Remaining three celebrities — William Levy, Katherine Jenkins and Donald Driver — will continue competing for mirror ball trophy next week. By Kelley L. Carter Maria Menounos and Derek Hough on “Dancing With the Stars” Photo: ABC The truth is, anyone’s name could have been called to head home from ABC’s hit show “Dancing With the Stars” on Tuesday night and it would have been a shock. On Monday night, most of the contestants scored well with the judges. Although opera singer Katherine Jenkins has been a top performer on the show all season, she made a few missteps in one of her Monday night performances — and subsequently beat herself up about it. So folks may not have been too surprised to hear her name called as this week’s eliminated dancer. Instead, it was one of the night’s top scorers who got the boot. It ultimately came down to TV journalist Maria Menounos and her partner Derek Hough and NFL star Donald Driver and his partner Peta Murgatroyd. Menounos was the one to go, despite having a near-perfect score on Monday night. The judges salivated over the Argentine tango she performed as her first dance, rewarding her with perfect 10s all around. For her second performance, she took on the jive, and the judges actually named her the winner of the night — and possibly the competition itself. When her name was called Tuesday night, Menounos said, “I learned so many things — how strong I was, to persevere … I want to thank everyone here. I want to thank Derek and my family and everyone who voted for us.” Next week, the remaining three celebrities — Latin heartthrob William Levy and his partner Cheryl Burke, Driver and Murgatroyd, and Jenkins and Mark Ballas will compete for the mirror ball trophy.
Remaining three celebrities — William Levy, Katherine Jenkins and Donald Driver — will continue competing for mirror ball trophy next week. By Kelley L. Carter Maria Menounos and Derek Hough on “Dancing With the Stars” Photo: ABC The truth is, anyone’s name could have been called to head home from ABC’s hit show “Dancing With the Stars” on Tuesday night and it would have been a shock. On Monday night, most of the contestants scored well with the judges. Although opera singer Katherine Jenkins has been a top performer on the show all season, she made a few missteps in one of her Monday night performances — and subsequently beat herself up about it. So folks may not have been too surprised to hear her name called as this week’s eliminated dancer. Instead, it was one of the night’s top scorers who got the boot. It ultimately came down to TV journalist Maria Menounos and her partner Derek Hough and NFL star Donald Driver and his partner Peta Murgatroyd. Menounos was the one to go, despite having a near-perfect score on Monday night. The judges salivated over the Argentine tango she performed as her first dance, rewarding her with perfect 10s all around. For her second performance, she took on the jive, and the judges actually named her the winner of the night — and possibly the competition itself. When her name was called Tuesday night, Menounos said, “I learned so many things — how strong I was, to persevere … I want to thank everyone here. I want to thank Derek and my family and everyone who voted for us.” Next week, the remaining three celebrities — Latin heartthrob William Levy and his partner Cheryl Burke, Driver and Murgatroyd, and Jenkins and Mark Ballas will compete for the mirror ball trophy.
Pop singer had to participate in a dance-off with Jaleel White before getting the bad news. By Kelley L. Carter Karina Smirnoff and Gavin DeGraw on “Dancing With the Stars” Photo: ABC The savvy producers at ABC’s hit reality dance competition switched things up for fans during Tuesday night’s “Dancing With the Stars” elimination show. Instead of making fans sweat it out until the final minute to find out which celebrity dancer and his/her professional partner would be given the boot based on a combination of judges’ scores and fan votes, they turned the tables a bit. The bottom two couples — pop singer Gavin DeGraw and his partner Karina Smirnoff and childhood actor Jaleel White and his partner Kym Johnson — had to duke it out on the dance floor. The couples danced side by side in a duel of cha-chas, with the judges having the final say about who would be saved and who would be going home. In the end, it really wasn’t much of a shocker. DeGraw was told he’d danced his last dance on the show — he’d been the bottom scorer on Monday night, as was pretty much the case since the competition began. Monday night’s theme was Latin night, and his samba failed to impress the judges. That said, the judges told DeGraw that they based their decision solely on the dance he turned in Tuesday night, however, and not what he’d done in previous performances. “It’s been amazing to be part of the show,” DeGraw said after learning that he’d be going home, adding that Smirnoff was a great mentor. Next week, the celebrities take on Motown week.
Do you recognize these cakes? You should, they belong to a model famous for keeping up her physique past an age when most supermodels peak… Naomi Campbell and boyfriend Vlad were spotted heading back to her hotel in Miami after taking a swim. FameFlynetPictures More On Bossip! Beyonce Releases NEVER SEEN VIDEO EVIDENCE OF PREGNANCY And “4-Year Anniversary To Jay-Z” Never Seen Pictures (20-Pics) [Video] Thickly Thick Goodness: Women That Looked Better When They Had The Extra Weight You Mad?? Bossip Confirms That Reggie Bush Has Been Thirsting For Kimmy’s Cakes For 6 Months, Bitter That She Chose Kanye Over Him! [+ Pics Of Kim And Kanye Today!] All Hail Sisqó! Celebrities Caught Out And About Rocking Thong Th-Thong Thong Thongs!
Jennifer Lawrence did not feel any hunger for love on Valentine’s Day. Or maybe she did, but it was satisfied. Okay, we’re just gonna stop. The star of The Hunger Games film adaptation, 21, was photographed sharing passionate kisses with her British beau Nicholas Hoult, 22, on Wednesday. The casually dressed pair, who co-starred together in X-Men: First Class , exchanged their post-Valentine’s Day PDA in L.A., then went for a stroll: Lawrence and her man, who’s currently starring in Skins , will have plenty to celebrate March 23 when her highly anticipated action film hits theaters. It’s not too late to win free tickets to the premiere of the movie event from Lionsgate and our partner site, Movie Fanatic! Just follow the link to enter. [Photo: Pacific Coast News]
Looker proprietor and all-around swell guy Lawrence Levi braved last night’s New York Film Critic’s Circle Awards so you (read: I) didn’t have to, submitting to Twitter one of the juicier exchanges overheard on a night when anecdotal blips rained down like thumbs at an Adam Sandler flick. Perhaps obviously — despite the attendance of such luminaries as Brad Pitt, Robert De Niro and others — we turn the spotlight to contrarian messiah Armond White, in conversation with Best Supporting Actor award-winner Albert Brooks about a certain recently laid-off Village Voice institution : At NY Film Critics Circle awards dinner, I overheard Albert Brooks ask Armond White, “Is J. Hoberman here?” White replied, “That jackass.” Tue Jan 10 04:17:19 via web Lawrence Levi lawlevnyc Yowza! I mean, at least this year White downgraded from ” That racist ,” but… Anyway. This guy! [ @lawlevnyc ]
When James Franco took to the blogosphere to pledge his awards season support for Rise of the Planet of the Apes co-star Andy Serkis and his performance-captured turn in the film, Serkis was the one person who probably appreciated the gesture most, precisely because it did what he couldn’t do himself: Provide an argument in favor the art of performance capture as a mode of legitimate acting, from an outsider’s perspective. Serkis rang Movieline to chat and expressed appreciation for Franco’s open letter. “I thought it was extraordinarily bold and honest, and quite frankly I was thrilled that James had written it,” Serkis told Movieline. “It just goes to show that an actor who is in pursuit of creating drama isn’t prejudiced against live-action or performance capture or any method of performing,” Serkis continued. “He sees it as one thing.” In his open letter, Franco extolled Serkis’s turn as Caesar the chimpanzee as the heart and soul of Rise of the Planet of the Apes . “There is no question that [Serkis’s] character arc is much more dynamic and fascinating…” he wrote, calling for Serkis to get awards recognition “for the innovative artist that he is.” Franco admitted to being hesitant about what performance capture meant for the future of acting before he realized, acting opposite Serkis in Apes , that the medium is an enhancement tool rather than one that threatens to replace human actors with digital ones. “Performance Capture actually allows actors to work opposite each other in more traditional ways, meaning that the actors get to interact with each other and look into each others’ eyes,” he wrote. Beneath the “digital make-up” provided by WETA’s artists, according to Franco, “the thing that was so compelling about that film came from Andy, and the way he rendered that soul is of equal importance, if not more important than the photo realistic surface of the character.” Having a non-performance capture actor speak in support of the emerging craft gives the “Serkis for Oscar” campaign a key proponent – one who’s not necessarily invested in the medium, or in a Serkis Oscar nomination, who can speak to the greater benefit of the technology. “We’ve talked about it a lot, and he totally gets it,” said Serkis. “He is one of the first actors who have been bold enough to really state, and in such a humble way, that the weight of the movie lies in Caesar’s hands. I thought it was incredibly articulate.” Serkis continued: “Sometimes for me it’s very difficult because sometimes it sounds like I’m tub-thumping, like I’m the sort of the spokesperson for performance capture, and to have another actor lend their voice in such an articulate way means a lot — not only to me, but to the acting profession. Because part of the problem in accepting performance capture as acting is borne out of the fear and unknowing of what the process is, and to have that explained by a fellow actor is terrific.” The actor’s first performance capture role came in Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings , almost by happenstance, when what was originally intended to be a voice performance for the role of Gollum inspired Jackson to try filming Serkis in the character; the resulting experiment paid off handsomely for both Serkis and the film, and the actor went on to blaze a trail with the quickly advancing technology in films like Jackson’s King Kong , Steven Spielberg’s The Adventures of Tintin , and the forthcoming The Hobbit . But Serkis was a traditional live-action actor long before Gollum, and he still takes on live-action roles when he’s not involved in various WETA -aided projects with colleague Peter Jackson and Co. (See: Mike Leigh’s Topsy-Turvy , Michael Winterbottom’s 24 Hour Party People , and Tom Hooper’s Longford , which earned him BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations.) And to Serkis, nothing about his process as an actor is any different, whether he’s suited up in mo-cap wear or in a character’s tangible costume. “In the 11 years that I’ve been involved in it, I’ve never drawn any distinction in the acting process between live-action acting and performance capture acting,” Serkis said. “In fact, performance capture acting is merely a misnomer; ‘performance capture’ is more of a technology, it’s a set of cameras that record an actor’s performance in a slightly different way to a 35mm camera or a digital camera recording a live action actor’s performance. But in terms of the actor process — getting into character, working on a scene with the director, engaging with other actors and finding the drama within a scene — on day to day basis on set, it’s exactly the same.” So how much will a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination matter to Serkis and Co., given that their awards campaigning has, in the least, advanced the conversation and challenged preconceptions that have historically reduced performance capture to the wayside? If Serkis prompts his fellow actors and the Academy members to rethink the medium as legitimate acting, will that be enough? “I think, unfortunately we live in a world whereby we have to set a precedent,” Serkis admitted, addressing his Apes campaign. “It’s the way people think, and it sets a precedent to say ‘This is acting, and this goes into an acting category’ — then that shows a marked understanding of what it is. It’s not just about awards, no, of course not. For myself what’s most important is that actors begin to engage with it, and with the process of using it, and invest in it… I think it’s hugely important to keep talking about it, but also to have it recognized for what it is — which is, at the end of the day from an acting point of view, it is no more than acting.” Stay tuned for Movieline’s full interview with Serkis, discussing Apes ’s Oscar hopes, The Hobbit , and the struggle to legitimize performance-capture acting, later this week. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
In between all the trenchant dog interviews and Taiwanese Star Wars news animations you’re likely to find at Movieline on any given day, a nagging question no doubt persists: Where can I find the most up-to-the-minute entertainment news videos on the Web? I’ve got not only your answer, but at least one shiny, highly desirable reason to check it out. First things first: Movieline’s parent company PMC is excited to announce the launch of our partner brand, ENTV , on YouTube! In addition to featuring breaking news from this site and its siblings Deadline, HollywoodLife, and TVLine, ENTV will also feature some of your favorite Movieline talent, YouTube movie reviewers and more. But wait! Subscribe to the ENTV YouTube channel now and you will be automatically entered to win an iPad 2! Say whaaaa? Yes, an iPad 2 — Apple’s top-of-the-line tablet on which you can keep abreast of ENTV, Movieline and the rest of the PMC family wherever you go. As an iPad owner, let me just say I use mine every day, it is the future you keep hearing about, and it makes a great camping plate in a pinch. Rules are available in this convenient PDF file , and once again, you can (and should) subscribe to ENTV right here . Good luck!
Watch out, TV waifs, because the curvy girls are taking over. First Kat Dennings struck sitcom gold with 2 Broke Girls , and now her partner in pneumatics, a newly slimmed-down (but still fantastically stacked) Sara Rue , is looking to do the same. Sara is working with The CW to develop a sitcom called Poseurs , and she’s signed on to write and co-executive produce as well as star. Sara will star as Lucy, a yuppie whose swanky Manhattan co-op is on the line when her fiancee moves out and her college BFF Alexandra moves in. The building technically doesn’t allow for roommates, so to keep her highly desirable apartment, Lucy claims her new bunk mate is also her new bed mate. We just hope that their co-op board is nosy. Very, very nosy. Members can see more from voluptuous vixen Sara Rue right here at MrSkin.com!
For those of you in relationships… An emotionally abusive spouse wants you all to themself and makes efforts to have it that way. They do not understand that you have a life outside of the relationship – one that includes family and friends. It is healthy and normal for you to hang out with other people as well, so if your partner prevents you from doing so, this may be a sign of a bad relationship. Check out some of the “symptoms” from Health Central …