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Leo overrated? ~~ Leo may be Annakin ~~ New Home for Alex Garland~~ A Beach Fashion Statement
What's in a name?~~ Ship of Fools?~~Leo among good Company~~
Some information on the Holocaust CD Leo Narrated~~ Man in the Iron Mask on TV~~
Leo replaces Saints?~~Toys for Tots~~Leo to Attend Ripley Premiere~~





Leo to attend premiere of The Talented Mr. Ripley

WHAT: Premiere Screening of "THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY"
WHO: "THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY" cast members attending include: Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law, Cate Blanchett, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jack Davenport, Philip Baker Hall, Stefania Rocca Filmmakers attending include: Anthony Minghella, Sydney Pollack, William Horberg, Tom Sternberg Other guests include: Ben Affleck, Casey Affleck, Christine Baranski, Julie Cypher, Dana Delany, Leonardo DiCaprio, Harrison Ford, Melissa Etheridge, Jonathan Frakes, Genie Francis, Peri Gilpin, Rachel Hunter, Laura Innes, Rob Lowe, Tobey Maguire, Juliana Margulies, Martha Plimpton, Freddie Prinze Jr, Ving Rhames, Julian Sands, Alicia Silverstone, Patrick Stewart, Julia Stiles ... and more to come.
WHEN: Sunday, December 12, 1999 @ 6:30 p.m. Prompt Arrivals begin at 5:30 p.m.
WHERE: MANN VILLAGE THEATRE
961 Broxton Avenue, Westwood


Leo to attend Toys for Tots function

GZA of the Wu-Tang Clan, Black Thought and ?uestlove of The Roots, Talib Kweli, and Rah Digga from the Flipmode Squad will all perform at a special invitation-only benefit for Toys for Tots, scheduled for December 13 at the Exit club in New York City. Model Tyson Beckford will host the show, dubbed the "Hip-Hop Holiday '99," and which is being co-sponsored by digital music site MCY.com and a new online clothing store, 2Gee.com, which will launch next week in conjunction with the event. Other celebrities slated to come out in support of the Toys For Tots show include Milla Jovovich, Q-Tip, Leonardo DiCaprio, N'Dea Davenport, Ben Stiller, and possibly other members of the Wu-Tang Clan. Toys For Tots was started in 1947 by the U.S. Marine Corps, which works with local groups to help collect and distribute new toys to needy children across the U.S. at Christmas time. Last year, the Marines collected and distributed over 11 million toys.


God ousted in earthly vision of paradise
BY RUSSELL JENKINS


THE Bishop of Liverpool yesterday lamented the opening of a controversial art exhibition at the Tate Gallery in Liverpool depicting Heaven as an earthly paradise. The exhibition shows "Heaven" not as a traditional sacred place but material gratification to be found on a tropical beach, in a shopping mall or at a football stadium. God has been ousted from his position of pre-eminence in an age, the artists suggest, where saints have been displaced by celebrities such as Diana, Princess of Wales, and Leonardo DiCaprio, supermodels and pop stars. The Right Rev James Jones, who aims to celebrate Millennium Eve with the masses at the Cream 2000 Pier head party, acknowledged it as a "sign of the times". The bishop said: "This controversial exhibition is a sign of our times. It reflects our culture and shows the huge gap that exists between traditional beliefs and the spirit of a new age. Like it or not the Church has to face up to the fact that although people are spiritual, many do not find the Church fulfils their hopes." The exhibition's organisers have used fashion, video, painting, digital imaging, sculpture and photography to show how religion has changed at the end of the century.

"Religious imagery and ritual is no longer contained within a traditional sacred place and a tropical beach resort, a fashionable shopping mall or a football stadium have become, for many a vision of paradise," the programme notes say. "Celebrities, supermodels and pop stars are now idolised and adored as once were saints and angels and many worship at the graves of the famous, at pop concerts, clubs and fashion shows." Visitors to Albert Dock pass a statue of Jesus Christ apparently walking on water but once inside the old warehouse gallery the "heavenly" figures appear more earthly. Karen Kilimnik portrays Leonardo di Caprio as a modern icon, alongside Jeff Koons' white and gold porcelian Michael Jackson and Princess Diana as Madonna. Ralph Burns's photographs of the faithful visiting Elvis Presley's Graceland depict the nature of adoration in a secular world. Mariko Mori offers a digital vision of heaven as a sun drenched beach where she appears as a virtual reality "cybermaid".

Lord David Alton, the former MP, said: "It is very depressing that this is the best we can do in the name of modern art and many people will find it deeply offensive."


USA Pacts With MGM for 7 Pix
By John Dempsey


NEW YORK (Variety) - USA Network has landed the first network window to seven MGM theatrical movies, including ``Man in the Iron Mask,'' starring Leonardo DiCaprio, and ``Hoodlum'' with Andy Garcia. USA will pay about $22 million to get multiyear runs of the movies, starting with ``Hoodlum,'' which grossed $23 million in U.S. theaters, and becomes available to the network in April. ``Iron Mask,'' which did better than any of the other seven pictures domestically ($57 million), is available to USA in November. The five other movies get to USA in 2001. Two of these five, ``The Rage: Carrie 2'' and the teen horror movie ''Disturbing Behavior'' (with Katie Holmes), will also get extensive play on USA's sister network, the Sci-Fi Channel. Included in the MGM package are ``At First Sight'' (Val Kilmer, Mira Sorvino), ``Mod Squad'' (Claire Danes) and ``Dirty Work'' (Norm Macdonald).


With Holocaust testimony collected,
Spielberg tries to make it accessible

By Tom Tugend

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 28 (JTA) – In a huge tent on the Universal Studios lot, crammed with advanced computer gear and large television screens, Steven Spielberg unveiled his high-tech master plan to transmit and preserve the living testimony of Holocaust survivors. Hollywood's most successful filmmaker paused briefly last week to review the work of the Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation, which he founded five years ago in the wake of the worldwide impact of his film "Schindler's List." Up to now, 50,441 testimonies have been videotaped in 57 countries and 32 languages, he said. A total of 115,965 hours of testimony have been recorded, which would take one person 12 years and 10 months to view. "This is like the original dream coming true," Spielberg said. "But like all dreams, you realize there's a lot more work ahead of you." The biggest job will be to catalog, index and digitize most of the 116,000 hours of tapes to make them accessible and user-friendly to researchers and students. Names, places and events in each testimony must be cross-referenced so that users can call up any segment or topic with the aid of a 15,000-term glossary of keywords, ranging from a camp site, such as "Auschwitz," to more subtle references, such as "aid: assistance in hiding valuables." The cataloging is labor-intensive, requiring eight to 12 hours to process a single hour of testimony. But without this state-of-the-art index, researchers looking for a specific piece of information would have to watch thousands of hours of testimony. The average interview runs 2 hours and 15 minutes, with the record length of 17 hours held by a survivor in Israel. So far, interviews with 22,000 survivors have been indexed and digitized.

By the time the remainder are processed, the Shoah Foundation will have the world's largest multimedia archive, with a database of 180 terabytes. By comparison, only 10 terabytes are needed to store the entire printed collection in the Library of Congress. Companies such as Unisys, which hosted the exhibit and fund-raising dinner on the Universal lot, and Sony and Silicon Graphics have donated $30 million in computer technology. As the digital library goes online, its content will become available via fiber-optic network links to five repositories, as well as museums and other educational institutions throughout the world. The first link is with the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. The existing material can be accessed by the center's staff now and is expected to be available to visitors early next year. Later, the network will be extended to four other repositories, the Museum of Jewish Heritage — A Living Memorial to the Holocaust in New York, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, the Fortunoff Archive for Holocaust Testimonies at Yale University and the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem. In a later phase, around 160 universities will be able to tap into the archives, said Sam Gustman, the foundation's executive director of technology. The material will not be available over the Internet.

The interviews have already been mined through other media by the Shoah Foundation, which has produced three award-winning documentaries, including last year's Oscar-winning "The Last Days." Released some months ago to high schools is the interactive CD-ROM "Survivors," featuring the testimonies of two men and two women. To heighten its appeal to teen-agers, "Survivors" is hosted by movie stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Winona Ryder. At the dinner last week, largely Latino teachers and students from Los Angeles high schools testified to the profound emotional impact of "Survivors" on their lives and outlook. Spielberg was equally taken by the CD-ROM.

"We've proven a point I've been trying to get Bill Gates to understand," he said. "Technology and emotion can go hand in hand." Turning to the massive Shoah archive, Spielberg expressed "our hope that it will be a resource so enduring that 50, or 100 or even 500 years from now, people around the world will learn directly from survivors and witnesses about the atrocities of the Holocaust — what it means to survive, and how our very humanity depends upon the practice of tolerance and mutual respect." Spielberg foresees another educational benefit. "We want to revise the social sciences," he said. "You cannot just teach the Holocaust without teaching about black slavery, civil rights or the liquidations of the Native American population. Every intolerance you can imagine has to be taught comprehensively and has to be taught together."


Leo One of the most Influential Figures in Cinema

By American-Statesman Staff

Published: Dec. 3, 1999

George Lucas (producer, director, Industrial Light & Magic, THX)
Quentin Tarantino (director, "Pulp Fiction")
Harvey Weinstein (producer, Miramax Films)
Michael De Luca (producer, New Line Cinema)
Jim Carrey (actor)
Adam Sandler (actor)
James Cameron (producer-director, "Titanic")
Nicolas Cage (actor)
John Travolta (actor)
John Woo (director, "Face/Off")
Robert Rodriguez (director, "El Mariachi")
Julia Roberts (actor)
Leonardo DiCaprio (actor)
Will Smith (actor)
Tom Hanks (actor)
Steven Spielberg (producer-director, "Schindler's List"; founder, Dreamworks)
The Farrelly Brothers (writers-directors, "There's Something About Mary")
John Lasseter (director, "Toy Story")
Sandra Bullock (actor)


Gov torpedos Titanic

The Titanic sank for a second time yesterday when Gov. Paul Cellucci deep-sixed all but a passing reference to the ill-fated oceanliner and the Leonardo DiCaprio flick of the same name from a speech he gave on character education. In Cellucci's original draft of the speech, he devoted nine paragraphs to singing the praises of the Oscar-winning flick including the odd argument that it was the movie's lessons about character development - and not Leo - that prompted teenage girls to return to the flick ``four, five and six times.'' After the argument was ridiculed in yesterday's Boring Broadsheet under the headline, ``Ever heard of Leo, governor,'' all but two paragraphs of the Titanic references mysteriously vanished.

File under: Ship of Fools?

A Rose by Any Other

UPI Arts & Entertainment - Scott's World

By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Would Tom Cruise have become a star if he hadn't changed his name from Thomas Mapother? Who knows? One superstar hung in there with the worst moniker in the history of leading men Arnold Schwarzenegger. "Arnold" was usually associated with bespectacled nerds who graduated cum laude. "Schwarzenegger," perfectly acceptable in Austria, was at first intolerable here. So what does a name matter?

Ask Red Buttons who was born Aaron Chwatt, or Tony Curtis, who was Bernard Schwartz. Name changing is an arcane Hollywood means of enhancing actors' popularity while minimizing their ethnicity. In socially liberal Hollywood where Jewish culture plays a vital part in the movie industry, identifiably Jewish names were changed to offset anti-Semitism. For instance, Piper Laurie was born Rosetta Jacobs.

But Italian and German names were often altered as well to escape type-casting or prejudices of moviegers. Thus Concetta Ingolia became Connie Stevens; Doris Mary Ann von Kappelhoff became Doris Day; Hedvig Eva Marie Kessler was reborn Hedy Lamarr; Ira Grossel switched to Jeff Chandler. Literally hundreds of wannabe stars reached their goals with ethnically unidentifiable names. They often were given "glamour" names. Tab Hunter was born Arthur Gelien. George Brendan Noland, a major star of the '30s, assumed the innocuous George Brent for no apparent reason. For a time in the '50s personal manager Henry Willson (cq) specialized in fashioning names for the likes of Tab Hunter, Touch Connors and Rock Hudson. Fred Astaire felt more comfortable when he switched from Frederick Austerlitz. As did Sandra Dee from Alexandra Zuck and Diana Dors from Diana Fluck. Hudson generated more masculinity than with his real name, Roy Sherer. Marilyn Monroe attracted more attention the moment she dropped her real name, Norma Jean Baker. Charles Bronson was an improvement over Charles Buchinski, which might have triggered debate over whether he was Polish or Russian. Would Greta Garbo been as mysteriously appealing had she stuck with her birth name, Greta Louisa Gustaffson? Perhaps not. Glamour girl Lana Turner had the good sense to pare down her original Julia Jean Mildred Frances Turner. Phyllis Isley wasn't good enough for Jennifer Jones not that anyone called her Jenny or Jonesy and she became an Oscar-winning star. And think of Robert Taylor who blue-collared his handle from the one his parents gave him, Spangler Arlington Brugh. An actress with real courage today is Calista Flockhart. Scheez!

Many current stars, doubtless following Schwarzenegger's lead, are reluctant to assume new monikers. If Arnie could get away with an attrocious marquee name, why not Leonardo DiCaprio? Middle names are often dropped in this country. DiCaprio dropped his _ Wilhelm (his mother is German). Sometimes one wonders why foreign performers cling to middle names. Examples, Austria's Klaus Maria Bandauer, and England's Daniel Day- Lewis. One assumes actors will take any name to enhance their careers and set them apart from the herd. The Screen Actors Guild refuses to allow a performer to assume the name of an established star. How would it have changed his life if Huntz Hall had taken Cary Grant's name? Grant's given name, incidentally, was Archibald Alexander Leach. Maybe Huntz was better off. Has Harrison Ford wondered what would have become of him if he had been born Harrison Chevy or, worse, Harrison Volvo? Did singer Jerry Lee Lewis think of changing his name to the famous comedian's real tag, Joseph Levitch? Thanks perhaps to Rudolph Valentino, abetted later by Gina Lollobrigida and Sophia Loren, Italian performers have long eschewed the closet: Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Danny DeVito, Ray Liotta and Lorraine Bracco. A real pip was Cher switching from Cherilyn Sarkisian LaPierre, but Sonny Bono with his Italian name went all the way to Congress. Germans since World War II have been shy about using their real names. Many a German actor in the past laid claim to being Swiss, Austrian or even Scandinavian. Country of origin notwithstanding, Teutonic names often ring harshly in American ears: Horst Buckholtz, for instance, and Gert Frobe, jah und Volker Scholondorff. Would Boris Karloff have made audiences laugh instead of quaver if he had kept his real name, William Henry Pratt (as in pratfall)? Foreign filmmaking is proliferating with indecipherable cast names appearing on American screens showing movies from Asia, India, Africa, the Balkans, Russia and other exotic places. There should be no problem whether the star's name is Yao Fen or Mustafa Glotz as long as the movie is good. Hollywood took Roberto Benigni to its heart last year for his performance in "Life Is Beautiful." Why not Ming Low Fat next year in "An Outsider in the Harem?"

Beach fashion statement

THE process of merchandising costumes from films is a treacherous path. In some ways this is surprising. Out of Africa spawned endless cotton-frilled, Edwardian-inspired petticoat skirts and camisoles that made a fortune for the high street, if not the film. And all that black shiny leather in The Matrix proved to be quite a fashion moment last summer. In fact, the scope for fashion/movie tie-ins is potentially huge. What about Holly Hunter's crinis from The Piano; the delicious little reticules in An Ideal Husband; Gwyneth's pashminas (when they were still rarities) in Emma, and Bet Lynch's iconic leopardskin coat? In practice, however, marketing fashions from movies has so far had limited success. The 1940s Evita dresses in the windows of Bloomingdale's met a so-so response. Perhaps fashion consumers don't want to believe that they are being spoon-fed by movies, even if, in reality, that is precisely what is happening.

All this may soon change. The Beach, based on Alex Garland's novel, has Leonardo DiCaprio wearing specially designed outfits from Komodo, which will be marketed heavily when the film debuts next spring (if you're feeling sheepish about slavishly copying a movie star you can always salve your conscience with the knowledge that some of the profits go to the Free Tibet campaign). Sleepy Hollow, the new Gothic thriller from Tim Burton and Johnny Depp, based on Washington Irving's classic tale and featuring Christina Ricci and Miranda Richardson in heaving corsets, is taking tentative steps to buck the trend. It is putting a limited edition of 50 of its headless-horseman costumes for sale online (www.sleepyhollowdirect.com), although, alas, none of the corsets. Andrea Galer, the costume designer on Mansfield Park, will, however, produce made-to-measure corsets for the public based on costumes she designed for Firelight, and Cinderella, the lavish TV film that will be screened over Christmas (0171-483 3242). The indicator of whether cinemagoers and fashionistas can be alchemised into one glorious new sector of the market will be Charlie's Angels, which starts shooting next week with Cameron Diaz, Lucy Liu and Drew Barrymore - three fashion-conscious actresses who will doubtless have much to say about the film's sartorial direction. Whether it boogies down the path of 1970s pastiche (so prevalent on the catwalks recently) or does a modern take remains to be seen. Be prepared, at the very least, for a rush on Charlie's curling tongs to create that Farrah flick.

Bestselling Author finds new home

Best-selling author Alex Garland, who wrote The Beach, now a film starring Leonardo DiCaprio, has rewarded himself with the perfect writer's retreat, a modern mews house on the secluded and little-known Oak Hill Park estate in Hampstead. The peace of the estate, coupled with the hustle and bustle of Hampstead High Street 10 minutes away, has suited singer George Michael for years. Estate agents Behr and Bitchoff says similar mews houses go for around £600,000.

Don't count Leo out of coveted Anakin role

By Jeff Vice Deseret News movie critic.

Don't book your flight to Australia yet. And while you're at it, don't count Leonardo DiCaprio out quite yet either. Recently, the Lucasfilm Ltd. offices were deluged by resumes and "head shots" after an announcement by "Star Wars" universe creator George Lucas that he still hasn't decided who is going to play the much-coveted role of Anakin Skywalker in the second prequel movie. (That film will begin shooting in Australia next year after Lucas finishes the script.) But the flood of resumes failed to garner even one unknown a tryout, which suggests that Lucas may be going for someone with name recognition. All the notoriously controlling filmmaker had to say on the subject was that he is looking for someone with at least a "resemblance" to young Jake Lloyd, who played the part in the first of the prequels, "The Phantom Menace." However, notice that the Grand Jedi himself didn't rule out the possibility of heartthrob DiCaprio playing the part. The "Titanic" star has been the subject of much gossip regarding his possible involvement in the next "Star Wars" movie, but the last word was that he had seen "The Phantom Menace" and thought the script was "garbage" — which ended the speculation for at least awhile. However, DiCaprio was recently spotted at Skywalker Ranch, Lucas' home-away-from-home, which has renewed the speculation. Frankly, it would make sense for both of them. After receiving complaints about the acting in "The Phantom Menace," Lucas could use someone with "chops" to play the lead role, especially if it's going to be as character-driven as he claims. Also, Leo will probably bring in another desirable audience demographic for the movie — teen and pre-teen girls, who were seemingly left out of the loop on the first prequel. As for DiCaprio, if the rumors are true about the quality of his next movie, "The Beach," he may need a big project to revive his career, and this would certainly fit the bill. By the way, in case you've forgotten, others supposedly in the running for the part of Anakin include television actors James Van Der Beek, Joshua Jackson and Jonathan Jackson, Ryan Phillippe and — oddest of all — Brendan Fraser.

Leo over-rated?

From the South China Morning Post
IAN MARKHAM-SMITH

Leonardo DiCaprio has been voted the most overrated star in the world. The hero of Titanic tops a poll ahead of Hollywood director Steven Spielberg, with Oscar-winning beauty Gwyneth Paltrow third. Star Wars director George Lucas came in fourth with Pulp Fiction creator Quentin Tarantino fifth. The thumbs down to the titans of Tinseltown came in the latest issue of the US magazine Total Film. Readers chose hell-raiser Oliver Reed, who died after a marathon drinking session in Malta while making the movie Gladiator, as their ideal celebrity partner on a pub crawl. Their top tear-jerker movie was surprisingly not a love story but Spielberg's tender family favourite ET. The best movie kiss was also a surprise - it was between two women. Up-and-coming stars Neve Campbell and Denise Richards took the award for their passionate smacker in Wild Things.





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