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02.07.2020 - 17:23 / etonline.com
James Marsden is everywhere. He knows it too. “I get texts from people saying, ‘You are on my TV screen all the f**king time.
How do you do this?’ I’m like, ‘I’m sorry!’”There’s truth to the ubiquity of his Hollywood existence. Since coming onto the scene in the early '90s, Marsden, 46, has amassed an extensive resume of more than 75 credits (and counting), featuring roles so different from the others that it’s nearly impossible to put him in a box.
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made America laugh for well over a decade.James, 65, is a beneficiary of the trust of the home, where he also grew up. His parents, David Noble Barry III and his wife, Margaret Carr Barry, built the house in 1955 and lived there until their deaths — David died in 2017 and Margaret in 2019.The house is now on the market and expected to sell for at least $2.9 million. «They built it when I was first born and I lived there till I moved out in my 20s,» James told ET's Nischelle Turner.
died peacefully March 2 in his home after having battled bladder cancer, TMZ reported — left his estate to his third wife Kedakai Lipton, according to a will filed in Manhattan Surrogate’s court in June.Lipton — who appeared on shows including “Arrested Development,” “Glee” and “Bewitched” — had $125,000 in “personal property” and another $2 million in “improved real property in New York State,” according to court papers included with the will.The thespian also bequeathed to Kedakai — whom he
The Walking Dead co-creator Robert Kirkman has announced a new animated series called Invincible starring Zachary Quinto and Khary Payton.The upcoming Amazon adaptation is based on Kirkman’s comic book series of the same name, which was first published in 2002 and ran for 144 issues.As The Hollywood Reporter confirms, Khary Payton has now joined his fellow Walking Dead actor Steven Yeun in signing up to the project, and will portray the character Black Samson.
coronavirus pandemic as the global death toll hits a new milestone.
Garrett Hedlund goes shirtless and shows off his toned body in this new clip from his movie Dirt Music, which is premiering exclusively on JustJared.com.
Scott Fenwick reflects on four memorable decades at Gleneagles“But by the end of the lesson they were all able to hit the ball pretty well. We’re going to go out on the golf course next week.“The interest has been amazing.
Dade Hayes Finance EditorJames Patterson and Condé Nast are teaming to revive vintage crime fighter The Shadow in a series of books that will also aim to be adapted for the screen.Hachette Book Group imprint Little, Brown will publish the original series, whose first installment is due out in the fall of 2021.
While all the world’s stages have been dark now for more than four months as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, Las Vegas is plotting a course for the future. Come summer 2021, the city will welcome The Theatre at Resorts World Las Vegas, the first new-from-the-ground-up casino-reso
Matt James has nothing but love and support for Clare Crawley's upcoming season of. James was originally cast on Crawley's season of the show before the coronavirus pandemic halted production.
James Roday will now professionally go by the last name he was given at birth — James Roday Rodriguez — and in a new interview, explains how his past experiences in Hollywood led him to erase an important part of his heritage when he was just 21 years old.The 44-year-old actor spoke to about why he originally decided to change his name from James Rodriguez to James Roday after he started to audition for acting roles while studying at New York University.
Jazz Tangcay Artisans EditorThe second season of Netflix’s “You” saw Joe Goldberg, played by Penn Badgley, relocate from New York to Los Angeles. Goldberg wanted to turn over a new leaf after murdering an ex and framing her therapist for the crime, and in doing so, he assumed a different life as a man named Will.
has died. He was 102.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVSeveral more overseas productions will join James Cameron’s Avatar sequels and Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog Netflix film in New Zealand in the coming months.New Zealand’s Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment has announced that Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings series, Netflix series Cowboy Bebop and Sweet Tooth, Peter Farrelly’s film Greatest Beer Run Ever starring Viggo Mortensen, and Power Rangers Beast Morphers series have been granted
Donald Trump took to Twitter with this question on June 30: “Where are you Roger Ailes?” Well, the former Fox News CEO is in his grave, because he died in 2017. The POTUS inquired about his friend’s whereabouts after voicing his disapproval of Fox News hiring former Democratic National Committee Chair Donna Brazile, who used to be a contributor at CNN.
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly were spotted holding hands when they stepped out for another date night in Los Angeles.Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly enjoyed a romantic date night at celebrity hotspot Nobu in Malibu on Saturday. The lovebirds were photographed holding hands while leaving the sushi spot after a romantic dinner.For the outing, the "Transformer" actress wore a skintight PVC pants, and paired it with a black crop top and matching blazer.
The New York Post reported today that Jenny Slate And Kristen Bell’s step-down from voicing TV characters this past week hasn’t stopped the controversy surrounding the topic. In case you missed it, the aforementioned actresses stepped down from Big Mouth due to accusations of “white-washing.” In response to the controversy, social media users pointed out that a black man, James Earl Jones, had voiced Darth Vader in Star Wars without subjection to accusations of racism.
Ben Croll Israeli multi-hyphenate Dani Rosenberg marks his feature debut with “The Death of Cinema and my Father Too,” a self-reflexive hybrid film that mixes fact, fiction and autobiography as it grapples with the big questions.Presented under the Cannes 2020 label and sold internationally by Films Boutique, the film follows a rising director as he tracks his father’s final days, camera in hand, telling a story culled from Rosenberg’s experience and interspersed with footage from his own