Monday, August 29, 2005

Brosnan to Star in "Seraphim Falls"


Pierce Brosnan and Liam Neeson are signed to star in David Von Ancken’s directorial debut “Seraphim Falls,” a psychological action film set during Civil War-era America. The script is by Von Ancken and Abbey Everett Jaques. Neeson plays Carver, an army colonel who vows to kill Brosnan’s character Gideon whatever the cost and pursues him across the West. First-time director Von Ancken, whose TV credits include “The Shield” and “CSI NY,” will shoot the film in New Mexico this October.

MTV VMA's: The Parties





(Miami) I arrived in Miami early in the week to catch some of the pre-event festivities for the MTV Video Music Awards (VMA’s) and instead got a front row seat for Tropical Storm Katrina. I was on the verge of panic thinking everything was going to be canceled when Katrina retreated back to the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico with her eye dead-set on the Big Easy. Some events did end up getting cancelled due to the weather. In the best parties which never happened category, U2’s Bono had planned an exclusive party at the Pawn Shop on Saturday night which was postponed and then, by Thursday afternoon, called off. The folks at legendary New York punk club CBGB had also planned an event there on Saturday night which was similarly cancelled. Entourage star Jeremy Piven was scheduled to host a karaoke party Friday night at Sushi Samba in the heart of South Beach, but he wasn't able to get a flight to Miami so the party went on without him.

Thanks to our Bureau Chief, Clif Loftin, not only did I score an All Access VIP Pass to the awards -- I also scored invitations to some of the most exclusive parties in South Beach. My first stop Saturday afternoon was the ultra-chic barbecue for Madonna’s record label Maverick, hosted by company President Guy Oseary at the Raleigh Hotel. Coldplay’s Chris Martin was in attendance, sans Gwenyth and Apple. There was a lot of interesting gossip being thrown around at this event, particularly about the very private party that Mariah Carey had thrown in her penthouse at the hotel the night before.

Next stop, Kayne West’s party at the private Red Room of The Shore Club, apparently I left this party just in time to miss the bizarre shooting of record executive/ex-Con, Suge Knight. I skipped Diddy’s (aka Puff Daddy, P. Diddy or Sean Combs) dinner party at Setai so I could go directly to the intimate dinner party Quincy Jones was throwing for 100 VIP’s – me included. This elegant dinner party was held in a giant tent on the future site of the swank W South Beach Hotel. Quincy held court in a candlelit corner of the room, where he sat and chatted with many guests, including stylist Oribe, Jamie Presley, Michael Chow of Mr. Chow’s and Alicia Keys. I also popped by the Verizon Wireless Sponsored invite-only concert by the Black Eyed Peas where I ran into Jay-Z and Gwen Stefani. Other notable events were Pamela Anderson’s party hosted by OK! Magazine at Prive, and the Ocean Drive Party at The Loews hosted by Jamie Foxx – in attendance Foxx’s Miami Vice co-star Colin Farrell, others included Ludacris, Shaq and Christina Milian.

Of course I have to mention some of the luxury Swag Suites filled with “freebies” for the celebrities to devour. I ran into a shockingly skinny Hilary Duff and Good Charlotte boyfriend, John Madden, at The Sanctuary for the BWR & Best Events Premiere Gifting Suite which was organized by our good friend, LA-based event planner, Jeffrey Best. Some other hot swag suites were the Style Villa, Victoria’s Secret and EXPRESS Suites at The Sagamore where I had the most delightful conversation with desperate housewife Eva Longoria and the Heatherette trio Richie Rich, Traver Rains and Amanda Lepore.

I could report on the actual MTV VMA's ceremony, but what could I say that hasn't already been said? And anyway reporting on the exclusive private parties is all you Hollywood insiders want to hear about anyway. Right?

Buzz Austin reporting for The Hollywood Bureau

Saturday, August 27, 2005



The Hollywood Bureau can hardly contain ourselves in anticipation for New York City's Spring 2006 Fashion Week. The largest and most important fashion week event in the nation, Olympus Fashion Week is one of New York City's marquee events. With its reputation firmly in place along with the Paris and Milan shows, New York Fashion Week has become a global destination attracting over 100,000 industry insiders, buyers, retailers, celebrities, political and social VIPs and members of the regional, national and international media.

The invitation-only shows take place in a tented super-structure in mid-town's Bryant Park. The iconic "Tents" house multiple show spaces of varying size featuring approximately seventy runway shows. The Lobby of the tent encompasses Bryant Park's historic fountain and provides a central meeting area surrounded by tasteful sponsor lounges offering services to guests and members of the media who spend their days attending the shows.

Olympus Fashion Week continues to grow and evolve while maintaining its historical and current mission: to organize, centralize and modernize the runway shows of America's leading and emerging designers from all over the world.

The Hollywood Bureau is looking forward to shows by John Bartlett, Project Alabama, Betsey Johnson, Michael Kors, Peter Som, Donna Karan, Alice Roi, Oscar de la Renta and Heatherette.

The Constant Gardener


Based on the best-selling John le Carré novel and from the Academy Award-nominated director of "City of God." In a remote area of Northern Kenya, activist Tessa Quayle (Rachel Weisz) is found brutally murdered. Tessa's companion, a doctor, appears to have fled the scene and the evidence points to a crime of passion. Members of the British High Commission in Nairobi assume that Tessa's widower, their mild-mannered and unambitious colleague Justin Quayle (Ralph Fiennes), will leave the matter to them. They could not be more wrong. This career diplomat's equilibrium has been exploded by the loss of the woman he was deeply devoted to. They were opposites whose attraction sustained a marriage, the memories of which now spur Justin to take decisive action for the first time in his life and diplomatic career. Haunted by remorse and jarred by rumors of his late wife's infidelities, Quayle surprises everyone by embarking on a personal odyssey that will take him across three continents. Using his privileged access to diplomatic secrets, he will risk his own life, stopping at nothing to uncover and expose the truth - a conspiracy more far-reaching and deadly than Quayle could ever have imagined.

Teen People’s 2nd Annual Young Hollywood Party Cabana Club in Hollywood.






Thursday, August 25, 2005

Sandra Bullock's Premonition


Sandra Bullock is in the middle of negotiations to star in "Premonition," the Hollywood debut of German director Mennan Yapo. Written by Bill Kelly, the film revolves around a woman who has a premonition that her husband will die in a car crash, and sets out to prevent it. Shooting is slated to begin in January 2006 in Louisiana.

FAREWELL

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

R.I.P. Six Feet Under 2001 - 2005


After 48 hours of mourning we have decided to return to work. The Fischer family died bringing our all-time favorite HBO series "Six Feet Under" to an end. We loved the Fischers, the disfunctional family that owned and operated an independent funeral home in Los Angeles. This was the family that we welcomed into our lives every Sunday night for the past four years. A family that demanded our "compassion" and our "conscience". They will be sadly missed...............

Sunday, August 21, 2005

Britney Spears Baby Shower


Although our invitation to Britney Spear’s baby shower was apparently lost in the mail, it did not stop the staff of The Hollywood Bureau from sending a gift and getting the inside scoop on the Moroccan-themed baby shower held at Britney’s Malibu resident.

The invitation designed by Lehr & Black requested that guests “come barefoot & beautiful.” Event Planner’s Diane Levin and Alyson Fox – the mother/daughter duo also responsible for throwing Spears’ 2004 nuptials, erected a giant pink and orange Moroccan tent where guests fed on North African dishes such as Moroccan brisket and salad Tangiers. The air was filled with Nag Champa incenses and thousands of scattered rose petals covered the grounds were Henna tattoo artists and a Tarot card reader entertained.

Of course the most exciting moment of all took place outside the gates of Britney’s Malibu estate when paparazzo, Brad Diaz, was shot in the leg with a pellet gun. Baby showers and BB guns usually don't go together, however this seemed to be the bizarre exception to the rule. Diaz was taken to a hospital and the LA Times noted that he was released from the hospital with a Band-Aid on his thigh only hours after the incident. One published report says that Diaz plans to sue "for millions." "I can't believe it, I was on a public street," Diaz reportedly said. That may be tough, as he'll need to know who shot him to file a lawsuit. Right now, authorities are unclear on exactly where the plastic pellet came from or who pulled the trigger.

The Hollywood Bureau just received a thoughtful “Thank you” note from Britney and Kevin thanking us for sending a shower gift. And I guess you want to know what we sent, huh? Well, we sent a rare first edition copy of the children’s classic, “Where the Wild Things Are” story and pictures by Maurice Sendak.

Jodie Foster Returns to Work



Jodie Foster will direct and likely star in "Sugar Kings," based on Marie Brenner's Vanity Fair Investigative Article "In the Kingdom of Big Sugar." Scripted by screenwriter's Ned Zeman and Daniel Barnz, "Sugar" is about a young lawyer who teams up with a veteran public-interest attorney to take on powerful sugar barons who are exploiting cane-cutting migrant workers. The article focuses on Alfy and Pepe Fanjul who owned a sugar-manufacturing empire in Florida. The magnates were hounded by attorney Edward Tuddenham, who charged the brothers treated 20,000 sugar-cane cutters like slave labor, hiding behind their well-developed political connections and social standings. Foster will next be seen in "FlightPlan" and has been starring alongside Denzel Washington and Clive Owen in the Spike Lee-directed heist drama "The Inside Man."

FASHION: Heatherette Takes On Fifth Avenue


The Hollywood Bureau was thrilled to receive our special invitation to the Heatherette Launch Party at Henri Bendel’s. Richie Rich and Traver Rains served up their Fall Collection to party revelers turning Henri Bendel’s into a hot POP-Mart. On August 10th the pair transformed the Fifth Avenue store into its own version of the Wonka Fashion Factory with treats from Lee’s Ice Cream, Red Bull and Pink POP by Champagne Pommery featuring a window display designed and set by none other than guest-curator-extraordinare, David LaChapelle.

The Hollywood Bureau had so much fun at this event we just had to share an excerpt of Fashion Week Daily’s interview with Heatherette’s dynamic duo by FARAN KRENTCIL.

They party more than Lindsay Lohan, but that doesn’t mean the Heatherette crew isn’t hard at work. Despite their many late-night appearances around the city, the merry band of hauterflies will carefully launch their once-obscure line in big department stores for fall. That means founders Richie Rich and Traver Rains, scenestress Aimee Phillips, and man-turned-woman-turned-muse Amanda Lepore might soon transform from boldface names to household names. Not bad for a brand that started with some ripped t-shirts in a downtown apartment.

Q: Let’s start with the launch. This is the first time Heatherette is available to a mass audience, not just your friends downtown. Are you nervous?
RICHIE: “Yeah. It’s like sending our babies to kindergarten.”
TRAVER: “We’re so excited about this, it’s going to be a huge landmark. And the people at Bendel’s are so crazy-supportive, they’re just amazing.”

Q: Do you think it takes something away from the brand to make it available to everyone? Like, how do you feel about girls in Nebraska wearing an Amanda Lepore t-shirt?
TRAVER: “I love it! Even in Nebraska, if they have the personality to wear it, then that’s great. It’s good for them. And it’s good to mix up the fashion sense a little bit, like a fashion shock.”
RICHIE: “People ask about our demographic, and I’ve found that we don’t really have one. It’s a fountain of youth. This old woman approached me and said, ‘Oh I would love a Heatherette gown!’ I want to have a Burning Man type of event where everybody who owns Heatherette shows up. It would be a crazy mix of people.”

Q: How has partnering with Weisfeld group changed Heatherette?
RICHIE: “The creative vision has changed, like a gradual evolution. Mackey Dugan is our technical designer, and he’s trained in fashion design—that’s important. And with the partnership, we have more resources at our fingertips and it’s almost easier to see your vision come alive. Yesterday we got back a sample with an eyelash hem on it, and who would have ever thought we could do that? Five years ago, we were gluing t-shirts!”
TRAVER: “Before, we couldn’t handle the manufacturing and production and sales; we didn’t come from that background. Doing the shows came so naturally, it was what we were good at. We built the brand through the shows, but now we have access to factories all over the world. Before it was whatever we could find in New York.”

Q: Heatherette’s entourage is very high profile. Do you think friends like Paris Hilton and Lydia Hearst have helped the brand?
RICHIE: “It’s like the Warhol aesthetic where Andy was an artist and submerged in creativity, but along the way, his cast of characters was growing as fast as his art. For us, Heatherette wasn’t a business; it was a lifestyle. So then with people like Lydia Hearst, and Paris, and David LaChapelle, and also our friends who go out but who aren’t famous—people would see us, and then girls would come up to us on the street and say, ‘Where do I get it?’”

Q: What’s the best part of launching nationally?
RICHIE: “It feels really great to know that something we’ve envisioned, we’re watching it grow. It’s fun to surprise people, that you actually can be organized and make a business out of fun.”
TRAVER: “When people say, ‘How can I get Heatherette?’ Now you can actually get it!”

Q: Want to tell us how Heatherette got its name?
TRAVER: “Every Heather is crazy! It comes with the territory of the name. If your name is Heather, you’re out to have fun! And they act all innocent, but they’re not!”
RICHIE: “I’ll tell it.”
TRAVER: “It’s kind of a different story every time you hear it.”
RICHIE: “No, here, this is the true story. There was this girl named Heather that used to follow me around in the nightclubs in San Francisco. She had one arm and a lisp and she sang opera, but when she sang, she didn’t have a lisp. When I think of spunk, I think of Heather. When we were thinking of a name, we were drinking red wine and we were like, ‘Let’s call it Heather. It’s not from Heathers; it’s from Heather, the girl. And Grace Jones was playing in the background and we kept singing Warm Heatherette instead of Warm Leatherette and that was it.”

STUDIOS: NO More Big Newspaper Ads


Hollywood's major studios are considering significantly reducing their expenditures on advertising in major-market newspapers, L.A. Weekly columnist Nikki Finke reported today, citing one unnamed mogul who commented that newspaper readers are mostly "older and elitist." Finke added that at least two Hollywood movie studios -- which she did not identify -- have already decided to cut their newspaper ads as soon as possible. Even those studios who are likely to continue their advertising campaigns may be doing so not to attract patrons, Finke added, quoting another executive as saying, "It's about talent relations. The only reason you do it is because the talent expects it. ... These people like to see their ad in the paper. It's ego feed."

Thursday, August 18, 2005

The Gogetter


Zoey Deschanel, Jena Malone and William Lee Scott are set to star in Martin Hynes' indie feature "The Gogetter." The film follows a teenage boy who steals a car in order to go on a road trip to find his long-lost brother to tell him that their mother has died. The boy ends up finding his brother and himself as well. Production is scheduled to begin Mid-October in Hynes' hometown of Eugene, Oregon, other locations include Reno, Nevada, Enseneda, Mexico and Los Angeles.

THE GREAT DIVIDE: Vivendi-Universal and NBC-Universal

As a result of G.E./NBC's acquisition of most of Vivendi-Universal's entertainment assets, with the exception of the Universal Music Group, two media companies bearing the name Universal following the hyphen were created. And, as if to demonstrate the permanence of the split, Vivendi Universal's music company announced Tuesday that it will back Sony's Blu-ray DVD format over Toshiba's HD DVD format, which is backed by NBC-Universal. Meanwhile, Toronto-based Lions Gate was expected to announce today (Wednesday) that it will also back the Blu-ray technology. Sony's two new allies now give it an edge in its format war with Toshiba.

WEINSTEINS' Departure Could Cost Disney


Bob and Harvey Weinstein are exiting their contract with the Walt Disney Co. and Miramax Films on Oct. 1 to launch another media empire, having just leased 27,000 square feet of office space at 345 Hudson Street in Tribeca. Meanwhile back at Disney..............the costs of marketing and distributing seven Miramax films in Disney's fourth quarter, which ends on Sept. 30, will have a significant impact on the company's earnings in the quarter, Wall Street analysts warned clients Tuesday. Disney is speeding up the release of the films that were produced under the aegis of Bob and Harvey Weinstein, who are leaving Miramax after 12 years at the end of September. Three films, Secuestro Express, The Warrior and The Great Raid, already released during the current quarter, have performed poorly. The latter film, which reportedly cost Disney $20 million to market, took in only $3.4 million in its debut last weekend. In his message to clients, CIBC World Markets analyst Michael Gallant referred to the additional costs to Disney of "blowing out the remaining Miramax films in development."