Bryan Cranston opened up about his and his wife’s coronavirus symptoms and recovery in a recent interview. The “Breaking Bad” actor also spoke about his bond with Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson, who both tested positive earlier this year.
24.07.2020 - 15:33 / variety.com
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaMel Gibson battled coronavirus in April, coming down with a case severe enough to require the 64-year old actor and director to be hospitalized.
The “Braveheart” star is the latest celebrity to go public with a positive COVID-19 diagnosis, joining a list that includes Idris Elba, Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson, Pink, and Daniel Dae Kim.“He tested positive in April and spent a week in the hospital,” a spokesperson for Gibson said in a statement to People
.Bryan Cranston opened up about his and his wife’s coronavirus symptoms and recovery in a recent interview. The “Breaking Bad” actor also spoke about his bond with Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson, who both tested positive earlier this year.
Bryan Cranston felt "very lucky" to only experience "extreme exhaustion" when he contracted coronavirus. The former 'Breaking Bad' star and his wife Robin Dearden contracted the virus in March but he didn't speak out about their illness until recently because he felt there was "no need" to do so after Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson shared their experiences of Covid-19, and he had only suffered very mild symptoms.
Actor Antonio Banderas has become the latest celebrity to reveal they have contracted coronavirus.
shuttered daily life around the world and is claiming more lives every day.In the US, some figures estimate that up to 70% of people will eventually get the flu-like illness if the spread isn’t slowed. Celebrities falling victim to the virus are doing their part by bringing awareness to its symptoms and how to prevent it.The grim announcements first started with celebrity power couple Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson who were diagnosed during a trip to Australia.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaJohn Gore Organization, the Tony-award winning production company being “Dear Evan Hansen” and “The Band’s Visit,” has laid off roughly a hundred employees.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaAMC Entertainment lost $561.2 million during a quarter where the world’s largest exhibitor’s cinemas were closed to moviegoers and virtually its entire staff was laid off or furloughed. Revenues at the company topped out at $18.9 million, a 98% plunge from the year-ago period.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaNext year’s Sundance Film Festival will be significantly shorter than previous editions of the annual celebration of the best in indie cinema.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaHerman Cain, the Godfather’s Pizza chief who launched an improbable run for the White House, has died of coronavirus. He was 74.Cain briefly vaulted to the top of the pack of Republic presidential contenders in 2011 on the strength of his catchy 9–9–9 tax plan, which advocated replacing taxes with a 9% personal income tax, 9% federal sales tax, and a 9% corporate tax.Cain’s rise was short-lived, however.
coronavirus diagnoses and recoveries including Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson, George Stephanopoulos and the singer Pink. For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks.
Mel Gibson spent a week in a Los Angeles hospital in April after testing positive for COVID-19, his representative said Friday. The 64-year-old actor and director has completely recovered and is doing "great," according to the rep.
Mel Gibson spent a week in a Los Angeles hospital in April after testing positive for Covid-19, his representative said.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaThe makers of “Citizen Penn,” a documentary about actor Sean Penn’s volunteer work in Haiti, have updated their film to include footage of the Oscar-winner’s efforts to expand access to COVID-19 testing.Over the past few months, director Don Hardy and producer Shawn Dailey have followed Penn as he worked with his non-profit organization CORE to set up free testing sites in places such as New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Oakland, New Orleans and the
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaMovie theaters have been devastated by coronavirus since the pandemic has forced cinemas to close across the country and essentially wiped out summer blockbuster season.Exhibitors had long hoped that the August releases of Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” and Disney’s live-action remake of “Mulan” would kick off a moviegoing revival. However, those plans suffered a major setback on Monday when Warner Bros.
Colin Hanks has educated his children on the coronavirus pandemic after his father, Tom Hanks, was diagnosed with the virus. The 42-year-old actor explained the "very serious illness" to his daughters Olivia, nine, and Charlotte, seven, after their grandfather - and his wife Rita Wilson - fell ill earlier this year, and has told the youngsters to make sure they follow health and safety measures.
Colin Hanks shared how he spoke with his and Samantha Bryant‘s two daughters about the coronavirus pandemic.“I told them that there’s something very serious going on … an illness,” the actor, 42, exclusively told Us Weekly on Thursday, July 16, while promoting his Hanks Kerchiefs partnership with the Parks Project.
Tom Hanks' bones "felt like soda crackers" during his coronavirus battle. The 'Forrest Gump' star battled the deadly virus earlier in the year alongside his wife Rita Wilson, and admitted the illness left him feeling so fatigued, whilst his wife had a high fever and lost her sense of taste.
on “The Late Show” Tuesday night, Tom Hanks revealed that he and wife Rita Wilson experienced vastly different symptoms during their much-publicized bout with the coronavirus in March.The pair had both tested positive during a break from shooting Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis Presley biopic in Australia, but have since recovered.During the virtual interview, the 64-year-old told host Stephen Colbert his bones “felt like they were made of soda crackers,” over the eight or nine day recuperation
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaIf movie theaters are banking on Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” to ride to their rescue, they may have to wait a lot longer for help.That’s the takeaway from a new note by Eric Handler, a leading exhibition industry analyst with MKM Partners, who predicts that there’s a “low likelihood” that “Tenet” will open on Aug.