best-recalled as a member of the paranoid, weapons-toting 'Armed Family'. After an agent suggested she lose weight, Aniston shed 30 pounds and won the role of Rachel on "Friends" (1994-2004). Although her shag hairdo got a lot of attention, she proved to be a gifted light comedienne, skillfully moving her character from a pampered girl to a self-reliant woman, along the way, engaging in a romance with the divorced Ross Geller (played by David Schwimmer), and later with the thick but loveable Joey (Matt LeBlanc). The role made Aniston a superstar and earned her four successive Emmy nominations (2000-2003), twice as Best Supporting Actress and twice as Best Lead Actress--she would take home the Lead Actress Emmy in 2002, as well as a Golden Globe in 2003.
While Aniston had appeared in the low-budget schlocky horror outing "Leprechaun" (1993), her small screen success led to feature offers. She tried to move slowly away from her TV image with supporting turns as the unhappily married wife of a womanizing stockbroker in Edward Burns' "She's the One" (1996) and an acerbic cameo as an overwhelmed young woman juggling career and motherhood in the otherwise forgettable "'Til There Was You" (1997). Her first lead, as an ambitious advertising executive who creates a fake boyfriend to insure her climb up the corporate ladder, in "Picture Perfect" (1997) proved both a critical and box-office disappointment but Aniston bounced back in the more serious role of a pregnant woman who forms a bond with her gay roommate in "The Object of My Affection" (1998). She had what was essentially a supporting role in "Office Space" (1999) and voiced the mother of the boy who discovers "The Iron Giant" (also 1999) in that underrated animated feature.
In 1997 Aniston became romantically to the handsome movie actor Brad Pitt, placing them on magazine covers as Hollywood's reigning "It" Couple for years to come. They married in July 2000 in a storybook Malibu wedding illuminated by fireworks. The couple worked together professionally only once, when Pitt appeared on a 2001 episode of "Friends" as a formerly fat high school class mate and onetime pal of Courteney Cox's Monica with a long-simmering resentment of Aniston's Rachel.
Aniston next appeared as the love interest to a salesman (Mark Wahlberg) who joins a heavy metal band in "Rock Star" (2001), anchoring the lightweight, high-concept film with its most convincing and emotional presence. In 2002, Aniston made an impressive debut on the indie-film scene as a conflicted housewife/retail worker in "The Good Girl," playing a bored and forlorn Midwestern housewife who discovers that throwing caution to the wind and bucking her staid life is not everthing she imagined it would. The following year, Aniston paired with Jim Carrey for the hit comedy feature "Bruce Almighty" (2003) as the girlfriend of a man gifted with God's powers. She fared even better in her follow-up "Along Came Polly" (2004), playing against type as a free spirit who teaches her risk-fearing new beau (Ben Stiller) how to take chances. The role cemented Aniston's status as a potential A-list movie star just as "Friends" drew to an end in May 2004.
As she moved on to her next projects, Aniston found herself in the center of a media tempest when she announced her split from Pitt, who subsequently appeared to responsible for the breakup when it appeared he began a romance with actress Angelina Jolie on the set of their film "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" (2005). The drama played out in the entertainment media for several months, with Aniston finally giving a teary-eyed interview to Vanity Fair that, while taking some pains to play fair and amicable, decidely cast her as the unsuspecting victim and Pitt as the cad. Ironically, during the media firestorm Aniston was shooting "The Break-Up" (lensed 2005) in Chicago with actor Vince Vaughn, playing a divorcing couple struggling to continue to cohabitate. Rumors swirled of a budding relationship between the two stars, and despite denials they did appear to be a couple by fall of 2005 when Aniston had two films hitting theaters: the first, "Derailed," cast the actress and Clive Owen as two married business executives having an affair who are blackmailed by a violent criminal and must turn the tables to save their families; the second, director Rob Reiner's "Rumor Has It," saw Aniston playing Sarah Huttinger, who learns that her family was the inspiration for the book and film "The Graduate" -- and that she just might be the offspring of the notorious storyline.
Profession(s):Actor, messenger, waitress, receptionist, telemarketer Sometimes Credited As: Jennifer Joanne Aniston Familyfather:John Aniston (born c. 1933; appeared in NBC daytime serial "Days of Our Lives"; divorced from Aniston's mother in 1980, leaving her for another woman; family name was originally Anastassakis) godfather:Telly Savalas (born on January 21, 1924; died on January 22, 1994) half-brother:John Melick (born c. 1959; mother, Nancy Aniston) husband:Brad Pitt (actor; met in 1998; married July 29, 2000 in Malibu, California; announced separation on January 6, 2005, after more than fours years of marriage; Aniston filed for divorce March 2005; divorce finalized October 2005.) mother:Nancy Aniston (born c. 1936; had been previously married before her 1965 marriage to John Aniston; divorced from Aniston in 1980; because of comments made in a TV interview c. 1995, daughter has ceased contact; wrote book "From Mother and Daughter to Friends" (1999)) Companion(s)Adam Duritz , Companion , ```..with band Counting Crows; dated briefly in 1995 Charlie Schlatter , Companion , ```..dated when they co-starred on "Ferris Bueller" in 1990 Daniel MacDonald , Companion , ```..dated in the 1990s; broke up just before Aniston was cast in "Friends" Paul Sculfor , Companion , ```..rumored to have dating for a few months between May and July of 2007. Tate Donovan , Companion , ```..born September 25, 1963; began dating in November 1995; separated c. April 1998 Vince Vaughn , Companion , ```..rumors of the pair dating began while filming "The Break Up"; they were first spotted kissing at a wrap party in August 2005; relationship troubles reported September 2006 with an "official" split by December 2006

EducationRudolph Steiner School New York, New York Fiorello H LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts New York, New York 1987





Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Kate Silverstone


Date of birth: 4 October 1976; San Francisco, California, USA
Nickname: Queen Slice
Height: 5' 9"



Julie Fiona Roberts


Birth name: Julie Fiona Roberts
Date of birth: 28 October 1967; Smyrna, Georgia, USA
Height: 5' 9"
(2000) On People (USA) magazine's '50 Most Beautiful' list.
Dated Jason Patric, Matthew Perry, Daniel Day-Lewis Dating Benjamin Bratt