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Posts Tagged ‘Joan’

Kristen Stewart kiss wasn’t a ‘big deal’, says Dakota Fanning

Dakota Fanning has claimed that kissing co-star Kristen Stewart in new movie ”The Runaways” was not such ””a big deal””.
The American star plays Cherie Currie in the film about the highly influential 1970s all-girl rock band.
And Fanning has now said that her onscreen smooch with co-star Kristen was anything but awkward.
“It [...]

Joan Rivers: “Julia Roberts & SJP Have B@lls….Like Me!”

Facelift fanatic Joan Rivers loves Hollywood leading ladies Julia Roberts and Sarah-Jessica Parker — because they have “balls” just like her.
“People like Julia Roberts and SJP come straight up to me with balls and say, ‘Say it to my face’ and ‘Tell me the truth’. They’re not scared of me like the others.”
Joan will [...]

Joan Rivers Detained At Costa Rican Airport Due To Passport Dispute

Comedienne Joan Rivers missed a flight from Costa Rica to Los Angeles on Sunday after she was “held hostage” by airport security before boarding a flight to Newark, New Jersey. The sharp-tongued pundit ran into troubled when officials questioned the authenticity of her passport. The 76-year-old is listed as Joan Rosenberg AKA Joan Rivers on [...]

Pete Wernick Announces 2010 Bluegrass Jam Camps

PETE WERNICK ANNOUNCES 2010 BLUEGRASS JAM CAMPS

Pete Wernick

Pete Wernick (“Dr. Banjo”) will bring his renowned Bluegrass Jam Camps to several communities across the country in 2010. Jam Camp is geared to “closet pickers” of all bluegrass instruments. “Many people want to start playing bluegrass, but they don’t realize how easy it can be,” says Wernick. “It’s available for anyone, 8 to 88. They just need a little help.”

Pete and his wife Joan show inexperienced players how to fit into bluegrass jam sessions and develop confidence in making music together. Each camp (some of which precede bluegrass festivals) is a multi-day musical immersion, with hands-on instruction as students play in small groups. Participants are required only to be able to change smoothly between a few simple chords.

For intermediate players, Pete is also offering two intermediate level jam camp sessions this year. The first is an intermediate track as part of his North Carolina camp; and the second is a full-immersion intermediate/band skills camp in Loveland, Colorado. Topics covered include band dynamics and backup, ear skills, musicianship, harmony singing, practice techniques, performing skills, breakout sessions for instrument instruction, and more.

2010 Bluegrass Jam Camps
March 26-28 — Boulder, CO, at the Boulder Inn
April 16-18 — Loveland, CO, Intermediate/Band Skills Camp at Sylvan Dale Ranch
April 26-29 — Boomer, NC, preceding MerleFest, includes Intermediate Track
May 11-13 — Gettysburg, PA, preceding the Gettysburg Bluegrass Festival
June 28-30 – Owensboro, KY, at the International Bluegrass Museum (tentative)

July 12-15 — Oak Hill, NY, preceding the Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival (tentative)


Joan Rivers Returns To E! “Fashion Police”

Joan Rivers is returning The E! Network to host the network’s Fashion Police red-carpet specials in 2010.

Joan and Melissa Rivers have not provided fashion commentary for E! since departing the network over a salary dispute in 2005. The Rivers then headed to the TV Guide Channel, where they were replaced by actress Lisa Rinna in [...]

Joan Rivers Slams Brooke Shields Michael Jackson Tribute

We don’t think Joan Rivers was among the people feeling all warm and fuzzy inside during Brooke Shields’ touching Michael Jackson’s memorial service tribute last month.
Unfortunately, Joan’s lack of emotion can’t be blamed on the fact that after her thousandth facelift her tear ducts are now located in her ears.

The legendary comedienne has branded the [...]

Joan Rivers F-Bomb “Good Day Sacramento” VIDEO

Comedienne Joan Rivers turned the air blue during a live interview on Good Day Sacramento on Tuesday morning after she swore at a host for cracking a joke about her daughter Melissa.
Is it just us or is Joan getting too old for this sh*t?

The 76 year old spitfire appeared on the local morning broadcast [...]

Joan E. Dowlin: The Healer in Chief

Let’s look at the history of blacks and police in our nation in this century. The story is always familiar. The police say they are protecting lives and the community. They shoot first and ask questions later.

Nurses to discuss assisted suicide law

Royal College of Nursing to meet Margo MacDonald, the Scottish MP behind the End of Life Choices bill

The Royal College of Nursing is to meet Scottish MP Margo MacDonald to discuss proposals on legalising assisted suicide after the organisation dropped its five-year opposition to the policy.

MacDonald, who has Parkinson’s disease, is planning to introduce a bill to legalise assisted suicide in Scotland in the autumn.

She said discussions with the nurses’ organisation would be extremely useful. “The RCN recognises that there is a public mood to deal with choices at the end of life,” she told the BBC. “They recognise that their members will be asked by patients about it because very often the relationship between the nurse and the patient is perhaps the closest one.”

The Royal College of Nursing has opposed assisted suicide since 2004, but adopted a neutral stance yesterday after a recent consultation in which almost half (49%) of its members said they supported the policy, while two out of five (40%) said they were against it. It is to issue detailed guidance to nurses.

Dr Peter Carter, RCN chief executive, told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme that the organisation recognised that assisted suicide was a complicated issue. He said the shift to the neutral stance would allow nurses to talk to patients about it if they were questioned, but added: “That must not be confused with us being proponents of assisted suicide.”

He called for authorities to clarify the law on assisted suicide. Currently, anyone who assists someone to take their life faces up to 14 years in prison, although no one has yet been prosecuted. Earlier this year the appeal court rejected a legal challenge by Debbie Purdy, a multiple sclerosis patient, who wanted a guarantee that her husband would not be prosecuted for helping her to travel to Switzerland to take her life. The House of Lords is expected to rule on her case next week.

The move comes as a poll found that 74% of people want doctors to be allowed to help terminally ill people end their lives.

The survey in today’s Times found that six out of 10 people said they wanted friends and relatives to be able to help their dying loved ones to take their own lives, without fear of prosecution.

The poll also found that only 13% supported a blanket right to assisted suicide regardless of the individual’s health, while 85% said it should be legal only “in specific circumstances”.

In July doctors at the British Medical Association stuck by their opposition to assisted suicide, having briefly adopted a neutral stance several years ago.

The Christian Nurses and Midwives organisation said today it regretted the RCN’s policy shift. Secretary Steve Fouch said it sent out the wrong signals “at a time when there is growing anxiety about how we will care for the elderly and severely disabled in the future”.

The latest moves follow high-profile cases involving Britons using the Dignitas clinic in Switzerland. On July 10 renowned conductor Sir Edward Downes and his wife Lady Joan died together in the Zurich clinic which has helped more than 115 people from the UK to commit suicide since it was founded in 1998.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Joan E. Dowlin: A Love Affair: Sharon Gless and the Gay Community

The audience cheered as a montage of Gless’ acting roles ended with her as Debbie Novotny, a beloved and outspoken mother of a gay son in Showtime’s Queer as Folk.

Jacob M. Appel: Assisted Suicide for Healthy People?

Advocates for physician-assisted suicide have in recent years focused upon the rights of the terminally ill and severely disabled to control their own destinies. Oregon’s…

Downes’ decision was romantic

The great conductor’s decision to end his life in Zurich with Dignitas still doesn’t make me think assisted suicide is right

The Verdi and Wagner operas that Sir Edward Downes conducted with such distinction throughout his long career often featured lovers who couldn’t bear the thought of life without each other – Aida without Radames, Gilda without the Duke of Mantua, Brünnhilde without Siegfried, Isolde without Tristan. Sir Edward’s death in a suicide pact with his devoted wife, Joan, reminds one of such operas. She had terminal cancer; he was unwell and couldn’t imagine living without her. So they decided to depart this world together.

Theirs was a poignant, even uplifting, decision, but it’s a shame it had to be carried out in a tacky Zurich apartment with the assistance of Dignitas staff grimly videoing them as they swallowed poison, hoping thereby to protect themselves from any subsequent accusations of encouraging them to die.

In opera, heroes don’t think twice about plunging daggers into their own hearts, and their lovers, overcome by grief, often spontaneously drop dead beside them. In real life, such scenarios are less easily available. Those wishing to take their lives are often driven, like the Downeses, to seek the help of the rather creepy Ludwig Minelli, the founder of Dignitas, and his equally creepy minions. And the deaths of British citizens at Dignitas are always succeeded by mundane police investigations to determine whether any crime was committed by anyone under English law – eg by any family members who might have accompanied them to Switzerland.

This is not the kind of ending that Sir Edward could ideally have desired. His love and understanding of Verdi confirms him as a romantic (as do the exotic names, Caractacus and Boudicca, that he gave his children), and there is nothing so unromantic as a Dignitas-assisted suicide and a subsequent British police inquiry. But this doesn’t in my view strengthen the case, rejected the other day by the House of Lords, for a change in the law to allow friends or relatives to play an active part in the suicide arrangements. Assisted suicide is too close to murder for the law to be able to distinguish clearly between them. The possibility of prosecution should continue to exist as a protection for the old and vulnerable against those who might wish them dead, though nobody has yet been prosecuted and, I hope, will ever have to be.

In last year’s Sky television documentary showing the Dignitas-assisted suicide of Craig Ewert, an American computer-science professor suffering from motor neurone disease, we saw him slipping away to music from Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. I wonder if Sir Edward and his wife also asked for music to be played during their deaths; and if so, I wonder what it would have been. I like to think it might have been the last scene from Aida in which she and Radames, sealed in a tomb from which there is no escape, resign themselves to death and welcome it – Morir! Si pura e bella. It is the loveliest and most moving of death duets, and one that would have put Dignitas firmly in its place.

Alfred Hitchcock was clever to recognise that few things are scarier than an aggressive bird. We don’t expect birds to attack us. We think of them as shy and fearful, usually unapproachable by anybody without the stealth and cunning of David Attenborough. But for more than two months now, I have been living in fear of a pheasant. So, too, have my neighbours in the Northamptonshire hamlet where I live. So, even, has my jack russell terrier, Polly, who previously didn’t know the meaning of fear. We are a terrorised community.

At the moment of writing, hope is slowly returning because it is now four or five days since anyone has seen the hateful bird. But before then it was out and about every day, wandering from house to house in search of food and making a ferocious little charge at any human or animal it encountered along the way. Maybe someone (I hope so, frankly) has secretly murdered it.

It was no ordinary pheasant. It had a white head with a black band across its eyes, which gave it the menacing look of a mafioso in dark glasses; and its body plumage was golden, flecked with white. Research on the internet has convinced me that it must have been a Reeves’s pheasant – a breed introduced from China in the 1830s by the English naturalist John Reeves – for it fitted internet descriptions of the breed in both appearance and character, with Wikipedia stating, for example, that “Reeves’s pheasants are known to be aggressive towards humans, animals and other pheasants.”

When I took Polly for a walk, the pheasant would follow along close behind, awaiting its opportunity to attack. It was like being tailed by a mugger in an inner city. Every now and then it would launch itself, bristling, towards Polly, who would cower away in disbelief. It was the improbability of her assailant that unnerved her. Confronted by a pit bull or doberman pincher, she always stands her ground.

The pheasant was probably a refugee from the great country estate of Easton Neston four miles away, where the pheasants bred for sport have always included a smattering of exotic specimens. Since the estate was sold by its sport-loving ancestral owners to an American fashion king, Leon Max, a few years ago, the pheasants may have been left to their own devices more than they were previously. But that can’t really explain this pheasant’s relentless hostility to everyone and everything; there must just be something bitter and twisted in its nature. Anyway, I pray it has gone for good, for my cleaning lady warns me that if it comes back, she won’t.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Conductor Edward Downes And Wife Joan Die In Swiss Suicide Clinic

LONDON — He spent his life conducting world-renowned orchestras, but was almost blind and growing deaf – the music he loved increasingly out of reach. His wife of 54 years had been diagnosed with terminal cancer. So Edward and Joan…

Conductor dies at Swiss suicide clinic

Sir Edward Downes, who conducted first Sydney Opera House performance, ends life with wife, Joan, in Switzerland

One of Britain’s most respected conductors, Sir Edward Downes, and his wife, Joan, a choreographer and TV producer, have died at an assisted suicide clinic in Switzerland, their family said today.

Downes, 85, was almost blind when he and his 74-year-old wife, who had become his full-time carer, travelled to Switzerland to end their lives, a family statement released to the BBC said.

Born in Birmingham, Downes had a long and distinguished career, including conducting the first performance at the Sydney Opera House. He worked with the BBC Philharmonic and the Royal Opera House in London.

The statement from the couple’s son and daughter, Caractacus and Boudicca, said they “died peacefully, and under circumstances of their own choosing”.

The statement continued: “After 54 happy years together, they decided to end their own lives rather than continue to struggle with serious health problems.”

The couple died at a clinic run by Dignitas, the Swiss organisation that operates a specialist euthanasia service.

The Downes family said: “Our father, who was 85 years old, almost blind and increasingly deaf, had a long, vigorous and distinguished career as a conductor.

“Our mother, who was 74, started her career as a ballet dancer and subsequently worked as a choreographer and TV producer before dedicating the last years of her life to working as our father’s personal assistant.

“They both lived life to the full and considered themselves to be extremely lucky to have lived such rewarding lives, both professionally and personally.”

Downes was knighted in 1991.A Metropolitan police spokesman said Greenwich CID had launched an investigation.

“We continue to investigate the circumstances of their deaths. [There are] no further details at this stage,” he said.

In the past, police have investigated cases in which British people have travelled to the Dignitas clinic. Anyone assisting a person to commit suicide could face up to 14 years in prison.

Prosecutors have not pushed forward cases against families and friends of the growing numbers of Britons who have travelled to Dignitas to die, however, and there is fierce debate about whether the law should be changed to protect people from prosecution.

Last December, the Crown Prosecution Service announced it would take no action against the family of 23-year-old Daniel James, who travelled to Switzerland to die after being paralysed from the chest down in a rugby accident.

The police did not investigate the deaths earlier this year of Peter and Penelope Duff, who became the first terminally ill British couple to be helped to die together in Switzerland.

Last week, the House of Lords voted against an attempt by the former lord chancellor Lord Falconer to relax the law on assisted suicide. His amendment to the coroners and justice bill would have allowed people to help someone with a terminal illness travel to a country where assisted suicide is legal.

Debbie Purdy, who has multiple sclerosis, is seeking to clarify the law in the House of Lords. She wants a ruling that her husband will not be prosecuted if he helps her travel abroad to die.

Some people fear that relaxing the law on assisted suicide would lead to an increase in cases, and put people at risk of being pushed into taking their own lives. Gordon Brown is against a change in the law.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


UK conductor dies at Dignitas clinic

Sir Edward Downes. Photograph: Bill Cooper

Renowned British conductor Sir Edward Thomas Downes, CBE, has died at the age of 85, after travelling to right-to-die clinic Dignitas with his wife.

He and his wife Joan, 74, both chose to end their lives at the Swiss clinic, their family said in a statement.

According to the statement, the couple "died peacefully, and under circumstances of their own choosing".

The Birmingham-born conductor enjoyed a 40-year relationship with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra.

"Our father, who was 85 years old, almost blind and increasingly deaf, had a long, vigorous and distinguished career as a conductor," his family said.

"Our mother, who was 74, started her career as a ballet dancer and subsequently worked as a choreographer and TV producer, before dedicating the last years of her life to working as our father’s personal assistant.

Health problems

"They both lived life to the full and considered themselves to be extremely lucky to have lived such rewarding lives, both professionally and personally.

"After 54 happy years together, they decided to end their own lives rather than continue to struggle with serious health problems."

Sydney Opera House

Born in Birmingham on 17 June 1924, the renowned conductor began playing the violin and violin at the age of five.

His pursuit of conducting was aided by a two-year scholarship to study in Aberdeen, which led him to study with eminent German conductor Hermann Scherchen.

In 1952 he joined the Royal Opera where he remained a company member for 17 years.

He became Associate Music Director in 1991 and conducted a huge repertoire at Covent Garden for over 50 consecutive seasons.

He began his relationship with the BBC Philharmonic as Chief Guest Conductor, going to become Principal Conductor from 1980 to 1991 and later Conductor Emeritus.

Honoured

In 1970 he became Music Director of the Australian Opera and conducted the first performance in the Sydney Opera House.

He was Chief Conductor of the Netherlands Radio Orchestra until 1983 and travelled widely as a guest conductor to opera houses and orchestras all over the world.

Sir Edward was honoured by four music colleges and five universities as well as receiving the Laurence Olivier, Evening Standard, Critics Circle and Royal Philharmonic Society awards.

He became a CBE in 1986 and was knighted in 1991.</p


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

Tallulah Morehead: Big Brother 11: Meet the Fockers.

Over the last decade, CBS’s perennial summer-filler voyeurism-fest Big Brother has lowered its rock-bottom contestant standards into the lowest depths of Hell in search of…