37 pics of Julia Sawalha
and 539,033 images of 17,190 celebrities!
-
Next
-
Julia Sawalha Filmography
Julia Sawalha Gossip
Julia Sawalha Info
Julia Sawalha Is Related
Sources
-
http://www.smh.com.au/news/TV--Radio/A-matter-of-time/2005/05/16/11160959041
58.html?oneclick=true
A matter of time
May 17, 2005
Michael Idato reports from the set of the new Doctor Who.
Only two elements were mandatory when screenwriter Russell T. Davies sat
down with producer Phil Collinson and BBC Wales drama chief Julie Gardner to
recreate the iconic TV series Doctor Who for a new audience. The haunting,
synthesised theme music, by Ron Grainer and Delia Derbyshire, is back. So is
the blue, 1950s-style London police call box that the Doctor uses to travel
through time and space.
"I think those are quintessential parts of Doctor Who, and we'd have been
fools to tamper with them in any way," Collinson says. "The theme is one of
the best pieces of theme music ever written and it sums up the mood and the
flavour of the series brilliantly well.
"As for the police box, for two seconds we toyed with whether our audience
would recognise it, but we realised that, fundamentally, it doesn't matter.
It's a box, it's small, and when you walk in it's bigger. It's a fantastic
concept, as brilliant now as it was in 1963. No one has done it since
because it belongs to Doctor Who."
Beyond that, Collinson insists, all bets were off. The new series comes with
a big budget and state-of-the-art special effects, plus great, sometimes
dark, writing from Davies (Queer as Folk), Mark Gatiss (The League of
Gentlemen) and Steven Moffat (Coupling) and an intriguing, even sexy, Doctor
Who in actor Christopher Eccleston.
"The Doctor Who we're making is very modern, very vibrant, action-packed,"
Collinson says. "In order to achieve that you have to almost forget the past
and think we're making something really new and hopefully really different."
Collinson is talking to The Guide during a break on the Cardiff set of the
new series. Nearby, art department staff put the finishing touches on a
Dalek, the iconic Doctor Who villain of old, whose return to the screen has
fans and journalists in a frenzy.
Getting here, on the set to witness the much-discussed first reappearance of
the Daleks, was an epic in itself, involving scores of telephone calls,
emails and, finally, a signed confidentiality agreement.
Today is clearly no ordinary day, and this is clearly no ordinary TV series.
At times, Collinson concedes, it feels like he is taking on a British
institution. "There are very few shows that have ever achieved the kind of
publicity that Doctor Who did," he says.
Few indeed. The story of Doctor Who begins in 1963, when the BBC's head of
drama, Sydney Newman, developed the original series with colleagues,
including writer David Whitaker and producer Verity Lambert. It was to be a
children's series with an edge, about a mysterious time traveller - "a
crotchety old man in a police box" - whose adventures through history would
be vaguely educational.
The first six-part serial, 100,000 BC, was just that. The second, The
Mutants, changed the fabric of children's TV forever. It introduced viewers
to the evil Daleks, transformed the show's characters into icons and created
Dalekmania, a pop-cultural earthquake that still rumbles more than four
decades later.
The series endured for 26 years until 1989, when it was "suspended" (the BBC
insists it was never actually axed), but it lived on in a series of CD audio
plays, novels and merchandise, including Dalek toys, which still line shop
shelves. In 1996, it briefly lurched back into life as a US TV movie
co-produced by Fox, Universal and the BBC, but a hoped-for spin-off series
didn't eventuate.
Last year, the BBC again set about reinventing what had over the decades
become one of its most enduring brands. The project was put in the hands of
Davies, who, distinguished writing credits aside, is a Doctor Who fan. One
of his first recruits to the writing team was Gatiss, the star and writer of
The League of Gentlemen and, interestingly, another Doctor Who fan.
"For all of us who kept the torch burning all these years, including
Russell, the best parlour game a Doctor Who fan can play is: wouldn't it be
great if it came back," Gatiss says. "And suddenly it is, but you're dealing
with a world of TV realities - ratings count and it's a very different
environment."
In a sense, the fans had been handed the keys to the kingdom, although
Gatiss says it was important to draw a line between their memories and the
cold, hard realities of making TV today. "If all of us had just been trying
to bring back Doctor Who, I think it would be very different," he says.
"It's all about having a proper perspective, and none of the people involved
in this reincarnation is a slave to the past."
The critical flaw with the failed 1996 telemovie, he says, was its fannish
approach - it claimed to be pitched at a new audience, but mentioned Daleks,
Time Lords and the Master in the first scene.
"You have to remember, Doctor Who wasn't a cult program for most of its
life.
It was just the most popular program on telly," Gatiss says. "Where it
really started to go wrong was when it began to tell stories that you really
wouldn't understand unless you'd seen early serials, such as The Tenth
Planet. That is when pop [culture] eats itself - it starts to become too
inward looking."
But fear not, fans - the new series does tap the wellspring of mythology.
The infamous sonic screwdriver makes an appearance and the first episode is
a twist of a sort on an old 1970 serial, Spearhead from Space. It even
replicates one of that serial's most memorable scenes, when shop-window
mannequins eerily come to life.
"It probably had a lot less to do with it being familiar to Doctor Who fans
and much more to do with the shop-window dummies," Gatiss says. "The notion
of plastic is very gettable, and after 30 years that image is still as
powerful. When I was little, after I saw that scene, I really couldn't go
near shops with dummies for years. I was mortified by the idea. It's a
reinvention of the original scare."
The most striking aspect of the new series is its speed. The original
stretched its stories across four or six (sometimes more) 30-minute
episodes - a side-effect, Gatiss says, of their limited budget. The new
series compresses stories into about 80 scenes in a 45-minute episode.
"TV has changed so much and the first episode particularly had an awful lot
to do. In terms of introducing you to the Doctor through the eyes of an
innocent, through Rose, it works very well," Gatiss says.
There are 13 episodes in the series - three featuring the Daleks - followed
by a Christmas TV special and a second series of 13 episodes, which will
star David Tennant as the 10th Doctor. (Eccleston declined the offer.) The
best, Collinson promises, is yet to come.
"What we wanted to do was make him a man of mystery again," he says. "The
original Doctor Who was on air for 26 years continuously and a lot of the
myths about the man were exploded, so we're trying to go back to the
beginning, to the origins of the series."
A who's who
The Doctor
A figure of mystery when Doctor Who premiered in 1963, the Doctor was later
revealed to be a Time Lord, one of a race of ancient masters of time, from
the planet Gallifrey in the constellation of Kasterborous. He renounced Time
Lord society and travels through time, usually with several companions. Time
Lords have two hearts, a respiratory bypass system (which allows them to
feign death) and when they die, they "regenerate" their bodies. A Time Lord
can regenerate 12 times - so far, the Doctor has used eight regenerations,
played by William Hartnell (1963-1966), Patrick Troughton (1966-1969), Jon
Pertwee (1970-1974), Tom Baker (1974-1981), Peter Davison (1981-1984), Colin
Baker (1984-1986), Sylvester McCoy (1987-1989) and Paul McGann (1996). The
new series begins with the ninth doctor, Christopher Eccleston (2005).
The TARDIS
The Doctor's time-space ship, the TARDIS, takes its name from the acronym
for Time And Relative Dimension In Space. In technical terms it is a Type 40
TT (time travel) Capsule, which the Doctor stole when he left his home
planet. Bigger on the inside than the outside (a fact which should make
sense to anyone who understands trans-dimensional physics), it travels by
de-materialising in one location, travelling through the space-time vortex,
and re-materialising at its destination. The Doctor's TARDIS is famously
unreliable (it was in for repair when he stole it) and consequently it
rarely lands precisely where, or when, the Doctor intends. It has a
chameleon circuit that makes it blend naturally with its surroundings - the
Doctor's TARDIS has a faulty chameleon circuit and it is permanently
disguised as a blue 1950s-style London police call box.
The Doctor's Companion
During all but a handful of his TV adventures, the Doctor has been
accompanied by one or several companions. They have included his
granddaughter Susan (Carole Ann Ford), the savage Leela (Louise Jameson),
amateur spy Jo Grant (Katy Manning), navy surgeon Harry Sullivan (Ian
Marter), mathematical genius Adric (Matthew Waterhouse) and airline
stewardess Tegan Jovanka (Janet Fielding). Undoubtedly, the most popular
companion was journalist Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen), who travelled
with Tom Baker's fourth Doctor during the peak of the show's popularity in
the UK. In the first episode of the new series, we meet the ninth Doctor's
new companion, Rose Tyler (Billie Piper).
Bug-Eyed Monsters
Budgetary constraints for the classic Doctor Who series often meant that
aliens were little more than actors in rubber suits, though several
creatures featured in the classic series became genuine figures of childhood
menace. The most memorable enemies of the Doctor included the metallic,
emotionless Cybermen, the creepy, leather-skinned Sontarans, the reptilian
Silurians, the scaly Ice Warriors and the Master, a renegade Time Lord who
was the Doctor's recurring nemesis. The first episode of the new Doctor Who
series sees the return of the plastic Autons, creatures animated by a huge
alien consciousness called the Nestene.
Of course, the most famous monsters in Doctor Who are ...
The Daleks
Once humanoid, the Daleks are horribly mutated creatures from the planet
Skaro, created by an insane scientist called Davros. They travel in mobile
metal casings - the Doctor once described them as "little green blobs in
polycarbide armour" - and they are most famous for their battle cry of
"Ex-ter-mi-nate!". They are merciless killers, armed with a ray gun and a
plastic bathroom plunger, which, in the new series at least, proves to be
more menacing than ever before. The often-cited criticism that Daleks,
despite their enormous firepower, cannot climb stairs is untrue - in the
1988 serial Remembrance of the Daleks, a Dalek uses anti-gravity to ascend a
staircase. In the new series, the Daleks, the Doctor claims, were all but
wiped out in a devastating war with the Time Lords. Or were they?
Other Doctors
Two Doctor Who colour feature films were made in 1965 and 1966: Dr. Who and
the Daleks and Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150AD. Both were rewrites of early
black-and-white TV episodes and starred actor Peter Cushing as a human
scientist called Doctor Who (in the TV series, the character was alien and
was always referred to as "the Doctor"), who built the TARDIS in his
backyard. In 1981, a pilot for a spin-off series, K-9 and Company, featured
popular companion Sarah Jane Smith and K-9, a robot dog that had been in the
TV series. (The pilot did not become a series.) In 1996, a telemovie called
Doctor Who was produced for the US market, and starred Paul McGann in his
only appearance as the eighth Doctor. Finally, in 1999, a TV comedy special,
Doctor Who and the Curse of Fatal Death, was produced to raise money for Red
Nose Day. It featured Rowan Atkinson as the Doctor, Julia Sawalha as his
companion and Jonathan Pryce as the Master. In it, the Doctor was forced to
regenerate several times, turning into, in order, Richard E. Grant, Jim
Broadbent, Hugh Grant and, lastly, Joanna Lumley.
-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/showbiz/showbiznews.html?in_a
rticle_id=336461&in_page_id=1773
Saffy's floating retreat with hippy boyfriend
08:21am 3rd February 2005
Appearing on the arm of one famous boyfriend after another, Julia Sawalha
was a glamorous fixture on the celebrity circuit.
But the actress who played Saffy in Absolutely Fabulous has chosen to turn
her back on showbusiness to live on a canal with a hippy.
And according to friends, she has never been happier.
Julia, 36, broke up in February last year with Alan Davies, star of the
detective series Jonathan Creek.
In June, she went to the Glastonbury rock festival and met Richard Annetts,
who lives with a bull terrier on a narrowboat on the Kennet and Avon canal
in Bath.
She moved in with 37-year-old Mr Annetts, who is known to friends as Rich,
in a community of what the town's posher residents call "water gipsies".
And she stayed there until just before Christmas when she decided to rent a
first-floor flat nearby.
Water gipsies
The couple now divide their time between the barge and the flat, making the
journey between the two in Mr Annetts's black Morris
As active members of the West Kennet Boaters' Community they have clashed
with British Waterways and other river residents on various issues including
whether or not they should pay for moorings, since their community is "
continuously cruising".
On dry land, Julia and Rich have also become quite a fixture on the
travellers' circuit in Bath, frequenting hippy pubs including The Bell,
where they spent a particularly wild Rio-themed New Year's Eve.
A friend said: "Julia has found the love of her life in Rich. She really has
turned her back on showbusiness and has become quite a hippy.
"They have spent much of the last six months cruising around the canals.
Julia just wanted to get away from all the media attention and finally seems
to have found happiness."
Finally found happiness
The once-fashion-conscious actress now prefers to wear 'grunge' style
clothes. "It's as if she's gone from riches to rags," said a fellow drinker
at The Bell.
Like his new girlfriend, Mr Annetts is a former high flyer. The son of a
local government officer, he worked in the City before opting for a simpler
life.
He told the Mail: "I am surprised at the amount of interest in us. I don't
want to get involved with talking about our relationship as it is very
private."
At the family home in Westbury, Wiltshire, Mr Annetts's mother Sophie said:
"Richard is a lovely boy - what else would a mother say of her son? But we
don't see much of him, unfortunately. He comes round every so often to drop
off his washing.
Floating village
"Richard has had a few girlfriends over the years, but he seemed quite taken
with this new one. The first thing I said to her is, 'Which one are you?'
when he brought her round. Then he introduced her simply as Jools.
"Richard has his own life totally separate to ours - I must say I know
nothing about it at all. But he describes the canals as a brilliant
society - like a floating village."
Mr Annetts is a major contrast to Julia's previous boyfriends. Before her
two-year relationship with Davies, who she was wrongly reported to have
married, she dated the actor Dexter Fletcher.
Her name has also been linked with the comedians Keith Allen and Richard
Herring, and the sculptor Carl Duncan.
Julia and Davies met on the set of Jonathan Creek, when she was hired to
replace Caroline Quentin. Davies was pathologically protective about his
private life and caused a huge rift
between his girlfriend and her actress sister Nadia after the couple were
pictured in a glossy magazine at former EastEnders star Nadia's wedding.
Nadia - who made no secret of her loathing for Davies - announced her
sister's break-up with him last year during an interview to promote a
daytime TV show. She said at the time: "There was nothing about him I liked.
I don't think he's a very nice man. He didn't like me and I didn't like him
from the instant we saw each other."
But with the arrival of Rich on the scene, all that acrimony appears to have
changed. Julia recently spent more than a week staying with Nadia and their
father at the family home in South London
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
-
"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://media.guardian.co.uk/presspublishing/story/0,7495,1117092,00.html
TV stars challenge press over wedding reports
John Plunkett
Tuesday January 6, 2004
TV stars Alan Davies and Julia Sawalha said today they were taking
"appropriate action" against newspapers that claimed they had married in
secret, saying the reports were "totally inaccurate".
Weekend press reports led by the Mail on Sunday said the couple had married
in a "secret new year wedding". A front page headline in the Mail claimed:
"Secret wedding for Ab Fab Julia and TV's Jonathan Creek".
The report said Davies had bought wedding rings before Christmas while
filming a new series for ITV, and quoted Davies' father Roy as saying:
"We're very, very happy for them."
But in a statement today the couple, who are fiercely protective of their
privacy, said: "Alan Davies and Julia Sawalha do not discuss their private
lives in the media.
"However, they would wish their family, friends and others to know that,
contrary to recent reports in a number of newspapers, they are neither
married nor engaged.
"Appropriate action is being take against newspapers that have published
totally inaccurate stories about them."
The report on page three of the Mail on Sunday said "obsessively private"
Davies had bought the rings while filming legal drama The Brief.
It quoted a close friend as saying: "Alan is a great guy but he is almost
neurotic about his privacy. That's a bit difficult when you are an actor and
so obviously in the public eye but he did say he and Julia are really happy
together."
The report added that Davies was expected to make an announcement when he
returned to the set of the ITV programme on Monday.
But the couple today denied they were even engaged.
The story also appeared on page 34 of the Sunday Express, which claimed
Davies was said to be "absolutely furious that news of the marriage had
leaked out". Smaller versions of the story appeared in the News of the
World, the Sunday Mirror and the Sunday People.
Davies launched a scathing attack on the press for intruding on his private
life last year, claiming that "famous people are vilified in this country".
"I'm often told that I should be prepared to talk about my private life, and
I just don't accept that. People say that if you're famous, you give up the
right to privacy. That's bull," he said.
"I work as an actor and comedian and that's it. I'm not a celebrity. I don't
have a PR person. I've seen a very good friend of mine, Angus Deayton,
destroyed by the media."
On his relationship with Sawalha, he said: "I will neither confirm nor deny.
In the past I've naively trotted out lengthy and honest answers to questions
about my personal life, and they've caused nothing but grief."
From Sunny Oz, Rick :)
Proud Keeper of the talented & beautiful Halle Berry.
-
Late surges from Rachel Stevens saw her open up a sizable lead to
secure top spot and saw Cheryl Tweedy rise to 5th spot and secure top
Girls Aloud babe. Suranne Jones is voted top Soap babe, Jennifer Love
Hewitt as top American and Holly Valance as top Aussie.
The Final Leaderboard:-
1st Rachel Stevens - 98 points
2nd Emma Bunton - 84 points
3rd Suranne Jones - 58 points
4th Holly Willoughby - 55 points
5th Cheryl Tweedy - 49 points
6th= Jennifer Love Hewitt - 48 points
6th= Michelle Ryan - 48 points
8th Kirsten Dunst - 44 points
9th Nadine Coyle - 43 points
10th Nikki Sanderson - 39 points
11th Kate Garraway - 38 points
12th Holly Valance - 37 points
13th= Britney Spears - 32 points
13th= Kelly Brook - 32 points
15th= Scarlet Johansson - 30 points
15th= Stephanie McIntosh - 30 points
15th= Jennifer Ellison - 30 points
18th Sarah Hendy - 29 points
19th= Laura Jaye - 27 points
19th= Natalie Bassingthwaighte - 27 points
19th= Christina Ricci - 27 points
19th= Cat Deeley - 27 points
19th= Emma Pierson - 27 points
24th Keira Knightley - 26 points
25th= Elisha Cuthbert - 25 points
25th= Amy Nuttall - 25 points
27th Verity Rushworth - 24 points
28th Kirsty Gallacher - 23 points
29th= Katherine Heigl - 22 points
29th= Michelle Tractenberg - 22 points
29th= Konnie Huq - 22 points
29th= Alizee - 22 points
29th= Tina O'Brien - 22 points
34th= Jennifer Garner - 21 points
34th= Claire Sweeney - 21 points
34th= Heidi Range - 21 points
34th= Melissa Joan Hart - 21 points
38th= Stacey Cadman - 20 points
38th= Louise Redknapp - 20 points
38th= Liv Tyler - 20 points
38th= Tiffany Mulheron - 20 points
38th= Hilary Duff - 20 points
43rd= Sarra Elgan - 19 points
43rd= Lindsay Lohan - 19 points
43rd= Michelle Williams - 19 points
46th= Halle Berry - 17 points
46th= Victoria Beckham - 17 points
46th= Alex Lovell - 17 points
46th= Stacy Keibler - 17 points
46th= Angellica Bell - 17 points
46th= Charlotte Church - 17 points
46th= Christie Hayes - 17 points
53rd= Maria Sharapova - 16 points
53rd= Katie Holmes - 16 points
53rd= Kerry McFadden - 16 points
56th= Beyonce Knowles - 15 points
56th= Jennifer Aniston - 15 points
56th= Daniela Denby Ashe - 15 points
56th= Hannah Spearritt - 15 points
56th= Jodi Albert - 15 points
61st= Courteney Cox Arquette - 14 points
61st= Amanda Lamb - 14 points
61st= Samia Ghadie - 14 points
64th= Kylie Minogue - 13 points
64th= Alyson Hannigan - 13 points
64th= Stephanie McMahon - 13 points
64th= Miquita Oliver - 13 points
64th= Lara Sacher - 13 points
69th= Heather Graham - 12 points
69th= Gemma Atkinson - 12 points
69th= Rebecca Cartwright - 12 points
69th= Natalie Portman - 12 points
69th= Lisa Rogers - 12 points
74th= Jill Halfpenny - 11 points
74th= Delta Goodrem - 11 points
74th= Lucinda Rhodes Flaherty - 11 points
74th= Mena Suvari - 11 points
78th= Helen Fisher - 10 points
78th= Becky Jago - 10 points
78th= Julia Sawalha - 10 points
78th= Pandora Peaks - 10 points
78th= Melanie Chisholm - 10 points
78th= Danielle Nicholls - 10 points
78th= Ulrika Jonnson - 10 points
78th= Elize Du Toit - 10 points
78th= Mariah Carey - 10 points
78th= Charley Webb - 10 points
78th= Charlene Choi - 10 points
78th= Linda Fiorentino - 10 points
78th= Susan Ward - 10 points
91st= Monica Bellucci - 9 points
91st= Paris Hilton - 9 points
91st= Christina Applegate - 9 points
91st= Kimberley Walsh - 9 points
91st= Jordan - 9 points
91st= Kate Moss - 9 points
91st= Martine McCutcheon - 9 points
91st= Zhang Ziyi - 9 points
91st= Lisa Snowdon - 9 points
91st= Karyn Parsons - 9 points
91st= Serena Williams - 9 points
Notable babes that didn't make the final top 100 of 2004 include: Eliza
Dushku, Sammy Winward & Madonna with 8 points; Jamelia, Pamela Anderson
& Jennifer Lopez with 7 points; Anna Friel & Charisma Carpenter with 6
points; Lucy Pargeter, Abi Titmuss, Sarah Beeny & Sarah Michelle Geller
with 5 points; Larisa Oleynik, Jenni Falconer, Alicia Silverstone &
Tammin Sursok with 4 points; Selma Blair, Neve Campbell & Carol
Vorderman with 3 points; Amanda Bynes & Helen Chamberlain with 2 points
and Cameron Diaz & Kate Lawler with 1 point.
- Celebrity Gossip
- Daughter of Nadim Sawalha.
- Sister of Nadia Sawalha.
- Dated "Press Gang" co-star Dexter Fletcher
-
ImagineContact.com is an online service provider which offers a convenient web gateway to freely available binary content, including but not limited to images of Julia Sawalha, as well as other content associated with celebrities posted within Usenet newsgroups. Users can join instantly online and have access to gigabytes of new images, updated daily. Every night, ImagineContact.com automatically crawls, sorts, converts, thumbnails and indexes these files from the Usenet for access by users on the website. Every day there are hundreds of new images posted to the Usenet.
-
The binary content on ImagineContact.com, including but not limited to any and all images of Julia Sawalha, 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.
-
Some Usenet postings may contain nudity, otherwise be of an adult nature or will simply be objectionable to some people. Users who object to such content are advised to not use this service.
-
Pics Info
-
- 834 x 480
- sawahla--preview.jpg
- Jan 23rd, 2008
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities.nospam
-
- 764 x 563
- JuliaSawalha_2ndThoughts_1b.JPG
- Dec 24th, 2007
- alt.celebrities
-
- 600 x 491
- julia_sawalha_02.jpg
- Mar 3rd, 2004
- alt.binaries.celebrities
-
- 600 x 491
- julia_sawalha_01.jpg
- Mar 3rd, 2004
- alt.binaries.celebrities.polaris
-
Pics Info
-
- 1280 x 1024
- julia_03.jpg
- Aug 14th, 2003
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities.portra
its
-
- 720 x 404
- 1st
- CelebHQ.com_JuliaSawaX34AFD.jpg
- Jul 23rd, 2003
- alt.celebrities
-
- 984 x 627
- julia_sawalha001.jpg
- Apr 11th, 2003
- alt.binaries.pictures.fan.television
-
- 771 x 1046
- julia_sawalha_mmm.jpg
- Jan 13th, 2003
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities
-
Pics Info
-
- 766 x 574
- 3rd
- julia_sawalha_makeover.jpg
- Jan 13th, 2003
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities
-
- 1280 x 1080
- juliaXsawalha_01.jpg
- Oct 15th, 2002
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities
-
- 640 x 480
- juliasawalha5.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.celebrities.polaris
-
- 606 x 825
- juliasawalha8.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities
-
Pics Info
-
- 640 x 480
- sawj033s.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.celebrities.diva
-
- 640 x 480
- sawj027s.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.celebrities
-
- 640 x 480
- sawj024s.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.celebrities.piccaps
-
- 609 x 1000
- juliasawalha3.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities
-
Pics Info
-
- 640 x 480
- juliasawalha2.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.pictures.celebrities.repost
-
- 640 x 480
- juliasawalha1.jpg
- Nov 26th, 2001
- alt.binaries.pictures.fan.television
-
- 768 x 576
- julias1.jpg
- Oct 5th, 2001
- alt.binaries.celebrities.alist
-
- 768 x 576
- julias2.jpg
- Oct 5th, 2001
- alt.binaries.pictures.fan.television
-
Next