Tag Archives: lincoln-center

Hillary Rodham Clinton leaving the Time 100 Gala

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Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Hillary Clinton visited the Time 100 Gala at the Lincoln Center in New York last night. The former First Lady took in the event, which celebrates the magazine’s annual “100 Most Influential People in the World” list.

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Hillary Rodham Clinton leaving the Time 100 Gala

Hilary Clinton Departs ‘Women in the World’ Summit

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Hilary Clinton and Chelsea Clinton depart the prestigious ‘Women in the World’ Summit held at the David H. Koch theater at Lincoln Center in New York City. ‘Like’ us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/hollywoodtv!

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Hilary Clinton Departs ‘Women in the World’ Summit

Hey NYC! Review Your Favorite Shakespeare Film in 10 Words, Win Tickets to a Special Screening of Shakespeare High

Contest time again! And while our L.A. squad had all the fun last time around, today I’m pleased to offer readers in and around New York City a chance to check out a nifty new doc tying the Bard, cutthroat competition and the winsome likes of Kevin Spacey and Richard Dreyfuss together in a potent nonfiction blend. If you’ve got this Friday night free and are feeling creative and/or lucky, read on to win a pair of tickets to Shakespeare High . The festival favorite makes its theatrical debut this weekend at Lincoln Center’s Howard Gilman Theater, with director Alex Rokaru and several of the film’s young actors in attendance. Check out the trailer: To win a pair of tickets to the screening this Friday, March 9 at 6 p.m. , all you have to do is write a 10-word review — no more, no less — of your favorite Shakespeare screen adaptation . For example:

REVIEW: There’s Too Much Being and Not Enough Doing in Being Flynn

Though it’s always a bad idea to review a director’s intentions at the expense of the actual results, there’s something about Paul Weitz’s movies that makes you want to cut him a little extra slack. Weitz, with his brother Chris, was one-half of the directing team that brought us About a Boy (an affecting and well-crafted adaptation of Nick Hornby’s novel), as well as American Pie (which, despite its reputation as a teen raunchfest, was surprisingly in tune with the complexities of sexual relationships as they’re experienced by young women). The pictures Weitz has directed on his own have been either unjustly overlooked (as in the case of the freewheeling satire American Dreamz ) or justifiably lambasted (there’s not much to say about the icky gun-for-hire vehicle Little Fockers ). But when Weitz is at his best, his films show an easygoing open-heartedness that more technically gifted directors – we’re looking at you, Alexander Payne – can’t even begin to muster. There may not be a single misanthropic bone in his body. Which is a way of saying that the vibe of Weitz’s latest, Being Flynn, may have a greater impact than the sum of its parts. Jonathan Flynn (Robert De Niro) is an aging, crabby, racist nutter of a cab driver who’s convinced he’s the most brilliant (undiscovered) writer of his time: He’s got a multi-volume opus — with the rather ominously intriguing title “The Button Man” – stored away in his jam-packed rat’s cubby of an apartment. His son, Nick (Paul Dano), is also an aspiring writer, and he too is struggling to understand exactly how that shapes his identity. But Jonathan and Nick must suffer their respective delusions and anxieties separately: They’ve been estranged for as long as Nick can remember, and he’s been raised by his hard-working, long-suffering mother (Julianne Moore, whose occasional appearances in the angst-ridden narrative are like small puffs of ocean air; how a woman can believably play a character who’s working two exhausting jobs and still look so radiant is beyond me). Nick and Jonathan reconnect when Jonathan tracks him down to ask for help: He needs Nick to help him move his stuff into a storage facility after he’s evicted from his apartment. (The offense: He went after a noisy neighbor with a heavy stick outfitted with two sharp nails, the first of several Travis Bickle-style warning signs that are played more for laughs than for suspense.) By this time the aimless Nick has begun working at a homeless shelter, at the urging of a fetching new female acquaintance, Denise (Olivia Thirlby, who gives some nicely chiseled contours to a rather shapeless role). Imagine his surprise when Pops shows up at the shelter, having lost his cabbie’s license thanks in part to his irrepressible irascibility. The previously nebulous relationship between Nick and Jonathan takes a more concrete form almost immediately, and it isn’t pretty. Being Flynn isn’t sure what it wants to be about: We get lots of voice-over from Dano’s Nick, musing painfully about what it means to be a writer, or even just a maybe-writer, while also reflecting on the nature of the barely-there relationship he has with his father. Meanwhile, Jonathan goes further and further off the deep end, acting more unlikable (not to mention certifiable) before, at the end, being redeemed by a last-minute bout of semi-benevolent winkling and twinkling. The script was adapted by Weitz from Nick Flynn’s Another Bullshit Night in Suck City: A Memoir , and as he’s shaped the material for the screen, he’s made sure that Nick’s youthful disaffection and befuddlement comes through loud and clear. That may be too much of a bad thing, and Dano drifts through it all like a moon-faced naïf; he’s either giving a really subtle performance, or he’s doing absolutely nothing – it’s hard to tell. The moody, aimless, self-absorbed voice-overs he’s given don’t help much, though it is possible to feel the occasional tug of sympathy for Nick: Dano has the flat, impassive face of a doll from a Brothers Quay animation, but every once in a while, a shadow of confused pain drifts visibly across it. Jonathan is a tougher case: The more he misbehaves, the harder it is to like him, and although De Niro plays the role with the right degree of mischievous menace, his shtick wears thin rather rapidly. This is a character who’s so much larger than life that he’s barely equipped to live it: He’s been a legend in his own mind for so long that he can barely conceive of any effect he might have on other people. De Niro bites into the role with gusto, but that makes it all the more wearisome to watch. You want Nick and Jonathan to find their way toward that necessary connection, but you also dread getting there: That means these two personalities, one rather indistinct and the other far too big for the britches of real life, will have to meet somewhere in the middle, and you just know it’s going to be anticlimactic. And sure enough, it is. Yet there’s no doubt that Being Flynn is an attempt at something painful and genuine – the movie itself yearns to make a connection, even if it can’t quite locate the most effective channels. Some of its problems may be rooted in the tone as dictated by the source material: At one point Nick, thinking aloud in voice-over about the non-relationship he has with his father, wonders if they’ll find each other if Nick just stays in one place. “But what if both of you are lost and you both end up in the same place, waiting,” he says aloud, giving in to that kind of circular nonthinking that writers, as they’re depicted on-screen, so often indulge in. Maybe if Nick did less thinking out loud, and if Jonathan had fewer lovable-loose-cannon moments, Being Flynn would be a more direct, more effective picture. As it is, it’s a movie that’s always thinking out loud, leaving us waiting, and waiting, for it to take action. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: There’s Too Much Being and Not Enough Doing in Being Flynn

Happy 18th Birthday, Justin Bieber! Let’s Predict His Acting Future

Usually we celebrate birthdays ’round these parts with a look at someone’s best screen work. But pop icon Justin Bieber has only a guest turn on CSI and his hit concert doc Justin Bieber: Never Say Never under his newly notched cinematic belt — so far. Still, he’s got plans to break into acting with a handful of projects on the horizon, so in honor of the Biebster’s 18th birthday, let’s predict what the future may hold for the doe-eyed Canadian crooner as he adds “actor” to his resume in earnest. As far as musicians-turned-actors go, the transition certainly can be made, and well; just look at examples from recent generations of teen idols-turned-thespians like Justin Timberlake , Ryan Gosling , and Mark (-y Mark) Wahlberg . After getting their respective starts by singing and dancing their way into the hearts of their fans (or, in the case of Wahlberg, rapping and dancing his way out of his pants for Calvin Klein), each took a different route to gain full-fledged respect as an actor. Timberlake enjoyed early fame as the youngest member of boy band ‘N SYNC before testing the waters of acting with the 2000 ABC telefilm Model Behavior , which any good ‘N SYNC fan watched because it was Justin Timberlake Acting. Eventually he graduated to bolder choices in projects like Alpha Dog and Black Snake Moan , which declared his more serious acting aspirations, and thank goodness; he’s much more interesting to watch these days even if every Social Network is balanced out by a Yogi Bear , In Time , Bad Teacher , or Friends with Benefits . Gosling spent his youth alongside (and in the shadow of) Timberlake on The Mickey Mouse Club , a mop-topped Canadian R&B enthusiast who didn’t quite go on to achieve the pop glory of the more successful of his peers. So he earned his stripes the old-fashioned way: At first on television in Young Hercules , then by going for braver roles in films like The Believer , which established Gosling’s more indie-leaning tastes. Wahlberg, meanwhile, shed his “Marky Mark” moniker as he pursued a serious acting career in the early-to-mid ’90s. After appearing in supporting roles that tapped into his natural charisma in Renaissance Man and The Basketball Diaries , he dared to play bad in Fear and established himself by playing porn star Dirk Diggler in Boogie Nights . So Bieber has no shortage of role models to mold his burgeoning acting career after; he’s already got a starring feature project cooking with Wahlberg and may team up with Ashton Kutcher for a comedy. He’s already too famous to follow in Gosling’s footsteps — the Drive star’s trajectory was borne of necessity rather than celebrity — but he could certainly take a cue from Gosling’s choices. Then again, Bieber’s got his brand and his fans to consider; how best can he transition into an acting career (not to mention young adulthood) while the world watches, and while he’s still making more records that need selling? That’s not to say anyone’s ready to see angel-faced Bieber playing thugs, evil boyfriends, neo-Nazis, or porn stars. (Just yet.) But I’d like to think he’d like to, one day. His stint on CSI playing a doomed serial bomber hinted at a desire to play against his pop persona. Show us more darkness, oh cherubic one! Use that magic hair for evil! I’m hoping the day comes when I can watch Bieber act and forget he’s Bieber — that he can make us Belieb, for real.

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Happy 18th Birthday, Justin Bieber! Let’s Predict His Acting Future

Old Racists, Ex-Colleagues Among Harvey Weinstein’s Latest Enemies

What week for Harvey Weinstein: Win a truckload of Oscars on Sunday, re-up on a PR war with the MPAA on Tuesday, and then today — as his company’s other notable French import Intouchables prepares for its U.S. premiere in New York City — start a trans-Atlantic flame war with France’s most infamously racist old coot. It’s like Linsanity, but for Hollywood megalomaniacs! Weinsanity! And there’s more . First though, here’s the notorious, ultra-conservative French nationalist and political firebrand asshole Jean-Marie Le Pen weighing in on Intouchables , the blockbuster buddy flick about (per a Weinstein Co. statement) “a wealthy, physically disabled risk taker, the picture of established French nobility, who lost his wife in an accident and whose world is turned upside down when he hires a young, good-humored, black Muslim ex-con as his caretaker.” I don’t know how one exclaims, ” Say whaaaa? ” in French, but it probably sounds something like this: That aforementioned Weinstein Company statement translates: “France is like this handicapped person stuck in this wheelchair, and we are going to have to wait for the help of these suburb youngsters and the immigration in general. I don’t subscribe to this point of view. It’s a movie, a novel. And we have to take it that way and not like an example for the future. It would be a disaster if France would find itself in the same situation as this poor handicapped person.” On the one hand, this is just Le Pen being Le Pen. Big deal. On the other, check out Harvey being Harvey — i.e. waiting a full month after the interview aired (he acquired Intouchables ‘ distribution and English-language remake rights last summer) to lay into the easiest, fattest target imaginable on his film’s behalf: “It’s not a surprise to hear such an intolerant statement from the man who founded and was president of the extreme-right, xenophobic, racist National Front party. Le Pen made a repulsive statement, representing a bigoted world view. And right now, Jean-Marie’s daughter, Marine Le Pen, is running for president of France as the leader of the National Front party — and she is fourth in the polls with almost 16% of the population intending to vote for her. That’s frightening to me, and I think it’s important to speak up and speak out against Le Pen and his ideas. That’s why I’m proud to bring THE INTOUCHABLES to American audiences. This movie is based on a true story, and it’s a funny, extremely entertaining illustration of how simple human connection trounces socioeconomic, religious and racial divides.” Perfect . Did I mention Intouchables premieres this evening as the Opening Night film of Lincoln Center’s prestigious Rendez-Vous with French Cinema series and opens May 25 in limited release? Ahem. Meanwhile, all of Harvey’s recent protesting-too-much has received one of its most devastating rebuttals to date from Mark Lipsky, the former indie exec turned filmmaker who got his start in the Weinsteins’ Miramax regime. That experience yielded today’s extraordinary takedown at indieWIRE , where Lipsky further exposed Harvey’s hypocritical, gratuitously self-serving and exploitative handling of his documentary Bully : I hate bullying and always have. I also have an abiding contempt for hypocrisy. If Harvey has, in fact, reformed, he needs to come out and say so publicly. He needs to own his past behavior, admit to his addiction – bullying is an addiction, after all, both to power and dominance – and pledge to never bully anyone again. If he’s looking for ink and controversy (and he certainly is) there’s no more honest or powerful way for him and the film to get it. Harvey, you have a rare opportunity with Bully to actually move the needle and leave the world a better place. I believe that you’d like to see bullying stop. I believe that you “want every child, parent, and educator in America to see “Bully,” and not just for the boxoffice. So get up on that incredibly high horse of yours and use that bully pulpit to assure children, parents and educators everywhere that if you can reform, anyone can. Light a fire, Harvey, for every kid that’s ever bullied someone and for every parent who taught them how. Ouch. Your move, Harvey. Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Old Racists, Ex-Colleagues Among Harvey Weinstein’s Latest Enemies

New York Fashion Week Debuts Styles For All Fashionistas

MTV News talks to Whitney Port and other designers to find the latest trends that appeal to all fashion personalities. By Christina Garibaldi Whitney Port presents her collection during New York Fashion Week 2012 Photo: Getty Images NEW YORK — Fall Fashion Week took over New York City as the top designers showed off their collections for the Fall/Winter 2012 season. Thousands of fashionistas descended upon Lincoln Center to get a glimpse of what will be hot for fall, but MTV News was able to give you a front-row seat to all the action. All week long, we learned about the hottest trends for the fall, and depending on what your fashion personality may be, we have found the perfect look for you. Carefree And Laid-Back Fashionista If you are more a laid-back girl who likes to glam it up every now and then, we suggest taking a look at Whitney Port’s line , Whitney Eve . The former “The City” star, who told MTV News she was “pretty nervous” about showing her line for the first time as a solo designer, mixed traditional yet fun dresses with unique patterns, perfectly translating her kaleidoscope inspiration for the collection. “This line is obviously really near and dear to my heart, I’ve been working on it for quite some time,” Port told MTV News backstage at her show. “It’s really reflective of my aesthetic, it’s kind of that easy Los Angeles girl mixed with like the little funky streety vibe of New York. [There are] really fun prints, great embellishments, lots of texture. Glitter And Glam Fashionista If you love a little glitter and glam in your wardrobe (what girl doesn’t?) then check out Alice + Olivia . Worn by celebrities like Kim Kardashian, Selena Gomez and Jessica Alba , designer Stacey Bendet mixed bold colors with sequins and leather, making this line not only incredibly fashionable, but also extremely wearable. “The thing for this season was vixen Lolita character,” Bendet told MTV News about the inspiration behind her collection. “The colors are really rich. It’s sort of an interesting palate of taking these bright but rich colors and mixing it with black, white and browns in an autumnal kind of way, so it feels sort of happy, but rich and fresh. It makes you smile.” Futuristic Fashionista If you are looking to stand out in a crowd, take a peek at Michelle Smith’s collection, Milly . Her 2012 fall collection showed off a futuristic flare, catching everyone’s eye with her choice of vibrant colors of pink, greens and cobalt blue, which added a dramatic pop to her array of dresses, coats and skirts. “I started with very technological fabrics, bounded double wools, textured tweeds a lot of lamination techniques,” Smith said. “Very modern, futuristic fabrics, but they’re cut in more traditionally classic couture silhouettes.” To get a full recap of 2012 New York Fashion Week, check out MTV Style.

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New York Fashion Week Debuts Styles For All Fashionistas

Emerson Runway Show at Fall 2012 Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week

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Emerson held it’s fashion show at The Studio at Lincoln Center in New York City. The show was for the Fall 2012 Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week and Hollywood.TV was there to capture all the fashion action and designer Jackie Fraser-Swan give a bow. “Like” us on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Emerson Runway Show at Fall 2012 Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week

Nicholas Kunz, Christoper Kunz, Eric West, Heather Schmid at Nicholas K Fashion Show

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Nicholas Kunz, Christoper Kunz, Eric West, and Heather Schmid all attended the Nicholas K Fashion Show. The fashion show was held at The Studio at Lincoln Center for the Fall 2012 Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week! “Like” us on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Nicholas Kunz, Christoper Kunz, Eric West, Heather Schmid at Nicholas K Fashion Show

Camilla Belle Fancies Up Her Cleavage

I can’t remember where I know this Camilla Belle beauty from, probably from something that involved a sexy little bikini, but the woman is one hell of a stunner so I had to post her with her clothes on. Here she is looking gorgeous at that Lincoln Center event I will never ever get invited to. Ever! Not that I care, as long as I get to look at fancy cleavage like what Camilla is putting on display here, I’m good.