Friday, October 18, 2013



Idris Elba


THOR GUARDIAN OF WORLDS


GHOST RIDER



PROMETHEUS


PACIFIC RIM



Birth Name: Idris Elba
Born: 09/06/1972
Birth Place: London, England, GB

He was born Idrissa Akuna Elba in London, England on Sept. 6, 1972, the only child of African immigrants; his mother was originally from Ghana and his father was a Sierra Leonean who worked as an engineer at the Ford plant in Dagenham. Elba spent his early years in Hackney, East London, which he claimed made him technically a Cockney Englishman, but the family later moved to the city's Canning Town area, a largely white neighborhood where Idris found himself periodically the victim of violence at the hands of racist schoolmates. Growing up listening to his father's American soul records, at age 14 he had begun helping his uncle in the latter's successful wedding DJ business and, while at Trinity Comprehensive secondary school in Canning Town, he began participating in school plays. At 16, he earned a grant and joined the National Youth Music Theatre - where he publicly sang for the first time in a production of "Guys and Dolls" - before dropping out of school and beginning a series of jobs to support himself, including his own DJ work under the name Big Driis (he grew to 6'3"), as well as a stint at the same Ford factory at which his father worked. His family discouraged his thespian aspirations, he later said, insisting a career with Ford more promising.

By his early twenties, he was auditioning for television and stage roles, netting his first credited small screen part in "Absolutely Fabulous" (BBC, 1992-2004). He followed that with a series of guest shots, most notably on the long-running crime drama "Silent Witness" (BBC, 1996- ) and the primetime soap "Family Affairs" (Channel 5, 1997-2005), capped with the second male lead in the Channel 4 vampire-themed, sci-fi miniseries, "Ultraviolet" (1998). The next year, he joined the cast of the medical/crime series "Dangerfield" (1995-99). Elba and wife Dormowa Sherman, a Liberian actress he married in 1997, moved to New York, seeking a market where lead roles were open to black actors, but for three years he "couldn't catch a cold," he later told NPR. He worked constantly to pick up American accents and did manage to win the role of Achilles in a 2001 New York stage production of "Troilus and Cressida," a small role in the ill-fated "Buffalo Soldiers" (2001) - a darkly comedic look at larcenous U.S. soldiers in late Cold War-period Berlin, buried when it ran afoul of the country's jingoistic fervor - and a guest shot on NBC's staple cop procedural show "Law & Order" (1990- ), before scoring an audition with producer David Simon's upcoming HBO series, "The Wire."

Elba initially read for the role of Baltimore drug kingpin Avon Barksdale, returning for multiple callbacks. On the day his daughter was born, the producers awarded him the role of Stringer Bell, Barksdale's less prominent consigliere/business manager, and, when he thanked them in his normal voice, they were stunned to hear his East Ender accent. Raw-nerved in its bleak, humanistic portrayal of both cops and dealers and since lauded by some critics as the best show ever to grace U.S. airwaves, "The Wire" saw his role expand greatly as Elba and the writers nuanced Bell, who took college economics classes, ran dealer meetings with parliamentary rules, and plotted with quiet, cold-blooded resolve to break out of the dog-eat-dog business of the streets to exploit an already corrupt "legitimate" business and political community; to the point of betraying Barksdale. For the latter, Bell paid the ultimate price for it in the show's third season. Still, the role gave Elba nearly instant street cred, certainly in pop-cultural circles as he rubbed elbows with top-tier urban artists and producers such as Sean Combs, Ludacris and Jay-Z - whose 2008 album American Gangster Elba would voice a spoken-word intro for - and even among real drug dealers who had no problems initiating conversations with him in public.

Essence magazine would dub him one of the "Ten Hottest Men on the Planet" in 2004 and 2005 - apropos of which or not, he and Sherman divorced the next year - and his film work would pick up steam to boot. He stole the show in an ostensibly supporting role as a young Southern minister in the indie drama, "The Gospel" (2005), then earned the lead as a conscientious Rwandan army captain caught in the middle of that country's infamous genocide in "Sometimes in April," a made-for-HBO companion piece to the more famous feature, "Hotel Rwanda" (2004). He scored roles in bigger-profile projects, including a major role opposite Hillary Swank in the A-horror flick "The Reaping" (2007) - bookended by a turn as the standard superfluous cop in the next year's B-horror outing "Prom Night" (2008) - and supporting parts in Ridley Scott's "American Gangster" (2007), the zombie flick "28 Weeks Later" (2007), and as the love interest of Gabriel Union in producer-director Tyler Perry's drama, "Daddy's Little Girls" (2007). Elba's success allowed him to revive his musical predilections. He issued an EP, Big Man, and his Hollywood networking would see "Driis" land tracks on movie soundtracks such as those of "Prom Night" and Perry's "Madea Goes to Jail" (2009). After a handful of other supporting roles, most notably reverting to his natural accent with a comic turn in Guy Ritchie's underworld ensemble, "RocknRolla" (2008), he scored a coveted male lead opposite superstar Beyoncé Knowles in the "Fatal Attraction" (1987) redux, "Obsessed," playing a successful businessman whose marriage to Beyoncé Knowles and life are threatened when an attractive but deranged female temp begins stalking him. Though the film received mixed reviews, it surprised films wags in early 2008 by ranking No. 1 during its first box office weekend, earning $27.5 million.

In early 2009, Elba donned a suit again to make a high-profile splash in American TV comedy by joining the cast of NBC's hit "The Office," playing the straight-talking, corporate-level supervisor whose finds his amicable but no-nonsense demeanor mightily challenged by the buffoonery of ever-clueless branch manager Michael Scott (Steve Carell) and his pathos-addled cubicle denizens. Back in his native England, Elba landed the starring role in the crime series "Luther" (BBC One, 2010- ), playing the titular character, a dedicated inspector who suffers a mental breakdown after a traumatic case involving a child killer, which leads him down dark paths in order to catch criminals. While the show itself suffered from being bogged down by familiar cop show tropes, Elba was widely hailed for his powerful performance, with some critics citing it as his best since "The Wire." The actor was genuinely humbled upon learning that he earned nominations for both the Golden Globes and Emmy Awards in 2011; he went on to win the Globe for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie. In fact, 2011 proved to be a banner one, as Elba earned a second Emmy nod for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series for his performance as a painter and love interest to a high school teacher (Laura Linney) battling cancer on "The Big C" (Showtime, 2010- ).

The turn of the decade also saw Elba jumping into the world of comic-book adaptations in no fewer than three consecutive projects. First up was a turn as the appropriately named Rogue, a member of the mercenary team "The Losers" (2010), in the action-packed shoot-'em-up co-starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Zoe Saldana and Chris Evans. A smaller, but pivotal role came in the form of Heimdall, the all-seeing, all-hearing sentry to the gates of mythical Asgard in the fantasy epic "Thor" (2011). Early the next year, Elba took on the guise of a disgraced monk who enlists the aide of Johnny Blaze (Nicolas Cage) in his battle against the Devil (Ciaran Hinds) for the over-the-top sequel "Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance" (2012). As his performance on "Luther" continued to impress the pundits, leading to a 2012 Golden Globe win, Elba returned to theaters in one of the year's most highly anticipated blockbusters, "Prometheus" (2012), director Ridley Scott's quasi-prequel to his 1979 sci-fi masterpiece "Alien." Next he played an inspiring leader and tough robot pilot in the monster-infested blockbuster "Pacific Rim" (2013), and reprised his part as the imposing Heimdall in the superhero sequel "Thor: The Dark World" (2013).














Friday, October 11, 2013




DEDICATION TO MICHAEL CLARKE DUNCAN
R.I.P. GENTLE GIANT


DAREDEVIL


SCORPION KING


PLANET OF THE APES



THE ISLAND


TALLADEGA KNIGHTS


KUNGFU PANDA


SIN CITY



GREEN LANTERN
Birth Name: Michael Clarke Duncan
Born: 12/10/1957
Birth Place: Chicago, Illinois, USA
Death Place: Los Angeles, California, USA
Died:                September 3, 2012


Born in Chicago, IL on Dec. 10, 1957, Duncan - known affectionately as "Big Mike" - was raised by his hard-working single mother, Jean, who encouraged him to pursue acting from an early age. So much so, that she forbade him from joining the school football team, lest he be injured, and worked with her son on his diction as she had him practice dramatic readings aloud. Although Duncan dropped out of high school, he eventually returned to earn his GED, and later attended Mississippi's Alcorn State University for three years before returning home to Chicago to assist his ailing mother. Duncan worked digging ditches for the local gas company and moonlighted as a nightclub bouncer for a time, prior to landing a personal security job for the producer of a touring stage show "Beauty Shop, Part 2." Despite dozens of requests by the aspiring thespian to his boss to let him perform in the stage production, Duncan's performance debut would have to wait. When the tour came to an end, Duncan found himself in Los Angeles, where he once again found work as a bouncer and bodyguard for such hip-hop/rap acts as Will Smith, LL Cool J and the Notorious B.I.G. In fact, he was supposed to guard the latter the night the rapper was shot dead in a drive-by shooting in L.A., but had swapped shifts that evening. Fortunately, one of his clients was rapper/film star Ice Cube, who gave him a part as an extra in the urban comedy "Friday" (1995). Encouraged, Duncan picked up an agent and began accumulating bit parts on televisions sitcoms like "Married... With Children" (Fox, 1986-97), and in films like Warren Beatty's political comedy "Bulworth" (1998) as well as the "Saturday Night Live"-inspired "A Night at the Roxbury" (1998) - cast, not surprisingly, as a bouncer.

Duncan's big break came that same year when he wrested the supporting role of Bear in the big-budget, sci-fi action-adventure "Armageddon" (1998), starring Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck. In a bizarre move - that years later, even Duncan could not fully explain - the fledging actor, eager to win the part, poured bottled water over his head before walking in to audition for the part for director Michael Bay. Apparently, it was enough to get him noticed, as Duncan was signed on to join Willis' team of roughneck astronauts in their desperate attempt to destroy a massive meteor before it destroyed the earth. During the filming of "Armageddon," Duncan and Willis became friendly, with the action superstar suggesting a new project being directed by Frank Darabont, based on a recent novel by Stephen King. At Willis' urging, and with the help of an acting coach, Duncan secured his breakout role as the wrongly convicted John Coffey in the supernatural drama "The Green Mile" (1999). Duncan's affecting portrayal of the child-like death row inmate, opposite the likes of heavy hitters Tom Hanks and James Cromwell, earned him the respect of his new peers, crystallized in the form of an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. "Big Mike" was officially on the Hollywood map, that same year appearing with his friend and supporter Willis in the film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.'s "Breakfast of Champions" (1999), alongside an all-star cast that also featured Albert Finney and Nick Nolte.

Duncan reteamed with Willis with a supporting role in the caper comedy "The Whole Nine Yards" (2000), before joining the cast of director Tim Burton's reworking of the sci-fi classic "Planet of the Apes" (2001), as Attar, leader of the militaristic gorillas. He also lent his voice to the anthropomorphic family film "Cats & Dogs" (2001), working with yet another star-studded cast, including Jeff Goldblum, Tobey Maquire and Susan Sarandon. Duncan was at last given the opportunity to try on the mantle of action star, when he appeared alongside Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in genre director Chuck Russell's "The Scorpion King" (2002). A prequel to 2001's "The Mummy Returns," Duncan played an uneasy ally of Johnson's assassin-turned-hero, in an attempt to overthrow an ancient despotic ruler. He acquitted himself so well, that director Mark Steven Johnson tapped Duncan to play Wilson "The Kingpin" Fisk, the hulking crime lord of NYC, in the big screen adaptation of the Marvel comic "Daredevil" (2003), opposite Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner. After some more voice work in the Disney-animated woodland fable "Brother Bear" (2003), Duncan took on a brief, but riveting cameo as Starkweather, a clone scheduled for organ harvesting, in director Michael Bay's futuristic thriller "The Island" (2005). That same year, Duncan provided the voice for the Clydesdale in the live-action/CGI hybrid "Racing Stripes" (2005), in addition to making an appearance as the brutal enforcer, Manute, in "Sin City" (2005). Directed by Robert Rodriquez and Frank Miller - creator of the graphic novel on which it was based - the highly-stylized pulp film featured yet another all-star cast, including Bruce Willis and Mickey Rourke.

For his next project, Duncan switched gears when he took a comedic role in the Will Ferrell NASCAR-themed "Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby" (2006), which went on to become one of the year's highest-grossing comedies. Not quite as successful, was the dark comedy "School for Scoundrels" (2006), starring Billy Bob Thornton as an unorthodox life coach, and Jon Heder as a parking officer with self-esteem problems, in which Duncan played the good doctor's assistant. He also appeared as a national security agent sent to investigate bizarre goings-on in the family fantasy "The Last Mimsy" (2007), before taking a turn as Martin Lawrence's rough-housing older brother in the family comedy "Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins" (2008). Duncan kept busy with back-to-back voice roles in the animated features "Kung Fu Panda" (2008), as the overly confident prison guard, Commander Vachi, as well as in the fantasy adventure "Delgo" (2008), as the voice of the wise elder, Marley. Next, he teamed up with the Broken Lizard troupe for the raunchy restaurant comedy "The Slammin' Salmon" (2009), as the bullying celebrity eatery owner, Cleon "Slammin'" Salmon. Duncan then camped it up as Balrog in the video game-spawned "Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li" (2009), a cut-rate action romp featuring Kristin Kreuk and Chris Klein.

The following year, Duncan reprised his role in "Cats & Dogs: Revenge of Kitty Galore" (2010), once again providing the voice of Sam. Sticking with voice roles, he was Kilowog in the superhero flop "Green Lantern" (2011) before turning to television as a guest star on an episode of Hart Hanson's "Bones" (Fox, 2005- ), which actually became a spin-off for the lighthearted procedural, "The Finder" (Fox, 2012). The show starred Geoff Stults as Walter Sherman, a former Iraq War veteran who possesses the extraordinary ability to find missing persons and valuable items through rather unorthodox means. Duncan played Sherman's loyal partner, Leo Knox, a widower and former attorney. Despite a promising premise and good interplay between Stults and Duncan, the show failed to capture a significant audience and was canceled after 13 episodes. Meanwhile, as he continued appearing in films both large and small, Duncan was admitted to the hospital in July 2012 after suffering a heart attack at home. His fiancée, Omarosa Manigault, reportedly performed CPR and resuscitated Duncan before he was brought to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. While the outlook was considered promising at first, his condition never really improved as Duncan remained in the intensive care unit for over a month. Ultimately, he took a sudden turn for the worse and died on Sept. 3, 2012. He was 54 years old. Manigault reportedly was by his side virtually every minute since he was taken to the hospital in July.






DEDICATION TO MICHAEL CLARKE DUNCAN





Wednesday, October 9, 2013




R.I.P. KEVIN PETER HALL











Kevin Peter Hall

Date of Birth
Date of Death
10 April 1991, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA (AIDS) 
Height
7' 2½" (2.20 m) 
Mini Biography
This African American actor attended Penn Hills High School in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He started his junior year at 6' 5" and finished it at 6' 9"! He played basketball throughout his high-school years and won a scholarship. He averaged 18 points a game and 10 rebounds! He played basketball during college, but not when it would interfere with his major at George Washington University in Washington, DC, which was Theatrical Arts. During his college years, he met Jay Fenichel with whom he would later make musical productions. Upon graduation, Fenichel moved to Los Angeles and Hall moved to Venezuela to play basketball.

After a year, Hall lost interest and relocated to Los Angeles, California. Along with Fenichel, the duo put together two night-club acts/musicals. One was a semi-autobiographical two-man musical, "In Five," and the other was a two-man show called "The Worst of Friends," both of which played in night clubs throughout the LA area. They also had a promotional business where they did promotional acts in department stores for new products.

While working on the set of the series "227" (1985), he met his co-star, Alaina Reed-Hall, who played Rose Lee Holloway. They married--both on the set, and in real life--and they had two children. Predator 2 (1990) was released December 1990, and in April 1991, he died of AIDS, which he contracted through a blood transfusion a few months before.

Spouse
Alaina Reed-Hall(29 December 1988 - 10 April 1991) (his death) 2 children







Trivia
He is the tallest of six brothers, all over 6' 5".
His father Charles Hall was 6' 6" and his mother Sylvia Hall was 6' 2".
This giant's face was rarely seen in his films, as he usually played monsters and semi-human creatures that required him to wear mounds of make-up, so few people know that he was a handsome and muscular man.
The character of the Predator in Predator (1987) went through many development stages, including one version that was set up for Jean-Claude Van Damme to play a martial-arts fighting Predator, and finally decided on the crab-like humanoid monster seen in the film. The producers realized much of their human cast were bodybuilders over 6 feet tall (and Van Damme was clearly smaller) and thus they cast the enormous Hall so that the Predator could realistically physically dominate the film's human characters.
Can be seen in Predator (1987) without costume. He is the helicopter pilot at the end of the film.
He was in a major car accident in Los Angeles. During surgery for his critical wounds, he received a contaminated blood transfusion. He died shortly thereafter of AIDS. He went public with his illness with the full support of his wife.
Referred to his non-speaking monster parts as grunt roles.
Auditioned for the lead role of the alien in Enemy Mine (1985) but didn't get the part.

Personal Quotes
"The problem is there aren't many calls for 7'4" black actors. Still, if I had let myself get discouraged I wouldn't be here now. I believe in myself and my acting." (from a 1985 "Starlog" interview)
When I first came to California it was fun and exciting to get any part in any movie and get paid for it. Because of my size and my background it seemed like I was right for just about anything. I did go through a period where I thought it was time to give up monster movies. But then the scripts and the effects started getting better. I was treated better and starting getting paid more. Doing creatures these days is more of a job for me than it was in the beginning. In the early days I was creating these creatures and basically getting lost in them. Now with creatures like Harry and the Predator it's more a matter of getting deeper into their characters and making sure they work. (from a 1991 interview)
It's ironic. People know me because I play the monsters, but I'm most recognized from the small roles in which they see my face. None of that stuff really bothers me. Whether I'm recognized in or out of a costume isn't a kind of pressure I put myself through anymore. (from a 1991 interview)
I'll always do costume roles. I'm bigger than life and so, in a way, I'm part of the fantasy/science fiction/horror genre.. But I'm more than just a guy in a suit. When people want big and a performance along with that big, I'm the one they call. (from a 1991 interview)
With Harry, I am always in control of the expressions and the performance. With the Predator it is half performance and half dealing with the physical traps. There's a balance you got to keep inside the suit. You've got to keep your character going while dealing with the fact that you've got all these wires and FX things coming out of you. It all boils down to concentration and being well-rehearsed.
I'm not just somebody shuffling around in a monster suit. I'm a kind of puppeteer from the inside who is attempting through arm and body movements to give the creatures I play a sense of personality.



Tribute to Kevin Peter Hall















Danny Glover & a cameo appearance by Calvin Lockhart



Danny Glover


Birth Name: Danny Glover
Born: 07/22/1946
Birth Place: San Francisco, California, USA

Born on July 22, 1947 in San Francisco, CA, Glover was raised by his father, James, a postal worker and union organizer, and his mother, Carrie, who also worked at the post office and organized for the union. Both were also active in working for equal rights with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. At five years old, Glover had his own paper route, which taught him the value of hard work - a lesson that remained with him for the rest of his life. By the time he reached George Washington High School, he was engaged in athletics - namely football and track - while also being enamored with acting. But his childhood and adolescence was plagued by dyslexia and later epilepsy - the latter hindering his athletic career, but neither of which derailed him from continuing his education. After graduating high school, he studied mathematics and economics at San Francisco State University, where he followed in his parents' footsteps and became active in the Black Students Union, participating in the 1968 country-wide student strike in protest to the Vietnam War. Also significant was meeting future wife Asake Bomani, with whom he later had his only child, Mandisa, in 1976. The couple eventually divorced in 1999.

Though he had developed an interest in acting, Glover instead decided on a career in public service, working several city government jobs, including as a researcher in the mayor's office and an evaluator for the San Francisco Model Cities program. He quit the latter job to begin studying acting at the Black Actors' Workshop, performing in productions of "Macbeth" and Sam Shepard's "Suicide in B Flat." Making his film debut, Glover played an anonymous inmate in "Escape from Alcatraz" (1979), director Don Siegel's excellent recounting of the famed prison break starring Clint Eastwood as mastermind Frank Morris. Glover first won acclaim on the stage for his work in two Athol Fugard plays; an off-Broadway revival of "The Blood Knot" (1980) and the Broadway premiere of "'Master Harold'...and the boys" (1982). A highly versatile actor, Glover made himself known on the big screen, easily shifting from warm, sympathetic characters, like Moze, the sweet-natured cotton farmer in "Places in the Heart" (1984), to frightening villains, like a corrupt cop in "Witness" (1985) and Mister, the brutally abusive husband of a Southern black woman (Whoopi Goldberg) in "The Color Purple" (1985).

Glover continued his breakout year when he co-starred in Lawrence Kasdan's revisionist Western, "Silverado" (1985), playing a cowboy who loses everything and teams up with three other so-called outlaws (Kevin Kline, Scott Glenn and Kevin Costner) to take on a corrupt rancher (Ray Baker) and a ruthless sheriff (Brian Dennehy). He also proved effective as African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela in the docudrama, "Mandela" (PBS, 1986), which immediately led to him reviving the character again in the cable-made biopic, "Mandela" (HBO, 1987). Glover was paired opposite Alfre Woodard as Winnie Mandela in both projects. But it was his next project that established Glover as a widely recognized action star, albeit for a short time. As the aging Detective Roger Murtaugh in "Lethal Weapon" (1987), Glover exuded a world-weary resignation that stood in sharp contrast to the suicidal psychosis of his new partner, Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson). Despite the stark differences between the two detectives, they form a bond as they track down a ruthless drug dealer (Mitchell Ryan) responsible for the murder of Murtaugh's Vietnam buddy (Tom Atkins). The success of "Lethal Weapon" - truly one of the great action yarns from the big budget 1980s - propelled Glover into the realm of international star.

Following the first of three sequels, "Lethal Weapon 2" (1989), which performed exceedingly well at the box office despite lacking its predecessor's originality, Glover returned to the small screen to play Joshua Sheets in the epic miniseries "Lonesome Dove" (CBS, 1989), which earned him an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Special. Glover's star power made it possible for noted black independent filmmaker Charles Burnett to get his quirky family drama "To Sleep with Anger" (1990) onto the screen. Glover signed on as executive producer and starred as the Devil, who ingratiates himself upon the home of his old friend (Paul Butler) and his disapproving wife (Mary Alice). His sturdy presence was a comfort to first-time feature director Bill Duke and executive producer and co-star Forest Whitaker in "A Rage in Harlem" (1991), in which he gave a memorable performance as an eccentric uptown numbers runner. Glover reunited with "Silverado" cohorts Kasdan and Kevin Kline for "Grand Canyon" (1991) in a part specifically written for the actor. In this drama about seemingly random events colliding with one another, Glover played a tow-truck driver who rescues an immigration attorney (Kevin Kline) from a gang of inner city hoods, which leads to a rather unexpected friendship between the two men.

Glover was paired once again with Alfre Woodard and put their South African accents to use one more time in "Bopha!" (1993), Morgan Freeman's feature directorial debut, which told the tale of a black South African policeman's political awakening. After playing Alex Haley's ancestor Alec Haley in "Queen" (CBS, 1993) and reviving Det. Roger Murtaugh for "Lethal Weapon 3" (1992), Glover made the rare transition to director, helming the Showtime production, "Override" (1994), a 30-minute short about an unusual tractor trailer driver. Turning back to his bread and butter, he spent the latter half of the 1990s in much more gentle films than he was used to. After playing a baseball manager who comes to believe in heavenly intervention in "Angels in the Outfield" (1994), Glover portrayed a Green Beret who leads a team delivering an elephant to a Vietnamese village in "Operation Dumbo Drop" (1995). While serving as executive producer on the HBO original "Deadly Voyage" (1996), about African stowaways on a freighter who are murdered, and "America's Dream" (HBO, 1996), a trilogy of stories about African- Americans, Glover enjoyed another critical success when he portrayed Phillip Marlowe on an episode of the neo-noir anthology series, "Fallen Angels" (Showtime, 1995-96). The role earned him another Emmy Award nomination, this time for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series.

Continuing to put forth quality projects, Glover was executive producer and star of "Buffalo Soldiers" (TNT, 1997), a gritty drama that told the story of black cavalry troops who battle Native Americans shortly after the Civil War. In the film, he turned in a gem of a performance as an ex-slave-turned-Army sergeant who runs afoul of the famed Texas Rangers. Glover's string of high-quality films came to an end when he was paired with J Pesci in the w fully unfunny comedy, "Gone Fishin'" (1997). After starring with Dennis Quaid in the action thriller "SwitchBack" (1997), he was featured as the judge in Francis Ford Coppola's "The Rainmaker" (1997), adapted from John Grisham's bestseller. The following year, Glover lent his distinctive voice to characters in two animated features: "Antz" (1998) and "The Prince of Egypt" (1998). He followed by returning to live action for the highly anticipated, but disappointing adaptation of Toni Morrison's American slave drama, "Beloved" (1998), which had his sensitive ex-slave Paul D. romancing the middle-aged single mother, Sethe (Oprah Winfrey). Taking one last spin as the curmudgeonly Det. Murtaugh, Glover and company went through the motions in what marked the final installment to the exhausted franchise, "Lethal Weapon 4" (1998).

Glover fared better opposite Angela Bassett in the screen adaptation of Fugard's play, "B sman & Lena" (2000) a harrowing tale about a homeless couple who survive the harsh terrain of South Africa's Cape Flats which screened at that year's Cannes Film Festival. Next, he was seen as a corrupt African president in "Battu," shown at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival. Glover was once more the recipient of critical acclaim for his role in "Freedom Song" (TNT, 2000), a stirring drama that gave the actor another opportunity to demonstrate his acting chops in a film that dealt with issues of race and oppression. Glover earned an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Movie for his performance as a tradition-minded father distressed by his son's involvement in a desegregation group in 1961. He next delivered one of his most endearing performances as Anjelica Huston's second husband, Henry Sherman, in Wes Anderson's triumphant ensemble comedy, "The Royal Tenenbaums" (2001). After providing the narration for "The Real Eve" (2002), a documentary about the search to trace DNA back to the origins of humanity, Glover reunited with Whoopi Goldberg in the underwhelming "Good Fences" (2003), which cast the pair as a successful black family in the 1970s trying to establish a new life in a posh, mostly white Connecticut enclave.

Though always busy with film and television projects - like the Queen Latifah-produced urban comedy "The Cookout" (2004) - Glover did not neglect his dedication to the stage, returning to the theater for the world premiere of Phil Kan Gotanda's "Yohen" in Los Angeles. Glover earned excellent reviews for his portrayal of a retired serviceman whose usually timid Japanese wife of 30 years suddenly forces him to re-examine their relationship. Following a turn as a detective in the surprise horror hit "Saw" (2004), Glover played the venerable, but Uncle Tom-like Wilhelm in Lars Von Trier's second installment to his U, S and A trilogy, "Manderlay" (2006), a part the actor initially refused to play because of the exclusively white perspective in a story about the slavery of African-Americans. He had a supporting role in a disappointing rehashing of "The Shaggy Dog" (2006), starring Tim Allen as a workaholic district attorney transformed into a mangy pooch in order to be taught the value of family. Glover next gave voice to the wise and patient Miles the Mule in "Barnyard: The Original Party Animals" (2006), an aimless and easily forgettable tale about a group of hard-partying farm animals that was beautifully animated despite its witless storyline.

Glover found himself in the midst of serious Oscar buzz with his next film, "Dreamgirls" (2006), a big screen version of the late director Michael Bennett's Broadway musical about the rise and potential fall of a black female singing trio (Beyonce Knowles, Jennifer Hudson and Anika Noni Rose) in the 1960s and 1970s. Glover played the trio's old-school manager who loses his talent to a younger and more ambitious manager (Jaime Foxx), but reunites with the most talented, but attractive member (Jennifer Hudson) when she is demoted to backup singer. Alas, the buzz surrounding his performance resulted in a snub by the Academy. Glover returned to his activist filmmaking with his next project, taking the role of executive producer as well as making a cameo appearance as a cowboy in the independently financed "Bamako" (2007). In this satirical speculative fantasy, African society - beleaguered by mounting debt accrued from the enormous shift of wealth from third world countries into corporate pockets - brings action against Western financial interests, putting them on trial in a backyard where everyday people, including a bar singer (Aissa Maiga) and her unemployed husband (Tiecoura Traore), go about their business.

Glover returned to more straightforward commercial fare with "Shooter" (2007), playing a colonel who helps set-up a former expert sniper (Mark Wahlberg) in the assassination of the President of the United States. Following a guest turn on the hit comedy "My Name Is Earl" (NBC, 2005-09), he played the desperate proprietor of a 1950s juke joint in the Deep South who struggles to find new business in John Sayles' nostalgic drama, "Honeydripper" (2007). Glover returned to the realm of horror to reprise his detective role for the fourth installment to the long-running series, "Saw V" (2008), which he followed with an under-the-radar turn in the all-star ensemble, "Blindness" (2008). Following roles in "Be Kind Rewind" (2008) and "Gospel Hill" (2008), he returned to the small screen for a six-episode arc on the hit drama "Brothers and Sisters" (ABC, 2006- ). Putting his political activism on full display, he was one of numerous celebrities to participate in a pair of political documentaries: "The People Speak" (History Channel, 2009), a look at American history from a young person's point of view, and "Poliwood" (Showtime, 2009), which focused on the 2008 Democratic and Republican national conventions. Glover made headlines in early 2010 for being arrested during one of him many peaceful protests; this one for a labor union demonstration at the Maryland-based headquarters of a food service company. After being charged with trespassing, Glover and his cohorts were released.



Predator 2


Fun on Predator 2 movie set

Tuesday, October 8, 2013














Grace Jones

Date of Birth
Birth Name
Beverly Grace Jones 

Grammy nominee, and three-time Saturn Award nominee, Grace Jones can claim a career in show business by birthright. Her grandfather (on her mother's side) was a musician who traveled with Nat 'King' Cole. She was born May 19, 1948 in Spanish Town, St Catherine - Jamaica, to Marjorie Jones (née Williams) and Reverend Robert W. Jones. Though she was born in Jamaica, Grace was raised in Syracuse, New York, where she later studied Spanish at Syracuse University. Halfway through college, she was approached by a drama professor who proposed that she come work with him in a play he was putting on in Philadelphia, she accepted. She was 18 when she moved back to New York, and signed on as a model with Wilhelmina Modeling agency. But, since her looks were not successfully received, she moved to Paris, France, where her androgynous, bold, dark-skinned appearance fostered her potential. She modeled for Yves Saint-LaurentClaude MontanaKenzo Takada,Helmut NewtonGuy BourdinHans Feurer and Azzedine Alaïa, and she appeared on the covers of "Elle", "Vogue", and "Der Stern". While modeling, she found herself acting, playing minor parts in film. Her debut film appearance was in Gordon's War (1973), she played the role of Mary, a drug smuggler. Grace started to work prolifically in the 1980s and became a successful American actress with her roles of Zula the amazonian in Conan the Destroyer (1984), and May Day in the 14th James Bond film A View to a Kill (1985). Other notable roles include: Katrina, the Egyptian queen vampire in Vamp (1986), Helen Strangé, the forceful and sex hungry model in the Eddie Murphy film, Boomerang(1992), and Christoph/Christine, an intersexed circus performer in the made-for-television film, Wolf Girl (2001) (TV).




Grace Jones in Conan the Destroyer




Slave to the Rhythm 




Pull Up To The Bumper Baby


Grace Jones in Boomerang
(warning explicit language)















Tina Turner


Anna Mae Bullock
Born: 1939/11/26
Birth Place: Nutbush, Tennessee, United States
Years Active: 1958–present
Genres: Rock 'n' Roll, Blues, Pop, Rock, Pop Rock, Soul

Tina Turner (born Anna Mae Bullock; November 26, 1939) is an American singer and actress whose career has spanned more than 50 years. She has won numerous awards and her achievements in the rock music genre have earned her the title The Queen of Rock 'n' Roll.

After joining Ike Turner's band as a background vocalist, the pair formed the duo, Ike & Tina Turner in 1960. Turner remained as a member of the duo until 1976, acquiring a series of major hits on the R&B chart, including "Proud Mary," "Nutbush City Limits," "A Fool in Love", "It's Gonna Work Out Fine", "I Idolize You" and "River Deep, Mountain High." The single “Proud Mary” won a Grammy for Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group.

After leaving Ike Turner, she established a solo career, signing with United Artists Records, where she would release four studio albums, “Tina Turns the Country On” (1974), “Acid Queen” (1975), “Rough” (1978), and “Love Explosion” (1979). None of Turner's releases gained commercial success, and Turner left the label at the end of the decade.

After collaborating with electronic group, B.E.F. in 1982, Turner signed a recording contract with Capitol Records in 1983. Her first Capitol release, a remake of Al Green's "Let's Stay Together," reached the Billboard Top 30. The third release, "What's Love Got to Do with It," peaked at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks, revitalizing Turner's career. The single spawned the album, “Private Dancer” (1984), which produced three additional Top 10 hits ("Better Be Good to Me" and "Private Dancer") and sold five million copies in the United States.

Following Turner's success in 1984, she participated in the film, “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome,” and recorded the film's soundtrack as well, which produced the international hit, "We Don't Need Another Hero."

She followed “Private Dancer” with her second Capitol effort in 1986 titled, “Break Every Rule,” which also spawned major hits on the Hot 100, including "Typical Male" (#2) and "What You Get Is What You See" (#13). Turner internationally toured throughout Europe in 1987, and released her first live album, “Tina Live in Europe” in 1988.

She returned with her first studio album in three years in 1989 titled, “Foreign Affair.” Its lead single, "The Best" was a worldwide hit that year and the album sold over 1.5 million copies in the United Kingdom.

Turner released her first compilation, “Simply the Best,” after signing with Virgin in 1991. Two years later, Turner recorded the soundtrack to the film about her life, “What's Love Got to Do with It,” which spawned the single, "I Don't Wanna Fight," which became her first Top 10 hit in the United States since 1986.

Turner lived in Europe for over several years before releasing her full-length studio album in 1996 entitled, “Wildest Dreams,” followed by “Twenty Four Seven” in 1999. After publicly announcing her retirement from touring in 1999, Turner reunited with her band on her final tour in 2008, "Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour."
Through her career she has become one of the top-selling music artists of all time in Rock music, selling over 180 million albums and singles worldwide. In 1991, Ike and Tina Turner were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Turner has won 8 Grammy Awards and two of her recordings, "River Deep - Mountain High" (1999) and "Proud Mary" (2003), are in the Grammy Hall of Fame.ner




Tina Turner Performing We Don't Need Another Hero



Thunder Dome Trailer




Ike & Tina Turner
Rollin on a River