HIGHLIGHTS YOUR TRAITS - RESALTA TUS RASGOS



After having completed the world's most influential runways of fashion, very subtle impose new "laws" about what will be. When it comes to makeup and make a recap of the last few seasons there is something very palpante to our vision: the piel.Lo care than in previous seasons we caught: extravagance and strength of color, today takes a turn 180. We make a conscientious objection.



It's like going back to the beginning, back to basics where we started, to take care of the canvas, to educate, re-educate, to make believe, ... I say re-educated by the importance we attach to skin care. (A regime of cleansing and moisturizing). In my humble opinion, we are on the right track.
There are those who see this device linked to the concern for eternal youth, by the disappearance of wrinkles, the desire to possess that youthful skin or longing for times past, in short by self.


Again, to create this kind of looks, which many call "good side effect", the most important thing is to be aware of the importance of skin in it. A very polished skin from the start, moisturizing and using trainers, wherever necessary, to achieve an effect of bare and moisturized skin.


Does our ally? The subtlety to create it not be noticed cuts and controlling the amount of product using fine textures and you can be creating a 3D effect, while giving you the face amount. LESS IS MORE.
The color range is governed by neutral tones that mimic the same skin, creating a play of light. Soft tones like beige, cream, hazelnuts, ... and with metal or crystallized. We can illuminate even with creams and apply powder only where necessary.



SHOPPINGCONSEJO: Skins really bright warm colors, natural lips and eye brows marked by very blurred, that's the key.


Do YOU, DARE TO THIS LOOK?






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RESALTA TUS RASGOS 


Tras haber concluido las pasarelas más influyentes del mundo de la moda, de forma muy sutil se imponen las nuevas "leyes" sobre lo que se llevará . Si hablamos de maquillaje y hacemos un recap de las últimas temporadas hay algo muy palpante a nuestra visión: el cuidado de la piel.Lo que en temporadas anteriores nos atrapaba:la extravagancia y la fuerza de color, a día de hoy da un giro de 180º. Hacemos una objeción de conciencia.

   Es como volver al inicio, regresar a lo básico de donde partimos, a cuidar el lienzo, a concienciar, a re-educar, al hacer creer,... Y digo re-educar por la importancia que damos al cuidado de la piel. ( un régimen de limpieza e hidratación). En mi humilde opinión, estamos en el camino correcto.

Hay quién ve este artificio ligado a la preocupación por la eterna juventud, por la desaparición de las arrugas, al deseo de poseer esa piel jovial o a la añoranza de tiempos pasados; en definitiva por el uno mismo.


Una vez más, para crear este tipo de looks, al que muchos llaman "efecto buena cara", lo más importante es ser consciente de la importancia que tiene la piel en él. Una piel muy trabajada desde el inicio, hidratándola y con la utilización de preparadores, siempre que sea necesario, para conseguir un efecto de piel desnuda y humectada.

¿Nuestra aliada? La sutileza para crearlo de forma que no se noten cortes y controlando la cantidad de producto, utilizando texturas finas y con las que puedas ir creando un efecto 3D, mientras vas aportando al rostro volumen. MENOS ES MAS.




La gama de colores se rige por tonos neutros que imitan a la misma piel, creando un juego de luces. Tonos soft como beig, cremas, avellanas,... y con acabados metálicos o escarchados. Podemos iluminar incluso con cremas y aplicar polvo únicamente donde sea necesario.





SHOPPINGCONSEJO: Pieles realmente luminosas en tonos cálidos, labios naturales y ojos marcados por unas cejas muy difuminadas, esa es la clave.

¿ Y TÚ, ATREVES CON ESTE LOOK?


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Y-3 Spring/Summer 2013 by Odd Barcelona



Ayer, por la tarde-noche Odd Barcelona presentó el X aniversario de Adidas Y-3 Spring/Summer a prensa y bloggers especializados en un espacio tan especial como es el de The Cooking Space by Delishop.

Conmemoración de diez años de fructífera colaboración entre Adidas y Yohji Yamamoto, la mayor parte de la colección se compone de una elegante estética japonesa con la tecnología alemana de deportes Adidas. Estampados tropicales para el alivio relajado, la colección ha destacado en estilo y sustancia.

El fotógrafo de la campaña, Pierre Debusschere, se ha divertido celebrando el movimiento y la exploración del mismo, con las imágenes que han sido distorsionadas para crear tal efecto.

Una presentación sencilla y reducida, solo para prensa. En ella tomamos buena nota, fotografiado y preguntado todo lo que nos apetecia, en un ambiente tranquilo y relajado con poca gente, pero selecta.

Y como no, humedecimos el paladar seco con Fever-Tree que se encargo de endulzarlo con unos cócteles a la altura del evento.

Repetiremos, seguro, en la próxima que organicen estos chicos...

Gracias por la invitación.

























ADRIEN BRODY _ biography















Trade Mark                  
Elongated nose
Calming voice
Intense Physical and Mental commitment to his roles
Often plays Intellectuals or artistic types
Frequently plays characters with mental illness'

Trivia                                 
Is the only actor to win a Best Actor Oscar when nominated alongside four previous Oscar winners.
In 2003, at the age of 29, he replaced Richard Dreyfuss as the youngest actor ever to win the Best Actor Academy Award, for his role in El pianista (2002).
Has great appreciation for hip-hop music. Like the Beatnuts, one of his favorite groups, Brody is also from Queens.
Performed magic shows at children's birthdays as a child as the Amazing Adrien.
In 2004, Esquire Magazine named him the Best Dressed Man in America.
Once owned and drove a Hummer H2.
Was considered for a role in Pearl Harbor (2001).
Was dressed by Zegna for the Academy Awards.
Is a big hip-hop fan and plans on becoming a producer. He is being mentored by The RZA.
Ranked #21 on VH1's 100 Hottest Hotties.
His father, Elliot Brody, is a retired history teacher of Polish-Jewish descent who lost family members in the Holocaust. His mother Sylvia Plachy, the renown photographer, fled Communist Hungary as a child during the 1956 revolution against Russia.
Taking acting classes as a youth, by age 13 he had done an off-Broadway play and a PBS-TV movie.
In 1992, he was seriously hurt in a motorcycle accident in which he flew over a car and crashed feet-first into a crosswalk. He spent months recuperating.
To prepare for his title role in El pianista (2002), he learned to play Frédéric Chopin pieces on the piano and shed 30 pounds off his already-thin frame. He cut himself off from his real life by giving up his car and apartment because he felt responsible to those Polish Jews who had suffered greatly and wanted to connect, to some small degree, with their hurt and despair.
Shares a birthday with Sarah Michelle Gellar.
Admits a shot of his parents in a passionate, back-bending embrace inspired his famous kiss with Halle Berry at the Oscars in 2003.
Is the only American actor to win a César, the French equivalent to the Oscar.
Has been compared to Robert De Niro and Al Pacino for his unconventional acting skills and unique looks.
Did sessions in an isolation tank, performed prison exercises, and went on a protein diet for his role in The jacket (2005).
He was furious when his nose was broken during the final fight in SOS Summer of Sam (Nadie está a salvo de Sam) (1999). When he had it fixed, he didn't change it: his nose is one of his most distinctive features and sets him apart from other actors.
Close friends with Asia Argento.
Grew up in the Woodhaven section of Queens in New York.
Was friends with the late Tupac Shakur, with whom he starred in the little-known film Bullet (1996).
He signed on to make Pan y rosas (2000) without a script because he trusted the director Ken Loach. Prior to filming, he also went undercover to research life as a union member in Los Angeles, California. He went to conventions and sat in on strike talks. A couple of the members recognized him, but Brody persuaded them not to blow his cover.
Attended CUNY Queens College in the Flushing section of Queens, New York.
Was engaged to Elsa Pataky, having been in a relationship with her since June 2006 after meeting on the set of Manolete (2008) (April 2008-May 2009).
Fought hard to convince producer Robert Rodriguez and director Nimród Antal that he was a good choice for the lead role of "Royce" in Predators (2010).
Put on 25 pounds of muscle for the role of Royce in Predators (2010).
He attended a charity auction in November 2011 for Artists for Peace & Justice, which was offering "Tea with Gerard Butler" as a bidding item; it was a chance to meet and chat with Butler. Brody's $15,000 bid was the winner. On a whim, Brody offered to host "Champagne with Adrien Brody" as a last-minute addition to the auction, if it could take place later that day; he had a bottle available. Brody's offer was accepted, and it earned an additional $17,000 for the charity.

Personal Quotes                       
[Referring to his portrayal of Jewish pianist Wladyslaw Szpilman who survived the Holocaust, in El pianista (2002)] It made me have a much greater understanding of loss, of loneliness, and the level of intense tragedy that so many people have experienced in this world, I take a lot less for granted. It's really valuable to gain that, especially at a young age.
[on his role as the village idiot in El bosque (2004)] It just felt like it was the unconventional choice. It was the kind of role that I would have taken prior to the Academy Awards. A lot of actors tend to wait for the perfect role. And that perfect role may never come. I don't want to start changing the way that I view things and become precious.
I was a wild, mischievous kid and I had tremendous imagination. Any experience I had, I'd try to reenact it. I always had an actor within me.
I think to be a well-rounded person, you have to experience good and bad, wonderful moments and pain. You need to meet people who have no exposure to kindness, who lack any opportunity and have no way out--like the homeless, the mentally ill--and you've got to learn empathy for them.
[on working on Peter Jackson's King Kong (2005)] I'm running around in front of a green screen screaming, "Where's the monkey? Where's the monkey?"
[on his role as Jack in Amar al límite (2001)] I identified a lot with that character, I was exorcising the demons that I'd has as a hoody kid in Queens, where you hold your own or wither. So my character out-hustled the hustle.
My dad told me, "It takes fifteen years to be an overnight success", and it took me seventeen and a half years.
[on giving up material possessions and shedding 30 pounds for El pianista (2002)] There's no comparison to what Wladyslaw Szpilman went through and the suffering that people during the Holocaust, or nations afflicted with famine are going through, but it gave me a much greater understanding of that. And you can't act that. I take the work very seriously.
[on working with Roman Polanski on El pianista (2002)] We were shooting a scene and he's like, "Adrien, I need you to climb up the building. And I want you to go up to the roof and I want you to climb out the window. And I want you to hang and they're going to shoot at you. And I want you to slide off the building and hold on to the gutter and then you're going to fall". And I said, "Has anyone tried this before?" And he said, "Hollywood actors! Come on, I show you, I show you." And he runs up the building, sixty-eight years old, climbs out the window and hangs from the window, slides down the roof of the building, hangs from the gutter, jumps down to the ground, brushes himself off and he said, "There, somebody did it. Now do it".
[on proclaiming himself a magician at age five] I was an amazing Adrien. I may still be at times. In retrospect, I see that was my first performance. And you know a lot about magic is not just the trick, it's the pattern. It's the delivery. It's the presentation. And this is why you're going to be amazed.
[on Roman Polanski] He wasn't easy on me, ever. He wasn't particularly kind to me, but he wasn't -- he was never disrespectful regarding the work. I grew. I'm stronger, I'm tougher from Roman. I'm tougher. I'm not harder, I'm just tougher.
[on winning the Academy Award for Best Actor] It's interesting, winning an Academy Award as a young man . . . life-changing, but I'm just me within that. It's been very helpful for my career, but I'm trying to stay on the path I was on before.
[on being strapped in a straitjacket and thrown in a body drawer for The jacket (2005)] Those situations are very challenging, emotionally and psychologically, to find yourself in a confined space like that. I thought it would be interesting. It was very painful and I kind of encouraged that pain. I spent time in an isolation tank -- lots of time -- and I would let them leave me in the jacket and leave me in the drawer for a while.
I'm not the kind of person to deliberately behave differently for the sake of behaving differently, but there are certain things that you have to kind of be true to and sacrifice your own freedom at that time to do.
I've never taken a role for money. I felt it would be wrong - not necessarily a career decision - just wrong.
[on playing hero Jack Driscoll in Peter Jackson's King Kong (2005)] I've always wanted to do something like King Kong. It's a phenomenal role that any actor would kill for. I've been looking for this kind of iconic leading man guy for years, but they are hard to find.
They compare me to Al Pacino -- I admire and appreciate the comparison. But, really, I'd rather be thought of as "the first Adrien Brody," than "the new Al Pacino".
[on growing up in Queens, New York] I hung out with troublemakers. I was a sensitive teenage boy, who luckily had kind parents, but I lived in a not-so-kind neighborhood. In order to deal with it, I toughened up and became more of a hoodier kid. It was never malicious, that's not in my nature, but I was much harder than I am today. Had I not had parents I could talk to, it would have got out of hand.
[on being enrolled into acting classes by his parents when he was a teen] I liked it instantly. Aside from being one of only three boys in a class of 20 girls - the odds were fantastic - I felt I was good at it, it was creative. I had been encouraged by my parents to be outspoken and free, so I was pretty much disinhibited. It was a good outlet for me.
[on his role in La delgada línea roja (1998) being cut down from lead character to bit part] It kind of felt like a soldier coming home after giving his soul and then not being appreciated. At 24, it sucked; it was embarrassing because I would assume if an actor was cut out of a movie of that nature with a director of that caliber it must be as a result of a flaw in the actor's work. Not as a result of a director changing his vision. But you pick yourself up. The advantage of being a bigger name is it costs them too much money to cut you out of a movie.
I suppose that means I'm not easy to define. But that's good, isn't it? In this town they love to define you to death.
Everything is harder than you would imagine, including success. You might think it's lovely to be famous, but if your process is to constantly observe people and human behavior and yet everyone is observing you all the time, how do you do what you do? I never saw that coming as an obstacle.
I don't think anyone saw me as the heroic leading man before I won an Oscar. I'm not sure anyone does now, outside of Peter Jackson.
I would have loved to make a lot of money as an actor. I would have loved to not live in a shitty little apartment for most of the time I've been in Los Angeles. I would have loved to have nice things and bought new cars, but it's painful for me to do a bad role. Personally painful. You feel like you're lying to everybody. It's just not worth it.
I grew up without a lot of money and my parents grew up with far less money. And that's kept me in line. Really in line.
You get a little fame as an actor and suddenly people ask your opinion on world politics and why we're in Iraq. Why is my opinion any more valid than anyone else's? My opinion doesn't count more just because I'm famous now.
[Upon being described as "a young Al Pacino"] I'm a young Adrien Brody, thanks.
[on motorcycling in India] I almost died. I jammed on the brakes, skidded and nearly slammed into it. I was laughing, thinking, "This is the way I'll be remembered: rear-ending a cow".
What guides me is to do work that's more avant-garde - things that I think are special. You can easily become a celebrity and get caught up in all that blur. I just want to work and surprise myself.
[In 2010, regarding fame after El pianista (2002)] Even though I've had plenty of ups and downs, I didn't have the maturity and the sense of self-awareness to have gotten me through it as positively as I did if I had been in my early twenties. A five-year difference would have had a big impact. Because you have a tremendous amount of attention: All the girls think you're beautiful all of a sudden, and people wanna be your friends - and they genuinely wanna be your friend. I don't feel that it's insincere. You now emanate some sort of light that you didn't have before, and it's created, but it's too much. Even tons of positive energy on one person is still energy, and that does something. There're repercussions for that kind of energy. It's a lot of forces coming right at you, and that's tumultuous for any young person.
[In 2010, on his career] I work when I want to work. I don't feel the pressure that I used to feel as an actor that I may not have an opportunity to work, that I will not find gainful employment with something that inspires me, that I might have to take work just for the sake of working. I feel honestly so fortunate to have that.
[In 2010, on acting] I was always an actor - not in a way that people might presume actors to be, 'cause I believe there's a presumption that they like attention all the time, and that they're very outgoing. Acting is perhaps misunderstood. I'm a relatively shy person. I often liken it to my mother's approach as an artist, because she's a photographer and she sees so much in a situation that very few people might see. She'll see so much happening beneath the surface with an imagery that says something else. And I have a fascination with a similar kind of thing where I see details in people's mannerisms, or beneath something that's said to someone else. All these things that lay beneath the surface and things that are really special and that make us all so unique. Growing up in New York, I encountered so many different kinds of people everywhere. I went to the School of Performing Arts, but I feel like my real acting training came from going to and from school on four different trains each way, because of how many human beings I've encountered, between homeless people and immigrant workers and shark businessmen and every kind of human being - every kind of human being every other step. My natural fascination was that I gravitated toward their mannerisms - not to use as an actor, just because I'm curious, I guess. And rather than capture the image with photography, I feel like I capture it somehow and remember details very specifically, and I retain things very easily and evoke them later.
[In 2010, on acting] An actor has a responsibility [to be] connected and present and able to be very malleable and exist in a space that isn't his or her own on set, and when they're working. I'm not able to fully engage with you when I'm working on a set. I couldn't do an interview justice because it's impossible for me to separate from myself, and then to engage as myself, and then go back to [that character]. So then my producer who needs that interview might say, "Oh, he's being pretentious." But it's detrimental to my process of being truthful [to the character], nothing more. Sometimes I am very gregarious and outgoing, and sometimes I'm not. I'm relatively introverted, and I'll stay by myself; but they'll misinterpret what that is.
[in 2010] The reality is that, for me, acting is somewhat of a painful process. A beautiful process, but a painful one. The more I have to do battle to find truth, the more painful it is if I don't, because film is permanent. So it's important the work I choose is something I can have that confidence in. Otherwise, a movie becomes a permanent reminder of a mistake you made.
[i 2010, on losing or gaining weight for a role] It's exciting when you physically change, when you change your body chemistry and you feel a transformation, it helps you feel a connection to the character. You feel different from yourself. It's another level of involvement.
[in 2010, on adding muscle for Predators (2010)] Putting on weight obviously is more enjoyable, though I was trying to put on lean muscle. So they're both very strict diets. But one diet builds confidence and the other strips it away. The diets are similar, but with volumes more food when you're building muscle. I have a fast metabolism so I had to gain mass and then shred it. I started with heavy weights to put on size; then I did higher repetitions with smaller weights to give the muscles definition. No carbs and I did a workout with more cardio.
[on his first role in Home at Last (1988) (TV), when he was 14] I was in high school and I went off to Nebraska by myself and I loved it. I was playing an orphan from the 1800s and I went wild. I hung out with the wranglers' sons and was riding horses and chewing tobacco and having amazing experiences. I remember when it was over, the director kiddingly said that they were going to turn it into a series. I was ready, I didn't want the experience to end.
[in 2010, on doing a film for the paycheck] Everybody has a price, I'm sure. Often times the jobs you'll be well-compensated for are that way for a reason. The roles that speak to you usually don't have resounding success, or even compensate you fairly. There is a balance you try to strike. Really, if I wasn't an actor, I don't know what the alternative would be. I'm glad I don't have to face that.

Salary                             
El bosque (2004) $2,750,000
King Kong (2005) $10,000,000
Giallo (2009) $1,500,000

Where Are They Now                           
(September 2008) Attended the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto, Onatrio, Canada on Sept. 9th.
(June 2009) Attended the 2009 Moscow Film Festival in Moscow, Russia on June 19th.
(June 2009) Attended the Hugo Boss: Paris Fashion Week Menswear in Paris, France on June 25th.
(July 2009) Attended the BOSS Orange Fashion Party: Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Berlin in Berlin, Germany on July 2nd.
(May 2008) Attended the 2008 Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France on May 19th.
(December 2007) Attended the CatHouse grand opening at the Luxor Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada on Dec. 29th.
(September 2007) Attended the 64th Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy on September 3rd.
(November 2006) Attended the 2006 MTV European Music Awards in Copenhagen, Denmark on November 2nd.
(October 2006) Attended the Elle Magazine 20th Anniversary Party in Valenica, Spain on October 20th.
(October 2012) Haikou, China: Attended the World Celebrity Pro-Am golf tournament.

        source: imdb.com

Sarah Michelle Gellar

Sarah Michelle Gellar (biography)

RON PERLMAN _ biography



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spouse                       
Opal Stone (14 February 1981 - present) 2 children


Trade Mark                           
Deep, rolling voice
Frequently appears as characters who are deformed or not human, starting with his role as Amoukar in En busca del fuego (1981). These roles include Salvatore in El nombre de la rosa (1986), Vincent in "La bella y la bestia" (1987), Sayer of the Law in La isla del Dr. Moreau (1996), Reinhardt (a vampire) in Blade II (2002), the Reman Viceroy in Star Trek: Nemesis (2002), and Hellboy in Hellboy (2004).
Frequently has a role in the films of his friend Guillermo del Toro
Strong jawline and bold blue eyes


Trivia                                
His children, with Opal Perlman, are Blake Perlman (b. 1984) and Brandon Avery Perlman (b. 1990).
He is left-handed, but was forced to use his right as a child - therefore he is relatively comfortable using his right hand.
Attended the University of Minnesota from fall 1971 to spring 1973. On July 20, 1973, he graduated with his then new degree of Master of Fine Arts.
Attended George Washington High School.
Attended the Lehman College in New York City in 1971, where he got the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Theatre.
His wife, Opal Perlman, was a fashion designer, but now works as a jewelry designer.
Upon meeting to discuss Hellboy (2004), creator Mike Mignola and director Guillermo del Toro decided to reveal to each other their choice for the lead role. They both said at the same time, Ron Perlman. Revolutions studio wanted a bigger name like Vin Diesel to play the title role, but del Toro fought for Perlman to get the role, and in the end, he did.
Does not speak French and was the only American on set of the French film La ciudad de los niños perdidos (1995). But he learned all of his lines, and delivered them flawlessly.
His favorite movie is Ni un pelo de tonto (1994).
Is a New York Yankees fan.
Broke a rib while filming the subway scenes in Hellboy (2004). He jumped onto a train that was coming towards him.
To prepare for his role in Hellboy (2004), he read all the Hellboy comics and worked out three hours a day, five to seven days a week. He also worked out while shooting, every day he had off from filming, he would work out.
Is the godfather to Nicholas Kadi's daughter.
Was ranked in Star Magazine's Reader's Poll - Best Dramatic Actor as Vincent in "La bella y la bestia" (1987).
Was ranked in US Magazine's "20 Who Turned us on" list. [December 26, 1988]
Was ranked in US Magazine's First Annual Reader's Poll - Third runner-up for Best Dramatic Actor as Vincent in "La bella y la bestia" (1987). [1988]
His favorite episode of "La bella y la bestia" (1987) is "Happy Life".
Was friends with Sammy Davis Jr.. They met at the Golden Globe Awards in the late 1980s, apparently Davis was a huge "La bella y la bestia" (1987) fan and had seen every single episode.
Voiced the mutant villain Clayface on "Batman" (1992), a character who, ironically, was a disfigured actor, then voiced the villain Slade on "Teen Titans" (2003), and also did the voice of the Hulk/Bruce Banner twice in two separate series, one for a guest spot on "Los cuatro fantásticos" (1994) and one for a guest spot on "Iron Man" (1994), in addition to providing the voice of Orion for "Justice League" (2001). He then played the comic book character Hellboy in Hellboy (2004). He went to portray Batman in Justice League Heroes (2006) (VG).
Has a dog (terrier) named Nigel.
Hobbies include golf, jazz, and pool.
With the creation of Hellboy II. El ejército dorado (2008), at age 58, he became the oldest actor ever to play a main superhero.
Frequent voice collaborator with fellow voice-actor Keith David. Computer games: Fallout: A Post-Nuclear Role-Playing Game (1997) (VG), Lords of EverQuest (2003) (VG), Halo 2 (2004) (VG), Halo 3 (2007) (VG). Animated series: "Aladdin" (1994), "Los cuatro fantásticos" (1994), "Justice League" (2001), "Teen Titans" (2003). And they have both had a guest appearance on the television series "Más allá del límite" (1995).
Good friends with former "La bella y la bestia" (1987) co-star Linda Hamilton. They reunited in the theatre play "Lover Letters" (1991) and in the post-Vietnam War drama Missing in America (2005).
Was presented with the Acting Award of Excellence at the Big Bear Lake International Film Festival [September 18th, 2004].
Worked on the Acadamy Award winning short film Two Soldiers (2003) for free as a favor to writer/director Aaron Schneider.
Was offered promotional advertisements as Vincent, his character from the television series "La bella y la bestia" (1987), but he refused, stating that the character was not there to be exploited.
Is well known for his extensive body of work with acting under prosthetic and has given many actors, like Armin Shimerman ("Star Trek: Espacio profundo 9" (1993)) and Michael Chiklis (Los cuatro fantásticos (2005)), advice on how to emote effectively under full-head prosthetic appliances.
Said in his audio commentary for La ciudad de los niños perdidos (1995), that of all the things his characters have done in films, his most hated action was when his character, One, attacked Miette under the influence of the evil Octopus Sisters' drug.
His characters are frequently seen smoking cigars (La última cena (1995/I), Salvajemente tiernos (1999), Price of Glory (2000), Seducido por una ladrona (2001), Hellboy (2004), et cetera). Perlman is an avid cigar smoker in real life.
Early in his career, he tried doing stand-up comedy.
Producers Lawrence Gordon and Lloyd Levin tried hard for Perlman to get cast as Edward Blake aka The Comedian in Watchmen (2009).
Was offered the role of Piccolo in Dragonball Evolution (2009), but turned it down to work on Hellboy II. El ejército dorado (2008) instead.
Was considered for the role of Uncle Dave in Postal (2007), before Dave Foley was cast.
Wrote a script some years ago entitled Wooden Lake which he was also going to direct, but as of this date, it has not gone into production (2011).
Was up for a role in El Hobbit: Un viaje inesperado (2012) when Guillermo del Toro was at the helm, but as pre-production was prolonged again and again, del Toro left and so did Perlman.
Started his own film production company called "Wing and a Prayer" (2010).
In 2012, Ron Perlman once again endured the 4-hour makeup routine required to transform him into Hellboy--not for a sequel or other acting job but to fulfill the Make-A-Wish request of a six-year-old boy named Zachary who has leukemia. Creature effects house Spectral Motion applied Perlman's Hellboy makeup (and later, also made up Zachary as Hellboy as well), and then Zachary got to spend the day hanging out with "Hellboy.".


Personal Quotes                            
I've always felt there were aspects of me that were monstrous, and you can either hide from it or confront it, embrace it and understand that those are aspects that make you unique and define you and motivate you. You can either overwhelm or overcompensate for them -- but they truly define you as a human being...So that life became a question of either dealing with this monstrousness in one way or another...One finds a way to understand and make friends with that monster and understand that that's the very thing that makes you who you are. That's your emotional and spiritual fingerprint.
I've done millions of mediocre movies. I've done way more than my fair share. You do what you gotta do. This is not heart surgery. I'm not curing cancer. I'm just trying to put my kids through school.
[on being a director]: "I don't like working with me. I would punch myself in the mouth if I had to take my direction."
[When asked what his idea of Hell is]: "Working at a job that you hate. Having a career and a life that you have no passion for. That's hell."
[on Guillermo del Toro]: "It seems as though we are like brothers. After knowing the guy for five minutes, it was one of these instances, where you felt, that you've known him for twenty-five years. This instantaneous friendship and recognition. Very very similar way of viewing the world. And then we found, that working with each other, there was a real simpatico. And I think you could even say, that we are alter egos for one another. Like if he was and actor he would be me and if I was a filmmaker I would be him. We seem to be trying to make the same statement in the world."
I'd be dead without my sense of humor. I can't imagine processing the shit we are slogging our way through in life without it. In a twenty-four-hour space, you get an acute sense of how all of this injustice and out-rage is absurd. There are things that are truly serious, like when one loses his health or gets into a life- threatening accident. But the rest of it.... If you can't laugh your way through life, then you are fucked. Humor was the first form of armor I ever wore to counteract my self-image. The first girl I ever asked out on a date laughed at me, because she thought I was kidding. While I didn't cry on the surface, inside I was weeping. But outwardly I made a joke out of the situation. So humor has always been my shield against the slings and arrows. I turn them into something satiric.
[1990]: "People are doing sitcoms on stage rather than theater. You go to the theater, and it's as if you were watching a sitcom at 8:30 on Channel 4."
[When asked if he is afraid to be type-cast as a tough guy after Alien resurrección (1997)]: I don't bear any label. I perform very extreme characters, but at the same time men with an enormous goodness. Take for example the Hercules from La ciudad de los niños perdidos (1995), One, he is a child in an adult body; One is pure, simple and innocent. My character in "La bella y la bestia" (1987) had an enormous generosity, far from this world; the Beast was too good to be real. It's true that I hardly play ordinary people due to my appearance, anyway I am not a captive of any register, I don't systematically play tough and not very bright people. I congratulate myself for my varied filmography and for being able to do all roles.
I lost 90 pounds and my blood pressure went down to a normal level and the salt in my urine disappeared. And that was when I had to make the transition from fat character actor to thin character actor.
[on acting]: "It's nice to get paid for therapy rather than having to pay $240 an hour for it."
I just think that there are those people that their resolve is strengthened by what it is that's keeping them down, and there are some people that will buckle under it. You never know which one is which until you get into the eighth or ninth round of the fight.
I will not do a role that I don't think I can do, that I'm not interested in, where there's no humanity, that doesn't have any kind of handle for me at all because I know I'll just stink the joint up.
I think there are a lot of technocrats in the business who would much rather work with just wheels and gears and machinery. Those things interest them more than humanity and I wish them the best of luck.
I don't think anything is ever going to replace the human heart and what that generates in terms of performance.
"I was not dealt the best physical hand in the world. My nose didn't fit my mouth. My forehead didn't fit my cheeks. And those are traditionally the years when a boy is judged primarily on his looks. So, consequently, I suffered from very low self- esteem. In a sense, I had a beast inside me. That beast was fear and insecurity." (on his childhood days)
[on his love for the Turner Classic Movies channel]: My antidote to a cold, hard, really cruel world is to go back and watch old black and white movies and go, "Oh, Oh...Oh, Humphrey! Oh, Cary! Oh, Burt!" That's it, man. I mean, you know it's just another time and place. It seems like there was a little order to the universe back then.

Salary                         
Two Soldiers (2003) $0.00

Where Are They Now                      
(2004) Now lives in Los Angeles, California, but also keeps a home in New York City.
(July 2005) Currently filming En el nombre del rey (2006) in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
(June 2004) Was Guest of Honor at the multi-genre Dreamcon, in Jacksonville, Florida.
(May 2001) Attended the A Diamond is Forever - Cinema Against Aids 2001 gala at the Moulin de Mougins restaurant, to benefit the American Foundation for AIDS Research.
(January 2009) Budapest, Hungary - filming En tiempo de brujas (2011).



        source: imdb.com

Shannen Doherty_biography





 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spouse                                       
Kurt Iswarienko (15 October 2011 - present)
Rick Salomon (25 January 2002 - 16 May 2003) (annulled)
Ashley Hamilton (24 September 1993 - 7 November 1994) (divorced)


Trivia                                           
Couldn't reach an agreement with the producers of "Sensación de vivir" (1990) regarding specifics of her participation in the series finale so using edits and digital effects they removed her entirely from the next to last episode retrospective. An hour long special which included virtually every other actor in show's history.
Sentenced to anger-management counseling by the Beverly Hills Municipal Court for an incident that occurred in August 1996; she got into an argument with 22 year old Corey Hanker and smashed a beer bottle on his car window as he tried to drive away from her. [12 September 1997]
In her family, her father Tom, works at a bank; her mother Rosa, is the owner of a beauty parlor; she also has an older brother named Sean; born November 26, 1967.
Appeared several times partially nude in Playboy magazine, one image is December 1993, others in safer sex spread in March 1994. Later posed once again on the cover of Playboy in December 2003.
Was removed from the teen soap "Sensación de vivir" (1990) at end of 4th season (March 1994). According to producer Aaron Spelling because of constant conflicts with other cast members and repeatedly late appearances on the set.
Infuriated William Friedkin when she failed to turn up for the first day of shooting for "Rebel Highway: Jailbreakers (#1.8)" (1994) in Hollywood. As it turned out, she had just returned from Italy, where she raised hell by turning up late for an interview on a television talk show. Friedkin's first reaction was to call for auditions and look at 12 other actresses to take her part. He changed his mind and decided to stick with Doherty.
Family moved to Los Angeles when she was 7 years old.
In 1992, Shannen was a guest on "The Dennis Miller Show" (1992). She appeared on the fourth show which meant that host, Dennis Miller, was still in the process of getting used to the talk-show format. Early in the interview, she rudely asked Miller if he was nervous and went on to point out his eyebrow which was twitching nervously. This made headlines the next day and before long, Miller was routinely making an effort to lampoon her on his talk show.
Offered a role in Scream 3 (2000).
While on the set of Seducción oculta (1994) (TV), she met Judd Nelson and they later became engaged.
Sentenced to either 10 days in jail or 20 days of work-release duty, three years probation, and ordered to pay a $1500 fine for drunk-driving charges. [12 June 2001]
Beat future "Embrujadas" (1998) co-star Alyssa Milano for the role of Rene in the cult film Mallrats (1995). [1995]
Shannen had her wages garnished by California United Bank when she was on "Sensación de vivir" (1990) because she wrote nearly $32,000 worth of bad checks.
Has four horses and three dogs.
Goddaughter is named Cooper London, daughter of Jason London and Charlie Spradling.
Still owns a percentage of "Embrujadas" (1998) even though she left the show.
Her brief marriage to Ashley Hamilton is referenced in Mallrats (1995). Ben Affleck's character in the film is named Shannon Hamilton.
Reunited with ex-husband Rick Salomon after being separated for a year. [2004]
Lives on a horse ranch in Ventura County, California
On the special, Beverly Hills 90210: 10-Year High School Reunion (2003) (TV) she revealed that the hardest thing about doing the show was pretending that Jason Priestley, whom she referred to as "being so hot", was her brother. She then revealed that, years later, people often approach her and ask her about the "weird incestuous vibe" between Brandon and Brenda, their characters. She said her response is always "Uh-huh, you better believe it!".
Is a fan of "24" (2001). On that show's Season 4 DVD set, she provides audio commentary on "3:00 PM - 4:00 PM" with episode writer Evan Katz.
Was born on the same day and year as Nicholas Brendon.
Ranked #5 in "100 Greatest Teen Stars" (2006).
Suffers from the bowel condition Crohn's Disease.
Considered taking on the role of Bethany Sloane in Dogma (1999).
Is allergic to wool and chocolate.
She earned a seven figure sum for posing in the December 2003 edition of Playboy.
Close friend of actress Sarah Michelle Gellar.
Hails from the same city as musician/actor Justin Timberlake and wrestling legend Jerry Lawler.
Was engaged to Max Factor fortune heir, Dean Factor, in 1992.
Was engaged to real-estate developer, Chris Foufas, from 1991-1992.
Landed a second job as an art director for a California based magazine called, 'Pasadena' [2009].
Listed her Malibu beach home at $4 million. The gated mansion, built in 1976, has five bedrooms and 4 bathrooms in 3,410 square feet. It has an outdoor patio with a waterfall, overlooking an ocean view with 1 acre of park-like grounds and includes a pool and spa [2009].
Auctioning her personal wardrobe worn in many of her on-screen appearances and at Hollywood events selling on eBay auctions and at many boutiques all around Los Angeles, CA [August 2009].
Lives in Malibu, California.
Former daughter-in-law of George Hamilton and Alana Stewart.
She sang all her own vocals for the TV movie, Amigas hasta el final (1997) (TV).
She likes listening to U2, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Frank Sinatra.
While she may claim a Disney movie was made about her great, great, great grandfather, it's untrue. The movie was called The Fighting Prince of Donegal (1966). While the movie was set in the mid-1800s, the historical character and events it is based on actually happened in the late-1500s.
Her hobbies include horseback riding, playing video games, cooking, and playing the guitar.
Married celebrity photographer Kurt Iswarienko in a private Malibu beach ceremony on Saturday October 15, 2011.
Younger sister of Sean Doherty.
Only appeared on "Dancing with the Stars" (2005/I) because her father was a big fan of the show. She was eliminated in the first round. Her father died a few months later.
Published author.


Personal Quotes                                        
[in Cleo magazine, August 2000] Let me start by saying it wasn't like I walked out one day and said, "I quit". It was a very long process of quitting the show. Aaron [producer Aaron Spelling] got as fed up with me as I was with the show, and I think it was because the notoriety was too much. People were hating the character and I couldn't take the abuse that came with that. People couldn't separate me from her and I got sick of people assuming that I was as naughty and bad as Brenda was. It was all very hurtful.
[on the tabloid articles] You know, as far as I'm concerned, whatever they write, um, is so . . . it's consisted of so many different lies that it's not even worth justifying it.
Even when I'm called in for an audition or anything, and even when I have to meet other actors / actresses, or be in front of the camera, I get goosebumps.
[in February 2005] I've been very, very, very happily single since October--I ended my previous relationship, and it thrills me to no end. I'm just sort of hanging out and being a single girl and enjoying the moment. I think to just be a girl and have fun is so incredibly important.

Salary                                             
"Sensación de vivir" (1990) $17,500 per episode
"Embrujadas" (1998) $75,000/per-episode (third season).

Where Are They Now                            
(September 2001) Camarillo, California
(October 2003) Just completed her first season as host of SciFi's hidden camera show "Scare Tactics" (2003).
(October 2003) In talks to allow her image to be used on "Embrujadas" (1998) including the making of a Prue Halliwell doll and a picture to be placed on the set of the show and old footage of her to be used in flashback episodes.
(August 2006) Hosting her own reality show, "Breaking Up with Shannen Doherty" (2006).

        source: imdb.com

VINCENT GALLO_biography



 
 
 
 
 
Mini Biography                                                    
Vincent Gallo. American-born, Buffalo, New York, 1961. Left home, moved to New York City in 1978, and began playing in the experimental musical group, Gray, with artist Jean Michel Basquiat. After leaving Gray, he formed the band, Bohack, and recorded the highly regarded avant-garde industrial noise album, "It Took Several Wives".

During the same period, Gallo also became known in New York City for his very unusual street performances, which were spontaneously executed in public and also witnessed by invited guests in the know. The One-Armed Man, The Man with No Face, Sandman, Boy Hit by a Car, and Boy Cries in Restaurant Window, to name a few. These radical public performances were upsetting and disturbing and were meant to provoke thought, self-reflection and consciousness. Gallo's invited guests could witness his performance's impact in this larger public context.

One invited guest, New York Underground filmmaker, Eric Mitchell, cast Gallo as the lead in his film, The Way It Is (1985), alongside newcomer Steve Buscemi. The Way It Is (1985) was Gallo's first appearance in a feature-length film, though previously he had directed himself in several short films, including If You Feel Froggy, Jump (1986), The Gunlover (1986) and Rocky 10, as well as the collaborations with filmmaker Michael Holman, Vincent Gallo as "Jesus Christ" (used in Julian Schnabel's Basquiat (1996)) and Vampire LeStat.

Since his early performance art days, Gallo has continued to create very conceptual performance pieces. Examples are a series of protesting of protests. Gallo has also created his own website, which upon closer examination, is actually a highly conceptual artwork resonating with his early performance work.

On his website www.vincentgallo.com in the merchandise section, Gallo is selling his sperm and sexual fantasies as conceptual works. Gallo's Internet art questions celebrity, procreation, ego, social agenda, and views of religion, race and sexuality. These public offerings are motivated by extreme sensitivity, concept and thoughtfulness, however their presentation appears crude and offensive. Misinterpretation of this work is common and Gallo is often incorrectly categorized as a racist, sexist, homophobe. Gallo has had over 25 one-man shows of his paintings, including several with famed New York art dealer, Annina Nosei, and 4 museum shows including one at the Hara Museum in Tokyo, Japan.

Gallo has also released several musical albums including 2 on the prestigious Warp Records label-When and Recordings of Music for Film. Gallo wrote, composed and performed the original music for the films Buffalo '66 (1998), The Agent (1990) and Promises Written in Water (2010).

In the 1980s, Gallo reached the professional level of Grand Prix motorcycle racing, though he did not win a national championship. Gallo is one of the actual motorcycle riders in his feature film, The Brown Bunny (2003).

For many years, Gallo has been known and highly respected in hi-fi and music recording circles and is considered by many professionals in the field as having world-class knowledge and experience. He has been published many times by specialty magazines focused on high fidelity designs and equipment as well as music recording techniques and equipment. His collection of vintage hi-fi and recording gear, as well as musical instruments, is amongst the largest and most refined in the world. Gallo is also a fanatic record collector, owning over 35,000 vinyl LP's.

Gallo has no agent, manager, assistant or intern and he makes his films without producers, and with extremely scaled down crews. He has self-distributed his movies and is directly involved in his films' sales for distribution. Gallo has also created all of his films' trailers and posters.

Gallo is one of the most misunderstood, misquoted, misrepresented talents in the past 25 years and a brief review of his IMDb page suggests he has also been incredibly prolific. In the summer of 2011, under much secrecy, Gallo began co-directing the independent fantasy, Ape (2012), alongside long-time collaborator, Joel Potrykus.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Catherine Doran





Personal Quotes                                                 
I stopped painting in 1990 at the peak of my success just to deny people my beautiful paintings. And I did it out of spite.
I don't trust or love anyone. Because people are so creepy. Creepy creepy creeps. Creeping around. Creeping here and creeping there. Creeping everywhere. Crippity crappity creepies.
I'm the happiest the saddest guy in the world can be.
There's nothing self-gratifying about knowing you've played a performance where people may easily dislike the character and associate it with you. There's nothing fun about having people suspicious about why you're making work. I'm clearly not networking or making a bid for popularity. I'm following another motivation, and it's not as a provocateur. It's because I'm blinded, like an idiot, by wanting to preserve and express an insight that I have, or an aesthetic that I believe in. I forget that people react to me personally as the representative of that. Did you see a credit for hair and makeup? How can I be a narcissist? I've never even had hair and makeup done for me on a film. I don't even know what I look like as I'm filming. - on being called a narcissist.
Early in elementary school I had a very small moment where I had a different face - a little nose, straight, blond hair. I had a lot of response, from older women and little girls. But at some point when I transformed into a less [attractive] person, I decided to push away my feelings, to protect myself in order to avoid rejection.
I don't drink any coffee or take any drugs and I don't smoke cigarettes and I don't eat sugar and I don't take any medicine at all. I eat a lot of fish, vegetables, and I stay away from starches. I'm not so sure my eating behavior is responsible. I look like someone who takes drugs, so I refuse to take even aspirin in order to contradict my appearance. But I like the color brown. Oh, and I don't eat dairy. And I sure do like the color brown.  And pink.  Pink and brown. If I had to choose, pink would lose.
I never wanted to be an actor. I never want to be an actor. I want to be a movie star. The whole idea of having to act is too gruesome. It's too ambitious for me.
I told you, I'm an extremist. Even in art, if my work wasn't 50 times more interesting than me and my petty life, it would be useless.
I'm not an artist, I'm a hustler. As a hustler I've done many things. You should really believe it when I tell you that, 'cause I'm not being sarcastic. I'm a total hustler. What that means is I've hustled to make a buck and I've hustled to change the world and I've hustled to take revenge - but it's always hustling. I've never had a career or a single goal. I've never been formally educated. To get things together, to make a living, I constantly have to hustle.
I'm so in love with the United States. Not as a patriot. I'm in love with America like it's my first girlfriend. The geography, the people, the smell, the touch, the taste, the gas stations. I'm madly in love with America. Madly in love. And I was the guy that people used to say, "He's so European." I mean, I never felt like that. I don't relate to those monkeys. I just can't relate to them. I'm a super American--Captain America.
"Well, if you want to be an actor, move to a major city, either in L.A. or N.Y. and every day do as many things as you possibly can to reach that goal. But make sure that goal is set so high, that if you reach one-tenth of the goal, you've gone a long ways. Fantasize and believe that you could star in a 100 Oscar-winning movies, and just work for that every day. Let's face it, most people want to be actors because they want unconditional love and power and money and to be able to act out a character fantasy that involves themselves.  So if one is truly honest about themselves in that way, then you're on the right path.  If not, the process becomes convoluted.  You have to go out grab it, and demand  it. That's my advice. " - His advice to struggling actors.
I did my first job as an actor and my first role was in 1978 in Rome. I did a play with an Italian actor named Victor Cavallo who worked with Bernardo Bertolucci. After that I was very much a part of the New York performance art and underground theater and movie scene, so it's been quite awhile. But always very peripheral.
The good thing about bicycling is that, since I'm a public figure, I don't have to interact with people. If I walk from here to West Broadway, 50 people will stop me. On my bike, I can just wave. More public figures should ride bikes. It's a good way to deal with people.
My parents took an interest in nothing, at home no books, no records. My mother and my father are the emblem of indifference, dryness and bad taste. My father is also terribly stingy, in life as well as in feelings: I have never seen him filling up the bathtub. To save, he used to put the water 4 inches from the bottom. At home everything was ugly, casual, lacking in love, from furniture to clothes, to behaviors...
I became an actor, because of Danny Bonaduce on the "Partridge Family". He's tremendous, so funny and brilliant, and we seemed around the same age, I felt I should be on a show with him. We could have done a good spin-off, "the Danny Bonaduce, Vinnie Gallo show", da-da-da-da- da di da da.
I feel very happy that Bush is our president. One way that you can tell we have a good president, is by how much the French dislike him. The more the French hate him, the better he must be. And they hate this one.
I sold The Brown Bunny camera package because I had organized it so methodically, so precisely, that I couldn't let anyone touch it, scratch it, or break it up. I just had to get it out of my life. The package was sold to Sage Stallone who's one of my favorite people in this whole world, one of the smartest, young, goofy kids I've ever known in my whole life. So it went to the right person
I've never been a popular person, but it doesn't matter. I have everything in my life that I want. I'm not a walking publicity stunt. I'm not an anarchist, or bitter. I'm not trying to be subversive. I just try to remain unguarded, unprotected by fear, and agents and publicists, and I feel comfortable that way.
[on Argentina]: This country sucks. If I drop a banana here, everyone kills for it.
Sofia Coppola likes any guy who has what she wants. If she wants to be a photographer she'll fuck a photographer. If she wants to be a filmmaker, she'll fuck a filmmaker. She's a parasite just like her fat, pig father was.
I wouldn't work for Martin Scorsese for $10 million. He hasn't made a good film in 25 years. I would never work with an egomaniac has-been.
[on Spike Jonze] He's the biggest fraud out there. If you bring him to a party he's the least interesting person at the party, he's the person who doesn't know anything. He's the person who doesn't say anything funny, interesting, intelligent. He's a pig piece of shit.
Drugs and alcohol cloud your mind. When you drink, you do things you wouldn't do as sober. And that's why most people drink... O.K., but it doesn't interest me.

Salary                                                                     
El sueño de Arizona (1992) $175,000
Palookaville (1995) $10,000
El funeral (1996) $20,000
Últimas consecuencias (1997) $100,000
Buffalo '66 (1998) $200,000
Trickbaby (Freeway II) (1999) $150,000
Trouble Every Day (2001) $350,000
Stranded (2001) $400,000
Loca seducción (2001) $400,000
The Brown Bunny (2003) $500,000
Tetro (2009) $300,000
Essential Killing (2010) $300,000
Loosies (2011) $175,000

Where Are They Now                                        
(March 2002) Working on second directorial movie, The Brown Bunny (2003). Lives in NYC and L.A.
(April 2011) Living in downtown Los Angeles. Within the past 24 months, he has written, directed and produced three films, two of which were in the 67th Venice film festival and both were in competition. At that festival, Gallo won the best actor prize. Mr. Gallo is currently set to star in an Italian film titled La leggenda di Kaspar Hauser (2012).


        source: imdb.com










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