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Max Mara summer 2013 collection evokes jungle

Written By empapat on Kamis, 20 September 2012 | 06.20

A model walks the runway at the Max Mara Spring/Summer 2013 fashion show as part of Milan Womenswear Fashion Week on September 20;2012 in Milan;Italy.

A model walks the runway at the Max Mara Spring/Summer 2013 fashion show as part of Milan Womenswear Fashion Week on September 20;2012 in Milan;Italy.

Photo Credit: Vittorio Zunino Celotto , Getty Images)

MILAN, Italy - Whether in leopard prints or safari wear, the Max Mara woman is the hunter not the hunted.

The Max Mara collection presented during Milan Fashion Week on Thursday evokes the jungle, where foliage prints provide natural camouflage for the animalistic spirit ready to spring - a mood captured in curve-hugging dresses in stripes of spotted and floral prints.

The silhouette is both free, with loose blouses of light fabric, and controlled, with fitted skirts that often finish below the knee. Safari touches are present throughout, including large pockets, rolled-up sleeves and button tabs on shoulders.

Blouson tops have large, lightweight hoods, for taking quick cover to scurry away, unrecognized.

In keeping with the theme, the collection's palette is rooted in earthy tones like camel and olive green, complemented by leopard, floral and sometimes plaid prints as well as icier tones of blue and green.

Accessories include ample leather bags with crocodile or fur accents and oversized tortoiseshell sunglasses. The look is finished with open-toed. thick-heeled clogs that are tied at the ankle. Hair is swept off the face and neck with headscarves, loose strands giving a hurried appearance.

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© Global News. A division of Shaw Media Inc., 2012.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/max+mara+summer+2013+collection+evokes+jungle/6442718843/story.html
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Paris' Louvre Museum unveils Islamic Art wing, decade in the making, as cultural tensions roil

French President Francois Hollande, second right, his companion Valerie Trierweiler, center, Culture minister Aurelie Filippetti, second left, and Sophie Makariou, right, chief of Department of Islamic Arts, look at the Saint Louis baptistery, work of Master Muhammad Ibn al-Zain as they visit the new Department of Islamic Arts galleries at the Louvre museum in Paris, Tuesday Sept. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Gonzalo Fuentes, Pool)

French President Francois Hollande, second right, his companion Valerie Trierweiler, center, Culture minister Aurelie Filippetti, second left, and Sophie Makariou, right, chief of Department of Islamic Arts, look at the Saint Louis baptistery, work of Master Muhammad Ibn al-Zain as they visit the new Department of Islamic Arts galleries at the Louvre museum in Paris, Tuesday Sept. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Gonzalo Fuentes, Pool)

PARIS - The Louvre Museum is unveiling a new wing and galleries dedicated to the arts of Islam, culminating a nearly €100 million ($130 million), decade-long project coming to fruition amid tensions between the Muslim world and the West.

The new dragonfly-shaped building marks the famed Paris museum's greatest development since its iconic glass pyramid constructed 20 years ago. The Department of Islamic Art will exhibit much of the Louvre's 18,000 works, hoping also to foster cultural understanding.

Mosaics from the Damascus mosque and a 15th-century Mamluk porch are among works spanning from 632 to 1800 A.D. Donors included Morocco's King Mohammed VI and Saudi Prince Waleed Bin Talal's foundation.

Louvre director Henri Loyrette says the galleries aim to showcase "the radiant face of a civilization."

The wing, with its mission of heightening cross-cultural understanding, is opening at a tense — and perhaps opportune — time.

France stepped up security Wednesday at its embassies across the Muslim world after a French satirical weekly published lewd caricatures of Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Charlie Hebdo, whose offices were firebombed last year, was brandishing its right to free speech. But the publication raised concerns that France could face violent protests like the ones targeting the United States over an amateur video produced in California ridiculing the prophet that have left at least 30 people dead.

French officials said the weekly was throwing "oil on the fire" and urged calm. France has western Europe's largest Muslim population.

In a sign of the political importance of the new Louvre exhibit, French President Francois Hollande attended an opening ceremony Tuesday, calling it a "political gesture in the service of respect for peace." The Saudi prince and the president of Azerbaijan, accompanied him.

Hollande criticized those who "destroy the values of Islam by resorting to violence and hate."

"The best weapons for fighting fanaticism that claims to be coming from Islam are found in Islam itself," he said. "What more beautiful message than that demonstrated here by these works."

The Louvre opened a department of Islamic art in 2003, under former President Jacques Chirac, who said he wanted to highlight the contributions of Muslim civilizations on Western culture. Chirac, who vigorously opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, constantly pushed for the idea of a "dialogue of cultures" to break down the misunderstandings between the West and the Muslim world.

But its gallery could initially display only a fraction of the thousands of pieces of art from the Muslim world, so it decided under Chirac on an ambitious expansion.

The museum opens to the public Saturday.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/paris+louvre+museum+unveils+islamic+art+wing+decade+in+the+making+as+cultural+tensions+roil/6442718788/story.html
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Made-in-Canada 'FIFA Soccer 13' video game draws huge demo audience

A screengrab from FIFA Soccer 13 is shown in a handout photo. While North American sports gamers eagerly anticipate the new version of Madden, it appears the world waits for the latest FIFA video game.Some 1.99 million people in 73 countries downloaded the demo for the made-in-Canada

A screengrab from FIFA Soccer 13 is shown in a handout photo. While North American sports gamers eagerly anticipate the new version of Madden, it appears the world waits for the latest FIFA video game.Some 1.99 million people in 73 countries downloaded the demo for the made-in-Canada "FIFA Soccer 13" in the first three days of its release.THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Electronic Arts

While North American sports gamers eagerly anticipate the new version of Madden, it appears the world waits for the latest FIFA video game.

Some 1.99 million people in 73 countries downloaded the demo for the made-in-Canada "FIFA Soccer 13" in the first three days of its release.

The game isn't out until Sept. 25 in North America and Sept. 28 worldwide but it's already hard to miss. Advertising hoardings promoting the new version were visible at English Premier League games on the weekend.

For Aaron McHardy, a game play producer of the EA Sports' title, the attention is quite remarkable.

"It's quite a cool thing," said the Vancouver native who has been working on the title since FIFA 08. "At home everyone knows FIFA, you tell people you're the game play designer for FIFA, you still get a smile.

"But it's quite breathtaking when you go to somewhere like London around (this) week or the week after and you start to see the signs and the lineups of people overnight waiting to get the game, it really is cool to see what an impact the game has worldwide. ... Everywhere you go, somebody knows what FIFA (the game) is."

The demo features five teams — AC Milan, Arsenal, Borussia Dortmund, Juventus and Manchester City — as well as Man City's Etihad Stadium.

And for those who haven't tried it yet, be warned that Manchester City's Argentine striker Carlos Tevez is a terror.

"I've heard people are finding him quite good this year," McHardy, an Arsenal fan, said with a laugh.

After rehauling the physics of the game last year, improving areas like tactical defending, the designers at EA Canada in Burnaby, B.C., saw the opportunity to build on those changes in "FIFA 13."

McHardy said the goals this time were to create "the unpredictability and the drama of real-world football" and to have "battles for possession and giving people creativity and freedom."

That turned into so-called features as first-touch control, attacking intelligence, and complete dribbling.

There's also more creativity surrounding free kicks, both on offence and defence.

The player impact engine was revamped last year, adding in real-word physical movement to improve the look of fumbles and falls. This year, more features have been added with more life-like defending in terms of pushing and pulling an opponent to battle for possession.

You can reach out with your arm to harass an attacker. But be too aggressive and the referee will penalize or yellow-card you.

On attack, players work harder to get open, making curving runs to stay onside or elude defenders.

It's all about polishing the product, with gamer feedback playing its part. Defences in "FIFA 11" were hard to break down, developers found, for example. Hence the need to expand the attack, to offer more ways to try to exploit the defence.

"Last year was laying that foundation," McHardy said. "This year, we're totally taking advantage of all those things we did last year by building features and behaviours on top of that."

In career mode this year, you can advance to the international arena — another request from gamers.

"FIFA Soccer 13" also offers the online service "Match Day" that provides regular updates to player form. And in-game commentary will reflect real-world events, thanks to previously prepared clips that can pulled out and used at the correct time to "accentuate what's actually happening in the real world."

FIFA Soccer 13 will be available for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation Vita, Nintendo Wii, PlayStation 2, Nintendo 3DS, PC, PSP and later this year on the Nintendo Wii U.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/made-in-canada+fifa+soccer+13+video+game+draws+huge+demo+audience/6442718540/story.html
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After Republican Convention, more empty chairs for Clint Eastwood at 'Curve' premiere

Cast members Clint Eastwood, right, and Amy Adams pose together at the premiere of

Cast members Clint Eastwood, right, and Amy Adams pose together at the premiere of "Trouble With the Curve" at the Westwood Village Theater on Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

LOS ANGELES - Three weeks ago, Clint Eastwood shared the spotlight with a single chair.

On Wednesday night, he shared it with 16.

The 82-year-old Oscar winner walked the press gauntlet at the Los Angeles premiere of his latest film "Trouble With the Curve" - with the empty chairs right behind him.

They were simply set dressing: bleacher seats lined up along the green carpet at the premiere for "Trouble With the Curve," a family drama about a fading baseball-scout father played by Eastwood and his estranged daughter, played by Amy Adams.

When it was pointed out to him the Oscar winner laughed.

On Aug. 30, Eastwood stood on stage at the Republican National Convention berating an empty chair, representing President Barack Obama.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/after+republican+convention+more+empty+chairs+for+clint+eastwood+at+curve+premiere/6442718819/story.html
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Dolan says 'transsexuality is a metaphor' in new film 'Laurence Anyways'

Written By empapat on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 13.46

TORONTO - In Montreal phenom filmmaker Xavier Dolan's new feature, "Laurence Anyways," a handsome teacher bravely reveals to his girlfriend of two years that he wants to be a woman.

While the ensuing drama details the struggles of transsexuality, Dolan notes the French-language film represents all couples who struggle with changing identities in relationships.

"Transsexuality is a metaphor for authenticity in a couple," the 23-year-old writer-director said at the recent Toronto International Film Festival, where "Laurence Anyways" won the best Canadian feature prize.

"From that moment which succeeds the honeymooning, the teenage years of love ... where you have to come off as who you really are and expect from the person facing you that she will respect you for that person and that you will respect her for who she is.

"That's a make or break for a lot of couples."

Opening Friday in Toronto, "Laurence Anyways" stars Melvil Poupaud as the eponymous protagonist, who surprises beau Fred (Suzanne Clement) with news that he feels like he was born to be a woman.

Fred is supportive and encourages Laurence to begin wearing women's clothing, both in his personal life and on the job, which upsets the local parents' group and ministry of education in Montreal.

As Laurence's life takes a dramatic turn, so too does his relationship with Fred, and the film follows their decade-long journey to connect through his transition in the 1990s.

Co-stars include Monia Chokri, who was also in Dolan's 2010 romantic comedy "Heartbeats" ("Les amours imaginaires"), which won the Regards Jeunes Prize at the Cannes film festival. It was his second feature after the 2009 personal parent-son drama "I Killed My Mother" ("J'ai tué ma mère"), which won three awards at Cannes.

"What I mostly see that connects these films is that they're all about impossible love," Dolan said in an interview in a Toronto hotel room, wearing his signature horn-rimmed glasses, his curly pompadour more tame than usual.

"Impossible love between a teenager and his mom, impossible love between two friends and that ... beautiful stranger that shows up, and then impossible love between two crazy lovers in the '80s or '90s that have great expectations for their lives that are compromised by honesty and request of authenticity from the man in the couple."

Dolan conceived the film idea while shooting "I Killed My Mother," when a wardrobe assistant revealed that her ex-boyfriend told her he wanted to become a woman.

Clement, who was also in "I Killed My Mother," discussed the story with him for several years and had some say in how far her character would go in the relationship.

"The fact that he's able to write about this at his age is amazing," she said.

"He ... goes beyond the fear of, 'What are people going to say — that I don't know enough?' ... He digs deeper in his own relationships ... asks questions. He's really open to observing and he's intelligent, I think."

Dolan also has a "boldness" onset and will change scenes and dialogue on the fly, added Clement, whose other credits include Robert Lepage's "Le Confessional" and Philippe Falardeau's "It's Not Me, I Swear."

In fact, a week after shooting the movie, he realized the pivotal scene where Laurence tells Fred that he wants to be a woman was "too boring."

Dolan had to fly Poupaud back to Quebec from his home in Paris to reshoot, but that's not unusual for him.

"I've always reshot, always. It's not very economic but sometimes you have to," Dolan said with a laugh.

Like "Heartbeats," "Laurence Anyways" is filled with rousing stylistic touches, from artfully framed shots to pops of colour and a charged soundtrack.

Clement noted Dolan is going through a "creative explosion" in his life and in his work, and it's always evolving.

"That's, I think, the main reason why I wanted to do the movie, is to do it with him, with this type of openness, that everything can always move. It's something that has become almost I think vital in my life."

Though many reviewers comment on the artistic touches in his films, Dolan said he's not sure he's found his filmmaking style.

"I've found stories to tell and I've tried to give these stories the best direction that they deserved, and I don't know how I've (succeeded) to do that but I never thought I would find myself or find a signature.

"Perhaps I can help it; there are things that I like, obviously. But these three movies are highly different from one another, very different."

Dolan also notes that he's "really into acting and dialogue and dramatic tension," not just style.

"But I don't really care about people's perception of my work," continued Dolan. "I read everything they write and everything they say and that's very important to me, it's educational, actually, so that's fun to read.

"But in the end I want to be content with what I do, not with what people think I do."

"Laurence Anyways" is set to open in Ottawa on Oct. 12.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/dolan+says+transsexuality+is+a+metaphor+in+new+film+laurence+anyways/6442718315/story.html
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Belafonte to be honoured at opening of Montreal International Black Film Festival

The legendary Harry Belafonte is to be honoured with the Montreal International Black Film Festival's 2012 Humanitarian Prize at the festival's opening night on Wednesday;September 19;2012.

The legendary Harry Belafonte is to be honoured with the Montreal International Black Film Festival's 2012 Humanitarian Prize at the festival's opening night on Wednesday;September 19;2012.

, Montreal International Black Film Festival

MONTREAL - The legendary Harry Belafonte is to be honoured with the Montreal International Black Film Festival's 2012 Humanitarian Prize at the festival's opening night on Wednesday.

He is being granted this award for his contributions to the civil rights movements, as well as for his selfless and dedicated efforts in addressing injustice and inequality, even at the risk of his own wellbeing.

"It is a tremendous honour and a real privilege for all of us to welcome the living legend, Harry Belafonte, to Montreal and to honour him with the very first Montreal International Black Film Festival's 2012 Humanitarian Prize," said Fabienne Colas, president and founder of the MIBFF.

"Giving him this award is also an excellent way for us to recognize the true value of his spirit." 

Belafonte is as well-known for his social activism and pursuit of social justice as he is for his acting and musical talent.

His album "Calypso" made him the first artist in history to sell more than one million LPs and he's taken home a Tony award, an Emmy award and the National Medal for the Arts by President Clinton.

Over the decades, Mr. Belafonte has worked with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., President John F. Kennedy, Nelson Mandela and he was the driving force behind the 1985 "We Are the World" project to help people affected by war, drought, and famine in Africa.

He has served as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and is a recipient of the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors for excellence in the performing arts.

The tribute to Harry Belafonte on September 19 will be followed by the screening of the festival's opening film, Darrell Roodt's Winnie, which stars Oscar- and Grammy-award-winning Jennifer Hudson and Oscar-nominated Terrence Howard. To find out more or to purchase tickets, please visit the MIBFF website.

© Shaw Media Inc., 2012. All rights reserved.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/belafonte+to+be+honoured+at+opening+of+montreal+international+black+film+festival/6442718402/story.html
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Lindsay Lohan charged with leaving scene of NYC car accident; rep expects her to be cleared

People walk in front of a driveway on the side of the Dream Hotel in New York, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Lindsay Lohan was arrested in New York early Wednesday on charges that she clipped a pedestrian with her car and did not stop, police said. The 26-year-old actress was arrested at 2:25 a.m. as she left a nightclub at the Dream Hotel on 16th Street in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, police said. They said no alcohol was involved. Lohan was charged with leaving the scene of an accident and causing injury. She was given a ticket and will have to appear in court at a later date. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

People walk in front of a driveway on the side of the Dream Hotel in New York, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Lindsay Lohan was arrested in New York early Wednesday on charges that she clipped a pedestrian with her car and did not stop, police said. The 26-year-old actress was arrested at 2:25 a.m. as she left a nightclub at the Dream Hotel on 16th Street in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, police said. They said no alcohol was involved. Lohan was charged with leaving the scene of an accident and causing injury. She was given a ticket and will have to appear in court at a later date. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

NEW YORK, N.Y. - Lindsay Lohan was arrested in New York early Wednesday on charges that she clipped a pedestrian with her car and did not stop driving, but her publicist said he expects the allegations to be proven false.

The 26-year-old actress was arrested at 2:25 a.m. as she left a nightclub at the Dream Hotel in Manhattan's Chelsea neighbourhood, police said. They said no alcohol was involved.

Lohan was charged with leaving the scene of an accident and causing injury. She was given a ticket and scheduled to appear in court on Oct. 23.

Police said Lohan was slowly driving a black Porsche through an alley between the Dream Hotel and the Maritime Hotel on 16th Street when the accident occurred. The victim called 911. He was treated at a hospital for a knee injury and released.

"We are confident this matter will be cleared up in the coming weeks and the claims being made against Lindsay will be proven untrue," Lohan's publicist Steve Honig wrote in an email. He wrote the incident appeared to be "much ado about nothing."

It was the latest car accident involving Lohan.

On June 8, Lohan was involved in a crash in California that sent her and her assistant to a hospital. They were on their way to a shoot for the film "Liz and Dick" when Lohan's Porsche collided with a dump truck on the Pacific Coast Highway. Neither was seriously injured and Lohan resumed shooting later in the day.

The accident remains under investigation; police have said they are trying to determine who was driving.

The actress, best known for roles in "Freaky Friday" and "Mean Girls," was cleared in May of allegations that she struck a Hollywood nightclub manager with her car. Los Angeles prosecutors refused to file charges, stating there was no evidence an accident occurred and citing doubts about the manager's credibility.

Lohan remains on informal probation for taking a necklace last year from a jewelry store without permission. She completed a strict counselling and morgue cleanup duty program implemented by a judge. She is not required to check in with a judge or probation officer, but she could face a jail term if she is re-arrested.

Lohan recently filmed "The Canyons," a film by "Less Than Zero" author Bret Easton Ellis. "The Canyons" has Lohan playing opposite James Deen, who is best known as an adult film star with thousands of movies to his credit.

___

AP Entertainment Writer Anthony McCartney in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/lindsay+lohan+charged+with+leaving+scene+of+nyc+car+accident++rep+expects+her+to+be+cleared/6442717959/story.html
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Valentino's new runway is the ballet stage

NEW YORK - When dancers of the New York City Ballet grace the stage at Lincoln Center for this year's fall gala Thursday night, they'll be wearing extraordinary costumes by Valentino - and not many people can say that these days.

Valentino - really Valentino Garavani, but his name stands on its own and usually in boldface - retired as one of fashion's most celebrated designers nearly four years ago, leaving the design house he founded in 1960. But, he says, retirement wasn't ever going to be spent enjoying the views from his half-dozen homes around the world.

His desire to put pencil to paper and sketch artful things never diminished, he says, but churning out collection after collection did.

"I stopped because in the 'fashion world,' I had done almost everything, and fashion was taking a direction I didn't like," Valentino, now 80, says. "... This is a new life for me, and it's been a very beautiful experience."

For the fall gala, he has created 16 original designs for a ballet set to selections from Tchaikovsky's "Eugene Onegin" and for pieces set to music by Duke Ellington, Fred Astaire, Max Richter and Dinah Washington.

There also will be a tribute of sorts to Valentino: The ballet will perform "Rubies," from George Balanchine's "Jewels," set to Igor Stravinsky's Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra. A bold ruby hue is known as Valentino red, a colour the designer made his signature over the years.

Valentino says he's a great fan of the ballet, and he has found working with the lovely music and eager dancers to be inspiring. It also helped that costumers were available to make everything perfect, just like it should be for what is essentially haute couture, he adds with a smile.

"I am doing this with great pleasure." he says.

For all his grandeur and fame, Valentino appeared quite comfortable in a sparse ballet practice room scattered with a few instruments.

He says NYCB Ballet Master-in-Chief Peter Martins, who is a friend, seems a little surprised at the minute level of detail that's required, and at the number of changes that were happening just days before the show. It's the first time Martins has seen choreography done around a dress and not vice versa, Valentino says with a smile.

Valentino designed costumes for the Vienna Ballet in 2009, and he would like to do a large-scale, ornate production, perhaps for the Bolshoi Ballet in Russia.

He, along with partner Giancarlo Giammetti, spent most of the last two weeks at Manhattan's Lincoln Center, which is not only the home of the NYCB but also is the hub of New York Fashion Week, where twice a year designers preview their looks for the coming season. He attended the runway show of his friend Diane von Furstenberg, but doesn't miss "fashion."

"I have nothing to regret in my career, and I love my colleagues and peers, but I don't pay attention to 'fashion' anymore," Valentino says.

He adds: "I have no nostalgia."

For those who do miss his typically feminine, glamorous fashion looks, there are several opportunities to see his work.

Somerset House in London plans "Valentino: Master of Couture" as a major exhibit, with 130 gowns from the wardrobes of Grace Kelly, Sophia Loren, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Gwyneth Paltrow. It will open at the end of November and run through March.

Last year marked the launch of the Valentino Garavani Virtual Museum, a downloadable app with real-time, 3-D views of hundreds of his dresses and even more of his sketches, ads, photos and videos. Giammetti, the business-focused, big-picture half of the duo, headed up this project since Valentino is the first to say he's not an aficionado of high-tech gadgets.

"I am the worst thing for anything mechanical or on the computer. Last evening, something was wrong with the TV," he says. "I had to turn it off because I didn't know what else to do."

He's moved on, Valentino insists, not only to costumes, but also to his interests in decorating, architecture and restoration of buildings, as well as cooking. His French chateau is featured in the October issue of Architectural Digest, and he's been asked to write a cookbook, which he's considering. "It's not terribly far away from what I do," he says. "I love food, so maybe there will be a book of recipes."

And he's keeping other options open.

"People know I'm available, and if I think a project is sensational, then I'll do it."

© Global News. A division of Shaw Media Inc., 2012.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/valentinos+new+runway+is+the+ballet+stage/6442718288/story.html
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World celebrates 10th annual International Talk Like a Pirate Day

Photo Credit: File , Getty Images

TORONTO - Arrrr! It's that time of year again, matey: International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

This year marks the 10th anniversary of its debut.

According to the official website, the idea originated in 1995 during a game of racquetball between two friends. John Baur and Mark Summers, out to lose a bit of weight, began shouting words of encouragement at each other to help keep the momentum of the poorly-played game going.

From "Damn, you bastard!" and "Oh, jeez, my hamstring!", the two started shouting words of encouragement in pirate slang, using terms such as "cannonade" and "yardarm".

After realizing how enjoyable it was to speak in pirate, the two decided the world needed a Talk Like A Pirate Day. The date was set: September 19th, which also happens to be Summers' ex-wife's birthday.

The two men celebrated the day on their own for seven years. In 2002, they pitched the idea to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Dave Barry, who later became the official spokesperson for International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

The official website features everything from a English-to-pirate translator and slang terminology to pickup lines and pirate talk for kids.

 

© Global News. A division of Shaw Media Inc., 2012.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/world+celebrates+10th+annual+international+talk+like+a+pirate+day/6442718085/story.html
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'Satanic Verses' author Rushdie dismisses new death threat from religious foundation in Iran

FILE - This Sept. 8, 2012 file photo shows author Salman Rushdie posing for a photo as he promotes the movie

FILE - This Sept. 8, 2012 file photo shows author Salman Rushdie posing for a photo as he promotes the movie "Midnight's Children" during the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto. Rushdie is dismissing the latest threat against his life as just talk. "This was essentially one priest in Iran looking for a headline," the author of "The Satanic Verses" said Tuesday, Sept. 18, as he spoke at a Barnes & Noble in New York. Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1989 declared Rushdie's novel was blasphemous and called for his death. A semi-official Iranian religious foundation headed by Ayatollah Hassan Saneii has raised the bounty for Rushdie from $2.8 million to $3.3 million after recent protests against an anti-Islamic film that helped lead to riots around the Middle East. (AP Photo/The Canadian Presss, Chris Young, file)

NEW YORK, N.Y. - Salman Rushdie is dismissing the latest threat against his life as just talk.

"This was essentially one priest in Iran looking for a headline," the author of "The Satanic Verses" said Tuesday night as he spoke at a Barnes & Noble in Union Square before about 400 people, some just children when Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1989 declared Rushdie's novel was blasphemous and called for his death.

Iran's government has long since distanced itself from Khomeini's decree, his fatwa, but anti-Rushdie sentiment remains. A semi-official Iranian religious foundation headed by Ayatollah Hassan Saneii has raised the bounty for Rushdie from $2.8 million to $3.3 million after recent protests against an anti-Islamic film that helped lead to riots around the Middle East. But Rushdie, who called the movie "the worst video on YouTube," says Saneii has long offered a bounty and few people have taken him seriously.

Rushdie said the threat was simply the latest product of the "outrage industry" and added that there is "no evidence" of people being interested in the bounty. His concern had been state-sanctioned death squads, "professional killers." But the days of hiding are long over and he is free to walk the streets, stand on line in supermarkets and honour that old publishing ritual — the author reading.

Rushdie was discussing his memoir about the fatwa, "Joseph Anton," which has just been published to strong reviews and encouraging sales. Security officials were present Tuesday at Barnes & Noble, but precautions were modest enough that Rushdie's appearance was well publicized and you could enter the reading area on the fourth floor without having your bag checked. The greatest deterrent was the weather, whistling winds and pounding rain that at times pressed against the windows just behind Rushdie.

Wearing a grey suit and no tie, the 65-year-old author sounded relieved, gratified and at home. This was a story with a happy ending, he said, although one that he would prefer to relive only on paper. "Joseph Anton" follows the abrupt turns in his life and career, from his swift rise in the early 1980s as the celebrated author of "Midnight's Children" to his sudden notoriety as objections to "The Satanic Verses" intensified from protests to government sanctions. The book is named for the pseudonym Rushdie used while in hiding. Anton was for Anton Chekhov, the "poet of loneliness," and "Joseph" for Joseph Conrad, who penned a motto Rushdie tried to follow: "I must live till I die."

Rushdie made it, but he remembered those who nearly didn't, including the novel's Norwegian publisher, shot three times in the back. That publisher not only pulled through, Rushdie observed, he made sure to order more copies of the book. Rushdie also thanked such loyal friends as Christopher Hitchens and the many booksellers in the U.S. who continued to stock the novel despite bomb threats and real bombs. "This was a shooting war," he said.

As he writes in "Joseph Anton," Rushdie witnessed the very best and worst in people. He remembered being criticized by conservatives and even some liberals for causing his own trouble. Two marriages ended during his decade underground and publishers were reluctant to release the paperback of "Satanic Verses," which became a bestseller for reasons Rushdie never imagined or desired.

"Avoid being condemned to death by the leader of a tyrannical country," he advised the audience Tuesday.

The fatwa turned his life into a novel, a genre novel. Rushdie spoke of having armed policemen in his kitchen, people "licensed to kill." He described streets in Paris cleared by security officials so a car he was in could drive through. And he remembered looking out on a cafe and wishing he could join the drinkers and smokers trying to figure out who was causing the fuss.

He says he's proud of the book and of his fight for a most precious freedom — freedom of expression. Terrorism is really the art of fear, he explained. "The only way you can defeat it is by deciding not to be afraid."

© The Canadian Press, 2012

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Entertainment/satanic+verses+author+rushdie+dismisses+new+death+threat+from+religious+foundation+in+iran/6442717779/story.html
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