The 43-year-old actress admits to being a bundle of nerves before the “Glass Onion” premiere — “It wasn’t until the first explosion of laughter that I calmed down.”
Celebrity
Take things easy? Not in this lifetime. The 91-year-old Moreno is busier than ever with a new holiday movie out, plus a role opposite fellow legends Jane Fonda and Sally Field.
Growing up, different wasn’t accepted. “I was 5-foot-10 by age 11 and felt like a giant spider,” Sigourney Weaver recalls. And now, all these years later, it’s time for a bit of closure.
Cast members of the John Wayne coming-of-age classic “The Cowboys” are in town to celebrate the film’s 50th anniversary.
Gabrielle Union has pair of big movies out — “Strange World” and “The Inspection” — but her mind is on family. And dancing.
Clarence Gilyard, a UNLV film professor, was famous for his role as computer-terror expert Theo in “Die Hard.”
Why not learn a new skill at any age? Actor Patrick Dempsey poses the question while talking about his new film, the Disney+ fantasy sequel “Disenchanted.”
Letitia Wright and Lupita Nyong’o say the new sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” didn’t shy away from dealing with grief following the 2020 death of co-star Chadwick Boseman.
The Scottish actor rose to fame by playing a crime-solving psychologist on the TV series “Cracker.”
Las Vegas’ favorite new A-lister used the term again Tuesday, telling “The Talk” he wants to build an entertainment and business empire in our city.
“I don’t think people have grasped the magnitude,” the 53-year-old actor and TV star says. “The key is to talk about anxiety. That’s what makes me feel better. It’s part of my therapy,”
“Back in the Building,” the new show from“Legends In Concert,” will run from Nov. 4 to Dec. 30.
At 76, the actor/singer/comedian/author isn’t stopping now — she refuses to even slow down.
New Mexico’s Office of the Medical Investigator determined the shooting was an accident following the completion of an autopsy and a review of law enforcement reports.
The actor met director-writer David O. Russell several times a week over a five-year period at a Southern California deli, where they took pages from history and turned them into a movie.