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Elizabeth Montgomery Filmography
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She is cast in the role of Catherine McSweeney in the 2005 production of Animacho.
For the 1991 video Burn, she is cast in the role of Daisy Daws.
For the 1981 movie American Mythologies, Belle Starr.
For the 1948 feature The Dark Past, she plays Abigail Foster.
In 2002, Mary Brecker in the movie Chasm.
In 1978, Elizabeth Montgomery is cast in the role of Blanche Taylor Moore in the release of Bhairavi.
For the 2004 movie Children of Open City, she plays Ellen Harrod.
For the 1902 release of Cable Road in San Francisco, Cal., A, Edna Buchanan.
For the 1932 movie Asia Sitara, Elizabeth Montgomery's character is Margaret Lansdowne.
For the 2005 production of The Blood of My Brother: A Story of Death in Iraq, Elizabeth Montgomery plays Katherine Merrill.
In 2008, Elizabeth Montgomery stars as Edna Buchanan in the show Bart Got a Room.
For the 2000 production Anderson, Elizabeth Montgomery plays Dr. Diana Firestone.
She plays the part of Jennifer Prince in the 1978 release of Belle emmerdeuse, La.
In 2006, she is cast in the role of Darien 'Dare' Guiness in the release of 3 Minuten.
For the 1912 release of The Browns Have Visitors, she stars as Vikki Eaton.
In 2004, she plays the part of Elizabeth 'Lizzie' Borden in the feature Aisha the American.
She plays Sara Scott in the 1946 feature 100 dragspel och en flicka.
For the 1925 feature The Dark Angel, she plays Etta Place.
Joan Hagen in the 2001 release Ballroom Dancing: The International Championships.
She plays the part of Alaxandra McKay in the 2003 tv series Diddy Runs the City.
In 2003, Elizabeth Montgomery stars as Ruth Coe in the Barely Legal Summer Camp.
Elizabeth Montgomery is cast in the role of Mary Flynn in the 1966 production of Dakrya gia tin Ilektra.
Elizabeth Montgomery stars as Sayward Luckett Wheeler in the 1992 Bugs Bunny's Creature Features.
For the 1919 movie The Detectress, Elizabeth Montgomery plays the part of Samantha Stephens/Serena (1964-1972).
In 1915, she takes the role of Millie Curtain in the production of Her Slumbering Conscience.
Hollywood Star for Elizabeth Montgomery
(AP)
AP - A posthumous star honoring "Bewitched" star Elizabeth Montgomery was unveiled on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in a rainy Friday ceremony.
on 2008-01-04 20:45:11
Hollywood Star for Elizabeth Montgomery
(AP)
AP - A posthumous star honoring "Bewitched" star Elizabeth Montgomery was unveiled on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in a rainy Friday ceremony.
on 2008-01-04 20:45:14
Elizabeth Montgomery gets posthumous star
A posthumous star honoring ?Bewitched? star Elizabeth Montgomery was unveiled on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in a rainy Friday ceremony.
on 2008-01-04 20:45:50
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On Tue, 11 Oct 2005 18:05:31 -0400, Taylor
wrote:
>Killfile victim #847238 wrote:
>'Wonder Woman'.
At 44? Would you want her twin sister Candy to play Donna Troy?
Now, her oldest daughter is probably the right age to play a young Wonder
Woman, or maybe her niece Jaclyn.
--
... and my sister is a vampire slayer, her best friend is a witch who
went bonkers and tried to destroy the world, um, I actually used to be
a little ball of energy until about two years ago when some monks
changed the past and made me Buffy's sister and for some reason, a big
klepto. My best friends are Leticia Jones, who moved to San Diego
because this town is evil, and a floppy eared demon named Clem.
(Dawn's fantasy of her intro speech in "Lessons", from the shooting )
-
Killfile victim #847238 wrote:
> Taylor wrote:
> Jenny Picolo? Dude, please.
>
No, seriously... did you catch her on the recent 'Happy Days' reunion
special playing softball? The girl looks pretty good for her age! I
think she pumps iron. :-o
-
Taylor wrote:
> Killfile victim #847238 wrote:
> 'Wonder Woman'.
Jenny Picolo? Dude, please.
-
Killfile victim #847238 wrote:
> Squad wrote:
>
Phil Silvers' daughter Cathy Silvers ('Happy Days') should play the next
'Wonder Woman'.
-
Squad wrote:
> "Noodles Jefferson" wrote in message news:MPG.1db5c3015f6bb6e09898e3@news.alt.net...
> IAWTP.
I have an idea, how about Stephanie McMahon?
-
"Killfile victim #847238" wrote in message =
news:1129060699.596871.147800@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>=20
> Squad wrote:
news:MPG.1db5c3015f6bb6e09898e3@news.alt.net...
took
corruption
the
the day she died (and maybe a few days after...)
>=20
>=20
> I have an idea, how about Stephanie McMahon?
>
YES!
with some voice modulation of course...
-
Squad wrote:
> "Noodles Jefferson" wrote in message news:MPG.1db5c3015f6bb6e09898e3@news.alt.net...
> IAWTP.
I have an idea, how about Stephanie McMahon?
-
"Noodles Jefferson" wrote in message =
news:MPG.1db5c3015f6bb6e09898e3@news.alt.net...
> In article , Citizen Kane =
took=20
> the hamburger, threw it on the grill, and I said "Oh Wow"...
>=20
>=20
> Bring back Lynda Carter. She's *still* a hottie.
>=20
> --=20
> Noodles Jefferson=20
> mhm31x9 Smeeter#29 WSD#30=20
> sTaRShInE_mOOnBeAm aT HoTmAil dOt CoM=20
>=20
> "Our earth is degenerate in these latter days, bribery and corruption=20
> are common, children no longer obey their parents and the end of the=20
> world is evidently approaching."=20
> --Assyrian clay tablet 2800 B.C.
>=20
>=20
>
IAWTP.
Squad, who will also state that Elizabeth Montgomery was hot until the =
day she died (and maybe a few days after...)
-
http://www.azcentral.com/ent/celeb/articles/0627kidman.html
Kidman would love to be witch for a day
Knight Ridder Newspapers
June 27, 2005 8:18 AM
Nicole Kidman would love to have a witch's powers for a day - especially
when she's having a bad day.
"It's kind of nice to be able to...walk through and blow up the cappuccino
machine and make a dog jump into your arms and make him speak in tongues,"
Kidman told reporters recently, according to AP Radio.
In the new film, Bewitched, an adaptation of the classic TV show, Kidman
plays a blissfully naive (good) witch who wants to give up her supernatural
powers for mundane, suburban, mortal life.
The Oscar-winning actress said she needed two things to help her learn how
to twitch her nose as Elizabeth Montgomery had done on the '60s sitcom.
"I needed a mirror. And I needed the slo-mo on the video in the VCR. And I
would put her nose in slow motion. And then I would put the mirror and I
would try to mimic it."
-
Zeb Quinn wrote:
> What, you expected Citizen Kane? Bewitched was a lame 60s sitcom.
> Yeah, it had a few really good performers in it, not the least of which
> was Elizabeth Montgomery, but it's premise was not its strong suit. A
> great movie was never going to spring from that. You can't make a silk
> purse out of a sow's ear.
Yeah, but the movie's premise (remaking the old series "Betwithced" only
the woman who plays the Elizabeth Montgomery role really *IS* a witch!)
is workable enough, but the killer of the film is summed up in two words:
Will Farrell.
Seing the trailer where Nicole Kidman is professing an attraction for
him makes me wanna wretch.
Michael
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http://www.suntimes.com/output/entertainment/sho-sunday-nicole19.html
'Bewitched,' bothered and bewildered
June 19, 2005
By Cindy Pearlman
LOS ANGELES -- Her ex-husband Tom Cruise can jump up and down on Oprah's
couch until the springs come loose. He can kneel and pump his fist until he
slips a disc.
Nicole Kidman is quietly in love, but don't expect any public displays of
lunacy.
"My films are my love affairs," says the fiery Aussie redhead, who by her
own standards is "in deep" these days when it comes to her significant
other, Hollywood.
Kidman honestly doesn't believe women can have it all. "Who is good at all
this balancing?" says the 37-year-old single mother of two, who mentions
that at the end of the day, her passion is for some quiet, a comfy bed and a
piece of chocolate cake.
"I'm just not good at balancing," Kidman admits as a way of explaining why
she's not deliriously announcing to the world her latest love affair --
because there is none.
The ex-Mrs. Cruise insists, "When I was married, acting wasn't as
interesting to me, which is why I only dabbled in it. Now I take it far more
seriously."
Which isn't to say she wouldn't like to get hitched again someday in the
future. Kidman sips designer water in a room at the Four Seasons Hotel and
swings a ponytail dramatically when the question is asked. By the way, she's
also reed-thin in a gorgeous navy blue sundress.
"Oh, God! The marriage question!" she quips. "If I go down this territory,
I'll end up with headlines. Then I'll end up getting letters from men
saying, 'I'll be the father of your child!' I'll read these letters and
think, 'You'll be the father of my what? I don't even know you!'"
Does she really get those letters? "To be honest," Kidman says, "the answer
is yeah. Yes. In case you're wondering, I have not responded."
Likewise, she really doesn't want to respond to the idea of her ex-husband
Tom being so public with his new relationship to Katie Holmes. As for her
own love life, Kidman makes it clear she won't talk about reported
flirtations with millionaire Steve Bing'>Steve Bing or rocker Lenny Kravitz.
"I'm just protective of who I am," Kidman says. "I'd rather decline
answering."
If only she could magically make these questions go away. Actually, Kidman
could do that if she had the powers of the witch she plays in the new big
screen version of "Bewitched," directed by Nora Ephron, and starring Will
Ferrell as her mere mortal lover.
As the new story goes, Kidman's witch has come to Los Angeles to give up the
craft once and for all -- much to the dismay of her warlock father (Michael
Caine). She needs a human job, and lo and behold, she's discovered and cast
on a new TV version of "Bewitched" starring a piggish, egotistical actor
(Ferrell) whose career is on the skids. At first, they lock horns and then
later lips -- until he finds out that her nose-twitching is not just
courtesy of special effects.
You could say that Kidman won the infamous witchy woman part by a nose.
"They said it was my nose that got me the role," she says. By the way, she's
not kidding.
When the reporter mentions that it had to be more than her very slim, but
easily twitchable schnoz, she replies, "Maybe it was JUST that."
Laughter follows and Kidman insists, "Honestly, I think I should have been
fired if I couldn't do the nose."
The truth is she was a bit of a Samantha expert, who logged countless hours
as a girl in the '70s watching "Bewitched" in her native Australia. "I
watched it all the time," Kidman says. "As a young girl, I honestly thought
that Elizabeth Montgomery could do magic. And wasn't that the ultimate
dream?
"Can you imagine just wiggling your nose and getting what you want?"
Hmmm, it sounds a lot like being, uh, a movie star who dials up her cell
phone and gets what she wants.
"When I was a girl, all I truly wanted was to pass my exams and get a great
Christmas present," Kidman says. "You know, I found joy in the little
things. Actually, I still do."
She admits that twitching her nose and making "Bewitched" a big summer box
office hit would be a little thing that would sit well with her, too.
"I didn't do the film because it had the summer hit potential," she says. "I
loved that [director] Nora Ephron and her sister Delia wrote a that
quite cleverly incorporated the series, but it also created new characters
for us. We didn't imitate the Samantha and Darrin thing. We were able to
find the essence of them and set it in present day."
A bewitching suggestion
Kidman was actually instrumental in getting Ephron her job. It seems that
she is good friends with "Spy Kids" mom and actress Carla Gugino. One night
they were having a girl's night in. "Between bites of dessert, I said, 'I
wonder why they've never made a film out of 'Bewitched'? They've made films
of so many other series.'"
Gugino suggested that Kidman put down her pastry and make a few calls. The
next day, because she is Nicole Kidman, a meeting was set with Columbia
Pictures honcho Amy Pascal. "I said to her, 'What's happening with
'Bewitched'? Amy said, 'Absolutely nothing. It's been stalled for years.'"
At the same time, Ephron was asking the same questions. Pascal later called
Kidman and said, "Nora has this wacky idea of how to bring it to the big
screen."
A couple more calls later and the deal was done.
Ask her how she juggles it all and she just sighs and looks a little bit
disgusted with herself. Kidman is the first to admit that she juggles, but
sometimes drops a few balls.
"If only I had those witchy powers to know exactly everything my children
were up to," says Kidman, who's about to enter teenland this year when
daughter Isabella turns 13. Son Connor is 10.
"There are a lot of secrets when they become teenagers, and it's scary for a
mother," she says with a little moan of dread.
In another breath, she admits, "But you can't do it all. You just do what
you can. And at the moment, my kids are happily at a baseball game and I'm
talking to you. We're going to get spaghetti tonight at their favorite
Italian restaurant because I don't have time to cook. So there, I am
juggling away."
The tabloids have had a field day insisting she's also juggling dating
ultra-rich playboy Steve Bing'>Steve Bing (father of Elizabeth Hurley's son) in her
spare time. Kidman just shakes her head and won't comment .
She will go on the record to say that she isn't a hopeless romantic. Love at
first sight? "I probably don't believe in it," she says. "I mean, you sort
of glance across the room at a man and go, 'There's my future love'? No.
"I think you've got to get to know somebody," she insists. "I'm not easy,
because my personality leans toward being a bit shy. I need to be drawn
out."
Kidman admits she has improved in the last few years. "I used to be
painfully shy and now I'm able to do things I could never do before," she
says. "But I still need to be coaxed out of my shell a bit."
Yet, unlike Cruise, she remains steadfast when it comes to holding back
certain details to the press. "I'm very honest," she says. "I don't ever
want to get accused of lying."
After parenting, acting and telling the truth, but not too much of it, she
manages to fit in her role as one of the big screen's premier actresses.
She's currently in New York City filming a biopic about photographer Diane
Arbus.
"I think I value acting more than when I started," she says. "Stanley
Kubrick [her director for "Eyes Wide Shut"] taught me that acting is my art.
I don't want to sound pretentious about it, but I can't just say, 'Oh, I'm
just an actor, and it's just silly.' I'd rather say that cinema is
important. Being an actor is important. It has value.
"I have enormous respect for what I do. As a young girl, it was like, 'Oh,
great, I can get a paycheck and get to go eat chocolate cake on a movie set.
And get out of school."
Advice from Endora
Now she's been called the next Streep, the next Lange. Kidman does love to
get advice from those who have gone before her, such as Shirley MacLaine who
plays Endora in "Bewitched." "On the set, Shirley told me, 'We have
something that connects us, and it's not just the red hair.'
"Shirley calls me her alien," Kidman says with a delighted laugh.
"She is an alien," MacLaine insists. "She's just one of those creatures who
has to act. It's in her soul. There was never a choice. She has to do this
work."
Kidman doesn't take talk about herself lightly and is uncomfortable when she
hears that quote. Squirming in her seat, she mulls it over and eventually
says, "At this particular stage in my life, I have to act.
"But what worries me is my ability to balance things is not good," she says.
"So either I work or I don't work. There's kind of nothing in between."
She has time for one last question: Who does she think has more magical
powers to change lives: Samantha or the guys from "Queer Eye for the
Straight Guy"?
"Both!" she says, laughing. "Actually, I love watching that show because
people are so happy with the changes done to their lives."
"Believe me, I'm not a big fan of plastic surgery," she cautions, "so I
don't like those type of makeover shows. But 'Queer Eye' just aims to fix up
a house or give someone new clothes.
"We can all relate to a makeover,' says Kidman, whose entire life has been
made over in the last few years. "One of the great gifts the children have
given me is that they don't allow me to get into a state of reclusiveness,
which could happen, you know."
Acting is actually her version of a makeover, too. "I just love to step into
somebody else's skin and change the way I talk and move," she says.
"Now that's magic.
-
http://www.dailytelegraph.news.com.au/story.jsp?sectionid=1267&storyid=32421
72
Spotlight helped shy Nic
June 6, 2005
YEARS in the spotlight have helped Oscar winner Nicole Kidman overcome
chronic shyness.
She was once so shy she had to hold a friend's hand while walking the red
carpet or undertaking publicity projects.
But promoting her latest film Bewitched in Hollywood today, Kidman said she
was finally able to do things her shyness had prevented in the past.
"I used to be painfully shy and now I am able to do the things that I have
too," Kidman said.
In Bewitched Kidman plays Isobel, a real life wife who is cast in the
television series remake of the classic TV series of the same name which
starred Elizabeth Montgomery.
The film also stars funnyman Will Ferrell as Kidman's love interest, as well
as Shirley MacLaine and Michael Caine.
"I decline to answer a lot of things," Kidman, who last night attended the
MTV movie awards where ex-husband Tom Cruise took to the stage with new
girlfriend Katie Holmes to accept an award.
"I am very protective of who I am and what I do. Emotionally I try to deal
with things in a really honest way."
Bewitched opens in the United States on June 24 and hits Australian cinemas
on July 7.
Kidman spent several months in Australia this past summer when she was to
star opposite Russell Crowe in Eucalyptus.
When that project was postponed due to ing issues, Kidman stayed in
Australia holidaying with family.
But she was the subject of much attention from local paparazzi and even took
out a restraining order against one photographer.
However she says she is generally able to live a normal life.
"I am quite fortunate in a way that I play such an array of characters that
people don't really know who I am," the 37-year-old said.
"And it tends to be this strange warmth (from fans) which is really nice.
People don't intrude. I have things with the paparazzi but in a much broader
sense audiences and people in the street tend not to invade."
Kidman also spoke of being a mother saying she had to wake up early this
morning to get her son Connor ready for a tennis lesson.
"I staggered out of bed at six to get him up on the court by 7.30am and I
got to tell you it ain't pretty," she said.
"It is sweats and a tee-shirt and slightly bleary eyed but desperately
trying to be a good mum."
Kidman said it was often difficult to juggle motherhood and a busy film
career.
"What you've got now is a really tired mother," the actor said.
"My kids are at a Dodgers game while I'm doing this interview and then we're
off to an Italian restaurant tonight because I don't have time to cook."
And Kidman's work commitments will keep her juggling over the coming months
with her intense promotional schedule for Bewitched and upcoming film
projects.
She is currently based in New York filming Fur, a bio-pic based on the life
of the late photographer Diane Arbus.
AAP
-
"Thanatos" wrote in message
news:atropos-5602CE.21455318032008@news.giganews.com...
> In article
> ,
> TranslucentAmoebae wrote:
possession"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/11/mary-ann-busted-with-mary-jane/
responsibility"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/12/it-wasnt-mary-anns-mary-jane/
> difference?
He can't tell you...too drunk.
-
http://www.teenhollywood.com/d.asp?r=56090&cat=1027
Kidman's Nose-twitching Woes
Nicole Kidman is having a huge problem preparing for her upcoming film
version of Bewitched - she can't twitch her nose like original star
Elizabeth Montgomery.
The statuesque actress has signed up to portray the beloved witch alongside
Will Ferrell, in the film - a remake of the hit sixties TV series - which is
set to be released in 2005.advertisement (story continues below)
And while the Hollywood actress is elated to have landed the coveted role -
which was also reportedly chased by Reese Witherspoon - she's unsure just
how well she'll be at twitching her nose before casting spells.
She says, "Everybody keeps asking me if I'm gonna do it, so I guess I've got
to get that down. It just doesn't come that easily. I don't know how
(Elizabeth Montgomery) did it."
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
-
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2005/01/01/1104344993690.html?oneclick=tru
e
Sequels, prequels star in year of action replays
By Philippa Hawker
It's cinematic business as usual in 2005: there are blockbusters from Steven
Spielberg and Peter Jackson, Star Wars and Harry Potter instalments, more
sequels, prequels, remakes, literary adaptations and big-screen versions of
comic books. As always, the film-going experience is reassuringly
unpredictable: some will meet our expectations, some fulfil our worst, and
some movies will take us by surprise.
We will have to wait a long time for one movie: Jackson's King Kong, with
Naomi Watts as the beauty who killed the beast, won't be released until
December. Another Star Wars instalment, Revenge of the Sith (with Anakin
Skywalker taking a walk on the dark side) hits the multiplexes in May, while
Spielberg has a blockbuster, The War of the Worlds, starring Tom Cruise.
Among the comic-book crossovers, there's an all-star cast in Robert
Rodriguez's Sin City (based on the tales of Frank Miller). The Fantastic
Four's cast includes Julian McMahon; Batman Begins, the tale of the caped
crusader's origins, is directed by Christopher Nolan (Memento, Insomnia) and
stars Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne.
There's a new Harry Potter film due in 2005. Director Alfonso Cuaron did a
sterling job with the third instalment, The Prisoner of Azkaban. Will Mike
Newell be able to deliver the goods with Harry Potter and The Goblet of
Fire, which will hit the screens late next year? Tim Burton tackles Roald
Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (already filmed, in a dark and
winning adaptation by Mel Stuart), while the first of The Narnia Chronicles,
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, is due in December.
Steve Martin plays Inspector Clouseau in a prequel to The Pink Panther (also
called The Pink Panther). Wes Anderson (The Royal Tenenbaums) brings us The
Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, starring Bill Murray as an oceanographer
with Captain Ahab leanings. Alexander Payne's Sideways, already loaded with
Golden Globe nominations, stars Paul Giamatti and Thomas Haden Church as old
friends on a trip through California's vineyards.
Richard Linklater adapts Philip K. Dick's A Scanner Darkly, starring Keanu
Reeves; Nicole Kidman is convinced her late husband is reincarnated as a
young boy in Birth and takes the Elizabeth Montgomery role in the remake of
Bewitched; Annette Bening is a diva of the stage in the Somerset Maugham
adaptation Being Julia; Clint Eastwood is a boxing coach to Hilary Swank in
Million-Dollar Baby; and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy comes to the
big screen.
There is the usual cluster of biopics, including Colin Farrell in Oliver
Stone's Alexander: Leonardo DiCaprio depicts Howard Hughes in Martin
Scorsese's The Aviator; and Liam Neeson is a pioneering sex researcher in
Kinsey.
Among literary adaptations, there is Roger Michell's Enduring Love, a
cinematic Ian McEwan novel, which begins with an extraordinary scene
involving a hot-air balloon. Jane Austen is given a Bollywood musical spin
in Gurindher Chadha's Bride and Prejudice. Mysterious Skin, directed by
Gregg Araki, is based on Scott Heim's unsettling novel about two young men
who share an experience of abuse.
Pedro Almodovar's Bad Education also deals with the after-effects of sexual
abuse and stars Gabriel Garcia Bernal. French director Jacques Rivette
returns with Story of Marie and Julien, a mystery of points of view and
strange events, while Cedric Kahn's Red Lights is a gripping adaptation of a
Georges Simenon story about a man who loses his temper, and then his wife,
on a car journey.
We'll see a sprinkling of Asian cinema in 2005, including Hong Kong director
Wong Karwai's 2046, an elaborate dream of loss and desire. It stars Tony
Leung and an exquisite trio of female stars: Gong Li, Faye Wong and Zhang
Ziyi.
Ziyi (from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Hero) gives a moving
performance in 2046, and she's the centre of House of Flying Daggers, Zhang
Yimou's second foray (after Hero) into the world of martial arthouse.
If 2004 was a low-key year for Australian film, 2005 has a high-profile
slate of local movies, including Hating Alison Ashley (Delta Goodrem's
big-screen debut); Paul Cox's The Human Touch and Craig Monahan's Peaches,
both starring Jacqueline McKenzie, and Kriv Stenders' The Illustrated Family
Doctor. Neil Armfield's Candy is adapted from the Luke Davies novel, with
Abbie Cornish and Heath Ledger as a couple caught in the thrall of
addiction.
There is Little Fish, directed by Rowan Woods (The Boys), starring Cate
Blanchett; Ray Lawrence's Jindabyne, an adaptation of a Raymond Carver
story; and Eucalyptus, based on Murray Bail's novel, with Russell Crowe,
Jack Thompson and Nicole Kidman, and directed by Jocelyn Moorhouse.
Philippa Hawker is an Age film critic.
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
-
http://www.irishexaminer.com/breaking/2004/11/11/story175427.html
Nicole's Bewitched role a childhood dream
Nicole Kidman says she needed little preparation for her role in the movie
version of Bewitched, as the TV show it's based on was her childhood
favourite.
The actress, who plays Samantha Stevens in the upcoming film, spent many
hours watching the late Elizabeth Montgomery play the role on the small
screen in the 1960s and 1970s.
Nicole, who also played a witch in the 1998 movie Practical Magic, said she
was asked if she wanted to see some of the original episodes to prepare for
the part but she was able to say: "No, I've seen them all already!"
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
-
http://www.sfgate.com/columnists/dailydish/
KIDMAN BANNED FROM TWITCHING
Movie bosses have banned Nicole Kidman from showing journalists her
"Bewitched" nose wiggle, until the movie is released.
The Oscar winner plays suburban witch Samantha Stevens alongside Will
Ferrell and Michael Caine in the big-screen remake of the 1960s TV comedy.
Kidman has undergone extensive training to perfect the twitch Samantha,
played by the late Elizabeth Montgomery in the original show, uses to cast
spells -- and has become so good at it, film bosses want her to keep it
secret.
A source tells gossip source the Scoop, "She's worked very hard on that nose
wiggle, and even had people who knew Montgomery to give her tips.
"It's harder than you'd think. But the people behind the movie don't want
the public to see her technique until the movie comes out."
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/showbiz/showbiznews.html?in_a
rticle_id=319044&in_page_id=1773&in_a_source=
Nicole bewitches her dance partner
by LAURA BENJAMIN, Daily Mail
09:08am 24th September 2004
With a twitch of her nose she can bewitch anyone who crosses her path.
But Nicole Kidman had to use some more traditional techniques to charm her
co-star Will Ferrell.
She twirled on the grass before embracing the 36-year-old American actor,
then leant into him for a passionate kiss for this dance scene from their
forthcoming film Bewitched.
Miss Kidman and Ferrell play husband and wife Samantha and Darrin Stephens
in the big screen remake of the classic 1960s TV comedy.
The 37-year-old Australian actress's character is a witch who swops sorcery
for life as a typical American housewife after falling for a suburban
businessman.
Magic powers
Samantha keeps busy in her new world using her magic powers to solve the
many problems which crop up in her relationship with long-suffering Darrin.
An insider on the set in Los Angeles said yesterday: "Nicole and Will have
had great fun making this movie.
"The dance scene was meant to be quite romantic but they were larking about
so much that it took them a while to start acting seriously."
Shirley Maclaine and Michael Caine also star in the film, which is due for
release next summer.
TV's Bewitched, which ran from 1964 to 1972, featured Elizabeth Montgomery
as Samantha. Darrin was played first by Dick York and later by Dick Sargent.
Erin Murphy was the couple's little daughter Tabitha.
Miss Kidman needed a lot of practice to replicate the twitch made famous by
Miss Montgomery, who died in 1995.
She admitted early in filming: "It doesn't come that easily. I don't know
how Elizabeth Montgomery did it."
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
- Celebrity Gossip
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The binary content on ImagineContact.com, including but not limited to any and all images of Elizabeth Montgomery, is directly obtained from the Usenet, and as such, reflects the uploaded files of millions of people worldwide. As an online service provider, ImagineContact.com does not and cannot editorialize the content posted on Usenet.
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