The Masked Singer is back for season 10!
20.09.2023 - 21:17 / nypost.com
“Back to the Future” star spoke on a panel about his foundation for Parkinson’s Disease research alongside businessman Joseph Deitch and the CEO of the nonprofit The Elevate Prize Foundation, Carolina Garcia Jayaram, at the Clinton Global Initiative conference. “There’s such shame associated with this illness,” Fox told Hillary Clinton, 75, on stage. “It’s so ridiculous, this great need to keep it secret.
The cruel thing of it is it’s going to out you eventually.”The former first lady said that without the actor’s help, “I don’t think this work would have made the progress it has if Michael hadn’t been so open.”The Post has contacted a rep for Fox for comment. Fox was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1991 at the age of 29, but didn’t announce it publicly until 1998. The neurological disorder causes unintended stiffness, shakiness and difficulty with coordination.He founded the Michael J.
Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research in 2000. Fox was honored with the Elevate Prize Catalyst Award on Tuesday, which comes with $250,000 that the actor plans to put toward his foundation. Earlier this year, Martin Scorsese gave Fox a sweet tribute ahead of receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2023 Spring Moving Image Awards for his film career and advocacy work.“Back in the ’80s, it was really an amazing thing to witness how Michael’s career took off.
I watched him in those early pictures and I was stunned,” the director said at the time. “Pay attention to the amount of work he’s done since his Parkinson’s diagnosis. He’s become a real guiding light for so many others with Parkinson’s — that includes my wife Helen.
The Masked Singer is back for season 10!
Laughs blended with tears tonight at the Beverly Hilton as many in Hollywood remembered late MGM Theatrical Distribution Boss and big screen champion Erik Lomis who was lauded posthumously with the Will Rogers Motion Picture Pioneers Foundation‘s Pioneer of the Year award. Lomis passed suddenly at 64 on March 22.
The Masked Singer is back for season 10!
Peter Debruge Chief Film Critic Werner Herzog has traveled to the ends of the earth for his art, rolling cameras in places rarely seen by human eyes — from rapids along the Amazon River for 1972’s “Aguirre, the Wrath of God” to the rim of an active volcano in Antarctica. But what’s inside Herzog’s head is what fascinates fans of the German director. As revealed in a new memoir, “Every Man for Himself and God Against All” (the phrase served as the original title of his 1974 film “The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser”), Herzog’s far-ranging filmography represents only a fraction of the encounters and adventures that have shaped his worldview.
Martha Plimpton is a beloved Emmy-winning actress best known for her work in TV shows like Raising Hope, The Real O’Neals and The Good Wife, but she’s also an activist who found the nonprofit A is For.
With guild agreements being signed and production ramping up, Hollywood hopefully awaits a moment of youthful innovation.
Clayton Davis Senior Awards Editor The Oscars love it when a movie sticks it to the man. Films focusing on systemic inequality, or the monied elite’s morally murky ways, arrive as many industry voters have spent the better part of the year on the picket lines, holding out for a better contract from studios. These movies could strike an emotional chord with Academy members when they cast their ballots.
A theme running through most recent (within the past five years or so) interviews with Martin Scorsese is about how the filmmaker laments the current state of the film industry. Particularly, the legendary filmmaker isn’t pleased with Hollywood filmmaking and the content being produced—mostly comic book films and franchise projects.
William Earl In a sprawling new profile with GQ, director Martin Scorsese discussed comic book and franchise culture, a topic which he has spoken out about at length in the past. When asked about those blockbusters, Scorsese said that their omnipresence could be negative to audiences who aren’t well-versed in other types of film. “The danger there is what it’s doing to our culture,” he said.
Michaela Zee “Taxi Driver” screenwriter Paul Schrader has expressed his disapproval of Robert De Niro reprising his role as Travis Bickle in an Uber ad campaign. “Ouch. Why Bob would do this is beyond my reckoning,” Schrader wrote on Facebook on Wednesday evening.
When you're trying to adopt a healthier lifestyle by eating better and working out, you'll likely notice the effect it has on your body and your appearance.
Hitting theatres in 1998, “Armageddon” was the year’s most successful film at the box office, although not so much with critics.
The s**t has hit the fan for Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner.
Actor and philanthropist Michael J. Fox won this year’s Elevate Prize Catalyst Award, which the "Back to the Future" star plans to use to further his foundation’s work to find treatments for Parkinson’s disease. Fox, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease at the age of 29 in 1991, received the award at the Clinton Global Initiative, or CGI, conference on Tuesday in New York.The annual prize, which went to Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai last year, includes $250,000 from the Elevate Prize Foundation and support to amplify the winner’s messaging.
Danish filmmaker Cristoffer Guldbrandsen, director of the documentary A Storm Foretold, has been on a journey into the heart of darkness of American politics.
Apple has become the latest entertainment company to suspend additional overall and first-look deals this month as the WGA strike is getting past the four-and-a-half-month mark.
Martin Scorsese’s “The Last Temptation of Christ” stirred up no end of controversy when it was released in 1988, met with protests and condemned by religious groups, while a terrorist attack in a Paris theatre showing the film injured 13 people.
When it comes to Fall 2023 theatrical releases, none may be more anticipated than Martin Scorsese‘s “Killers Of The Flower Moon.” Scorsese’s adaptation of David Grann‘s 2017 book of the same name already premiered at the Cannes Film Festival to much acclaim. But as the film approaches its October theatrical release, EW reports that the director wants to emphasize how different his movie is from Grann’s book despite following the same historical events.
The new trailer for “Killers of the Flower Moon” is here.
Martin Scorsese is quickly approaching his 81st birthday, but it doesn’t sound like he has any intention of slowing down his filmmaking anytime soon. Not only is “Killers of the Flower Moon” set to arrive in October, but he’s already figuring out what he’d like to do next.