Archive for October, 2007

Supermodel Naomi Campbell Visits Chavez

British supermodel Naomi Campbell met privately with President Hugo Chavez on Tuesday, becoming the latest in a series of celebrities hosted by the Venezuelan leader.

Campbell flashed a smile to reporters as she arrived at the presidential palace, but said little about what she hoped to discuss with Chavez.

“I’ve been here before actually,” she said. “A beautiful country, very tropical. You’ve got great waterfalls.”

Then, before turning to walk inside, she added: “I’m not going to be political. Thank you very much.”

Last month, Chavez met in Caracas with American actor Kevin Spacey, who praised the Venezuelan government’s efforts to support film-making. The Venezuelan President also has hosted recent visits by Hollywood stars including Sean Penn and Danny Glover.

Jerry Seinfeld Defends Wife’s Cookbook

Jerry Seinfeld says his wife isn’t guilty of “vegetable plagiarism.” Jessica Seinfield’s “Deceptively Delicious: Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food,” published this month by HarperCollins, explains how to hide nutritious vegetables in traditional recipes so children will eat them.

The couple have three children.

“So there’s another woman who had another cookbook - and it was a similar kind of thing, with the food and the vegetables in the food - and my wife never saw the book, read the book, used the book,” the 53-year-old comedian said Monday on CBS’ “Late Show With David Letterman.”

“But the books came out at the same time. So this woman says, `I sense this could be my wacko moment.’ So she comes out … and she accuses my wife. She says, `You stole my mushed-up carrots. You can’t put mushed-up carrots in a casserole. I put mushed-up carrots in a casserole. It’s vegetable plagiarism,’” Seinfeld joked.

“I love the term `plagiarism’ for this little event,” he said. “Because it used to be you had to really take a theme from a major novel, some sort of literary narrative. Now, you’re in your kitchen making brownies, you sneak a little spinach in there, your name’s dragged through the mud.”

“Are you worried now that discussing it on the television program here will actually incite or exacerbate the circumstance?” asked host David Letterman.

“Well, then it gets me another shot on your show,” Seinfeld responded.

“The Sneaky Chef: Simple Strategies for Hiding Healthy Foods in Kids’ Favorite Meals” by Missy Chase Lapine was published in April by the Running Press, which acquired the book after it was turned down by HarperCollins. In a statement released Tuesday by her publisher, Lapine said: “It was painful to be called names on national TV when I am just a mom who wrote a cookbook to help parents get their kids to eat well.”

Jessica Seinfeld has said she’s never seen or read “The Sneaky Chef.” Lapine has said she isn’t accusing anyone of anything, but added that it does “hurt” to see someone given credit for her method.

Both books are best sellers. “Deceptively Delicious” has more than 1 million copies in print, thanks largely to Jessica Seinfeld’s Oct. 8 appearance on Oprah Winfrey’s television program. Sales for “Sneaky Chef” have jumped since the allegations emerged against Seinfeld, with Running Press ordering a new printing of 60,000 copies, for a total of 150,000.

Jane Seymour Sickened by Food Poisoning

Actress Jane Seymour missed Tuesday night’s “Dancing With the Stars” results show after being sickened by food poisoning, a television station reported.

Seymour was taken to a hospital to be checked out, KABC-TV reported. A call to the actress’ publicist wasn’t immediately returned.

Seymour, a contestant on ABC’s dance competition, also missed part of the show earlier this month after her 92-year-old mother died.

Seymour told People magazine she had difficulty focusing on her dancing last week because her husband was busy defending their Malibu home from the wildfires that swept through the coastal area.

Singer Robert Goulet Dies at Age 73

Robert Goulet was in good spirits as he waited for a lung transplant, even telling doctors before they inserted a breathing tube, “Just watch my vocal cords,” his wife said.

The big-voiced baritone, whose Broadway debut in “Camelot” launched an award-winning stage and recording career, died Tuesday at a Los Angeles hospital, where he had been awaiting the transplant after being diagnosed last month with a rare form of pulmonary fibrosis. Goulet was 73.

Vera Goulet, his wife of 25 years, said they were last able to speak three weeks ago before the singer was placed on a respirator.

Longtime friend Wayne Newton said Goulet’s sense of humor “kept my spirits up in some of the lowest valleys in my life.”

“His incredible voice will live on in his music, and as Bob so brilliantly sang, ‘There will be another song for him and he will sing it,’ for God now has another singing angel by his side,” Newton said in a statement.

The Massachusetts-born Goulet, who spent much of his youth in Canada, gained stardom in 1960 with “Camelot,” the Lerner and Loewe musical that starred Richard Burton as King Arthur and Julie Andrews as his Queen Guenevere.

Goulet played Sir Lancelot, the French knight who falls in love with Guenevere.

He became a hit with American TV viewers with appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show” and other programs. Sullivan labeled him the “American baritone from Canada,” where he had already been a popular star in the 1950s, hosting his own TV show called “General Electric’s Showtime.”

Goulet won a Grammy Award in 1962 as best new artist and made the singles chart in 1964 with “My Love Forgive Me.”

“When I’m using a microphone or doing recordings I try to concentrate on the emotional content of the song and to forget about the voice itself,” he told The New York Times in 1962.

“Sometimes I think that if you sing with a big voice, the people in the audience don’t listen to the words, as they should,” he told the newspaper. “They just listen to the sound.”

While he returned to Broadway only infrequently after “Camelot,” he won a Tony award in 1968 for best actor in a musical for his role in “The Happy Time.” His other Broadway appearances were in “Moon Over Buffalo” in 1995 and “La Cage aux Folles” in 2005, plus a “Camelot” revival in 1993 in which he played King Arthur.

His stage credits elsewhere include productions of “Carousel,” “Finian’s Rainbow,” “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,” “The Pajama Game,” “Meet Me in St. Louis” and “South Pacific.”

Goulet also performed in movies ranging from the animated “Gay Purr-ee” (1962) to “Underground” (1970) to “The Naked Gun 2 1/2″ (1991). He played a lounge singer in Louis Malle’s acclaimed 1980 film “Atlantic City.”

He returned to Broadway in 2005 as one half of a gay couple in “La Cage aux Folles.”

Goulet had no problems poking fun at his fame, appearing recently in an Emerald nuts commercial in which he “messes” with the stuff of dozing office workers, and lending his name to Goulet’s SnoozeBars. Goulet also has been sent up by Will Ferrell on “Saturday Night Live.”

“You have to have humor and be able to laugh at yourself,” Goulet said in a biography on his Web site.

The only son of French-Canadian parents, Goulet was born in Lawrence, Mass. After his father died, his mother moved the family to Canada when the future star was about 13.

He received vocal training at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto but decided opera wasn’t for him. He made his first professional appearance at age 16 with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra.

Pianist Roger Williams said he first met Goulet when he performed on a Canadian television show.

“He appeared on the last part of the show, and I knew then that he was a tremendous talent,” Williams said. “He could shake a room with that big beautiful voice.”

In his last performance Sept. 20 in Syracuse, N.Y., the crooner was backed by a 15-piece orchestra as he performed the one-man show “A Man and his Music.”

Although Goulet headlined frequently on the Las Vegas Strip, one period stood out, evidenced by a photograph that hung on his office wall. It was the mid-1970s, and he had just finished a two-week run at the Desert Inn when he was asked to fill in at the Frontier, across the street.

Overnight, the marquees of two of the Strip’s hottest resorts read the same: “Robert Goulet.”

“I played there many, many years and have wonderful memories of the place,” Goulet told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

His first two marriages ended in divorce. He had a daughter with his first wife, Louise Longmore, and two sons with his second wife, Carol Lawrence, the actress and singer who played Maria in the original Broadway production of “West Side Story.”

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