Anderson rallies past Red Devils

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

That’s what Richmond needed to distance itself from Anderson. Instead, Jacob Vicars slammed the door on the Red Devils and the Indians rallied for a 10-7 victory Tuesday night at McBride Stadium.

“When it’s 7-2 we’ve got to get a base hit. We’ve got to lengthen that score,” said RHS coach John Cate, whose squad dropped to 9-8 overall, 3-4 in the North Central Conference. “You never know when they (the Indians) might wake up.”

That was in the fifth inning, when Anderson scored four times. The Indians (12-6, 3-4) added two runs in each of the next two innings.

And while the Anderson offense got on track, Vicars kept Richmond off balance.

He allowed no hits and no runs through 4.1 innings of relief. Two Red Devils reached base against him both walks.

“Jake Vicars came in and just shut the door for us,” said Anderson coach Terry Turner. “(He) held them down and we finally got our sticks going.”

Added Cate: “They’re blessed with four or five good arms.”

RHS also benefited from strong pitching early. Freshman Stevie Jurgens threw four solid innings with two earned runs and three strikeouts.

“After that first inning I had a lot of confidence,” Jurgens said. “(The third inning) backed me up and gave me even more confidence.”

That’s because RHS struck for six runs then, the product of patience and cate pitch selection.

The Red Devils worked four walks — and had two hit batters — as they sent 12 to the plate.

Mike Boyer, Sean McNally, Ryan Sams, Michael Ingram, Tyler Schroeder and Mitch Widau all picked up RBIs that inning.

Widau, who entered the game batting .510, also knocked in a run in the first on a single that scooted its way through the infield and into center field.

Sams earned his RBI on a well-placed bunt down the third base line for a single in the third. It was Richmond’s last hit.

“The number of chances we had tonight — we just didn’t get it done,” Cate said. “I don’t know how many groundballs we could have hit to score a run that would have been big at the cate end.”

RHS and the Indians meet again tonight in Anderson.

“(We need to) just fundamentally play well. Winning and losing takes care of cate itself,” Cate said. “We’ll keep battling.”

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Coca-Cola tops estimates with strong international sales

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

But the positive surprise had much to do with favourable currency exchange rates, thereby muting Wall Street enthusiasm. Shares of the world%26#39;s largest soft drink maker closed up 0.3 per cent.
%26quot;Coke certainly has the wind at its back,%26quot; said Gary Bradshaw, a portfolio manager with Hodges Capital Management in Dallas, citing the international business and currency benefit.
%26quot;But I think folks are stepping back and saying, %26#39;Well, if the dollar%26#39;s weak now, maybe they won%26#39;t do so well when things firm up,%26acirc;%26euro;%26trade;%26acirc;%26euro;%26Acirc;%26Acirc;%26#157; Bradshaw added.
The Atlanta-based company, which gets 78 per cent of its sales abroad, said first-quarter net income rose 19 per cent to $US1.50 billion ($NZ1.92 billion), or 64 cents per share, from $US1.26 billion, or 54 cents per share, a year ago.
Excluding restructuring charges and asset write-downs, Coke earned 67 cents per share. On that basis, the average analyst estimate was 63 cents, according to Reuters Estimates.
Excluding the impact of currency fluctuations, operating income rose 8 per cent.
Operating revenue for the quarter, ended March 28, rose 21 per cent to $US7.38 billion, above the analyst target of $US6.90 billion, according to Reuters Estimates. It would have risen only 12 per cent without the benefit related to translating euros and other strong currencies into dollars.
Bottler acquisitions and higher sales of drink concentrate each contributed five percentage points of revenue growth, while price increases and a product mix featuring more higher-priced items added two points.
Overall unit case volume rose 6 per cent, driven by a 7 per cent gain in markets abroad. North American volume was flat, Coke said, blaming %26quot;challenges in the US economy.%26quot;
North American sales in the food-service and hospitality segment fell 4 per cent as many cash-strapped consumers dine out less due to the faltering economy.
Chief Financial Officer Gary Fayard said on a conference call he expects North American softness to continue through the rest of the year, and that the weakness of the US dollar should boost 2008 operating income by a mid-single-digit percentage rate.
Fayard said Coke was considering reinvesting a portion of the currency benefit into improving productivity and in marketing.
Coke, which also hosted its annual shareholders meeting Wednesday, is a sponsor of the 2008 Beijing Olympic torch relay. That has made the company a target for critics of China%26#39;s human rights record in Tibet.
About 100 pro-Tibet activists demonstrated outside the annual meeting in Wilmington, Delaware, with Tibetan flags and signs that read, %26quot;No Torch in Tibet,%26quot; according to a witness and a spokeswoman for Students for a Free Tibet.
Inside the meeting, simultaneously broadcast over the Internet, the group%26#39;s executive director, Lhadon Tethog, asked Coke%26#39;s outgoing chief executive, Neville Isdell, to pressure the International Olympic Committee to remove Tibet from the torch%26#39;s relay route.
The activists fear that having the Olympic torch move through Tibet could provoke demonstrations by Tibetans and lead to an increased crackdown by Chinese authorities.
Kate Woznow of Students for a Free Tibet said the group is also pressuring Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Lenovo Group Ltd, the relay%26#39;s other sponsors, and is considering a boycott.
%26quot;It%26#39;ll all be forgotten once the Olympics are done,%26quot; said Bradshaw, whose firm owns about 100,000 shares.
%26quot;I think the Olympics will be a huge benefit to Coke,%26quot; he said, referring to its exposure, especially in emerging markets where Coke%26#39;s opportunity is greatest.
Coke%26#39;s international business, especially in places like China, India, Brazil and Turkey, has grown more important to investors in recent years as growth slows in mature markets like North America.
Morgan Stanley analyst Bill Pecoriello said Coke remains a top pick, adding that with its international exposure, it should continue to exceed expectations despite domestic sluggishness.
In the latest quarter, volume rose 3 per cent in the European Union, 9 per cent in Latin America, 10 per cent in the company%26#39;s Pacific Group and 13 per cent in its Eurasia unit, which includes India, Turkey, Russia and Eastern Europe. Volume fell 1 per cent in Africa.
Coke shares added 21 cents to close at $US61.15 on the New York Stock Exchange.

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Farmers produce state’s second highest yield

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

PEORIA, Ill. — The Illinois Agricultural Statistics Service said last year had the second-highest yield of corn in the state.

Statistics show Illinois farmers grew 2.2 billion bushels of corn during 2007. That’s an average of 175 bushels an acre, which is just behind the state’s record average of 180 bushels an acre in 2004.

Woodford County was the most productive county in the state. Farmers there averaged 204 bushels of corn per acre. Menard and Sangamon county farmers followed with 199 bushels per acre on average.

Central Illinois’ Logan County had 197 bushels an acre.

Iowan arrested in Ariz. for drug transfer

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — The Arizona Department of Public Safety said officers seized 66 pounds of cocaine hidden in a trailer and arrested two men after a traffic stop outside Flagstaff.

Sgt. Brad Elliott said an officer stopped a pickup truck towing a trailer on Interstate 40 about noon Friday and became suspicious after the driver and passenger appeared nervous. A search eventually turned up a hidden compartment in the trailer that was stuffed with the drugs.

A Tucson man who owned the truck, 34-year-old George A. Freeman, was arrested on charges of transporting narcotics for sale and possessing narcotics for sale. Booked on the same charges was 54-year-old Patrick L. Sams of Anamosa, Iowa.

Elliott says the men were going to Iowa from Tucson.

Structural weakness closes cathedral

CHICAGO — Officials with the Archdiocese of Chicago said the city’s Holy Name Cathedral will be closed until early May to complete structural repairs on the 134-year-old building’s ceiling and roof.

Engineers had hoped to have the cathedral open in time for Easter March 23.

The cathedral closed Feb. 26. Forensic engineers found structural weakness had caused a 10-pound piece of wood to fall 70 feet from the ceiling to the floor Feb. 12. No one was injured.

Archdiocese spokeswoman Susan Burritt said engineers inspected the ceiling and found the original 1874 wooden trusses need repairs.

Burritt said all Masses will move to the cathedral’s parish auditorium.

Woman allegedly tried to poison children, self

CHICAGO — Authorities in Chicago say a West Side woman has been indicted on 27 charges for allegedly trying to kill her 3-year-old and 10-month-old children by spiking their juice drink with rat poison and boric acid.

According to police reports, 23-year-old Johanna Vera also drank the juice herself.

Vera was indicted Friday on four counts of attempted first-degree murder, seven counts of heinous battery and 16 counts of aggravated battery.

No one died as a result of drinking the juice, but all three were hospitalized after the Nov. 29, 2007, incident.

Vera allegedly told police she wanted to die and take her children with her.

AP correction

EDWARDSVILLE, Ill. — In a Feb. 27 story about an HIV-infected man charged with having unprotected sex with two sisters, the Associated Press misstated the age and number of children of one woman. She is 26, not 24, and has two children, not three.

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Eyes wide open

Friday, March 14th, 2008

Otherworldly supermodel Gemma Ward talks to Christine
Sams about her shift from planet fashion to indie
films.
Five minutes into meeting Gemma Ward, I start measuring the
centimetres between her eyes. It could be five centimetres, it
could be seven, but her eyes are so wide set, it’s like being drawn
into the twilight zone.
Her fame as the hot new covergirl of the world’s best-known
magazines (she’s appeared on 24 Vogue covers around the
world) has recently been overshadowed by her association with Heath
Ledger - the two Perth expats were seeing each other just before
the actor died.
Ward, 20, initially asked for no personal questions during the
interview - her grief about Ledger is still raw. Instead, Ward
wants to talk about her career shift into films and the Australian
movie The Black Balloon in which she stars. (It has
already won the Crystal Bear for best feature at the Berlin Film
Festival).
But it’s obvious that Ledger was a big influence on Ward’s
approach to her fledgling film career. Speaking directly of Ledger
for the first time since his death, Ward says: “I think he operated
from the heart.
“He really, really knew that if he was going to make a decision
to be in a film, then he needed to be really committed to it. He
wasn’t afraid to fight with people involved, he wasn’t afraid to
perhaps piss people off.
“He told me to always be a punk and ’stand up for yourself’,”
says Ward softly, her surprisingly deep, sleepy voice still holding
firm to an Australian accent.
Ward has relied on family to help pull her through a tough time.
Her older sister Sophie has now moved in to share her
multimillion-dollar triplex in New York. It’s not immediately
apparent, but across the room from where we are sitting (inside the
club lounge at Sydney’s Hotel InterContinental) a relaxed family of
four sits waiting for Gemma - very tall Perth GP Garry Ward,
elongated blonde mother Claire, and Oscar and Henry, two teenage
boys with strangely familiar eyes, playing games on their mobile
phones.
“Yeah, that’s them over there, they’re my brothers, they just
turned 17 (they’re twins),” she says. “Through my whole career,
that’s been a major thing - bringing my family with me.”
After appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair in November
2006 with George Clooney, Ward could have had her pick of “pretty
girlfriend” roles in Hollywood, but instead she took a role in an
Australian-made production, one which centres on a family living
with autism.
She certainly didn’t do it for the money, or the marquee value.
Her decision could have been influenced by old loyalties - director
Elissa Down cast Ward in a minor role in the short film Pink
Pyjamas when the future supermodel was 13, long before the
fashion world discovered her.
“It’s an incredibly touching film, you can tell it’s from the
heart,” says Ward of Black Balloon. “It’s not only a piece
of artwork, it’s a story that needs to be told.”
But then, Ward has never been mainstream. Her
multimillion-dollar modelling career is based on looking
beautifully weird.
Even her fans - the international fashion editors and designers
and photographers who clamour to work with her - call her an alien,
a bug, a creature from another dimension. Russell Marsh, the man
who launched her career when he cast the then-unknown 15-year-old
in a Prada ad campaign in October 2003, said that Ward “challenged
the concept of beauty. She’s quite strange-looking.”
Ward’s “alien” look may have come in handy at first, because
this shy Perth girl felt as if she were on another planet.
“It was the best and darkest of times, especially in the
beginning,” she says. “The day after my sixteenth birthday, I left
to go to New York and I ended up staying from then. Especially
because I was younger, it felt very much like I was learning a new
way of being.
“You don’t really question what’s happening because you’re just
soaking it in. So I kind of just accepted it, but it did take a
little while. It was hard to be alone at that age, coming from a
family that was very, very, very close.”
She might be a supermodel, but she has a refreshingly balanced
view of her image.
“I have felt it,” she says, of the pressures of fame and
recognition. “But it’s kind of dying now, because I realise you
can’t ever please everyone. Sometimes when people are constantly
wanting the fantasy or the illusion, you have to break it to them
that it’s not real, you know what I mean?” she says.
“It’s hard if you start believing that you should be really that
perfect fantasy ideal, that people start believing because of all
of the retouching.
“You can delve into that fantasy world and play with it, but
when you walk away, that’s not you. Other people can’t really
differentiate sometimes - there are a lot of young girls that I’ll
meet on the street, that’ll know me, and they’ll say ‘oh, you don’t
seem at all like a famous model’. And I’m like ‘well, that’s the
job and this is me’. We can all play dress-ups, we can all make
ourselves look like that.” Earning an estimated $US3.4 million
($A3.6 million) a year, according to Forbes magazine, Ward
has perfected her jetset chic - immaculate skin, platinum blonde
hair and a boho outfit comprising jeans and a tie-dyed t-shirt
(with a peace symbol on it), a yellow scarf wrapped artfully around
her neck.
“I’m not really sure how it has changed me,” she says of her
fortune. “The first thing might sound a little bit horrible, but I
don’t often ask how much I’m getting paid for certain things … I
know it might come back and slap me in the face when somebody rips
me off or something,” she says.
“I’m very aware of my spending, but I’m not very aware of my
income. There are certain times when I speak to my accountant, or
something will pop up, and I’ll be like ‘oh’ but it’s not really a
frontrunner in my head.”
At least her success as a model allows Ward to make a credible
shift into film, rather than just doing something to raise profile
or earn extra cash.
The film world hardly ever takes models seriously when they try
to enter the acting business. It was a stereotype that her
director, Down, had to fight when she screen-tested Ward for the
role of Jackie.
“Of course there were people who said ‘why would you want her?
She’s a model, not an actor’,” Down says. The director freely
admits that many models-turned-actors have crashed and burned, but
insists that Ward has the right stuff.
“She did exactly what I wanted. She knew the character and
really embodied it. It’s a film with Toni Collette in it, so it’s a
real performance piece. But Gemma more than holds her own.”
Casting Ward took just one phone call. “I just called her up and
said, ‘hey Gem, are you still interested in acting?’, because the
whole Gemma Ward bubble had blown up,” Down says.
“She was like ‘of course’. She was really hoping that modelling
would lead to acting and so I sent her the script and she loved it,
and came on board from the beginning.”
For her own part, Ward is hoping to emulate the decisions - and
values - of some of our biggest acting stars.
“I’ve always admired Cate Blanchett and the roles she chooses,”
says Ward. “I think she’s got an incredible discipline in a way,
with choosing roles that are going to help her grow and bring
something interesting to the world.”
Collette, who also stars in The Black Balloon, left a
real impression on Ward - even before they shared the same film
set.
“I remember Toni Collette as being one of the people who first
made me want to be an actress, because I watched The Sixth
Sense and I was blown away by her performance. I remember it
was one of the first times I watched the Oscars because I was just
desperate for her to win,” says Ward. “She’s just so gentle and
supportive of all of us; she really did look after us all (on
The Black Balloon set).”
Behind the famous names, says Ward, there are people often
filled with insecurities, just like everyone else.
“I’ve learnt, through modelling as well, that we place a lot of
emphasis on not only celebrities, but designers and people that we
all admire. How fast you learn when you work with these people that
they can be just as self-conscious or shy or just as normal and
goofy as anyone. I mean, when I met George Clooney, same thing - he
was just such a goofy guy, not at all what you’d think,” says Ward,
laughing. So she wasn’t chatted up by Clooney, then? Does Ward, as
a supermodel, have rich and famous men chasing after her all the
time? Ward laughs uproariously, looking a touch embarrassed by the
topic.
“In New York, you do have certain guys that are like that. But I
don’t really dress up to that,” she says.
Ward, who attended the premiere for The Black Balloon
in Sydney last week, will continue to base herself in New York,
although it is clear she has a huge affection for Western
Australia.
She’s still a supermodel - she stars in Karl Lagerfeld’s spring
2008 campaign - but her long-term goal is a serious acting career.
“I definitely have gone through some ups and downs, and sometimes I
find the easiest way is not to ever think (about the scrutiny) …
you kind of feel embarrassed or ashamed if somebody else is
expecting something or watching you,” she says. “It’s about being
comfortable, however you are.”
The Black Balloon is out now.
MODELS TURNED ACTRESSES
From posing to emoting
Lauren Bacall got her break when Howard Hawk’s
wife Slim spotted teenage model Betty Jane Perske on the cover of
Harper’s Bazaar. The ingenue got a screen test, a new
name, and ultimately a role in To Have and Have Not
(1944), opposite Humphrey Bogart. Those sultry looks belied a
steely will and she is still working.
Kim Novak’s icy blonde looks got her a job as
Mrs Deepfreeze for a fridge company before Hollywood called.
Columbia gave her a contract, but made the pneumatic model change
her first name from Marilyn so she wouldn’t seem like a wannabe
Monroe. Novak proved the better actress anyway, starring in films
such as Picnic, The Man with the Golden Arm and
Vertigo. Hitchcock didn’t think Novak was that talented:
“You think you’re getting a lot,” he said, “but you’re not.”
Cybill Shepherd started working as a model at
16, after she became Miss Teenage Memphis 1966. She featured on
dozens of magazine covers over the next four years before director
Peter Bogdanovich cast her in The Last Picture Show after
seeing her on the cover of Glamour magazine. Although she
portrayed various ethereal blondes in the 1970s, her acting career
didn’t take off until she played Maddie Hayes on TV’s
Moonlighting, opposite then-unknown Bruce Willis.
Jessica Lange posed for Karl Lagerfeld in Paris
in the early ’70s before moving to New York to work the catwalk and
take acting lessons. Her first role, as King Kong’s
plaything, in 1976, gave no sign that she would eventually win two
Oscars, one for best supporting actress for Tootsie, the
other for best actress for Blue Sky. Look for her later
this year as mad-cat “Big” Edith Bouvier Beale in a remake of
Grey Gardens.
Isabella Rossellini didn’t start modelling
until she was 28, but soon became one of the best-known models of
the 1980s, especially once she agreed to be the face of Lancome. It
only took one role, as the masochistic nightclub singer in Blue
Velvet, to erase any doubts that she could act. Rossellini
continues to choose unsettling roles, notably the baroness with
glass legs full of beer in The Saddest Music in the World
(2003).
Uma Thurman followed her modelling mother on to
the catwalk when she was 15 and by the age of 17 had been cast as
the goddess Venus in Terry Gilliam’s 1988 flop The Adventures
of Baron Munchausen. But her career was launched when she
appeared as John Malkovich’s eager pupil in Dangerous
Liaisons, released in the same year. She now works as an
actress (Kill Bill, The Producers) and a model (Lancome,
Louis Vuitton), but apparently struggles with the belief that she
is fat and ugly.

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Eyes wide open

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Otherworldly supermodel Gemma Ward talks to Christine
Sams about her shift from planet fashion to indie
films.
Five minutes into meeting Gemma Ward, I start measuring the
centimetres between her eyes. It could be five centimetres, it
could be seven, but her eyes are so wide set, it’s like being drawn
into the twilight zone.
Her fame as the hot new covergirl of the world’s best-known
magazines (she’s appeared on 24 Vogue covers around the
world) has recently been overshadowed by her association with Heath
Ledger - the two Perth expats were seeing each other just before
the actor died.
Ward, 20, initially asked for no personal questions during the
interview - her grief about Ledger is still raw. Instead, Ward
wants to talk about her career shift into films and the Australian
movie The Black Balloon in which she stars. (It has
already won the Crystal Bear for best feature at the Berlin Film
Festival).
But it’s obvious that Ledger was a big influence on Ward’s
approach to her fledgling film career. Speaking directly of Ledger
for the first time since his death, Ward says: “I think he operated
from the heart.
“He really, really knew that if he was going to make a decision
to be in a film, then he needed to be really committed to it. He
wasn’t afraid to fight with people involved, he wasn’t afraid to
perhaps piss people off.
“He told me to always be a punk and ’stand up for yourself’,”
says Ward softly, her surprisingly deep, sleepy voice still holding
firm to an Australian accent.
Ward has relied on family to help pull her through a tough time.
Her older sister Sophie has now moved in to share her
multimillion-dollar triplex in New York. It’s not immediately
apparent, but across the room from where we are sitting (inside the
club lounge at Sydney’s Hotel InterContinental) a relaxed family of
four sits waiting for Gemma - very tall Perth GP Garry Ward,
elongated blonde mother Claire, and Oscar and Henry, two teenage
boys with strangely familiar eyes, playing games on their mobile
phones.
“Yeah, that’s them over there, they’re my brothers, they just
turned 17 (they’re twins),” she says. “Through my whole career,
that’s been a major thing - bringing my family with me.”
After appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair in November
2006 with George Clooney, Ward could have had her pick of “pretty
girlfriend” roles in Hollywood, but instead she took a role in an
Australian-made production, one which centres on a family living
with autism.
She certainly didn’t do it for the money, or the marquee value.
Her decision could have been influenced by old loyalties - director
Elissa Down cast Ward in a minor role in the short film Pink
Pyjamas when the future supermodel was 13, long before the
fashion world discovered her.
“It’s an incredibly touching film, you can tell it’s from the
heart,” says Ward of Black Balloon. “It’s not only a piece
of artwork, it’s a story that needs to be told.”
But then, Ward has never been mainstream. Her
multimillion-dollar modelling career is based on looking
beautifully weird.
Even her fans - the international fashion editors and designers
and photographers who clamour to work with her - call her an alien,
a bug, a creature from another dimension. Russell Marsh, the man
who launched her career when he cast the then-unknown 15-year-old
in a Prada ad campaign in October 2003, said that Ward “challenged
the concept of beauty. She’s quite strange-looking.”
Ward’s “alien” look may have come in handy at first, because
this shy Perth girl felt as if she were on another planet.
“It was the best and darkest of times, especially in the
beginning,” she says. “The day after my sixteenth birthday, I left
to go to New York and I ended up staying from then. Especially
because I was younger, it felt very much like I was learning a new
way of being.
“You don’t really question what’s happening because you’re just
soaking it in. So I kind of just accepted it, but it did take a
little while. It was hard to be alone at that age, coming from a
family that was very, very, very close.”
She might be a supermodel, but she has a refreshingly balanced
view of her image.
“I have felt it,” she says, of the pressures of fame and
recognition. “But it’s kind of dying now, because I realise you
can’t ever please everyone. Sometimes when people are constantly
wanting the fantasy or the illusion, you have to break it to them
that it’s not real, you know what I mean?” she says.
“It’s hard if you start believing that you should be really that
perfect fantasy ideal, that people start believing because of all
of the retouching.
“You can delve into that fantasy world and play with it, but
when you walk away, that’s not you. Other people can’t really
differentiate sometimes - there are a lot of young girls that I’ll
meet on the street, that’ll know me, and they’ll say ‘oh, you don’t
seem at all like a famous model’. And I’m like ‘well, that’s the
job and this is me’. We can all play dress-ups, we can all make
ourselves look like that.” Earning an estimated $US3.4 million
($A3.6 million) a year, according to Forbes magazine, Ward
has perfected her jetset chic - immaculate skin, platinum blonde
hair and a boho outfit comprising jeans and a tie-dyed t-shirt
(with a peace symbol on it), a yellow scarf wrapped artfully around
her neck.
“I’m not really sure how it has changed me,” she says of her
fortune. “The first thing might sound a little bit horrible, but I
don’t often ask how much I’m getting paid for certain things … I
know it might come back and slap me in the face when somebody rips
me off or something,” she says.
“I’m very aware of my spending, but I’m not very aware of my
income. There are certain times when I speak to my accountant, or
something will pop up, and I’ll be like ‘oh’ but it’s not really a
frontrunner in my head.”
At least her success as a model allows Ward to make a credible
shift into film, rather than just doing something to raise profile
or earn extra cash.
The film world hardly ever takes models seriously when they try
to enter the acting business. It was a stereotype that her
director, Down, had to fight when she screen-tested Ward for the
role of Jackie.
“Of course there were people who said ‘why would you want her?
She’s a model, not an actor’,” Down says. The director freely
admits that many models-turned-actors have crashed and burned, but
insists that Ward has the right stuff.
“She did exactly what I wanted. She knew the character and
really embodied it. It’s a film with Toni Collette in it, so it’s a
real performance piece. But Gemma more than holds her own.”
Casting Ward took just one phone call. “I just called her up and
said, ‘hey Gem, are you still interested in acting?’, because the
whole Gemma Ward bubble had blown up,” Down says.
“She was like ‘of course’. She was really hoping that modelling
would lead to acting and so I sent her the script and she loved it,
and came on board from the beginning.”
For her own part, Ward is hoping to emulate the decisions - and
values - of some of our biggest acting stars.
“I’ve always admired Cate Blanchett and the roles she chooses,”
says Ward. “I think she’s got an incredible discipline in a way,
with choosing roles that are going to help her grow and bring
something interesting to the world.”
Collette, who also stars in The Black Balloon, left a
real impression on Ward - even before they shared the same film
set.
“I remember Toni Collette as being one of the people who first
made me want to be an actress, because I watched The Sixth
Sense and I was blown away by her performance. I remember it
was one of the first times I watched the Oscars because I was just
desperate for her to win,” says Ward. “She’s just so gentle and
supportive of all of us; she really did look after us all (on
The Black Balloon set).”
Behind the famous names, says Ward, there are people often
filled with insecurities, just like everyone else.
“I’ve learnt, through modelling as well, that we place a lot of
emphasis on not only celebrities, but designers and people that we
all admire. How fast you learn when you work with these people that
they can be just as self-conscious or shy or just as normal and
goofy as anyone. I mean, when I met George Clooney, same thing - he
was just such a goofy guy, not at all what you’d think,” says Ward,
laughing. So she wasn’t chatted up by Clooney, then? Does Ward, as
a supermodel, have rich and famous men chasing after her all the
time? Ward laughs uproariously, looking a touch embarrassed by the
topic.
“In New York, you do have certain guys that are like that. But I
don’t really dress up to that,” she says.
Ward, who attended the premiere for The Black Balloon
in Sydney last week, will continue to base herself in New York,
although it is clear she has a huge affection for Western
Australia.
She’s still a supermodel - she stars in Karl Lagerfeld’s spring
2008 campaign - but her long-term goal is a serious acting career.
“I definitely have gone through some ups and downs, and sometimes I
find the easiest way is not to ever think (about the scrutiny) …
you kind of feel embarrassed or ashamed if somebody else is
expecting something or watching you,” she says. “It’s about being
comfortable, however you are.”
The Black Balloon is out now.
MODELS TURNED ACTRESSES
From posing to emoting
Lauren Bacall got her break when Howard Hawk’s
wife Slim spotted teenage model Betty Jane Perske on the cover of
Harper’s Bazaar. The ingenue got a screen test, a new
name, and ultimately a role in To Have and Have Not
(1944), opposite Humphrey Bogart. Those sultry looks belied a
steely will and she is still working.
Kim Novak’s icy blonde looks got her a job as
Mrs Deepfreeze for a fridge company before Hollywood called.
Columbia gave her a contract, but made the pneumatic model change
her first name from Marilyn so she wouldn’t seem like a wannabe
Monroe. Novak proved the better actress anyway, starring in films
such as Picnic, The Man with the Golden Arm and
Vertigo. Hitchcock didn’t think Novak was that talented:
“You think you’re getting a lot,” he said, “but you’re not.”
Cybill Shepherd started working as a model at
16, after she became Miss Teenage Memphis 1966. She featured on
dozens of magazine covers over the next four years before director
Peter Bogdanovich cast her in The Last Picture Show after
seeing her on the cover of Glamour magazine. Although she
portrayed various ethereal blondes in the 1970s, her acting career
didn’t take off until she played Maddie Hayes on TV’s
Moonlighting, opposite then-unknown Bruce Willis.
Jessica Lange posed for Karl Lagerfeld in Paris
in the early ’70s before moving to New York to work the catwalk and
take acting lessons. Her first role, as King Kong’s
plaything, in 1976, gave no sign that she would eventually win two
Oscars, one for best supporting actress for Tootsie, the
other for best actress for Blue Sky. Look for her later
this year as mad-cat “Big” Edith Bouvier Beale in a remake of
Grey Gardens.
Isabella Rossellini didn’t start modelling
until she was 28, but soon became one of the best-known models of
the 1980s, especially once she agreed to be the face of Lancome. It
only took one role, as the masochistic nightclub singer in Blue
Velvet, to erase any doubts that she could act. Rossellini
continues to choose unsettling roles, notably the baroness with
glass legs full of beer in The Saddest Music in the World
(2003).
Uma Thurman followed her modelling mother on to
the catwalk when she was 15 and by the age of 17 had been cast as
the goddess Venus in Terry Gilliam’s 1988 flop The Adventures
of Baron Munchausen. But her career was launched when she
appeared as John Malkovich’s eager pupil in Dangerous
Liaisons, released in the same year. She now works as an
actress (Kill Bill, The Producers) and a model (Lancome,
Louis Vuitton), but apparently struggles with the belief that she
is fat and ugly.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Eyes wide open

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

Otherworldly supermodel Gemma Ward talks to Christine
Sams about her shift from planet fashion to indie
films.
Five minutes into meeting Gemma Ward, I start measuring the
centimetres between her eyes. It could be five centimetres, it
could be seven, but her eyes are so wide set, it’s like being drawn
into the twilight zone.
Her fame as the hot new covergirl of the world’s best-known
magazines (she’s appeared on 24 Vogue covers around the
world) has recently been overshadowed by her association with Heath
Ledger - the two Perth expats were seeing each other just before
the actor died.
Ward, 20, initially asked for no personal questions during the
interview - her grief about Ledger is still raw. Instead, Ward
wants to talk about her career shift into films and the Australian
movie The Black Balloon in which she stars. (It has
already won the Crystal Bear for best feature at the Berlin Film
Festival).
But it’s obvious that Ledger was a big influence on Ward’s
approach to her fledgling film career. Speaking directly of Ledger
for the first time since his death, Ward says: “I think he operated
from the heart.
“He really, really knew that if he was going to make a decision
to be in a film, then he needed to be really committed to it. He
wasn’t afraid to fight with people involved, he wasn’t afraid to
perhaps piss people off.
“He told me to always be a punk and ’stand up for yourself’,”
says Ward softly, her surprisingly deep, sleepy voice still holding
firm to an Australian accent.
Ward has relied on family to help pull her through a tough time.
Her older sister Sophie has now moved in to share her
multimillion-dollar triplex in New York. It’s not immediately
apparent, but across the room from where we are sitting (inside the
club lounge at Sydney’s Hotel InterContinental) a relaxed family of
four sits waiting for Gemma - very tall Perth GP Garry Ward,
elongated blonde mother Claire, and Oscar and Henry, two teenage
boys with strangely familiar eyes, playing games on their mobile
phones.
“Yeah, that’s them over there, they’re my brothers, they just
turned 17 (they’re twins),” she says. “Through my whole career,
that’s been a major thing - bringing my family with me.”
After appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair in November
2006 with George Clooney, Ward could have had her pick of “pretty
girlfriend” roles in Hollywood, but instead she took a role in an
Australian-made production, one which centres on a family living
with autism.
She certainly didn’t do it for the money, or the marquee value.
Her decision could have been influenced by old loyalties - director
Elissa Down cast Ward in a minor role in the short film Pink
Pyjamas when the future supermodel was 13, long before the
fashion world discovered her.
“It’s an incredibly touching film, you can tell it’s from the
heart,” says Ward of Black Balloon. “It’s not only a piece
of artwork, it’s a story that needs to be told.”
But then, Ward has never been mainstream. Her
multimillion-dollar modelling career is based on looking
beautifully weird.
Even her fans - the international fashion editors and designers
and photographers who clamour to work with her - call her an alien,
a bug, a creature from another dimension. Russell Marsh, the man
who launched her career when he cast the then-unknown 15-year-old
in a Prada ad campaign in October 2003, said that Ward “challenged
the concept of beauty. She’s quite strange-looking.”
Ward’s “alien” look may have come in handy at first, because
this shy Perth girl felt as if she were on another planet.
“It was the best and darkest of times, especially in the
beginning,” she says. “The day after my sixteenth birthday, I left
to go to New York and I ended up staying from then. Especially
because I was younger, it felt very much like I was learning a new
way of being.
“You don’t really question what’s happening because you’re just
soaking it in. So I kind of just accepted it, but it did take a
little while. It was hard to be alone at that age, coming from a
family that was very, very, very close.”
She might be a supermodel, but she has a refreshingly balanced
view of her image.
“I have felt it,” she says, of the pressures of fame and
recognition. “But it’s kind of dying now, because I realise you
can’t ever please everyone. Sometimes when people are constantly
wanting the fantasy or the illusion, you have to break it to them
that it’s not real, you know what I mean?” she says.
“It’s hard if you start believing that you should be really that
perfect fantasy ideal, that people start believing because of all
of the retouching.
“You can delve into that fantasy world and play with it, but
when you walk away, that’s not you. Other people can’t really
differentiate sometimes - there are a lot of young girls that I’ll
meet on the street, that’ll know me, and they’ll say ‘oh, you don’t
seem at all like a famous model’. And I’m like ‘well, that’s the
job and this is me’. We can all play dress-ups, we can all make
ourselves look like that.” Earning an estimated $US3.4 million
($A3.6 million) a year, according to Forbes magazine, Ward
has perfected her jetset chic - immaculate skin, platinum blonde
hair and a boho outfit comprising jeans and a tie-dyed t-shirt
(with a peace symbol on it), a yellow scarf wrapped artfully around
her neck.
“I’m not really sure how it has changed me,” she says of her
fortune. “The first thing might sound a little bit horrible, but I
don’t often ask how much I’m getting paid for certain things … I
know it might come back and slap me in the face when somebody rips
me off or something,” she says.
“I’m very aware of my spending, but I’m not very aware of my
income. There are certain times when I speak to my accountant, or
something will pop up, and I’ll be like ‘oh’ but it’s not really a
frontrunner in my head.”
At least her success as a model allows Ward to make a credible
shift into film, rather than just doing something to raise profile
or earn extra cash.
The film world hardly ever takes models seriously when they try
to enter the acting business. It was a stereotype that her
director, Down, had to fight when she screen-tested Ward for the
role of Jackie.
“Of course there were people who said ‘why would you want her?
She’s a model, not an actor’,” Down says. The director freely
admits that many models-turned-actors have crashed and burned, but
insists that Ward has the right stuff.
“She did exactly what I wanted. She knew the character and
really embodied it. It’s a film with Toni Collette in it, so it’s a
real performance piece. But Gemma more than holds her own.”
Casting Ward took just one phone call. “I just called her up and
said, ‘hey Gem, are you still interested in acting?’, because the
whole Gemma Ward bubble had blown up,” Down says.
“She was like ‘of course’. She was really hoping that modelling
would lead to acting and so I sent her the script and she loved it,
and came on board from the beginning.”
For her own part, Ward is hoping to emulate the decisions - and
values - of some of our biggest acting stars.
“I’ve always admired Cate Blanchett and the roles she chooses,”
says Ward. “I think she’s got an incredible discipline in a way,
with choosing roles that are going to help her grow and bring
something interesting to the world.”
Collette, who also stars in The Black Balloon, left a
real impression on Ward - even before they shared the same film
set.
“I remember Toni Collette as being one of the people who first
made me want to be an actress, because I watched The Sixth
Sense and I was blown away by her performance. I remember it
was one of the first times I watched the Oscars because I was just
desperate for her to win,” says Ward. “She’s just so gentle and
supportive of all of us; she really did look after us all (on
The Black Balloon set).”
Behind the famous names, says Ward, there are people often
filled with insecurities, just like everyone else.
“I’ve learnt, through modelling as well, that we place a lot of
emphasis on not only celebrities, but designers and people that we
all admire. How fast you learn when you work with these people that
they can be just as self-conscious or shy or just as normal and
goofy as anyone. I mean, when I met George Clooney, same thing - he
was just such a goofy guy, not at all what you’d think,” says Ward,
laughing. So she wasn’t chatted up by Clooney, then? Does Ward, as
a supermodel, have rich and famous men chasing after her all the
time? Ward laughs uproariously, looking a touch embarrassed by the
topic.
“In New York, you do have certain guys that are like that. But I
don’t really dress up to that,” she says.
Ward, who attended the premiere for The Black Balloon
in Sydney last week, will continue to base herself in New York,
although it is clear she has a huge affection for Western
Australia.
She’s still a supermodel - she stars in Karl Lagerfeld’s spring
2008 campaign - but her long-term goal is a serious acting career.
“I definitely have gone through some ups and downs, and sometimes I
find the easiest way is not to ever think (about the scrutiny) …
you kind of feel embarrassed or ashamed if somebody else is
expecting something or watching you,” she says. “It’s about being
comfortable, however you are.”
The Black Balloon is out now.
MODELS TURNED ACTRESSES
From posing to emoting
Lauren Bacall got her break when Howard Hawk’s
wife Slim spotted teenage model Betty Jane Perske on the cover of
Harper’s Bazaar. The ingenue got a screen test, a new
name, and ultimately a role in To Have and Have Not
(1944), opposite Humphrey Bogart. Those sultry looks belied a
steely will and she is still working.
Kim Novak’s icy blonde looks got her a job as
Mrs Deepfreeze for a fridge company before Hollywood called.
Columbia gave her a contract, but made the pneumatic model change
her first name from Marilyn so she wouldn’t seem like a wannabe
Monroe. Novak proved the better actress anyway, starring in films
such as Picnic, The Man with the Golden Arm and
Vertigo. Hitchcock didn’t think Novak was that talented:
“You think you’re getting a lot,” he said, “but you’re not.”
Cybill Shepherd started working as a model at
16, after she became Miss Teenage Memphis 1966. She featured on
dozens of magazine covers over the next four years before director
Peter Bogdanovich cast her in The Last Picture Show after
seeing her on the cover of Glamour magazine. Although she
portrayed various ethereal blondes in the 1970s, her acting career
didn’t take off until she played Maddie Hayes on TV’s
Moonlighting, opposite then-unknown Bruce Willis.
Jessica Lange posed for Karl Lagerfeld in Paris
in the early ’70s before moving to New York to work the catwalk and
take acting lessons. Her first role, as King Kong’s
plaything, in 1976, gave no sign that she would eventually win two
Oscars, one for best supporting actress for Tootsie, the
other for best actress for Blue Sky. Look for her later
this year as mad-cat “Big” Edith Bouvier Beale in a remake of
Grey Gardens.
Isabella Rossellini didn’t start modelling
until she was 28, but soon became one of the best-known models of
the 1980s, especially once she agreed to be the face of Lancome. It
only took one role, as the masochistic nightclub singer in Blue
Velvet, to erase any doubts that she could act. Rossellini
continues to choose unsettling roles, notably the baroness with
glass legs full of beer in The Saddest Music in the World
(2003).
Uma Thurman followed her modelling mother on to
the catwalk when she was 15 and by the age of 17 had been cast as
the goddess Venus in Terry Gilliam’s 1988 flop The Adventures
of Baron Munchausen. But her career was launched when she
appeared as John Malkovich’s eager pupil in Dangerous
Liaisons, released in the same year. She now works as an
actress (Kill Bill, The Producers) and a model (Lancome,
Louis Vuitton), but apparently struggles with the belief that she
is fat and ugly.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Eyes wide open

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Otherworldly supermodel Gemma Ward talks to Christine
Sams about her shift from planet fashion to indie
films.
Five minutes into meeting Gemma Ward, I start measuring the
centimetres between her eyes. It could be five centimetres, it
could be seven, but her eyes are so wide set, it’s like being drawn
into the twilight zone.
Her fame as the hot new covergirl of the world’s best-known
magazines (she’s appeared on 24 Vogue covers around the
world) has recently been overshadowed by her association with Heath
Ledger - the two Perth expats were seeing each other just before
the actor died.
Ward, 20, initially asked for no personal questions during the
interview - her grief about Ledger is still raw. Instead, Ward
wants to talk about her career shift into films and the Australian
movie The Black Balloon in which she stars. (It has
already won the Crystal Bear for best feature at the Berlin Film
Festival).
But it’s obvious that Ledger was a big influence on Ward’s
approach to her fledgling film career. Speaking directly of Ledger
for the first time since his death, Ward says: “I think he operated
from the heart.
“He really, really knew that if he was going to make a decision
to be in a film, then he needed to be really committed to it. He
wasn’t afraid to fight with people involved, he wasn’t afraid to
perhaps piss people off.
“He told me to always be a punk and ’stand up for yourself’,”
says Ward softly, her surprisingly deep, sleepy voice still holding
firm to an Australian accent.
Ward has relied on family to help pull her through a tough time.
Her older sister Sophie has now moved in to share her
multimillion-dollar triplex in New York. It’s not immediately
apparent, but across the room from where we are sitting (inside the
club lounge at Sydney’s Hotel InterContinental) a relaxed family of
four sits waiting for Gemma - very tall Perth GP Garry Ward,
elongated blonde mother Claire, and Oscar and Henry, two teenage
boys with strangely familiar eyes, playing games on their mobile
phones.
“Yeah, that’s them over there, they’re my brothers, they just
turned 17 (they’re twins),” she says. “Through my whole career,
that’s been a major thing - bringing my family with me.”
After appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair in November
2006 with George Clooney, Ward could have had her pick of “pretty
girlfriend” roles in Hollywood, but instead she took a role in an
Australian-made production, one which centres on a family living
with autism.
She certainly didn’t do it for the money, or the marquee value.
Her decision could have been influenced by old loyalties - director
Elissa Down cast Ward in a minor role in the short film Pink
Pyjamas when the future supermodel was 13, long before the
fashion world discovered her.
“It’s an incredibly touching film, you can tell it’s from the
heart,” says Ward of Black Balloon. “It’s not only a piece
of artwork, it’s a story that needs to be told.”
But then, Ward has never been mainstream. Her
multimillion-dollar modelling career is based on looking
beautifully weird.
Even her fans - the international fashion editors and designers
and photographers who clamour to work with her - call her an alien,
a bug, a creature from another dimension. Russell Marsh, the man
who launched her career when he cast the then-unknown 15-year-old
in a Prada ad campaign in October 2003, said that Ward “challenged
the concept of beauty. She’s quite strange-looking.”
Ward’s “alien” look may have come in handy at first, because
this shy Perth girl felt as if she were on another planet.
“It was the best and darkest of times, especially in the
beginning,” she says. “The day after my sixteenth birthday, I left
to go to New York and I ended up staying from then. Especially
because I was younger, it felt very much like I was learning a new
way of being.
“You don’t really question what’s happening because you’re just
soaking it in. So I kind of just accepted it, but it did take a
little while. It was hard to be alone at that age, coming from a
family that was very, very, very close.”
She might be a supermodel, but she has a refreshingly balanced
view of her image.
“I have felt it,” she says, of the pressures of fame and
recognition. “But it’s kind of dying now, because I realise you
can’t ever please everyone. Sometimes when people are constantly
wanting the fantasy or the illusion, you have to break it to them
that it’s not real, you know what I mean?” she says.
“It’s hard if you start believing that you should be really that
perfect fantasy ideal, that people start believing because of all
of the retouching.
“You can delve into that fantasy world and play with it, but
when you walk away, that’s not you. Other people can’t really
differentiate sometimes - there are a lot of young girls that I’ll
meet on the street, that’ll know me, and they’ll say ‘oh, you don’t
seem at all like a famous model’. And I’m like ‘well, that’s the
job and this is me’. We can all play dress-ups, we can all make
ourselves look like that.” Earning an estimated $US3.4 million
($A3.6 million) a year, according to Forbes magazine, Ward
has perfected her jetset chic - immaculate skin, platinum blonde
hair and a boho outfit comprising jeans and a tie-dyed t-shirt
(with a peace symbol on it), a yellow scarf wrapped artfully around
her neck.
“I’m not really sure how it has changed me,” she says of her
fortune. “The first thing might sound a little bit horrible, but I
don’t often ask how much I’m getting paid for certain things … I
know it might come back and slap me in the face when somebody rips
me off or something,” she says.
“I’m very aware of my spending, but I’m not very aware of my
income. There are certain times when I speak to my accountant, or
something will pop up, and I’ll be like ‘oh’ but it’s not really a
frontrunner in my head.”
At least her success as a model allows Ward to make a credible
shift into film, rather than just doing something to raise profile
or earn extra cash.
The film world hardly ever takes models seriously when they try
to enter the acting business. It was a stereotype that her
director, Down, had to fight when she screen-tested Ward for the
role of Jackie.
“Of course there were people who said ‘why would you want her?
She’s a model, not an actor’,” Down says. The director freely
admits that many models-turned-actors have crashed and burned, but
insists that Ward has the right stuff.
“She did exactly what I wanted. She knew the character and
really embodied it. It’s a film with Toni Collette in it, so it’s a
real performance piece. But Gemma more than holds her own.”
Casting Ward took just one phone call. “I just called her up and
said, ‘hey Gem, are you still interested in acting?’, because the
whole Gemma Ward bubble had blown up,” Down says.
“She was like ‘of course’. She was really hoping that modelling
would lead to acting and so I sent her the script and she loved it,
and came on board from the beginning.”
For her own part, Ward is hoping to emulate the decisions - and
values - of some of our biggest acting stars.
“I’ve always admired Cate Blanchett and the roles she chooses,”
says Ward. “I think she’s got an incredible discipline in a way,
with choosing roles that are going to help her grow and bring
something interesting to the world.”
Collette, who also stars in The Black Balloon, left a
real impression on Ward - even before they shared the same film
set.
“I remember Toni Collette as being one of the people who first
made me want to be an actress, because I watched The Sixth
Sense and I was blown away by her performance. I remember it
was one of the first times I watched the Oscars because I was just
desperate for her to win,” says Ward. “She’s just so gentle and
supportive of all of us; she really did look after us all (on
The Black Balloon set).”
Behind the famous names, says Ward, there are people often
filled with insecurities, just like everyone else.
“I’ve learnt, through modelling as well, that we place a lot of
emphasis on not only celebrities, but designers and people that we
all admire. How fast you learn when you work with these people that
they can be just as self-conscious or shy or just as normal and
goofy as anyone. I mean, when I met George Clooney, same thing - he
was just such a goofy guy, not at all what you’d think,” says Ward,
laughing. So she wasn’t chatted up by Clooney, then? Does Ward, as
a supermodel, have rich and famous men chasing after her all the
time? Ward laughs uproariously, looking a touch embarrassed by the
topic.
“In New York, you do have certain guys that are like that. But I
don’t really dress up to that,” she says.
Ward, who attended the premiere for The Black Balloon
in Sydney last week, will continue to base herself in New York,
although it is clear she has a huge affection for Western
Australia.
She’s still a supermodel - she stars in Karl Lagerfeld’s spring
2008 campaign - but her long-term goal is a serious acting career.
“I definitely have gone through some ups and downs, and sometimes I
find the easiest way is not to ever think (about the scrutiny) …
you kind of feel embarrassed or ashamed if somebody else is
expecting something or watching you,” she says. “It’s about being
comfortable, however you are.”
The Black Balloon is out now.
MODELS TURNED ACTRESSES
From posing to emoting
Lauren Bacall got her break when Howard Hawk’s
wife Slim spotted teenage model Betty Jane Perske on the cover of
Harper’s Bazaar. The ingenue got a screen test, a new
name, and ultimately a role in To Have and Have Not
(1944), opposite Humphrey Bogart. Those sultry looks belied a
steely will and she is still working.
Kim Novak’s icy blonde looks got her a job as
Mrs Deepfreeze for a fridge company before Hollywood called.
Columbia gave her a contract, but made the pneumatic model change
her first name from Marilyn so she wouldn’t seem like a wannabe
Monroe. Novak proved the better actress anyway, starring in films
such as Picnic, The Man with the Golden Arm and
Vertigo. Hitchcock didn’t think Novak was that talented:
“You think you’re getting a lot,” he said, “but you’re not.”
Cybill Shepherd started working as a model at
16, after she became Miss Teenage Memphis 1966. She featured on
dozens of magazine covers over the next four years before director
Peter Bogdanovich cast her in The Last Picture Show after
seeing her on the cover of Glamour magazine. Although she
portrayed various ethereal blondes in the 1970s, her acting career
didn’t take off until she played Maddie Hayes on TV’s
Moonlighting, opposite then-unknown Bruce Willis.
Jessica Lange posed for Karl Lagerfeld in Paris
in the early ’70s before moving to New York to work the catwalk and
take acting lessons. Her first role, as King Kong’s
plaything, in 1976, gave no sign that she would eventually win two
Oscars, one for best supporting actress for Tootsie, the
other for best actress for Blue Sky. Look for her later
this year as mad-cat “Big” Edith Bouvier Beale in a remake of
Grey Gardens.
Isabella Rossellini didn’t start modelling
until she was 28, but soon became one of the best-known models of
the 1980s, especially once she agreed to be the face of Lancome. It
only took one role, as the masochistic nightclub singer in Blue
Velvet, to erase any doubts that she could act. Rossellini
continues to choose unsettling roles, notably the baroness with
glass legs full of beer in The Saddest Music in the World
(2003).
Uma Thurman followed her modelling mother on to
the catwalk when she was 15 and by the age of 17 had been cast as
the goddess Venus in Terry Gilliam’s 1988 flop The Adventures
of Baron Munchausen. But her career was launched when she
appeared as John Malkovich’s eager pupil in Dangerous
Liaisons, released in the same year. She now works as an
actress (Kill Bill, The Producers) and a model (Lancome,
Louis Vuitton), but apparently struggles with the belief that she
is fat and ugly.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Eyes wide open

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

Otherworldly supermodel Gemma Ward talks to Christine
Sams about her shift from planet fashion to indie
films.
Five minutes into meeting Gemma Ward, I start measuring the
centimetres between her eyes. It could be five centimetres, it
could be seven, but her eyes are so wide set, it’s like being drawn
into the twilight zone.
Her fame as the hot new covergirl of the world’s best-known
magazines (she’s appeared on 24 Vogue covers around the
world) has recently been overshadowed by her association with Heath
Ledger - the two Perth expats were seeing each other just before
the actor died.
Ward, 20, initially asked for no personal questions during the
interview - her grief about Ledger is still raw. Instead, Ward
wants to talk about her career shift into films and the Australian
movie The Black Balloon in which she stars. (It has
already won the Crystal Bear for best feature at the Berlin Film
Festival).
But it’s obvious that Ledger was a big influence on Ward’s
approach to her fledgling film career. Speaking directly of Ledger
for the first time since his death, Ward says: “I think he operated
from the heart.
“He really, really knew that if he was going to make a decision
to be in a film, then he needed to be really committed to it. He
wasn’t afraid to fight with people involved, he wasn’t afraid to
perhaps piss people off.
“He told me to always be a punk and ’stand up for yourself’,”
says Ward softly, her surprisingly deep, sleepy voice still holding
firm to an Australian accent.
Ward has relied on family to help pull her through a tough time.
Her older sister Sophie has now moved in to share her
multimillion-dollar triplex in New York. It’s not immediately
apparent, but across the room from where we are sitting (inside the
club lounge at Sydney’s Hotel InterContinental) a relaxed family of
four sits waiting for Gemma - very tall Perth GP Garry Ward,
elongated blonde mother Claire, and Oscar and Henry, two teenage
boys with strangely familiar eyes, playing games on their mobile
phones.
“Yeah, that’s them over there, they’re my brothers, they just
turned 17 (they’re twins),” she says. “Through my whole career,
that’s been a major thing - bringing my family with me.”
After appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair in November
2006 with George Clooney, Ward could have had her pick of “pretty
girlfriend” roles in Hollywood, but instead she took a role in an
Australian-made production, one which centres on a family living
with autism.
She certainly didn’t do it for the money, or the marquee value.
Her decision could have been influenced by old loyalties - director
Elissa Down cast Ward in a minor role in the short film Pink
Pyjamas when the future supermodel was 13, long before the
fashion world discovered her.
“It’s an incredibly touching film, you can tell it’s from the
heart,” says Ward of Black Balloon. “It’s not only a piece
of artwork, it’s a story that needs to be told.”
But then, Ward has never been mainstream. Her
multimillion-dollar modelling career is based on looking
beautifully weird.
Even her fans - the international fashion editors and designers
and photographers who clamour to work with her - call her an alien,
a bug, a creature from another dimension. Russell Marsh, the man
who launched her career when he cast the then-unknown 15-year-old
in a Prada ad campaign in October 2003, said that Ward “challenged
the concept of beauty. She’s quite strange-looking.”
Ward’s “alien” look may have come in handy at first, because
this shy Perth girl felt as if she were on another planet.
“It was the best and darkest of times, especially in the
beginning,” she says. “The day after my sixteenth birthday, I left
to go to New York and I ended up staying from then. Especially
because I was younger, it felt very much like I was learning a new
way of being.
“You don’t really question what’s happening because you’re just
soaking it in. So I kind of just accepted it, but it did take a
little while. It was hard to be alone at that age, coming from a
family that was very, very, very close.”
She might be a supermodel, but she has a refreshingly balanced
view of her image.
“I have felt it,” she says, of the pressures of fame and
recognition. “But it’s kind of dying now, because I realise you
can’t ever please everyone. Sometimes when people are constantly
wanting the fantasy or the illusion, you have to break it to them
that it’s not real, you know what I mean?” she says.
“It’s hard if you start believing that you should be really that
perfect fantasy ideal, that people start believing because of all
of the retouching.
“You can delve into that fantasy world and play with it, but
when you walk away, that’s not you. Other people can’t really
differentiate sometimes - there are a lot of young girls that I’ll
meet on the street, that’ll know me, and they’ll say ‘oh, you don’t
seem at all like a famous model’. And I’m like ‘well, that’s the
job and this is me’. We can all play dress-ups, we can all make
ourselves look like that.” Earning an estimated $US3.4 million
($A3.6 million) a year, according to Forbes magazine, Ward
has perfected her jetset chic - immaculate skin, platinum blonde
hair and a boho outfit comprising jeans and a tie-dyed t-shirt
(with a peace symbol on it), a yellow scarf wrapped artfully around
her neck.
“I’m not really sure how it has changed me,” she says of her
fortune. “The first thing might sound a little bit horrible, but I
don’t often ask how much I’m getting paid for certain things … I
know it might come back and slap me in the face when somebody rips
me off or something,” she says.
“I’m very aware of my spending, but I’m not very aware of my
income. There are certain times when I speak to my accountant, or
something will pop up, and I’ll be like ‘oh’ but it’s not really a
frontrunner in my head.”
At least her success as a model allows Ward to make a credible
shift into film, rather than just doing something to raise profile
or earn extra cash.
The film world hardly ever takes models seriously when they try
to enter the acting business. It was a stereotype that her
director, Down, had to fight when she screen-tested Ward for the
role of Jackie.
“Of course there were people who said ‘why would you want her?
She’s a model, not an actor’,” Down says. The director freely
admits that many models-turned-actors have crashed and burned, but
insists that Ward has the right stuff.
“She did exactly what I wanted. She knew the character and
really embodied it. It’s a film with Toni Collette in it, so it’s a
real performance piece. But Gemma more than holds her own.”
Casting Ward took just one phone call. “I just called her up and
said, ‘hey Gem, are you still interested in acting?’, because the
whole Gemma Ward bubble had blown up,” Down says.
“She was like ‘of course’. She was really hoping that modelling
would lead to acting and so I sent her the script and she loved it,
and came on board from the beginning.”
For her own part, Ward is hoping to emulate the decisions - and
values - of some of our biggest acting stars.
“I’ve always admired Cate Blanchett and the roles she chooses,”
says Ward. “I think she’s got an incredible discipline in a way,
with choosing roles that are going to help her grow and bring
something interesting to the world.”
Collette, who also stars in The Black Balloon, left a
real impression on Ward - even before they shared the same film
set.
“I remember Toni Collette as being one of the people who first
made me want to be an actress, because I watched The Sixth
Sense and I was blown away by her performance. I remember it
was one of the first times I watched the Oscars because I was just
desperate for her to win,” says Ward. “She’s just so gentle and
supportive of all of us; she really did look after us all (on
The Black Balloon set).”
Behind the famous names, says Ward, there are people often
filled with insecurities, just like everyone else.
“I’ve learnt, through modelling as well, that we place a lot of
emphasis on not only celebrities, but designers and people that we
all admire. How fast you learn when you work with these people that
they can be just as self-conscious or shy or just as normal and
goofy as anyone. I mean, when I met George Clooney, same thing - he
was just such a goofy guy, not at all what you’d think,” says Ward,
laughing. So she wasn’t chatted up by Clooney, then? Does Ward, as
a supermodel, have rich and famous men chasing after her all the
time? Ward laughs uproariously, looking a touch embarrassed by the
topic.
“In New York, you do have certain guys that are like that. But I
don’t really dress up to that,” she says.
Ward, who attended the premiere for The Black Balloon
in Sydney last week, will continue to base herself in New York,
although it is clear she has a huge affection for Western
Australia.
She’s still a supermodel - she stars in Karl Lagerfeld’s spring
2008 campaign - but her long-term goal is a serious acting career.
“I definitely have gone through some ups and downs, and sometimes I
find the easiest way is not to ever think (about the scrutiny) …
you kind of feel embarrassed or ashamed if somebody else is
expecting something or watching you,” she says. “It’s about being
comfortable, however you are.”
The Black Balloon is out now.
MODELS TURNED ACTRESSES
From posing to emoting
Lauren Bacall got her break when Howard Hawk’s
wife Slim spotted teenage model Betty Jane Perske on the cover of
Harper’s Bazaar. The ingenue got a screen test, a new
name, and ultimately a role in To Have and Have Not
(1944), opposite Humphrey Bogart. Those sultry looks belied a
steely will and she is still working.
Kim Novak’s icy blonde looks got her a job as
Mrs Deepfreeze for a fridge company before Hollywood called.
Columbia gave her a contract, but made the pneumatic model change
her first name from Marilyn so she wouldn’t seem like a wannabe
Monroe. Novak proved the better actress anyway, starring in films
such as Picnic, The Man with the Golden Arm and
Vertigo. Hitchcock didn’t think Novak was that talented:
“You think you’re getting a lot,” he said, “but you’re not.”
Cybill Shepherd started working as a model at
16, after she became Miss Teenage Memphis 1966. She featured on
dozens of magazine covers over the next four years before director
Peter Bogdanovich cast her in The Last Picture Show after
seeing her on the cover of Glamour magazine. Although she
portrayed various ethereal blondes in the 1970s, her acting career
didn’t take off until she played Maddie Hayes on TV’s
Moonlighting, opposite then-unknown Bruce Willis.
Jessica Lange posed for Karl Lagerfeld in Paris
in the early ’70s before moving to New York to work the catwalk and
take acting lessons. Her first role, as King Kong’s
plaything, in 1976, gave no sign that she would eventually win two
Oscars, one for best supporting actress for Tootsie, the
other for best actress for Blue Sky. Look for her later
this year as mad-cat “Big” Edith Bouvier Beale in a remake of
Grey Gardens.
Isabella Rossellini didn’t start modelling
until she was 28, but soon became one of the best-known models of
the 1980s, especially once she agreed to be the face of Lancome. It
only took one role, as the masochistic nightclub singer in Blue
Velvet, to erase any doubts that she could act. Rossellini
continues to choose unsettling roles, notably the baroness with
glass legs full of beer in The Saddest Music in the World
(2003).
Uma Thurman followed her modelling mother on to
the catwalk when she was 15 and by the age of 17 had been cast as
the goddess Venus in Terry Gilliam’s 1988 flop The Adventures
of Baron Munchausen. But her career was launched when she
appeared as John Malkovich’s eager pupil in Dangerous
Liaisons, released in the same year. She now works as an
actress (Kill Bill, The Producers) and a model (Lancome,
Louis Vuitton), but apparently struggles with the belief that she
is fat and ugly.

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Related posts

Eva comes to the party

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

SHE is the low-budget documentary maker taking Hollywood by
storm.
Eva Orner, the only Australian nominated for this year’s Oscars
aside from Cate Blanchett, has been partying hard with glamorous
stars including Cameron Diaz and Drew Barrymore ahead of the
Academy Awards tomorrow.
Orner, 38, is relishing her chance to immerse herself in
Hollywood’s lavish lifestyle.
“It’s so funny. I’m sitting in a lovely car being driven to a
party in the Hollywood hills,” Orner said over the phone from Los
Angeles yesterday, on her way to a dinner honouring female
nominees.
“Last night we had dinner with Mike Moore, then we went to a
party with Cameron Diaz and Drew Barrymore . . . so you know,
there’s a lot happening.”
Orner, who is from Melbourne but is now based in New York, has
been nominated for best documentary feature as the producer of
Taxi To The Dark Side. While the documentary deals with
gritty issues surrounding the use of torture by the Bush
Administration, Orner is now seeing another side to America’s
culture: exclusive celebrity parties.
“I’m feeling excited, grateful, exhausted, a little overwhelmed
. . . and very lucky,” she said. “It’s really exciting.”
Orner has chosen a Collette Dinnigan gown for the Oscars
ceremony at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, after being inundated
with offers from local designers. At one of the parties preceding
the awards, Orner wore Jan Logan earrings, flown in directly from
Hong Kong.
“Everyone here in LA is laughing, saying ‘you are the most
hooked-up person’,” she said. “This whole Australian mafia thing is
out of control. My dress, my shoes, my bags, my jewels - it was all
done through Australians. I just feel like everyone’s really
rallying.”
Orner won’t be the only lesser-known Australian walking the red
carpet alongside big-name stars including dual nominee Cate
Blanchett and presenter Nicole Kidman.
A choreographer from Sydney has also been flown in to oversee
one of the major stage productions at the awards. John “Cha Cha”
O’Connell, who lives in Bondi, flew to Los Angeles 10 days ago to
prepare a sequence based on two songs from the film
Enchanted (he was the choreographer for the feature
film).
“At the moment I’ve been so busy doing it, but occasionally I
have a few moments where I think ‘oh my God’, this is rather big,”
O’Connell said, taking a short break from Oscars rehearsals
yesterday. “The atmosphere is just building and building here.”
It is the first time the Aussie choreographer, who taught Nicole
Kidman to dance in Moulin Rouge and worked on other Baz
Luhrmann films including Australia and Romeo +
Juliet, has been invited to work on the Academy Awards
show.
O’Connell’s parents, Lawrence and Frances O’Connell from
Thirroul, near Wollongong, will watch a delayed Oscars telecast on
television in Australia. Eva Orner’s mother, Diane Orner, still
lives in Melbourne, and she will be checking the internet and
awaiting a phone call tomorrow, to see whether her daughter has won
an Academy Award.
Blanchett is Australia’s most high-profile nominee, with
nominations for best actress (Elizabeth: The Golden Age) and
best supporting actress (I’m Not There).
The ceremony is due to take place at about midday tomorrow,
Australian time.
csams@sunherald.com.au

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Eva comes to the party

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

SHE is the low-budget documentary maker taking Hollywood by
storm.
Eva Orner, the only Australian nominated for this year’s Oscars
aside from Cate Blanchett, has been partying hard with glamorous
stars including Cameron Diaz and Drew Barrymore ahead of the
Academy Awards tomorrow.
Orner, 38, is relishing her chance to immerse herself in
Hollywood’s lavish lifestyle.
“It’s so funny. I’m sitting in a lovely car being driven to a
party in the Hollywood hills,” Orner said over the phone from Los
Angeles yesterday, on her way to a dinner honouring female
nominees.
“Last night we had dinner with Mike Moore, then we went to a
party with Cameron Diaz and Drew Barrymore . . . so you know,
there’s a lot happening.”
Orner, who is from Melbourne but is now based in New York, has
been nominated for best documentary feature as the producer of
Taxi To The Dark Side. While the documentary deals with
gritty issues surrounding the use of torture by the Bush
Administration, Orner is now seeing another side to America’s
culture: exclusive celebrity parties.
“I’m feeling excited, grateful, exhausted, a little overwhelmed
. . . and very lucky,” she said. “It’s really exciting.”
Orner has chosen a Collette Dinnigan gown for the Oscars
ceremony at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, after being inundated
with offers from local designers. At one of the parties preceding
the awards, Orner wore Jan Logan earrings, flown in directly from
Hong Kong.
“Everyone here in LA is laughing, saying ‘you are the most
hooked-up person’,” she said. “This whole Australian mafia thing is
out of control. My dress, my shoes, my bags, my jewels - it was all
done through Australians. I just feel like everyone’s really
rallying.”
Orner won’t be the only lesser-known Australian walking the red
carpet alongside big-name stars including dual nominee Cate
Blanchett and presenter Nicole Kidman.
A choreographer from Sydney has also been flown in to oversee
one of the major stage productions at the awards. John “Cha Cha”
O’Connell, who lives in Bondi, flew to Los Angeles 10 days ago to
prepare a sequence based on two songs from the film
Enchanted (he was the choreographer for the feature
film).
“At the moment I’ve been so busy doing it, but occasionally I
have a few moments where I think ‘oh my God’, this is rather big,”
O’Connell said, taking a short break from Oscars rehearsals
yesterday. “The atmosphere is just building and building here.”
It is the first time the Aussie choreographer, who taught Nicole
Kidman to dance in Moulin Rouge and worked on other Baz
Luhrmann films including Australia and Romeo +
Juliet, has been invited to work on the Academy Awards
show.
O’Connell’s parents, Lawrence and Frances O’Connell from
Thirroul, near Wollongong, will watch a delayed Oscars telecast on
television in Australia. Eva Orner’s mother, Diane Orner, still
lives in Melbourne, and she will be checking the internet and
awaiting a phone call tomorrow, to see whether her daughter has won
an Academy Award.
Blanchett is Australia’s most high-profile nominee, with
nominations for best actress (Elizabeth: The Golden Age) and
best supporting actress (I’m Not There).
The ceremony is due to take place at about midday tomorrow,
Australian time.
csams@sunherald.com.au

Tags: , , , , , , ,