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Posts Tagged ‘Anna’

Anna Friel turns ghosthunter!

English actress Anna Friel anticipates meeting the ghosts of Audrey Hepburn and Truman Capote at the London’’s Royal Haymarket Theatre after hearing rumors of supernatural happenings on the stage in the past.
The Pushing Daisies star is presently performing in a stage version of Audrey Hepburn’’s 1961 classic Breakfast At Tiffany’’s at the venue.
“Everyone keeps [...]

Anna Kendrick ‘falls in love with Edgar Wright on film set’

Twilight star Anna Kendrick is romancing director Edgar Wright, it has emerged.
The pair fell for each other when Kendrick, 24, was filming her upcoming flick Scott Pilgrim Vs The World, helmed by Wright, 35.
And, the 10-year age difference between them has not prevented them from cosying up with each other.
However, the couple have made [...]

First Duggar Grandchild Mackynzie Renee Duggar

It’s another Duggar! The first Duggar grandchild was born to Josh Duggar and his wife Anna, both 20, overnight. Mackynzie Renee Duggar checked in at an even 8 pounds and 19½ inches. The little girl was born at the family’s Arkansas home at 6:39PM Thursday with a midwife and doula attending the birth.

Mackynzie’s birth will [...]

Anna Nicole Smith investigated for murder

The FBI investigated Anna Nicole Smith for plotting to have the son of her late husband murdered but she was never prosecuted, according to newly released files. The AP reports: Smith’s FBI records, obtained exclusively by The Associated Press, say the agency investigated Smith in 2000 and 2001 in a murder-for-hire plot targeting E. Pierce [...]

Anna Paquin says wedding plans “scare the s**t out of” her

Actress Anna Paquin says she has never thought of her wedding day and confesses she is nervous to plan her big day.
Contactmusic quoted her as saying: “It feels organic. It’’s more about being family that becoming Bridezilla overnight and wearing some big meringue wedding dress. That would scare the s**t out of me. I wasn”t [...]

Chris Pratt Anna Faris Wed

Anna Faris and Chris Pratt have tied the knot, a rep for the House Bunny star confirmed to PEOPLE on Wednesday.

“Anna Faris and Chris Pratt were married in a small ceremony in Bali on July 9.”
The couple kept under their nups under wraps until Tuesday night, when they stepped out at the Malibu [...]

Liukin returns to competition

Not bad after almost a year off. Not bad at all.
Olympic champion Nastia Liukin returned to competition for the first time since the Beijing Games on Saturday night, and it looked as if she’d barely been away. She posted the second-best score on balance beam, her only event, and her 14.5 was only .1 points [...]

Anna Paquin does ‘steamier role’ in new telly show

Canadian actress Anna Paquin has shown that she is all grown up, for she has done a “steamier role” in a new telly show.
Paquin, 27, who won an Oscar at the age of 11 for her role in ‘The Piano’, was pictured doing raunchy scenes on ‘True Blood’, reports the Sun.
In the telly show [...]

Anna Kelner: How the Subway to the Sea Could Change Los Angeles’ Culture

A subway could not only cleanse Los Angeles’ polluted air and clear its congested roads, but could also radically change the way Angelinos relate to one another.

Robert Amsterdam: After Obama Visit, Russia Resets to Default

What can be said about a kleptocratic country with no rule of law, where women are shot dead, young promising lawyers slain and the rest cowed into submission by fear?

Daniel Krotz: Letters From the Pen: A Review

Letters offers an opportunity to witness a man in an unusual, if not unique, situation as he fine-tunes his craft and his understanding of the human condition.

Italy’s minimalist G8 summit

Tent camp on outskirts of L'Aquila for people displaced by the earthquake

By Bridget Kendall
BBC diplomatic correspondent, L’Aquila

Switching the venue of this year’s G8 summit to an active earthquake zone sounded like a hostage to fortune.

Why invite the world’s most powerful leaders to perch on the same precarious spot of the Earth’s crust which in April killed 300 people and left 60,000 others homeless

Just think what global chaos would ensue if – mid session – the ground opened up and swallowed them all.

When the town of L’Aquila was rocked by a new – though less powerful – set of tremors last Friday, the summit’s prospects began to look decidedly dicey.

‘A good idea’

In the town centre many buildings were already cracked and cordoned off. On every corner caved-in roofs and ripped-out walls hinted at the prospect of new collapses to come. It felt as though at any minute it could all start to shake again.

George Clooney in L'Aquila

I had visions of us journalists stuck, incommunicado and cowering under tables in the so-called media village. Reporters turned refugees, caught in a new disaster zone, while summit leaders were airlifted out to Rome.

But in the event, nothing happened. Not a tremble.

To my surprise earthquake survivors living in local tent camps thought the summit an excellent idea.

What better way to draw attention to the fact their lives had been reduced to rubble, than to pull in the likes of George Clooney and other celebrity hangers-on who tend to pitch up at major summits.

"At one formal function, the eyes of a weary Barack Obama glazed over and his shoulders slumped. Not just us hacks, it seems, were getting by on hard mattresses with very little sleep"

"My home won’t get repaired for another three or four years. The entire tower block fell on top of it. Any publicity is welcome," said one woman, Anna, sitting with her neighbours under a sun parasol outside her blue canvas home.

The pathway between the tents was lined with drying washing and children’s bicycles. A hand-painted notice, decorated in big childish crayon, announced it was Butterfly Row.

There was also Cat Alley, and Moon Street, all clearly marked. An air of semi-permanence had set in.

Roughing it

In keeping with the earthquake tragedy, the summit itself had an air of austerity. So different from the usual lavish attempts to promote a country at its best.

Man plays a flute during a G8 protest

President Putin revamped an entire 18th Century palace in St Petersburg. Tony Blair took over one of Scotland’s grandest hotels.

But Italy’s Silvio Berlusconi commandeered the local barracks of the Finance Police and required world leaders and their delegations to sleep in dormitories on site.

"How is the accommodation for VIPs" I asked one UN official.

He sighed and replied wearily: "It’s not quite what we’re used to."

He was lucky. Some of the journalists unable to find places to stay locally were reduced to begging space among the tents of the earthquake refugees. Our BBC team drove back nightly over the mountains to a village two hours away.

Also minimalist and unpredictable were the communications facilities. It was almost impossible to find out schedules or contact numbers for delegations. The only truly reliable information was the time of the prime minister’s late afternoon press conference.

Barack Obama (left) meets African leaders and others

That you could not avoid. On large screens, beaming down at you would be the unmistakable jovial grin of Mr Berlusconi.

And if you did miss it, never mind. It was played over and over again.

Press conferences by those with critical views, like the so-called G5 group of emerging countries (India, Brazil, China, South Africa and Mexico)seemed to occur with almost no prior warning or publicity.

It was almost as though these Asian and Latin American giants were G8 dissidents, deliberately kept to the fringe.

The same world

One morning we arrived at the media centre to find the broadband connection we were using had been cut off. Local Italian technicians claimed it was on the orders of the Italian authorities.

Carla Bruni, wife of the French president, tours the ruins in L'Aquila

A few hours later it was restored. But in situations like this, you soon start to get paranoid. Was this an attempt to control our output to what could be monitored

Probably not, but – instead of the usual eagerness for media coverage – it felt distinctly odd to be prevented from telling the world what was going on.

In some ways this new "bare bones" G8 style suits the mood of the moment.

For a change the journalists were not kept 50 miles away from the leaders, or worse – as has happened – sequestered on a separate island.

The summiteers were a short walk away. It felt as though we could keep them under our gaze.

At one formal function, the eyes of a weary Barack Obama glazed over and his shoulders slumped. Not just us hacks, it seems, were getting by on hard mattresses with very little sleep.

This year, in L’Aquila, we were all part of the same world.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.