Tag Archives: james-gandolfini

NBC Fall 2013 Premiere Calendar: Released!

NBC has just announced its Fall 2013 premiere schedule, anchored as usual by The Voice and featuring a number of hit comedies and exciting new dramas. Set your DVR accordingly and scroll down now… Monday, September 23 The Voice, 8 p.m. The Blacklist, 10 p.m. Tuesday, September 24 Chicago Fire, 10 p.m. Wednesday, September 25 Revolution, 8 p.m. Law & Order: SVU, 9 p.m. Thursday, September 26 Parks and Recreation, 8 p.m. The Michael J. Fox Show, 9 p.m. Parenthood, 10 p.m. Friday, October 25 Grimm, 9 p.m. Dracula, 10 p.m. Friday, October 27 Dateline, 9 p.m. Wednesday, October 2 Ironside, 10 p.m. Thursday, October 3 Welcome to the Family, 8:30 p.m. Sean Saves the World, 9 p.m. Tuesday, October 8 The Biggest Loser , 8 p.m.

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NBC Fall 2013 Premiere Calendar: Released!

James Gandolfini Autopsy Results Confirm Death From Natural Causes

Autopsy results confirm that star James Gandolfini’s cause of death – he suffered a heart attack and died of natural causes – a family friend told the media. The 51-year-old’s sudden death instantly shocked and saddened fans Wednesday. As previously reported, Gandolfini had been visiting Italy with family. “Today we received the results of the autopsy, which stated he died of a heart attack, of natural causes,” Michael Kobold said in Rome on Friday. “The autopsy further states that nothing else was found in his system.” News that James Gandolfini died stunned his family most of all, and they plan to put his body back on a plane to the U.S. as soon as they get clearance. “We expect that to be Wednesday, maybe Thursday, but we will keep you informed,” Kobold said, noting that funeral is expected in NYC late next week. In a heartbreaking detail , the star’s manager confirmed that Michael, James Gandolfini’s 13-year-old son, found his father collapsed in his hotel room. The three-time Emmy winner was then transported to the Policlinico Umberto I hospital; paramedics tried in vain to revive Gandolfini en route to the hospital. Resuscitation maneuvers, including heart massage, continued for 40 minutes and then, seeing no electric activity from the heart, he was declared dead. R.I.P.

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James Gandolfini Autopsy Results Confirm Death From Natural Causes

Larger Than Life: 8 Overweight Celebs Who Died Too Soon

America is the fattest nation in the world where millions scarf down family-sized meals daily without any concern for their health. If you’re not skinny or fit, you’re usually frowned upon and warned to change your diet (OR ELSE) but it’s never that simple. Beloved by many, larger celebs have always been torn between losing weight and staying true to themselves as lovable plus-sized entertainers. Here are the eight overweight celebs who died too soon. Take a look. Continue reading

James Gandolfini Cause of Death: Natural Causes, Heart Attack Suspected

James Gandolfini died of a heart attack earlier this week, and the doctor in charge of the ER where he was taken says there are no suspicious factors. That statement is unofficial however, with respect to drugs or alcohol. Claudio Modini, the ER chief at the Italian hospital, says it looks like a heart attack, adding it was ” probably a natural cause of death, myocardial infarction.” James Gandolfini had acknowledged he’d been addicted to cocaine and alcohol, and that substance abuse played a part in his 2002 divorce. It’s premature to say if drugs or alcohol were a factor, here, and it has not been established what, if any, toxicology tests will be performed on the actor. Gandolfini’s death, which shocked the Hollywood community , took place Wednesday while on vacation in Italy with his teenage son from his first marriage. He is also survived by his current wife and baby daughter. James dined at an Italian restaurant – Ciampini in Rome – and was photographed during his meal shortly before he died, according to TMZ. After his cardiac event, doctors tried in vain for 40 minutes to resuscitate the actor, using heart massage and other methods, but it was no use. There was no electric activity from the heart, meaning he was probably deceased before he got to the hospital. There will be an autopsy performed. While nothing has been confirmed, doctors at the hospital seem fairly certain that he died of natural causes – a heart attack – at age 51. RIP.

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James Gandolfini Cause of Death: Natural Causes, Heart Attack Suspected

James Gandolfini Dies of Heart Attack; The Sopranos Star Was 51

James Gandolfini died earlier today in Italy, according to reports. The Sopranos star is believed to have suffered a heart attack, and was just 51 years old. Deadline was the first source to report Gandolfini’s death . He was in Italy to attend the 59th Taormina Film Festival in Sicily, and was scheduled to appear in an event this weekend with director Gabriele Muccino. “Everyone is in tears,” a N.Y. Daily News source said. Gandolfini has appeared in many successful TV shows and films, but he truly became a Hollywood star when he was cast as Tony Soprano in 1999. He won three Emmy awards for The Sopranos . The press-shy star got his start as a character actr, became famous relatively late in his career, and stayed largely out of the limelight once The Sopranos ended. The burly Westwood, N.J. native is survived by his wife, former model Deborah Lin, who gave birth to a baby girl last October. The pair wed in 2008. Gandolfini, who spent part of his early career supporting himself as a bartender and nightclub manager, also has a son with his ex-wife, Marcy Wudarski. R.I.P.

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James Gandolfini Dies of Heart Attack; The Sopranos Star Was 51

RIP MOTHERFUCKER – The James Gandolfini / Tony Soprano Edition of the Day

James Gandolfini /Tony Soprano – Is Dead…. Nothing celebrates the life of an actor who died of what is assumed to be a heart attack caused by living the good fat life, whether it is from food, or booze, or cocaine, or a slow metabolism, or a combination of those things…like watching him get a lap dance from Kristen Stewart. I guess this puts to rest as to whether they will ever do a Sopranos movie, unless it is my Parody Porn, I call The Sopr-ANALS…because James Gandolfini, an actor I actually liked watching in his non-Soprano roles, decided to not look after himself and die…at 51. Maybe it’s an excuse for CNN to distract America with special coverage ignoring the actual news…but maybe it should remind us to get off our asses and walk…gluttony kills….even if it’s fun in the process…just don’t tell my wife, I’m banking on her goin’ the same damn way, ideally sooner than later.. Here’s another clip…of James Gandolfini and Kristen Stewart from WELCOME TO THE RILEYS The real tragedy in the Tony Soprano death is that he didn’t use any of his fortune to hire a personal chef and a personal trainer to not die of a heart attack thanks to being obese. Seriously. Whether you liked the guy or not, he killed himself, and we don’t like suicide here at DrunkenStepfather. We do however like boobies…and career suicide cuz those are fun, so let’s focus on real issues.

http://www.drunkenstepfather.com/flv/KristenStewart_WTTR_1.flv

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RIP MOTHERFUCKER – The James Gandolfini / Tony Soprano Edition of the Day

REVIEW: David Chase Rocks The ’60s In Dynamic, Witty ‘Not Fade Away’

Music not only serves as the subject but informs the very fabric of Not Fade Away , David Chase’s savvy ’60s-set feature film debut. Aided immeasurably by his keen ear for dialogue, Chase filters a suddenly tumultuous, transformative decade through the restrictive prism of conservative suburbia in this story of a New Jersey boy’s coming of age, as political instability, class awareness and rock ‘n’ roll break in waves over the still-inchoate consciousness of several friends trying to form a band. Though starless, save for James Gandolfini’s knockout supporting perf, this dynamic pic should resonate with auds countrywide upon its Dec. 21 release. Not Fade Away injects the past with the nervous energy and exciting uncertainty of the present, devoid of nostalgia or biopic baggage, and infused with all the wicked wit that characterized Chase’s The Sopranos   and his bygone standout episodes of The Rockford Files. The move from TV to a theatrical canvas is mirrored in the picture’s very conception, presenting the New Jersey microcosm as no longer a self-contained unit. Still, the film rarely leaves its setting, where Doug (John Magaro) lives with his looming, disapproving father (Gandolfini), his quasi-hysterical mother (Molly Price), and his little sister (Meg Guzulescu), who supplies voiceover narration and performs a wonderful curtain-dropper to boot. Macrocosm first meets microcosm when Doug returns to Jersey from college sporting longer hair, Cuban heels and anti-war indignation, quitting his studies to devote himself to the rock band he started in high school. Chase’s writing shines in this intricate relationship between world events and their impact on the everyday: Drawing from his own, decidedly more lackluster experience as a band drummer, the writer-helmer surrounds Doug with friends whose talents are not necessarily congruent with their ambitions and whose class differences manifest themselves erratically. Thus, after lead singer/guitarist Gene (Jack Huston) temporarily knocks himself out by swallowing a lit joint, Doug takes over as vocalist, wowing the local crowd with his rendition of “Time Is On My Side,” a glamorous position he soon assumes permanently, to Gene’s ongoing resentment. Meanwhile, well-off Wells (Will Brill) wrestles with the philosophical implications of imminent fame, always worrying they’ll “lose the mystique” they’ve built up with their barely existent fanbase. The group covers the Rolling Stones , the Kinks and Bo Diddley with varying degrees of fidelity, but Not Fade Away   pointedly refuses to follow either a difficult-road-to-success or downward-spiral-to-failure scenario. Instead, the music feeds off surrounding chaos, anchoring Doug’s existence and coloring snapshots of various stages of his youth. His questioning whether to go for a more melodic or bluesier vocalization while listening to Leadbelly equates to his deciding on different attitudes toward life. Even movies and TV shows are defined through their music: The Twilight Zone  announcing its presence to the protag through its signature theme, while Blow-Up confounds him with its silence. Doug’s evolving relationship with wealthier girlfriend Grace (Bella Heathcote) forms the film’s other throughline and, like his interaction with certain band brothers, brings up issues of economic disparity. But Chase excels at diverting attention from the obvious and foregrounding the particular, as in how Doug’s cramped kitchen contrasts with Grace’s Toulouse Lautrec-wallpapered rec room, where his band plays parties. And when Doug is shown digging ditches at Grace’s country club, the scene’s focus stays completely on Doug’s failed attempt to musically bond with Lander (Isiah Whitlock Jr.), a conservative black co-worker who only likes church music. The young thesps play their characters, interestingly, as socially inept, with varying levels of self-assertion and intellectual pretension. Magaro’s Doug, maturing in fits and starts, contrasts strikingly with Gandolfini’s brilliant turn as a father undergoing a late-blooming epiphany. Chase often matches and sometimes even betters Cameron Crowe or Floyd Mutrux in granting present-tense immediacy to the rock ‘n’ roll on the soundtrack, never smothering it with hindsight. In this endeavor, he was undoubtedly greatly assisted by exec producer/music supervisor Steven Van Zandt. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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REVIEW: David Chase Rocks The ’60s In Dynamic, Witty ‘Not Fade Away’

HOLLYWOOD.TV Celebrity GPS — Happy 420!!

http://www.youtube.com/v/iPhGQ9o1cMc?f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

It’s HOLLYWOOD.TV Celebrity GPS! And while you’re celebrating 4/20, take a look at this! This episode features Shenae Grimes, who’s visibly quite pleased about her new boyfriend, Reese Witherspoon, who unlike General Electric, paid her taxes, Mallika Sherawat, fresh from Bollywood and visiting Perez Hilton before jetting off to Cannes for her latest film premiere, godfather James Gandolfini, who’s momentarily locked out of his ride, and Ben Stiller, fresh out of House of Blues. “Glamour Zombie” by Brandon Hilton.

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HOLLYWOOD.TV Celebrity GPS — Happy 420!!

TMZ Live: Gandolfini, Hilton, and Justin Bieber

Filed under: James Gandolfini , Paris Hilton , Justin Bieber , Oksana Grigorieva , Mel Gibson , TMZ Live , Celebrity Justice , Music We took your questions on everything — including James Gandolfini ‘s truck getting impounded, Paris Hilton being detained in Japan, and Justin Bieber ‘s make-out session in the backseat of a Honda. Plus: Oksana Grigorieva and Mel Gibson ‘s email… Read more

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TMZ Live: Gandolfini, Hilton, and Justin Bieber

James Gandolfini’s Truck Impounded

Filed under: James Gandolfini , Celebrity Justice James Gandolfini had to bum a ride with a friend this AM, after cops impounded his car because Mr. G was driving on a suspended license. Law enforcement sources tell us Gandolfini was pulled over for a traffic violation while cruising through the… Read more

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James Gandolfini’s Truck Impounded