Tag Archives: hollywood-gossip

DWTS Recap Performances: Nicole Scherzinger- Argentine Tango and Cha Cha Cha

If you thought Nicole Scherzinger didn’t have a very good chance at grabbing the Dancing With The Stars Mirror Ball Trophy, then you need to check out her performance last night. She performed an Argentine Tango that could put some professional dancers to shame and received a perfect 30. She also performed a Prince inspired Cha Cha Cha and was amazing Check it!

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DWTS Recap Performances: Nicole Scherzinger- Argentine Tango and Cha Cha Cha

Red Carpet Arrivals, Show and Backstage: World Music Awards in Monte Carlo

The World Music Awards are just underway in Monte Carlo with lots of great photos from the arrivals, the show, performances and backstage in the press rooom. Check out Jennifer Lopez, Ludacris, Akon, Pharrell, Melody Thornton, Ian Somerhadler, Kelly Rowland, and many more.. Check back often as more photos will be updated. Oh Jennifer don’t hurt’em. Hayden Panettiere looks gorgeous. Pop The Top For More… Jennifer wearing the hell out that dress… Melody Thornton looked gorgeous Deborah Cox Ludacris and his lovely lady. Paris Hilton looks lovely. Jennifer Lopez looking like a cheetah… The Vampire Diaries Ian Somerhadler looking good. Jennifer is wearing some kind of outfit. Kelly Rowland and Robert Cavalli Akon on stage. Deborah Cox Kelly Rowland performed. Ludacris and his girlfriend looking so cute. Jennifer Lopez gets sexy on stage. Pharrell Akon Credit:Wire Image

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Red Carpet Arrivals, Show and Backstage: World Music Awards in Monte Carlo

Watch: Lady Gaga Offers Sneak Peek at ‘Alejandro’ Music Video

HOLLYWOOD,

Lady Gaga Discusses Lupus Test, Michael Jackson Collaboration with Larry King

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Lady Gaga is opening up about her recent health issues. read more

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Lady Gaga Discusses Lupus Test, Michael Jackson Collaboration with Larry King

Eva Longoria Parker Loves Spoiling Husband Tony Parker

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Eva

Miley Cyrus Dishes on Hating ‘Glee,’ Her New Album

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Miley Cyrus is no Gleek. The 17-year-old teen star has zero interest in the hit Fox show, which featured her song, “The

Screen Legend Dennis Hopper Dead at 74

LOS ANGELES — Dennis Hopper, the Hollywood icon whose career included the 1969 film classic Easy Rider , has died. He was 74. The screen legend, who had been battling prostate cancer, died Saturday morning at his Venice home, surrounded by friends and family, family friend Alex Hitz told the Associated Press. During his distinguished career, Hopper received Oscar nominations for both Easy Rider (which he also directed and co-wrote) and Hoosiers . Other notable movie credits include Rebel Without a Cause , Apocalypse Now and Blue Velvet . Easy Rider was never a motorcycle movie to me,” he said in 2009. “A lot of it was about politically what was going on in the country.” read more

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Screen Legend Dennis Hopper Dead at 74

‘Diff’rent Strokes’ Star Gary Coleman Dies at 42‎

SALT

‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’ Movie Preview

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Walt Disney Pictures and Jerry Bruckheimer Films present Prince of Persia: the Sands of Time , an epic action-adventure set in the mystical lands of Persia. read more

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‘Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time’ Movie Preview

Gary Coleman Dead at 42 Brain Hemorrhage

Gary Coleman, 42 , the diminutive, wisecracking child star of the sitcom “Diff’rent Strokes,” whose adult life collapsed into a tabloid calamity, died Friday at a Utah hospital from a brain hemorrhage.

Gary Coleman dead
His brother-in-law told the celebrity gossip site TMZ.com that Mr. Coleman had fallen and injured his head at the actor’s home in Santaquin, Utah.

Mr. Coleman was 10 when he stepped into the national spotlight in 1978, playing the witty, lovable Arnold Jackson on NBC’s “Diff’rent Strokes.” The role was written for him and made Mr. Coleman the best-known child star on television for the eight years the hit comedy was on the air.

He played one of two orphaned African American brothers adopted by a white Manhattan millionaire after their mother — the rich man’s maid — had died. The show became a comedic showcase for Mr. Coleman, who looked younger than his actual age because his growth had been stunted by a congenital kidney condition.

On the set, he proved to be a thorough professional who could memorize his dialogue in a single reading and deliver it with perfect timing. His signature line, directed toward his brother Willis, played by Todd Bridges, became a nationwide catch phrase: “What’chu talkin’ ’bout, Willis?

“The true star of the show is 10-year old Gary Coleman as 8-year-old Arnold,” The Washington Post’s Tom Shales wrote when the show premiered, calling Mr. Coleman “a most unusual tot with a strikingly professional comic delivery.”

Newsweek pronounced him “NBC’s Littlest Big Man” and “possibly the most original vid-kid since Howdy Doody.”

First lady Nancy Reagan appeared on “Diff’rent Strokes” in 1983 to make an anti-drug pitch, and Mr. Coleman had his own Saturday morning cartoon show. As a guest on “The Tonight Show,” Mr. Coleman managed to upstage Johnny Carson, who jokingly asked if he wanted to take over the rest of the show.

“With all the laughing and cheering out there,” he replied, “quite possibly.”

As Mr. Coleman’s salary rose from $1,500 to $70,000 an episode, his fragile health continued to deteriorate. He had undergone two kidney transplants by the time he was 14, and he received daily dialysis while taping “Diff’rent Strokes.”

When the show was canceled in 1986, he was 18, and both of his kidneys had failed. He had amassed a personal fortune estimated at $18 million, but his life quickly devolved into a sorry spectacle of lawsuits, countersuits, recriminations and hurt feelings.

He sued his parents and advisers for stealing money from trust funds meant to support him as he grew older. In court, his parents charged that Mr. Coleman had been brainwashed by a manager and was not competent to take care of his affairs. In the end, Mr. Coleman won a $1.28 settlement, but his relationship with his parents was all but fractured.

At 4-feet-8 and now an adult, Mr. Coleman was becoming increasingly embittered and unemployable. He found occasional work in film and TV, but mostly he watched his money slip through his hands. At one point, his father said, Mr. Coleman tried to run him over with a car.

“Gary Coleman’s rage,” as a Los Angeles Times article bluntly put it, “is the direct result of being pampered, badgered and obliged to keep on being a cute freak for hire.”

By the late 1990s, his life was crashing in a sad, gossip-fueled tailspin. One of his fellow child stars on “Diff’rent Strokes,” Dana Plato, died of a drug overdose. Bridges was arrested for drug violations and for shooting a man.

Mr. Coleman had sold off many of his possessions and was working as a security guard at a Los Angeles mall in 1999 when a woman recognized him and asked for an autograph. They got into an argument, exchanged blows and ended up in court, where a tearful Mr. Coleman pleaded no contest to battery.

Describing his encounter with the 200-pound woman, he reportedly said, “I’m 4-foot, 8-inches, 86 pounds of nothing.”

Gary Wayne Coleman was born Feb. 8, 1968, in Zion, Ill., and was adopted as an infant. His kidney disease was diagnosed early on, and he had his first transplant at 5.

He began modeling for a local store at 7 and began to appear in TV commercials. A talent scout recommended him to producer Norman Lear, who cast him in episodes of “Good Times” and “The Jeffersons.” Recognizing Mr. Coleman’s appeal, Lear and his production team designed “Diff’rent Strokes” around him.

In later years, Mr. Coleman felt trapped by his early fame and yearned to find a dramatic role to play as an adult. He appeared on a celebrity dating show, worked as a corporate pitchman and wrote an online advice column. In 2003, while making a half-serious run for California governor, he admitted that he was still a virgin. He became such a source of tabloid fodder that he was parodied in the Tony Award-winning musical “Avenue Q.”

In August 2007, he secretly married 22-year-old Shannon Price and settled in Utah. Nine months later, they appeared on the TV show “Divorce Court” apparently trying to work out a public reconciliation. Mr. Coleman and his wife were arrested several times for disorderly conduct after arguments and, in January 2010, he was jailed overnight for domestic violence.

Besides his wife, survivors include his parents, W.G. Coleman and Edmonia Sue Coleman of Zion.

“Family never meant anything to me,” Mr. Coleman said in 2003, “but a whole lot of trouble that I don’t need.”