In 1999, Debra Messing stars as Lisa Kramer in the show Adventures in Time: The National Geographic Millennium Special.
In 1992, she stars as Herself in the Aida.
She is cast in the role of TV Reporter at Lupus Office in the 2003 video Amateur Angels 9.
For the 2006 release of Achi-wa ssipak, she plays Mary Magdalene.
In 1970, Debra Messing plays Lori Fox in the show Aeggunun park.
In 1985, Betty Sutton in the movie Alamo Bay.
For the 1968 movie Ask eski bir yalan, Lt. Penelope Carpenter.
In 1912, she takes the role of Herself in the feature Assisi, Italy.
In 2001, she is cast in the role of Mary Klein in the release of Beat the Blue.
In 1929, Debra Messing is cast in the role of Dr. Sloan Parker in the movie Belje.
In 1995, Debra Messing is cast in the role of Herself in the production of BSR: The Trash Movie.
In 1932, Debra Messing plays the part of Stacey Colbert Dorsey in the show Cordon bleu, Le.
In 2008, she plays Dr. Sloan Parker in the release of David and Fatima.
She is cast in the role of Herself - Nominee: Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series in the 1913 release of Falsa strada, La.
In 2000, Debra Messing stars as Kat Ellis in the movie Fighting Eddie.
Debra Messing is cast in the role of Narrator in the 2005 video release of Heidi - Das Luder von der Alm 3.
In 1964, Debra Messing is cast in the role of Kat Ellis in the release of Goben no tsubaki.
For the 1916 movie Going Straight, she stars as Presenter.
In 1998, Debra Messing is cast in the role of Herself - Nominee: Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series/Winner: Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series in the production of Gol.
For the 2002 show Goldfish in a Blender, A, Debra Messing plays the part of Herself - Nominee: Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series.
In 1933, Herself - Nominee: Best Actress in a Television Series [Musical or Comedy] in the movie The Good Companions.
Debra Messing Icy Movie Injury
Debra Messing ended up in the hospital while shooting new Christmas movie Nothing Like the Holidays, after slipping on ice. The festive film was shot earlier this year (08) in Chicago, Illinois during the city's worst winter in years. on 2008-12-15 04:48:09
Messing finds her ?inner Latina? in ?Holidays?
Debra Messing sticks out like a sore thumb in her latest movie, ?Nothing Like the Holidays.? But that is just fine by her. on 2008-12-09 04:47:42
Messing finds her "inner Latina" in holiday film
(Reuters)
Reuters - Debra Messing sticks out like a sore thumb in her latest movie, "Nothing Like the Holidays." But that is just fine by her. on 2008-12-09 04:45:10
This Week's Best Dressed
Now that the party season is upon us the celebrities are really pulling out the stops with their outfits and this week's fashion is no exception. With more and more events taking place each weeks the celebs are having to work harder to make sure they are on 2008-12-06 04:50:29
Debra Messing's Unique 'Holiday'!
Debra Messing tells ET's Kevin Frazier why her Christmas is scary! In her new Christmas comedy 'Nothing Like the Holidays,' Debra plays a high-powered executive who would rather raise capital than a kid. Christmas gets scary for her when her husband Mauri on 2008-12-06 04:49:06
HTV: Jack Nicholson & Debra Messing
Hollywood.tv is there as the classy and elegant Jack Nicholson goes out for dinner at trendy Madeo.
The cameras also spotted Debra Messing as she signed autographs while leaving the 'Nothing Like the Holidays' movie premiere and Jon Cryer jokes with a on 2008-12-05 04:49:13
Debra Messing: ?Nothing Like the Holidays?
Stepping out for her new movie, Debra Messing hit the red carpet at the premiere of “Nothing Like the Holidays” in Hollywood on Wednesday night (December 3).
Held at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, the 40-year-old actress happily posed fo on 2008-12-05 04:52:33
What to TiVo: Monday
Fox is new with Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles and Prison Break
NBC is new with Chuck, Heroes, and My Own Worst Enemy
CBS has repeats of The Big Bang Theory, How I Met Your Mother, Two and a Half Men, Worst Week, and CSI: Miami
ABC has Shrek the on 2008-12-01 04:50:31
Debra Messing Is Proud of Her Healthy Weight Loss
Debra Messing still recalls the hurtful stories about her as she tried to lose her baby weight.
“It was written about in the tabloids a lot,” the actress, 40, says of her post-baby body in the January issue of Shape magazine.
“On one pag on 2008-11-29 04:49:24
Debra Messing Opens Up About Weight Criticism
ET has the latest... "Will & Grace" star Debra Messing is speaking about difficult tabloid reports on her past struggle to lose her baby weight. "It was written about in the tabloids a lot," Messing tells the January issue of on 2008-11-26 04:47:03
Video: Debra Messing & Becki Newton are Gadget Girls!
ET was behind the scenes at one of this season's most exclusive parties, as "The Starter Wife'''s wild redhead Debra Messing and "Ugly Betty"'s Becki Newton teamed up to host an intimate cocktail party in New York City. "I really on 2008-10-31 04:48:56
Debra Messing Won't Return To Her Roots.
Debra Messing Won't Return To Her Roots.... Redheaded actress Debra Messing has refused to return to her natural hair colour - because casting directors ignored her as a brunette. The former Will & Grace star blended in with the legions of struggling actr on 2008-10-27 04:47:51
'Starter Wife' puts Debra Messing in the spotlight
The primary take-away from The Starter Wife the series sequel to last year's hit USA miniseries is that Debra Messing is a full-blown ...
on 2008-10-10 04:54:03
Debra Messing returns to 'The Starter Wife'
After the success of last year's miniseries, Debra Messing was asked to return. Before she said yes, she had a few . . . requests.
CLEARLY, there are worse jobs than working on a show that on 2008-10-10 04:53:59
Debra Messing returns to 'The Starter Wife'
After the success of last year's miniseries, Debra Messing was asked to return. Before she said yes, she had a few . . . requests.
CLEARLY, there are worse jobs than working on a show that on 2008-10-10 04:53:53
The Starter Wife
TV Reviews: Turns out a starter wife can be a trophy wife too. Case in point, "The Starter Wife," the Emmy-nominated mini-turned-regular series that returns to USA Network. Debra Messing reprises her role as the eponymous spouse, a Hollywood idiom for the on 2008-10-10 04:49:12
'Starter Wife' puts Debra Messing in the spotlight
The primary take-away from The Starter Wife the series sequel to last year's hit USA miniseries is that Debra Messing is a full-blown ...
on 2008-10-10 04:48:28
What to TiVo: Tuesday
All major networks will have coverage of the 2008 Presidential Debate
Fox has a repeat of House
NBC is new with Biggest Loser: Families
CBS has a repeat of NCIS
ABC is new with Dancing With the Stars
The CW is new with 90210 and Privileged
FX is new with on 2008-10-07 05:02:28
Debra Messing Reveals 'Starter Wife' Fantasy Scenes
ET's own Cojo goes on the set of USA's "The Starter Wife" to talk to leading lady Debra Messing about fashion, body image and her new fantasy scenes!
"You're not diva enough," Cojo jokes to Debra. "You're way too nice!"
De on 2008-10-03 04:50:14
The Ladies Pop and Shine on the Emmys Red Carpet
The ladies were bursting with color and sparkle at last night's Emmy Awards. Christina Applegate looked positively radiant and was the talk of the night ? smiley, happy and healthy. Mary Louise Parker was the most eye catching of all in her bright blue nu on 2008-09-22 05:05:57
"Joe Gillis" wrote:
>Why Stars Name Babies Moxie, Moses and Apple
>Published: April 16, 2006
[snip]
>Just as Frank Zappa'>Frank Zappa proved himself the classic hippie prankster by
>naming his children Moon Unit and Dweezil in the 1960's,
You know, if I were Ahmet Rodan and Diva Muffin, I might feel a little
marginalized here. Is he saying their names are normal?
And if he thinks Frank Zappa'>Frank Zappa was a hippie, he really hasn't done his
homework.
[snip]
>But as regular people - the sort who wait in line at restaurants and
>pay for their own clothing - try to catch up, the stars are pushed
>further into the realms of obscure names, in an effort to stay ahead of
>this particular fashion curve. So stars troll deeper into the Old
>Testament for name ideas (both Bono and Wynonna Judd have an Elijah,
>and Cynthia Nixon has a Charles Ezekiel), into world geography (David
>and Victoria Beckham have a Brooklyn, and Summer Phoenix and Casey
>Affleck have an Indiana) or even into Grandmother's attic. (Jude Law
>dusted off the name Iris for his daughter, and Heath Ledger and
>Michelle Williams exhumed the name Matilda for their first child last
>fall.)
And this highlights a trap all such articles as this end up falling into.
They establish a thesis, show good examples to support it, and then attempt
to force bad examples to fit it. Neither Elizah nor Matilda are all that
uncommon and out of the norm for names.
[snip - what horrible things stars are doing to kids by naming them Sue]
>Other psychologists, however, believe fears for the child's well-being
>are overblown. If, for example, Harvey Keitel's son, born in 2004,
>feels a bit conspicuous being named Roman, he will at least have
>company. Both Cate Blanchett and Debra Messing named sons Roman that
>year.
>discuss in therapy, said Dr. Berman, who said she has counseled
>several: "With kids of celebrities, in all honesty, the other issues
>are so big this one pales in comparison."
--
"Oh Buffy, you really do need to have
every square inch of your ass kicked."
- Willow Rosenberg
What crap...I've known many people named Moses.
And I adore the name Apple. Some people just like unique names. I was
going to name my daugher, Rhiannon or Fresa...I ended up with a much
more common name but those two names were front runners for a time.
Joe Gillis wrote:
> http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/fashion/sundaystyles/16NAMES.html?ex=1145332800&en=3f2a5b34a3ecd510&ei=5087%0A
> Published: April 16, 2006
> consider that if Henry Fonda were alive and having children today, it
> would seem as likely for him to name his daughter, say, Hanoi, as
> simply to call her Jane.
> Skip to next paragraph
> John Sciulli/WireImage.com
> mother, Beth Riesgraf.
> Jamie Tregidgo/WireImage.com
> his children out among the Hollywood elite equipped with ordinary names
> like Michael, Eric, Joel and Peter, as Kirk Douglas once did.
> her husband, Chris Martin, the frontman of the band Coldplay, named
> their newborn son Moses. It was an unlikely enough name for a baby boy
> born in 2006, but perhaps less startling than the much discussed (and
> mocked) handle his sister, Apple, born two years ago, will carry
> through life.
> anymore. The director Peter Farrelly plucked that very name for his
> daughter before Apple Martin came along. Even that name seems drab
> compared with Hollywood baby names like Pilot Inspektor, cooked up by
> Jason Lee, the star of "My Name Is Earl," or Banjo, the inspiration of
> the "Six Feet Under" star Rachel Griffiths, or Moxie CrimeFighter, a
> name chosen last year by the comedian and magician Penn Jillette for
> his daughter.
> names as another means for the attention-hungry to grab headlines. But
> psychologists and others who have worked with high-profile performers
> say that the naming of children can function as a window into a psyche.
> Perhaps subconsciously, they say, stars seize the opportunity of
> parenthood to express their obsessions, ambitions and inner quirks in a
> way that is, for a change, uned and not stage-managed by
> publicists.
> objectives when he and his wife, Emily, gave their daughter her highly
> individual name.
> name," Mr. Jillette said by e-mail, adding, " 'Moxie' is a name that
> was created by an American for the first national soft drink and then
> went on to mean 'chutzpah,' and that's nice."
> the losers named Dave that think having an unusual name is bad, and who
> cares what they think. They're named Dave."
> Paltrow said in an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2004. "And I just
> thought it sounded so lovely and clean." ("Moses" meanwhile is a song
> that Mr. Martin wrote for Ms. Paltrow in 2003.)
> like Karen and Joseph for fancier ones like Madison and Caleb, movie
> stars seem compelled to push the baby naming further. The names may be
> merely distinctive (say, Maddox, Angelina Jolie's Cambodian-born
> adopted son) or bizarre, like Makena'lei Gordon, Helen Hunt's daughter,
> inspired by a place name in Hawaii. Celebrities may not so subtly be
> saying that for them ordinary rules need not apply.
> can sometimes function as the equivalent of a royal title, a way for a
> privileged caste to bestow the power of its legacy on future
> generations.
> is special and different,' " said Jenn Berman, a clinical psychologist
> in Beverly Hills, who has worked with actors. "It's unconscious, but
> they think, 'We're a creative family, you have the potential to be
> creative, so here, I bestow you with the name 'Joaquin,' " Dr. Berman
> said.
> assumptions, defy conventions and push the frontiers of the possible.
> To settle for a tedious name for the child would almost be a form of
> spiritual surrender, said Stuart Fischoff, a psychologist, who has also
> worked with Hollywood clients.
> fear," Dr. Fischoff said. "It would be very embarrassing for people to
> think of them as normal."
> Perkins named his sons Osgood
> appeared in several movies, notably the 1932 version of SCARFACE.
> Paltrow, the daughter of the actress Blythe Danner and the director and
> producer Bruce Paltrow, is named Gwyneth, after all.
> for stars to come up with creative names for their children has grown
> in recent years, particularly as Hollywood members of Generations X and
> Y have moved into their peak years of child rearing, carrying with them
> their generation's taste for obscure pop cultural references,
> iconoclasm and smirky irony.
> naming his children Moon Unit and Dweezil in the 1960's, the actress
> Shannyn Sossamon, 26, established herself as a proud product of her
> times by naming her son, born in 2003, Audio Science.
> celebrity, you are going to have to work that much harder to set
> yourself apart as a person with a specialized knowledge or a rarefied
> taste," said Pamela Redmond Satran, who has written baby-name books
> with Linda Rosenkrantz, including "Beyond Jennifer and Jason" (St.
> Martin's). She said a competitive impulse among stars seems to account
> for the recent bonanza of unlikely baby names.
> "Anyone can be thin. The famous have to be thinner."
> coincidence that the name Ryder, which was the 901st most popular boy's
> name in the country in 2001, according to Social Security
> Administration statistics, jumped to 341 in 2004, the year Kate Hudson
> and Chris Robinson chose it for their newborn son.
> pay for their own clothing - try to catch up, the stars are pushed
> further into the realms of obscure names, in an effort to stay ahead of
> this particular fashion curve. So stars troll deeper into the Old
> Testament for name ideas (both Bono and Wynonna Judd have an Elijah,
> and Cynthia Nixon has a Charles Ezekiel), into world geography (David
> and Victoria Beckham have a Brooklyn, and Summer Phoenix and Casey
> Affleck have an Indiana) or even into Grandmother's attic. (Jude Law
> dusted off the name Iris for his daughter, and Heath Ledger and
> Michelle Williams exhumed the name Matilda for their first child last
> fall.)
> children amounts to simple narcissism by the parents, and the resulting
> status comes at the child's expense. The children, after all, are the
> ones who will have to raise their hands every time a teacher calls out
> "Coco" or "Eulala."
> psychologist in Los Angeles, who has had actors on his patient roster.
> "The child is a part of them, not an individual. It's an appendage."
> and Angelina Jolie are expecting has already been a cover subject for
> magazines.
> are overblown. If, for example, Harvey Keitel's son, born in 2004,
> feels a bit conspicuous being named Roman, he will at least have
> company. Both Cate Blanchett and Debra Messing named sons Roman that
> year.
> discuss in therapy, said Dr. Berman, who said she has counseled
> several: "With kids of celebrities, in all honesty, the other issues
> are so big this one pales in comparison."
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/fashion/sundaystyles/16NAMES.html?ex=1145332800&en=3f2a5b34a3ecd510&ei=5087%0A
Why Stars Name Babies Moxie, Moses and Apple
By ALEX WILLIAMS
Published: April 16, 2006
IT'S a measure of what we have come to expect from celebrities to
consider that if Henry Fonda were alive and having children today, it
would seem as likely for him to name his daughter, say, Hanoi, as
simply to call her Jane.
Skip to next paragraph
John Sciulli/WireImage.com
Pilot Inspektor Riesgraf-Lee with his father, Jason Lee, and his
mother, Beth Riesgraf.
Jamie Tregidgo/WireImage.com
Gwyneth Paltrow and her first-born, Apple Martin.
It seems almost unimaginable for any 21st-century movie star to send
his children out among the Hollywood elite equipped with ordinary names
like Michael, Eric, Joel and Peter, as Kirk Douglas once did.
This point was driven home again last week, when Gwyneth Paltrow and
her husband, Chris Martin, the frontman of the band Coldplay, named
their newborn son Moses. It was an unlikely enough name for a baby boy
born in 2006, but perhaps less startling than the much discussed (and
mocked) handle his sister, Apple, born two years ago, will carry
through life.
Not that a name like Apple Martin stands out among celebrity children
anymore. The director Peter Farrelly plucked that very name for his
daughter before Apple Martin came along. Even that name seems drab
compared with Hollywood baby names like Pilot Inspektor, cooked up by
Jason Lee, the star of "My Name Is Earl," or Banjo, the inspiration of
the "Six Feet Under" star Rachel Griffiths, or Moxie CrimeFighter, a
name chosen last year by the comedian and magician Penn Jillette for
his daughter.
Skeptics scoff at the mad rush by stars to come up with exotic baby
names as another means for the attention-hungry to grab headlines. But
psychologists and others who have worked with high-profile performers
say that the naming of children can function as a window into a psyche.
Perhaps subconsciously, they say, stars seize the opportunity of
parenthood to express their obsessions, ambitions and inner quirks in a
way that is, for a change, uned and not stage-managed by
publicists.
Mr. Jillette, for example, managed to satisfy a number of interests and
objectives when he and his wife, Emily, gave their daughter her highly
individual name.
"You're likely to be the only one in any normal-size group with that
name," Mr. Jillette said by e-mail, adding, " 'Moxie' is a name that
was created by an American for the first national soft drink and then
went on to mean 'chutzpah,' and that's nice."
Besides, Moxie CrimeFighter fits right into the creative world.
"Everyone I know with an unusual name loves it," he wrote. "It's only
the losers named Dave that think having an unusual name is bad, and who
cares what they think. They're named Dave."
Not all performers present their decisions in such terms.
"Apples are so sweet, and they're wholesome, and it's biblical," Ms.
Paltrow said in an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2004. "And I just
thought it sounded so lovely and clean." ("Moses" meanwhile is a song
that Mr. Martin wrote for Ms. Paltrow in 2003.)
But while middle-class parents increasingly trade in standard names
like Karen and Joseph for fancier ones like Madison and Caleb, movie
stars seem compelled to push the baby naming further. The names may be
merely distinctive (say, Maddox, Angelina Jolie's Cambodian-born
adopted son) or bizarre, like Makena'lei Gordon, Helen Hunt's daughter,
inspired by a place name in Hawaii. Celebrities may not so subtly be
saying that for them ordinary rules need not apply.
If celebrities are the new American aristocracy, the exotic baby name
can sometimes function as the equivalent of a royal title, a way for a
privileged caste to bestow the power of its legacy on future
generations.
"There's a sense of 'I'm special, I'm different, and therefore my child
is special and different,' " said Jenn Berman, a clinical psychologist
in Beverly Hills, who has worked with actors. "It's unconscious, but
they think, 'We're a creative family, you have the potential to be
creative, so here, I bestow you with the name 'Joaquin,' " Dr. Berman
said.
As artists, actors often consider it their duty to shake up
assumptions, defy conventions and push the frontiers of the possible.
To settle for a tedious name for the child would almost be a form of
spiritual surrender, said Stuart Fischoff, a psychologist, who has also
worked with Hollywood clients.
"They're expressing their creativity, and they're also expressing their
fear," Dr. Fischoff said. "It would be very embarrassing for people to
think of them as normal."
The unusual celebrity baby name is not new. Decades ago, Anthony
Perkins named his sons Osgood
[Faulty research here -- Osgood Perkins was Anthony's father. He
appeared in several movies, notably the 1932 version of SCARFACE.
Back to the article]
and Elvis, and Marlon Brando named his daughter Cheyenne. And Ms.
Paltrow, the daughter of the actress Blythe Danner and the director and
producer Bruce Paltrow, is named Gwyneth, after all.
But those who track the popularity of baby names say that the pressure
for stars to come up with creative names for their children has grown
in recent years, particularly as Hollywood members of Generations X and
Y have moved into their peak years of child rearing, carrying with them
their generation's taste for obscure pop cultural references,
iconoclasm and smirky irony.
Just as Frank Zappa proved himself the classic hippie prankster by
naming his children Moon Unit and Dweezil in the 1960's, the actress
Shannyn Sossamon, 26, established herself as a proud product of her
times by naming her son, born in 2003, Audio Science.
"A name is free, it is something that everyone has, so if you are a
celebrity, you are going to have to work that much harder to set
yourself apart as a person with a specialized knowledge or a rarefied
taste," said Pamela Redmond Satran, who has written baby-name books
with Linda Rosenkrantz, including "Beyond Jennifer and Jason" (St.
Martin's). She said a competitive impulse among stars seems to account
for the recent bonanza of unlikely baby names.
"In a weird way, it's like anorexia" in Hollywood, Ms. Satran said.
"Anyone can be thin. The famous have to be thinner."
They also have a traditional role as tastemakers. It's hardly a
coincidence that the name Ryder, which was the 901st most popular boy's
name in the country in 2001, according to Social Security
Administration statistics, jumped to 341 in 2004, the year Kate Hudson
and Chris Robinson chose it for their newborn son.
But as regular people - the sort who wait in line at restaurants and
pay for their own clothing - try to catch up, the stars are pushed
further into the realms of obscure names, in an effort to stay ahead of
this particular fashion curve. So stars troll deeper into the Old
Testament for name ideas (both Bono and Wynonna Judd have an Elijah,
and Cynthia Nixon has a Charles Ezekiel), into world geography (David
and Victoria Beckham have a Brooklyn, and Summer Phoenix and Casey
Affleck have an Indiana) or even into Grandmother's attic. (Jude Law
dusted off the name Iris for his daughter, and Heath Ledger and
Michelle Williams exhumed the name Matilda for their first child last
fall.)
Some therapists said the celebrity impulse to foist odd names on their
children amounts to simple narcissism by the parents, and the resulting
status comes at the child's expense. The children, after all, are the
ones who will have to raise their hands every time a teacher calls out
"Coco" or "Eulala."
"It's like having a mini me," said Robert R. Butterworth, a clinical
psychologist in Los Angeles, who has had actors on his patient roster.
"The child is a part of them, not an individual. It's an appendage."
The burden of celebrity falls even on the unborn. The child Brad Pitt
and Angelina Jolie are expecting has already been a cover subject for
magazines.
Other psychologists, however, believe fears for the child's well-being
are overblown. If, for example, Harvey Keitel's son, born in 2004,
feels a bit conspicuous being named Roman, he will at least have
company. Both Cate Blanchett and Debra Messing named sons Roman that
year.
Besides, the offspring of the Hollywood elite have other matters to
discuss in therapy, said Dr. Berman, who said she has counseled
several: "With kids of celebrities, in all honesty, the other issues
are so big this one pales in comparison."
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/indexd?blogid=7
Messing Selling Her 'Lucky' House
Actress Debra Messing is risking her good fortunes by putting her "lucky
house" up for sale.
The redhead actress and her husband, Dan Zelman, deemed their Hollywood
Hills home lucky, because on the same April day in 1998 that they closed
escrow on the three-bedroom property, Messing learned she'd landed her role
on the hit sitcom "Will & Grace."
As the series approaches its eighth and final season, Messing, 37, boasts
four Emmy nominations and one win for her portrayal of Grace.
Despite the apparent luck the home has brought her, Messing and her husband
have placed the property on the market at just under $1.3 million.
The couple used the house as their primary residence for about six years,
living there while they remodeled the seven-bedroom Westside home that they
purchased from Renee Zellweger in 2003 for close to $7.5 million.
Listing agent Loren Judd of Westside Estate Agency in Beverly Hills, says,
"They loved the little house, but now they're done with it."
Ewww. No thanks. I think Debra Messing has gorgeous hair, much better
than Jessica Simpson. What, did they poll 13 year old or something?
NY DAILY NEWS.....LLOYD GROVE'S LOWDOWN
Andy Dick is apparently breaking new ground in celebrity swag-hunting.
I hear that yesterday morning, the demonic D-lister, formerly of MTV's
reality show "The Assistant," showed up at the Lucky/Cargo hospitality
suite at the Ritz-Carlton - set up for the television biz's Upfront
Week - and made off with pretty much everything that wasn't nailed
down.
While fully employed entertainers such as Lindsay Lohan, Debra Messing,
David Arquette and Eric McCormack followed the rule of each celeb
taking only one high-end corporate freebie per vendor, Dick - according
to a spy - insisted on raiding all the swag stations.
Lowdown's spywitness reports: "He was completely out of line. It only
takes 20 minutes to run through the whole suite, and he stayed for an
hour and 20 minutes!"
The spy adds: "He doesn't even have his own show, and he took
significantly more than everyone else: James jeans, Bose earphones, an
MP3 player from iRiver and even women's jewelry!"
At one point, Dick took the liberty of opening a closet full of
clothing and ravenously rummaged through it, oblivious to looks of
horror from his fellow guests. After getting his hands on a chic Ted
Baker blazer, he simply put it on and left the ratty jacket he'd come
with for the staff to dispose of.
Of course, the 39-year-old Dick is no stranger to bad behavior: Last
August, he was spotted on the floor of the men's room at Suede flailing
his arms and legs, and had to be carried to a taxi, according to Rush &
Molloy.
Dick's PR rep disputes Lowdown's version of yesterday's visit: "I was
with him, and that's completely untrue," she said. "It sounds
completely fabricated. Andy was really grateful to be invited, and he
had a great time."
http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/entertainment/42852004.htm
Debra Messing: Husband OK With Her Movie Sex Scenes
April 23, 2005, 6:02:09
MESSING: 'SEX SCENES DON'T BOTHER MY HUSBAND'
WILL AND GRACE actress DEBRA MESSING performed some sexy scenes with co-star
DERMOT MULRONEY in new movie THE WEDDING DATE, but their respective partners
remained unfazed.
The red-haired beauty, 36, is devoted to her writer husband DANIEL
ZELMAN, and she claims their history of acting together ensures no
suspicions are aroused when she has to play an intimate scene with a hunky
actor.
She explains, "(Mulroney's) wife, CATHERINE KEENER is an actress as well and
my husband and I studied acting together at NYU (New York University)
together.
"I think when you come from that background you have a full understanding
and appreciation that it's storytelling, that it's technical, and for both
of our spouses it was a non-issue."
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005 3:56:56 +0800, Tinalatte wrote
(in message ):
> news:J2S8e.88789$cg1.21896@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
> Guess
> sagging after she's done breast-feeding you'll see her running to the
> plastic surgeon for a "lift".
Well, theres a lift, and then theres installing beachballs.
+-=====================================-+
Sponky
The Gunfighter Rule:
"Be courteous to everyone, friendly to no one. Be polite.
Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet."
http://toomanylosers.blogspot.com/
Mimi wrote:
> "Phoenix" wrote in message
> news:MPG.1ccdbd2a593529c6989bb2@news-server.carolina.rr.com...
> http://www.kious.com/Debra/images/hq_11.jpg
Nope, part of an elegant face, like M. Streep.
Pe
"moria" wrote in message
news:J2S8e.88789$cg1.21896@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
> news:hVu8e.1704$oa7.23497@nnrp1.ozemail.com.au...
> Yet supposedly she was a size 8 when the show started, and she had no
> problem starving herself down to a size 2 as it got more successful.
Guess
> she has no problem with that beauty trend.
Apparently she's not as much of a rebel afterall. Once her boobs start
sagging after she's done breast-feeding you'll see her running to the
plastic surgeon for a "lift".
In article ,
noemailplease@comcast.net says...
> news:MPG.1ccdbd2a593529c6989bb2@news-server.carolina.rr.com...
And it fits her face beautifully. Though the popular taste is to
replace an aquiline nose with a cheery little button, I think the
results are mostly terrible.
The exceptions are usually women who just had a bit of reshaping rather
than a full blown nip and tuck. Lisa Kudrow had a good surgeon who
allowed her face to keep it's distinction. Susan Lucci had a great nose
job. Sarah Jessica Parker, though no beauty, had just the right amount
of rhinoplasty done to enhance her look.
bel
>
"Phoenix" wrote in message
news:MPG.1ccdbd2a593529c6989bb2@news-server.carolina.rr.com...
> In article ,
> noemailplease@comcast.net says...
> Hasn't she already had one? Though I don't like the woman, I think her
> nose is lovely.
>
http://www.kious.com/Debra/images/hq_11.jpg
Beak!
"moria" wrote in message
news:J2S8e.88789$cg1.21896@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
> news:hVu8e.1704$oa7.23497@nnrp1.ozemail.com.au...
> problem starving herself down to a size 2 as it got more successful.
> Guess she has no problem with that beauty trend.
>
What Debra Messing really needs is a nose job. That eagle beak of hers
reminds me of a bird of prey.
"Rick in Oz" wrote in message
news:hVu8e.1704$oa7.23497@nnrp1.ozemail.com.au...
> http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/celebrity/35122004.htm
> April 17, 2005, 10:12:42
> popular trend, but it is an American beauty ideal that I don't subscribe
> to."
>
Yet supposedly she was a size 8 when the show started, and she had no
problem starving herself down to a size 2 as it got more successful. Guess
she has no problem with that beauty trend.
In article ,
noemailplease@comcast.net says...
> news:J2S8e.88789$cg1.21896@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
> What Debra Messing really needs is a nose job. That eagle beak of hers
> reminds me of a bird of prey.
Hasn't she already had one? Though I don't like the woman, I think her
nose is lovely.
bel
>
3finger wrote:
> In article ,
> "Rick in Oz" wrote:
> anymore, at least by what she once was. Who knows how long they'll
> linger after her son finishes up.
Wonder if she'll do a Charisma (Charisma Carpenter, who appeared in
Playboy to basically show the world that she'd got her body back post-baby)?
--
Stop the chop by deleting it from my address.
In article ,
"Rick in Oz" wrote:
> http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/celebrity/35122004.htm
> April 17, 2005, 10:12:42
> undergo breast enlargement surgery, insisting she's happy with her small
> bust.
> actresses to the operating room, because she's not interested in following
> popular trends.
> small breasts.
> "I'd never get implants, because that's just not me. Certainly it's a
> popular trend, but it is an American beauty ideal that I don't subscribe
> to."
Besides, since she had her baby, her small boobs aren't that small
anymore, at least by what she once was. Who knows how long they'll
linger after her son finishes up.
--
3finger
Chicago Cubs, Back-to-Back World Champions ... 1907,1908
http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/celebrity/35122004.htm
Debra Messing: Small Boobs Are The Best
April 17, 2005, 10:12:42
MESSING DEFENDS SMALL BREASTS
WILL AND GRACE actress DEBRA MESSING has rejected Hollywood pressure to
undergo breast enlargement surgery, insisting she's happy with her small
bust.
The flame-haired beauty, 36, refuses to follow many similarly small breasted
actresses to the operating room, because she's not interested in following
popular trends.
She says, "There have been many jokes made along the way about me having
small breasts.
"I'd never get implants, because that's just not me. Certainly it's a
popular trend, but it is an American beauty ideal that I don't subscribe
to."
Missourian wrote:
> In Commemoration of the TWIN-month anniversary of the Conception of the SON
> of JVLIAN and JANICE last February 26, it was Announced today (April 26)
> that English Janic priestess Cate Blanchett has TWINed the birth of "Roman".
> TWIN day and one TWIN week after Debra Messing gave birth to "Roman" on
> April 7.
> Anniversary of ROME's founding by the Holy TWINs ROMULUS and REMUS.
That can't just be a coincidence.
BTW, sugar, before you wrote that post, I thought the names were a product
of Polanski-admiration.
(?!)
Well, it *is* nice to see a pair of Blood Offerings done for Erotic ("Life")
purposes, instead of Thanatotic ones.
Dang straight!!
Hugs,
Janice
----------------------------------
(-)> *peep* (-)> *peep* (-)> *muckmouth*
"He's the best human being I know, he makes me a better person every day. I'm never happier than W_hen I'm with him." - Said about her husband Daniel in a Cosmopolitan interview: 2000.
Named TV Guide's "best dressed woman" in 2003
Was named one of the 50 Most Beautiful People by People Magazine in 2002.
Is severely allergic to flowers and perfumes.
Engaged to Daniel Zelman. [1998]
Following undergraduate training, went on to earn Master's degree in drama from New York University.
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