Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper Soar in the Rich, Rapturous A Star Is Born
It is now safe to believe the hype.
It is now safe to believe the hype.
This week‘s Little Gold Men catches up on the biggest stories from the Telluride and Venice Film Festivals, as Toronto gets underway.
And it seems to do the trick.
A full-frontal shot in Chris Pine’s new film, Outlaw King, has made the actor and his anatomy the belle of the ball in Toronto.
Also on this week’s episode of *In the Limelight,* Meghan’s favorite Disney movies, and Beyoncé’s birthday.
“In terms of people liking her, she had no time for it,” said Melissa McCarthy of literary forger Lee Israel, who she brings to life in Can You Ever Forgive Me?
For all that Trump blusters about assassinations and libel laws, the saga of the West Wing whistle-blower proves the president is a paper tiger without the self-discipline to get anything done.
The Vanity Fair contributor expands upon a viral 2015 feature about dating apps and the havoc they’ve caused.
Mueller’s former colleagues say he is always two steps ahead—and will see his job through to the bitter end.
With Trump “punch-drunk,” Ivanka and Jared Kushner are taking the lead in the mole hunt—and they’ve set their sights on an old enemy.
The Duchess of Sussex gets her “influencer” on?
Zoe Saldana, Justin Theroux, and Lily Collins came out to help Cartier celebrate its new iterations of Juste un Clou and Écrou de Cartier.
As Adam Venit resigns from William Morris Endeavor and the agency implements new policies to protect its clients from sexual misconduct, Crews opens up about a legal battle.
The AOL-Yahoo combination wanted more independence—but with growth less than expected and Oath increasingly pulled toward the mothership, the C-suite team hit the eject button. “You don’t really need Tim if you’re gonna run it as a business of Verizon,” one source said.
In a new filing, the former CBS anchor is seeking to have the sexual harassment case brought against him thrown out.
She even upstaged Tom Hanks.
All signs point to Steve Scalise making a bid to back-stab heir apparent Kevin McCarthy. But in the end, his political machinations may be for naught.
The fall’s most entrancing books about art, fashion, and travel include novelist Ann Patchett’s close-up on Nashville and a roundup of works inspired by Michael Jackson.
The venerable documentarian explains why he shot a feature-length Bannon interview, what Bannon actually gets right about America, and the White House exile’s “insane” movies.
Oscar season began in Italy, where the Venice Film Festival debuted a host of buzzy projects—including Damien Chazelle’s First Man, starring Ryan Gosling, and Bradley Cooper’s A Star Is Born, starring Lady Gaga (who looks just fabulous traveling to her film premiere by boat). Photogarpher Greg Williams was there to capture all the biggest stars as they navigated canals, red carpets, and the city’s charming, old-world streets.
Plus, Gigi Hadid, Nicki Minaj, Amy Schumer, Priyanka Chopra, and Irina Shayk take the stage.
Tom Hanks is here!
Following her wardrobe malfunction at the 2004 Super Bowl—the halftime show we’ll apparently never be able to put behind us—the embattled CBS chief reportedly wanted to sabotage the singer’s career.
Anwar Hadid, your tabloid moment has arrived.
The former White House staffer is reportedly releasing a new secret recording on The View.