Styles & Scenes

Celebrity fashion dish by Elizabeth Snead

Bling King's private "Blood" letting

Petranemco_j_mc_10331834_600Russell Simmons, the Godfather of Hip Hop, who has - among his countless musical/fashion endeavors - a line of expensive street-wise diamond jewelry, will get to see "The Blood Diamond" way before Oscar pundits, awards predictors and impatient film critics.

Bonnie Abaunza, head of Amnesty International's Celebrity Outreach Program, based in Los Angeles, got to talk with Simmons at a recent star-studded dinner at New York's Museum of Modern Art for Bill Clinton's Global Initiative. And she set up a private screening of "Diamond"  for Simmons.

Warner Bros. arranged for rapper Kayne West - who wrote "Diamonds from Sierra Leone" about the misery diamonds have caused in Africa - to see the film.

"'Blood Diamond' is amazing. It's a very entertaining, dramatic and exciting movie. But it will definitely get audiences thinking about the problems of conflict diamonds and child soldiers," says Abaunza, who has seen an early cut of Ed Zwick's controversial film starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Connelly and Djimon Hounsou. The film is set during the Sierra Leone civil war in the late '90s.

"It's not a boring message movie," says Abaunza. "It's real entertainment. But it's a Trojan Horse. When people see this powerful film, they will be astounded by the acting and the action, but also by what they've learned. Hopefully, people will leave the theaters and start logging on to learn more about these issues and what they can do to help."

Among other activities, Amnesty International plans a series of 10 special screenings on 10 campuses around the U.S. The organization will take students to the theater and hold salons/meetings afterward to answer questions, educate and inspire future activists. The "Diamond" screening parties will be similar to ones done for "Hotel Rwanda". This dedicated web page for "Lords of War" featuring Nic Cage will be similar to the upcoming "Blood Diamond" web page.

So the "Blood"-letting begins.

Photo Credits: Russell Simmons, Petra Nemcova and Carmen Electra at the Iconic Gap event in New York. Will seeing "Blood" make him an Amnesty International activist?
Jamie McCarthy/WireImage

October 06, 2006 in Leonardo DiCaprio, russell simmons, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (0)

Leo's on YouTube and he's got a new babe

Leonardodi_eamon_10484667_600The first trailer for "Blood Diamond," the film that has the international diamond industry shaking in their boots, is now up on YouTube.

Click here to see it.

The shot of Djimon Hounsou holding up the diamond and staring at it with wonder -  with an ominous  voice-over about 'a stone that will test the hearts of men' -  feels a tad "Lord of the Rings-ish," but the movie still looks pretty action-packed, dramatic and exciting.

And kudos to Leonardo DiCaprio for his very impressive South African accent. It's even better than Tim Robbins' in "Catch a Fire," and that's saying a lot.

Even more impressive than his S.A. accent is his new girlfriend Bar Rafaeli.

Bar who? Here's the scoop. She just turned 21. She's an Israeli swimsuit model and they've been dating for about six months. Wanna see more Bar?

People magazine reported that the love birds were spotted in Paris in April strolling down the Champs-Elysees and dining at a Japanese restaurant. 

Barrafaeli_ventu_10642288_600
For the full story on how they met, you have to click here to go Bar's website (no, I'm not kidding) where you can read details of how they met (In Vegas at a party for U2), how he flew to Barcelona to see her, how he sends flowers and chocolates to her when she's in New York for audition. And on and on.

(News Flash: A reader says it's NOT her official site. It's a "fan site," and an eerily well informed fan site, I might add. See comments for more details.)

Oh, and there are also lots of photos of Bar, which I'm sure Leo also looks at a lot when the lovers are kept apart by work schedules.

One thing I can safely predict is that Leo won't be giving Bar any diamond rings. Not after the education he's gotten about conflict diamonds from shooting "Diamond" in South Africa.

Gosh, isn't is a shame Leo can't seem to attract decent-looking ladies. He's rich, famous and not bad looking. What gives? This new one is as much of a dog as that Brazilian double-bagger Giselle Bundchen. Thank God we don't have to look at her anymore.

Photo credits: Leo does a great Capetown accent in the new film, "Blood Diamond," shot in South Africa.
Eamonn McCormack/WireImage

Photo credits: Bar Rafaeli, Leo's latest squeeze, arriving at the Dolce Gabbana dinner in Milan during fashion week. Notice that she looks nothing like his last exotic Amazon.
Daniele Venturelli/WireImage.com

October 05, 2006 in Leonardo DiCaprio, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (6)

US government builds "Blood Diamond" buzz

Bdd06882“Blood Diamond,” Ed Zwick's film about the illegitimate diamond trade in '90s war-torn Sierra Leone  - starring Oscar nominees Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou and Oscar-winner Jennifer Connelly – is getting more free publicity than Warner Bros could have dreamed of.

With the film not yet screened for press, the studio's PR department is sitting back and reveling in the daily flurry of diamond news and headlines building the buzz for "Blood," set for release December 15.

Now even the US Government is helping promote the film.

After reviewing the problem of conflict stones entering the U.S. market, the Government Accounting Office (GAO) has recommended that the diamond industry and the U.S. government do more to stop these illicit gems from entering the U.S. marketplace.

The GAO report, released last week, acknowledges that the legitimate trade of rough diamonds can help African economies, but it adds that rough diamonds - which fueled severe conflicts in Liberia, Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Angola during the 1990s  - remain a major cause for concern.

"Although many of these conflicts have now ended and the international community has taken steps to gain control of the rough diamond trade, the United Nations (UN) and other sources report that illicit trading of rough diamonds still exists and could potentially finance civil conflicts as well as criminal and terrorist activities,"
the GAO report states.

Even the Department of Homeland Security is getting into the act.

According to a Reuters report, the department released a response to the GAO report, pledging to work with the State Department to record detailed information about diamonds entering this country, as well as conducting periodic random examinations of diamond shipments.

Duh. About frigging time. Doesn't it seem like inspecting rough and/or polished diamond shipments will do more to stop global terrorist networks than banning lip gloss and hair gel on airplanes?

After the GAO report was issued, Global Witness, which has long reported that the diamond trade is still funding civil wars and that al-Qaida uses diamonds to fund their terrorist activities, released a joint statement with Partnership Africa Canada calling for the U.S. to take swift action on the report’s recommendations. It's worth noting that both organizations were nominated for a joint Nobel Peace Prize for their work to expose the “conflict diamond” trade.

In response to the GAO report, the World Diamond Council has promised to work with the U.S. to improve inspection of rough diamond imports and exports. No, really. They've promised.

But U.S. consumers should be forgiven if they find these promises hard to believe. Especially after reading the diamond industry's Web site - part of a new multi-million PR campaign -  insists the problem of “conflict stones” portrayed in “Blood Diamond” is ancient history - all fixed, nothing to worry about, end of story.

Meanwhile, a WB rep says "Blood" will be ready for press screenings in a few weeks. Then the real onslaught of awards buzz should begin.

Photo Credits: Leo and Djimon in an action scene from Warner Bros' prescient new film, "Blood Diamond," which, thanks to a just released U.S. government report, may be the easiest film to promote in recent Hollywood history.
Jaap Buitendijk / Warner Bros. Pictures

October 02, 2006 in DeBeers diamonds, jennifer connelly_, Leonardo DiCaprio, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (0)

Leo gets Stoned, Kirsten and Orlando get Frenched

Kirstendun_charb_10592742_600_1Mickjagger_j_mc_10592555_600_3Maybe you can’t judge a book by its cover.

But you can judge a film by its premiere party star power.

Tuesday’s night party in New York for Martin Scorcese’s  “The Departed” drew a Hollywood icon (Lauren Bacall), a music legend (Billy Joel) and  two Rolling Stones (Mick and Ronnie).  Listen for some classic Stones tunes in Scorcese's return to his "Mean Streets" beginnings. Along with the cast, Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon and Jack Nicholson, this party was a pretty big bill to top.

But writer/director Sofia Coppola’s “Marie Antoinette” party – sponsored by Chanel - at the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood came in a close second.

The reigning queens of the night were definitely Sofia - in a Chanel Spring '07 pleated chiffon dress - and her movie muse, Kirsten Dunst, in a Christian LaCroix halter gown.

Marie_antoinette_044_1Penelope Cruz
came glued to her “Volver” director Pedro Almodovar. Geoffrey Rush caught up with Angelica Huston, who later chilled on the patio with her husband and Jason Schwartzman. Will Ferrell was there and so was Courtney Love, who is starting to do a Thanksgiving Day Parade float imitation again (shock!).

I think I saw Samantha Mathis (where the heck has she been anyway?) in the crowd. Mike White and Robin Tunney seemed to be in good spirits.

One of the first to arrive was Maria Bello, followed by LA’s ultimate cool trio Donovan Leitch, Kristy Hume and Ione Sky and famed fashion photog Ellen Von Unwerth.

Also in the party: Mischa Barton, Drew Barrymore, Milla Jovovich, The Strokes, and Bow Wow Wow.

Dunst kept close to her patio table for most of the night, closely guarded by her PPP (Protective Personal Publicist) Steven Huvane.

No sign of a hot date for the "Marie" star. But guess who arrived late and snunk in under the radar? Her rumored on-again/off-again beau, Orlando Bloom.

Perhaps now that Bloom’s ex-girlfriend Kate Bosworth has dieted down to bare bones, his eyes are back on the slightly meatier Dunst, who at least has a BMI that might permit her to model in Madrid. Orlandoblo_charb_10593359_600_4

Much like  “Marie Antoinette,” the most impressive aspects of the party were not the actors but the astonishing set, costumes and props.

The Chateau was transformed into a tiny Versailles with a ballroom, crystal chandeliers, Louis XIV chairs, period rugs, huge gilded mirrors and  bouquets of pink roses/ gardenias.

Perrier Jouet was flowing and a decadent dessert banquet was piled with white chocolate boxes containing tiny berries, pastel-colored French macaroons, meringue, tarts, pink and lavender cupcakes and petite cotton candy.

The only thing missing was a few white powdered wigs, which, come it think of it, would have looked better on Bloom than that wierd flat hat.

Atmosphere_charb_10593135_600_1This isn’t the first time the Chateau – which was actually inspired by a Loire Valley chateau -  has been cleared out and transformed.

“I remember we cleared the lobby out for our very first party,” recalled Marmont’s owner Andre Balazs. "It was for Sofia's 17th birthday party."

How tres, tres appropriate.

By the way, the mystery of where those pink Converse shoes came from has been solved.

Seems Io Bottoms, who plays a lady-in-waiting in "Marie," bought the pink Chucky's in Paris for Kirsten to wear during rehearsals and down time on the set.

"They cost about 80 Euros," she explained, "They were a gift for Kirsten."

Then Sofia's bro, Roman Coppola, slid the funky modern shoes into that shot of Marie Antoinette's fancy French period footwear.

So now you know.

Photo Credits: Mick, Leo and Ron get satisfaction at the New York premiere of "The Departed."
Jamie McCarthy/WireImage.

Photo Credits: Long live the Queens! Kirsten and Sofia party hearty at the Chateau Marmont.
Eric Charbonneau/WireImage
Photo Credits: Penelope Cruz, a buzzed about Oscar possibility, makes the scene at the Marie Antoinette party at the Chateau.
Eric Charbonneau/WireImage
Photo Credits: Better than her 17th birthday party? You betcha. Sofia's table awaits her at the Marie post party.
Eric Charbonneau/WireImage

September 27, 2006 in Kirsten Dunst, Leonardo DiCaprio, marie antoinette, Orlando Bloom, party, pink, premiere, sofia coppola | Permalink | Comments (2)

De Beers vs Bushmen: who will win the bling PR war?

Bdd07220_1Diamonds - a staple of Hollywood award season attire - are having a rough time lately.

De Beers recently mounted a massive PR campaign to educate consumers about how good diamonds are for Africa and the efforts to control and/or eradicate the sale of "conflict" or "blood" diamonds.

Now the international diamond cartel has hired some hot new corporate communications guns, including one exec head-hunted from a global pharmaceutical company called AstraZeneca.

Judging from that company's recent problems, I'd say De Beers got themselves an expert corporate spinner to help them fight the negative publicity expected from Warner Bros’s “Blood Diamond” (Leonardo DiCaprio, Djimon Hounsou and Jennifer Connelly) that focuses on the link between diamonds and bloody civil wars in Africa.

But someone else has joined the fray.

Last week the Kalahari Bushmen of Botswana took out an unprecedented large ad in Variety, asking for help from DiCaprio. In the ad, Bushman Roy Sesana wrote: "Friends have told us that you are in a film, “Blood Diamond,” which shows how badly diamonds can hurt. We know this. When we were chased off our land, officials told us it was because of the diamond finds. Please help us, Sir. We know you are a famous and respected man, and that if you speak up for us many people will listen. We just want to go home, and hunt and gather and live in peace like we have always done."

And on behalf of the Bushmen, Survival International has asked Linda Evangelista to step down as the new face of De Beers. Don't laugh. SI already has Colin Firth and Julie Christie on the Bushmen's side. Christie has said, 'Diamonds as the cause of misery and suffering are not a thing of the past. The Bushman evictions in Botswana are a clear demonstration that local people are still suffering because of these stones.” And SI already convinced supermodel Iman to step down as the face of De Beers a few years ago.

That said, Iman is married to David Bowie and is very wealthy in her own right. Good luck getting Linda to turn down that big fat spokesmodel contract. The early ‘90s era supermodel, who once bragged that she didn’t “wake up for less than $10 grand a day,” now has a.. how shall I put this, slightly less stellar modeling career. 

Gosh, this Hollywood diamond war is getting so exciting. Will the Bushmen of Kalahari make a trip to Hollywood? Can the displaced tribe and their celebrity supporters  persuade A-list actresses to boycott the bling and not wear dazzling diamonds to awards shows?

Hey, these dudes have already taken out an ad in Variety. I’d say anything is possible.

Photo Credit: Leo and Djimon star in "Blood Diamond," the movie about conflict diamonds financing bloody civil wars that has De Beers execs shaking in their designer boots.
Jaap Buitendijk/Warner Bros. Pictures.

September 26, 2006 in awards, DeBeers diamonds, fashion, Golden Globes, Leonardo DiCaprio, Oscars, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (2)

Will "Blood" kill diamonds at the Oscars?

Is the international diamond industry getting really, really, really nervous about the impact of "The Blood Diamond” on their Christmas and Valentine’s Day gem sales?

You bet. Almost three months before  the Warner Bros film starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Connelly and Djimoun Hounsou, is due for release (Dec. 15), the World Diamond Corporation has launched a major offensive campaign with a big ad in large newspapers (and on their website) explaining that the "conflict" or "blood diamond" problem has been solved.

Terihatche_amy_g_7755012_600The ads mention the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, a plan put in place to certify a stone's origins, insuring that no conflict stones enter the marketplace. The KPCS is currently under review with results on the program's effectiveness due out this fall.

Why is the WDC trying to fend off criticism so early? Have they seen any film footage? No, according to studio sources.

But the diamond industry seems to be shaking in their bright shiny shoes, worried that consumers will believe that conflict diamonds are still being smuggled and sold. Or worse, that they will read about the stones being a viable currency funding international terrorist forces  such as Al Qaeda  and Hezbollah.

“If they want to educate the public, that’s great. The more information on conflict diamonds that gets out, the better,” says a source close to the film about the WDC's pro-active ads.  “Unfortunately, their ads do not tell the whole story, that, despite their attempts to police their industry, there are flaws and loopholes in the Kimberley Process.”

Amnesty International and Global Witness still warn of ongoing inadequacies in the diamond industry’s ability to curtail or control "blood diamond" sales.

Whatever happens to the diamond market, it will be interesting to see how A-list actresses will cope with questions about their bling in December, when "Blood Diamond," and other Oscar hopeful films, are released.

Here's a sampling: Did the jeweler who loaned you that million dollar necklace mention how many people had their hands hacked off for it? How do you feel knowing that your pretty ring could have funded Hezbollah? Or that those fabulous chandelier earrings may have bought arms for Osama?

May I suggest that any Oscar-hopefuls planning on wearing diamonds on the carpets have a prepared answer to these inevitable questions, along with the notes on who designed their gowns and made their shoes.

Otherwise, they'll risk looking stupid, vapid and uninformed. And that sure won't help an Oscar campaign, now will it?

Photo Credits: Thanks to "Blood Diamond," diamonds may not be as prevalent in the 2007 Awards Season. Even Teri Hatcher, selecting a ring at the Diamond Information Center's Pre-Oscar Suite at the Soho House last March, may think twice about bling.
Wire Image/Amy Graves

September 07, 2006 in DeBeers diamonds, jennifer connelly_, Leonardo DiCaprio, Oscar suites, Oscars, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (3)

Hollywood braces for "Blood Diamond" War

Angelinajo_j_mc_6292438_600Get ready for the big "Blood Diamond " PR War between Team De Beers and Team Zwick.

Nelson Mandela will act as a spokesman for the international diamond cartel to  defuse any negative publicity caused by Ed Zwick's new film “The Blood Diamond,” starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Connelly and Djimoun Hounsou, due out in December.

The film, a fictional tale, is set during the all-too-real ‘90s decade of African civil wars when rebel armies seized control of diamond mines, traded conflict diamonds for arms and murdered, raped and mutilated thousands of innocent people.

The film’s barely finished shooting but the World Diamond Council has already asked Zwick, the film’s producer/co-writer/director to add a disclaimer at the end that puts the nasty rough diamond trade in the past and the current industry in a better light.

Honest, those creepy rebels with nasty amputation habits are gone. Today's mining conditions are way improved and diamonds are now carefully documented thanks to the Kimberly Process, a voluntary industry agreement made in 2000, which tracks and certifies the movement of rough diamonds.

Human rights groups such as Amnesty International don’t buy it. But if you do, I’ve got some great New Orleans property near some lovely new levees you might also like. Zwick’s response? He gave it to E! Online yesterday.

A bitter battle is clearly brewing. But how will Team De Beers, headed by Mandela, do against Team Zwick? Let’s compare the players. Ready for their turn at bat are the “Blood” actors, all politically active and involved with a variety of humanitarian causes.

DiCaprio is outspoken about ecology and global warming issues. His website was redesigned and launched in 2004, the same year he joined the boards of NRDC and Global Green USA. Hounsou was born in Benin, near Niger. He participated in Amnesty International’s Live for Darfur concert series last fall. It's safe to say that he has strong opinions on the illicit diamond trade’s impact on Africa peoples. And Jennifer Connelly was just named Amnesty International USA's (AIUSA) Ambassador for Human Rights Education last winter.

But Zwick may also have a trump card, an actress who could give his team an unbeatable hand....

Continue reading "Hollywood braces for "Blood Diamond" War" »

June 28, 2006 in Brad Pitt, DeBeers diamonds, George Clooney_, Leonardo DiCaprio, nelson mandela, Oscars, politics, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (2)

Mandela to defend De Beers from bad "Blood"

The international diamond industry must be getting pretty nervous about “The Blood Diamond.”

Word is that Sitrick and Company, Tinseltown’s top spinmeisters, have been hired by De Beers, the world's largest supplier of rough diamonds, to deflect the negative image of their industry portrayed in the upcoming film which stars Oscar nominee Leonardo DiCaprio  (“The Aviator”), Oscar-winner Jennifer Connelly (“A Beautiful Mind”) and Oscar nominee Djimon Hounsou (“In America”).

“Diamond,” produced by Ed Zwick, will not be released until Jan 12, 2007. It’s the wrenching story of two South Africans, a mercenary (DiCaprio) and a fisherman (Hounsou) during the savage ‘90s Sierra Leone civil wars when rebels seized mines to sell “conflict” or “blood diamonds” to buy arms, murdering and mutilating (hand/arm amputation was a popular rebel sport) thousands of innocent men, women and children.Mandella

So guess who Sitrick plans to trot out to help stop the bad bling publicity? 

None other than South Africa’s activist and first post-apartheid president Nelson Mandela.

“Mandela is going to say that all that stuff seen in the film is in the past, that there are no more conflict diamonds in circulation and that the diamond industry is economically good for South Africa,” a smiling inside source revealed. “And who in their right mind is going to argue with Nelson Mandela?"

Who indeed.

But “Blood Diamond” will be one of those “important issue" awards season frontrunners. Diamonds used to fund wars and fuel massive slaughters is pretty nasty stuff. Imagine what this negative buzz could do to the bling quotient on the 2007 awards season red carpets.

The Academy/Globe consideration screenings in November may start the bad press that could hurt December diamond sales, not to mention Valentine's Day.

As far back as September 2005, De Beers’ honcho Jonathan Oppenheimer warned an industry convention that the movie was likely to attract a huge audience. "Can you imagine its impact on the Christmas-buying audience in America if the message is not carried through that this (conflict diamonds) is something of the past, that this is something that has been managed and taken care of?"

But it shouldn’t be a shock that Mandela would take the diamond dudes side. After De Beers chairman Harry Oppenheimer's death in 2000, Mandela recognized his support for democratic and philanthropic causes in a Time magazine obit, hailing him as "monumentally instrumental in helping our country become the economic leader it is today."

Gosh, who can argue with that?

Photo Credit: Nelson Mandela - seen at the 46664 HIV/AIDS Awareness Concert in 2005 - may show up in Hollywood to help De Beers fight any bad publicity due to "The Blood Diamond."
WireImage/Shayne Robinson

June 15, 2006 in awards, DeBeers diamonds, fashion, Golden Globes, jennifer connelly_, Leonardo DiCaprio, nelson mandela, Oppenheimer, The Blood Diamond | Permalink | Comments (49)

Filling Gyllenhaal's romantic boots?

Jake Gyllenhaal

"Brokeback Mountain" star Jake Gyllenhaal is, as the old saying goes, “sitting in the catbird seat.”

One Hollywood producer, fresh from high-level casting meetings this week, says that Gyllenhaal has reportedly stopped taking on new roles because he's waiting to get that big Oscar nomination, figuring, and rightly so, that once he gets an O nod he can raise his price, get better parts, etc. Right now, he's not even up for a Golden Globe, so his biz buzz is not as loud as say, Heath Ledger's.

But be forewarned, Jake. There is also the dreaded "Hilary Swank Oscar," a Hollywood term that translates to a huge award that brings none of the usual benefits — no better roles, no more moola, etc. And now comes Swank's sudden shockeroo split from Chad Lowe, a move that surprised even longtime Swank-Lowe watchers — the celeb-seasoned red carpet photographers, who were marveling about the seemingly devoted couple’s breakup backstage at the People’s Choice Awards. Hmmm. Maybe they should call it the Curse of the Swank Oscar.

Anyway, this big-time Hollywood producer theorizes that Gyllenhaal gets cast so darn much because basically there is nobody else around to cast as an under-40 romantic male lead.

Oh, c’mon. Surely there's more out there than Jake. Let’s see — Colin Farrell, but he’s kinda busy right now. Hayden Christensen? Nope. He played waaay too petulant in the last "Star Wars" saga. After Sharon Waxman's New York Times career-skewering piece on Orlando Bloom, he'll be lucky to get a meeting at any studio. Look, his name isn't even bold-faced anymore! Jeepers, that happens fast.

As for Ryan Phillippe? He's definitely a contender after his performance in "Crash." Then there's that old reliable, Leonardo DiCaprio, who's starting to look a little long in the tooth. Topher Grace's got a kind of goofy boy-next-door potential. And Wilmer Valderrama is definitely praying he can get on this short list. Then there’s “Vegas” hottie Josh Duhamel, who would make a great love interest for any actress.

Anybody got any other casting suggestions for the poor hunk-less producer?

Photo: Jake Gyllenhaal (Hollywood's Hottest Hunk?) at the Critics' Choice Awards
(Steve Granitz / WireImage)

January 13, 2006 in Brokeback Mountain, Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Leonardo DiCaprio, Oscars | Permalink | Comments (15)

And the presenters are....

The stars are starting to align for the Golden Globes.

Leonardo DiCaprio, Harrison Ford, Jamie Foxx, Natalie Portman, and Emma Thompson will present awards at the 63rd annual Golden Globes, taking place on Jan. 16 at the Beverly Hilton.

Leonardo DiCaprio

No official word on which star will present which award. But according to Barry Adelman, executive producer of the Golden Globe awards show, it's customary for last year's winners to present in their winning category. "It's not a hard and fast rule but we usually ask last year's winners to come back and present awards for best actress and best actor."

That could mean that Leo, who won a best actor in a dramatic movie for "The Aviator," will present in that category. It could also mean that Foxx, who won for "Ray," will present for his winning category, best actor in a musical or comedy movie. And since Portman won best supporting actress for "Closer" last year, well, you figure it out.

As yet, there is no word on who will perform the coveted task of presenting the prestigious Cecil B. DeMille Award. This year the honor goes to Anthony Hopkins, given by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. for the actor's "outstanding contribution to the entertainment field."

The lifetime achievement award requires a careful and painstaking selection process. "We try to be good matchmakers," says Adelman. We go through a research process to find someone who is either a personal or professional friend." Or both.

Adelman recalls past successful pairings: When Dustin Hoffman won his DeMille at the 1997 ceremony, Tom Cruise, his costar in "Rainman," presented it to him. Warren Beatty, one of Jack Nicholson's longtime close personal friends and a professional colleague, presented his pal with his DeMille in 1999.

Hmm. We can't help but wonder if Thompson, who costarred with Hopkins in two memorable and award-winning Merchant-Ivory productions, "Howard's End," and "Remains of the Day," may be the lucky lady who hands the distinguished British actor his overdue DeMille.

Then again, the DeMille presenter could also be....

Photo Credit: Leonardo DiCaprio warms up for Golden Globe presenter duty at the Earth to America! eco-fundraiser in Las Vegas in November 2005.
(Michael Caulfield / WireImage)

Continue reading "And the presenters are.... " »

January 03, 2006 in Anthony Hopkins, Emma Thompson, Felicity Huffman, Golden Globes, Harrison Ford_, Jamie Foxx, Julia Roberts, Leonardo DiCaprio, Natalie Portman | Permalink | Comments (6)