Oprah has wanted to quit before now
Today's talk about Oprah Winfrey's decision to wrap up her syndicated talk show in 2011 is bringing back memories of a conversation I had with her 11 years ago on that very topic. We were in her elegant but modest office at Harpo Studios in Chicago, steps away from where her shows are taped, and though she was game to talk about anything, it was her coming movie Beloved most on her mind. She confessed that when she went to Philadelphia to shoot that movie in 1997 — she produced and starred as a haunted former slave — she had decided to quit the talk show. She was tired of talk, she told me, and wanted to focus on films. But midway through the three-month shoot she had an epiphany. After an agonizing scene with her co-star Danny Glover, she said, "I thought, 'How dare
I think that I could be tired? Who am I to even say the words 'I am
tired'? I thought, 'You come from a people with no voice, no money, no
power, no vision, no vehicle for themselves and their children. You've
been given this.' " So she decided to continue and it was that fall of 1998 that she abandoned the sensational and announced her new TV mission — helping people improve their lives.
In that same interview, she said something I remember often: "Everything is about imagery. We're people who respond
to imagery. You need to see something different so you can feel
something different." Oprah is more of a national institution now than she was that summer she decided that she was meant to use her voice and vision on television. She has spent all of her adult life on TV. And while I understand that — as she said — "it feels right in my bones and it feels right in my spirit," to wrap it up after 25 years, the woman now has her own network. I think it's a pretty safe bet that she'll be back.
Photo courtesy of Harpo
October 26, 2009
Movie awards season is here
Two announcements today make it clear that movie award season is upon us. First, British actor and comedian Ricky Gervais, most recently the star of The Invention of Lying, will host the Golden Globe Awards on January 17. Gervais is the first host of the show since 1995. His presenting skills at both the Emmys and last year's Golden Globes (watch him below) were a cut above all the rest. Second, The Hollywood Reporter, announced the return today of its yearly Awards Watch, both online and in print. It's not the only publication covering entertainment with an informed look at films – my friend Tom O'Neil does a masterful job at his Goldderby.com (take a look at his 12 front-runners now). Bookmark both if you're awards obsessed.
September 18, 2009
Six Emmy nominees talk about their work
The television Emmy Awards are on CBS Sunday night with Neil Patrick Harris as the host, so already we know it will be better than last year's show when five reality show hosts flopped. Our Nancy Mills talked with a number of the nominees about their roles. Read who said what below.
Jack McBrayer on Emmy nomination and new '30 Rock' season
Jack McBrayer is living proof that nice guys don’t always finish last. The 36-year-old actor slowly climbed the comedy ladder working with Chicago's Second City improv troupe and doing bits on Late Night with Conan O’Brien, leading to his signature role as the always-smiling NBC page Kenneth on 30 Rock. After three years as the most polite man on television, McBrayer’s persistence has culminated in his first Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series. (Co-stars Tina Fey, Tracy Morgan and Alec Baldwin are also up for Emmys on Sunday.) Our Jon Tollestrup chatted with McBrayer for my Who’s News column this week, and read below for more of their conversation.
Photos courtesy of NBC, USA Today
Shohreh Aghdashloo goes for her first Emmy Award
Five years after nabbing her first Oscar nomination for House of Sand and Fog, Shohreh Aghdashloo is once again experiencing another career first in the form of an Emmy nomination on Sunday for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie in HBO’s House of Saddam. A native of Iran, Aghdashloo, 57, exhibited depth and dignity as Saddam Hussein’s first wife, Sajida, emerging as the striking standout in a male-dominated cast. She recently phoned our Jon Tollestrup for an item in my Who’s News column, so read below for her thoughts on several topics ranging from her favorite TV show to the post-election protests that gripped the streets of Tehran this past summer.
Photos courtesy of HBO
June 17, 2009
Zac Brown Band takes home CMT's USA WEEKEND award
A hearty congratulations goes out to the Zac Brown Band today. The group's video for their hit Chicken Fried won the USA WEEKEND Breakthrough Video of the Year honor at last night's CMT Music Awards in Nashville. We profiled Brown last week on the blog, as well as the other three nominated acts (Julianne Hough, Lady Antebellum and Jamey Johnson), and last night when accepting the award, Brown acknowledged all the people that voted for them. "We want to thank the country music fans," he said, "because without the country music fans buying our music, we wouldn't have a life in country music." (You can catch the acceptance speech in the video below.) Taylor Swift and Brad Paisley were the big winners of the night, taking home two trophies each: Swift for Video of the Year and Female Video of the Year, Paisley for Male Video of the Year ad Collaborative Video of the Year with Keith Urban. Other honorees included Rascal Flatts (Group Video of the Year), Sugarland (Duo of the Year) and Kid Rock (Wide Open Country Video of the Year).
Photo by Robert Deutsch/USA Today
June 05, 2009
Dierks Bentley, Joe Nichols and their hit country videos
The June 16 CMT Music Awards are coming up fast, so in this weekend's issue, we have a story featuring two country stars' takes on their past award-winning videos. Dierks Bentley (at right) talks about his 2004 winner, What Was I Thinkin', and Joe Nichols waxes nostalgic about Brokenheartsville, his 2003 hit. Also, our Dennis McCafferty chats with director George Flanigen about I Wonder, which was a USA WEEKEND Breakthrough Video of the Year winner for Kellie Pickler last year. You have until June 15 to vote for this year's group of awards, so come back to the blog next week. We'll have exclusive interviews with the four nominated acts in the 2009 Breakthrough category, Julianne Hough, Jamey Johnson, Zac Brown of Zac Brown Band and Hillary Scott from Lady Antebellum.
Photo by Robert Deutsch/USA Today
January 08, 2009
NAACP Image Award nominees for 2009
I'm just catching up today with the long list of nominees announced yesterday for the NAACP Image Awards. It's the 40th anniversary of the event and the 100th anniversary of the NAACP. In fact, the NAACP was founded on Feb. 12, 1909, and this year's Image Awards show, live on Fox, is Feb. 12. There are plenty of great nominations in movies, television, music and literary arts — you can read them all here — but my all-time favorite is Blair Underwood, and not just because he is nominated in three different categories: outstanding supporting actor in a comedy for The New Adventures of Old Christine (he's sweet and sexy as Christine's beau); outstanding supporting actor in a drama series for Dirty Sexy Money (he's ruthless, manipulative and scary as an egocentric billionaire); and outstanding actor in a drama series for InTreatment (he's a damaged, controlling military man prone to playing mind games). Underwood did his finest work in the latter, HBO's In Treatment, and he is rightly nominated as a lead actor by the Image Awards; he's nominated as a supporting actor for the same work by the Hollywood Foreign Press who give the Golden Globes. Underwood will be joined by a really stellar list of other stars on Feb. 12. Click on read more below for more of my favorites.
Photo by Claudette Barius
December 18, 2008
SAG Award nominees announced
Just watched the announcement of Screen Actor Guild Awards nominees and will spend the day writing our upcoming cover story on them. No big surprises. See the list and judge for yourself here!
December 11, 2008
2009 Golden Globe awards: Cool stars on red carpet
It's going to be a great Golden Globes ceremony on Jan. 11. The nominations are out today and if you look at the list just for a taste of who will be making the awards scene at this party, and probably the ones for the SAG Awards and the Oscars, there's lots to look forward to. Brad Pitt (at right in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) and Angelina Jolie (Changeling) will be arm in arm again, this time with matching nominations as best actor and actress; Meryl Streep will be there as well — she has two nominations, for Doubt and Mamma Mia! — and I always like to see whom she will bring (often one of her children). We'll see good friends and co-stars Kate Winslet (another double nominee, for Revolutionary Road and The Reader) and Leonardo DiCaprio (Revolutionary Road), and Vicky Christina Barcelona co-stars turned couple Javier Bardiem and Penelope Cruz. We'll see heartthrobs Jon Hamm (Mad Men), Jonathan Rhys Meyers (The Tudors) and, for we women of a certain age, Gabriel Byrne (In Treatment). Favorites like Sally Field (yes, we still like her), Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Shirley McLaine, Susan Sarandon and Laura Linney got nominations — all for movies except Field, who is up again for Brothers and Sisters. Tom Cruise got a Globe nomination for his Tropic Thunder cameo, so he and Katie Holmes should go because that nod is not likely to be repeated. And I'm thrilled to see Blair Underwood nominated for In Treatment, as it may have been the best performance on television this year. To see if your favorites made the list, click here.
Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures


