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Gwyneth Paltrow Filmography
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Gwyneth Paltrow Resources
Gwyneth Paltrow Music:
 | Duets (2000 Film) Various Artists - Soundtracks, Andre Braugher, Paul Giamatti, Huey Lewis, Gwyneth Paltrow, Scott Speedman, Lochlyn Munro, Carol Alexander, Michael Rogers and Amanda Kravat
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Hollywood Records RELEASE DATE: 12 September, 2000 |
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 | Great Expectations (1998 Film) Various Artists - Soundtracks, Gwyneth Paltrow, Hank Azaria, Chris Cooper, Anne Bancroft, Robert De Niro, Josh Mostel, Kim Dickens, Nell Campbell and Gabriel Mann
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Atlantic / Wea RELEASE DATE: 06 January, 1998 |
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 | Great Expectations: The Score (1998 Film) Patrick Doyle, Gwyneth Paltrow, Hank Azaria, Chris Cooper, Anne Bancroft, Robert De Niro, Josh Mostel, Kim Dickens, Nell Campbell and Gabriel Mann
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Atlantic / Wea RELEASE DATE: 06 January, 1998 |
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 | The Talented Mr. Ripley: Music from the Motion Picture Score Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law, Cate Blanchett, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jack Davenport, James Rebhorn, Sergio Rubini, Philip Baker Hall and Celia Weston
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Sony RELEASE DATE: 23 November, 1999 |
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 | Se7en: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Various Artists, Morgan Freeman, Gwyneth Paltrow, R. Lee Ermey, Andrew Kevin Walker, Daniel Zacapa, John Cassini, Bob Mack, Peter Crombie and Reg E. Cathey
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Tvt RELEASE DATE: 26 September, 1995 |
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 | Bounce: Music from and Inspired by the Miramax Motion Picture (2000 film) Various Artists - Soundtracks, Gwyneth Paltrow, Natasha Henstridge, Edward Edwards, Jennifer Grey, Tony Goldwyn, Lisa Carpenter-Prewitt, Lisa Joyner, Richard Saxton and Caroline Aaron
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Arista RELEASE DATE: 14 November, 2000 |
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 | Shallow Hal Gwyneth Paltrow, Jack Black, Jason Alexander, Joe Viterelli, Rene Kirby, Bruce McGill, Anthony Robbins, Susan Ward, Zen Gesner and Brooke Burns
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Island RELEASE DATE: 06 November, 2001 |
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 | The Pallbearer David Schwimmer, Gwyneth Paltrow, Michael Rapaport, Toni Collette, Carol Kane, Michael Vartan, Bitty Schram, Jean De Baer, Elizabeth Franz and Mark Margolis
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Hollywood Records RELEASE DATE: 30 April, 1996 |
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 | Sylvia Gabriel Yared, Alison Bruce, Amira Casar, Daniel Craig, Blythe Danner, Lucy Davenport, Julian Firth, Jeremy Fowlds, Michael Gambon and Sarah Guyler
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Varese Sarabande RELEASE DATE: 18 November, 2003 |
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 | Flesh And Bone (1993 Film) Thomas Newman, Ron Kuhlman, Jerry Swindall, Ryan Bohls, James Caan, Dennis Quaid, Ez Perez, Craig Erickson, Barbara Alyn Woods and Gwyneth Paltrow
EDITION: Audio CD MANUFACTURER: Varese Sarabande RELEASE DATE: 09 November, 1993 |
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Latest Film News
Latest news on Gwyneth Paltrow
EuropeBBC Trust criticises Jonathan Ross over lewd comment to Gwyneth Paltrow
The BBC Trust today criticised a further incident of bad language involving Jonathan Ross, but said his three month suspension without pay was adequate punishment for the "Sachsgate" scandal.In its final report on the row that engulfed the BBC last month, and which led to the resignation of two Radio 2 executives and comedian Russell Brand, the trust also said that BBC management should investigate another incident involving Brand on Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles' show.The trust said bad language in an episode of Ross's pre-recorded BBC1 chatshow, Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, in which the presenter told Hollywood actor Gwyneth Paltrow he "would fuck her" was "gratuitous and unnecessarily offensive". BBC management had originally reviewed the show, broadcast in May this year, and cleared it for broadcast.However, the trust today said it disagreed with that judgment, adding that the comment was made in an "overly sexual way" and that it had upheld a number of complaints made about the edition of Friday Night with Jonathan Ross.The trust also asked BBC management to investigate comments that Brand made on Moyles's show about dancer Georgina Baillie, who became embroiled in the Sachsgate affair after Ross and Brand left lewd messages about her on her grandfather Andrew Sachs' answerphone.Moyles and Brand had a conversation live on Radio 1 at 8.23am on October 21, three days after the offensive messages were broadcast on Radio 2 - but before the Sachsgate affair had blown up into a major crisis for the BBC.Brand told Moyles he had met Baillie and said he had "met her brains out".BBC trustee Richard Tait said today that the trust had taken the view that the comment was referring to Baillie's private life.The trust said it was down to BBC management to decide if any further sanctions were necessary over this incident.In its report on the Sachsgate row, the trust said the calls made to Sachs were "grossly offensive" and that there was no justification for broadcasting them.The trust added that the material broadcast on Brand's Radio 2 show on Saturday October 18 was a "deplorable intrusion" into the private lives of Sachs and Baillie. There was no "editorial justification" and no "informed consent obtained" for airing the messages, the trust added.Tait said there had been three failures by BBC management over the decision to broadcast the pre-recorded messages - failure to exercise editorial control, to follow established compliance systems and a failure of judgment in taking editorial decisions. But he added the trust considered the BBC's response to the controversy to be appropriate. The BBC Trust chairman, Sir Michael Lyons, said the corporation's regulatory and governance body would not be taking any further action against Ross."We have underlined very clearly that it is not the job of the trust to make decisions about the terms and conditions of performers or the sanctions that are applied to them when they are found to be wanting," Lyons added."We are very clear that the director general has taken the right action with respect to Jonathan Ross," he said."The common issue is not who the performers are. The common issue is editorial failings ... the failings here are in the role of the BBC as the publisher of the material."Lyons said that the offending material transmitted on Brand's Radio 2 show should not have been recorded in the first instance and in the BBC Trust's view should then have been edited out before the broadcast. "The failings we have discussed this morning are serious but they are being addressed," he added.Lyons said that the BBC "needs to learn some lessons" but it usually got it right. He described it as a "disappointing and dismal episode", but said the director general, Mark Thompson, and his team had responded constructively.Lyons also said it was "not rocket science" to have predicted that putting Ross in the same studio as Brand could lead to trouble. "You could have predicted a risky situation," he added.· To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 7239 9857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 7278 2332.· If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".Russell BrandJonathan RossBBCTelevisionGwyneth PaltrowRadioguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Published: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 12:17:42 GMT - Source: Guardian.Co.Uk - Read the articleEuropeImogen Fox on Kate Moss and the messy bob
When Kate Moss changes her hairstyle, it's usually blown up into a Big Style Event - discussed at length by the tabloids and celebrated by the weekly fashion mags. But back in early September when Moss cut her long, bleached rock'n'roll hair into a longish, side-parted scruffy bob, only a modicum of fuss was made. Perhaps we didn't notice because we were all far too distracted by Sarah Palin's demi-beehive or Cheryl Cole's heavy curtain of extensions (which, incidentally, are looking more Audrey Hepburn than Wag by the minute). But now, after almost two months have passed, it seems that Moss's cut was an early indication of a shift in the tonsorial landscape. As if by stealth, scruffy bobbed hair has become the cut to have.Strangely, considering that James Bond films don't usually count as significant in style terms, it is the Quantum of Solace posters that have crystallised this look into the contender for 'do of the year. Witness Olga Kurylenko walking away barefoot from some explosion, but miraculously still clutching her shoes. Yes, the sooty blusher is noteworthy, but it is her artfully dishevelled bob that really steals the scene. And it isn't just on widescreen that the scruffy bob is gaining ground. Kurylenko's hair is echoed on the small screen by the studiously unkempt bob of Alexa Chung. Over on the red carpet, film-maker and style leader Sofia Coppola has freshened up her brunette locks by lopping off a few inches to create a shoulder-grazing bob. Meanwhile, Gwyneth Paltrow has a somewhat less scruffy version of the cut. Even on the campaign trail the bob is winning out. Michelle Obama's relaxed bob with long side-swept fringe suggests both an easy confidence and a woman in tune with the times. Here is a cut that can travel from the clubs of Soho to Hollywood via Washington without losing its shine.In fashion, the trends that stick are rarely the trends that are forced upon us, they're much more likely to be the ones that creep up on us, as if by accident. Think how reluctant we were to take up the jumpsuit, yet with a thousand times less spin, we are suddenly all happily wearing ankle boots. It's the same with this year's reincarnation of the bob. The cut isn't some style diktat from on high, just an easy update that most women can pull off. Marianne Jones, deputy editor at Grazia magazine and long-time bob wearer, thinks that the core appeal of the style lies in this democratic element. "Every other woman in the Grazia office has a bob of some description," she says. "The cut is feminine and manageable at the same time." Jones puts the current proliferation of the bob in the celebrity world down to similar, quite pragmatic reasons. "I think Kate's just got to that age and stage in her life when she realises that a shorter cut is more flattering than wearing it long and flat, which drags your face down. Just look at Gwyneth Paltrow and how much sexier she now looks with her just-hitting-the-shoulder bob."In fact, Moss's bob was not the result of a long consultation with her hairdresser. She cut it herself because, according to her hairdresser and friend James Brown, "she fancied a change". He insists that he was only there to supervise. "I love a cut that looks DIY, even though I wouldn't recommend it, but Kate knows what she's doing. The look comes from 1920s and 30s schoolgirls who had their hair cut by their mums by dividing it into four sections," he explains. So, does Brown think that we are in the midst of a bob moment? "We're having an 'all-sorts' moment, but if there is one look that is more on-trend than anything else, then it is the bob."The DIY aspect of Moss's 'do hints at more subtle semantics of the scruffy bob. It is meant to look hacked off, not carefully snipped, giving the wearer a devil-may-care attitude. It is the hair of the kooky bad-girl of cinema (think Juliette Lewis in Kalifornia) the polar opposite of the sleek, razor-sharp Sasoon-shiny bob. The messed-up bob of Kurylenko isn't accidental either. It is sexy without being try-hard, which in turn makes it the perfect modern Bond-girl baddie cut. For Brown, it is Julie Christie, especially in Shampoo, who is the most iconic exponent of this look. "She's had a messed-up bob pretty much all her career. She looks like the kind of woman who does it herself, rather than spending loads of time and money on her hair," he says.With both credibility and practicality on its side, the bob is likely to be the cut to have well into 2009, and the coming recession adds weight to this theory. Not because hair lengths are in inverted synchronicity with the rise and fall of the economy, but for the more prosaic reason that a haircut is a far cheaper but more dramatic way to change your look, superior to just buying more clothes. Moreover, achieving the completely on-trend version of this look - the hacked-off messed-up bob - is unbelievably easy, because even the cheapest of hairdressers can't get that cut wrong.Kate MossFashionBeautyWomenCelebrityguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Published: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 00:14:12 GMT - Source: Guardian.Co.Uk - Read the articleNews}Paltrow 'supporting' pal Madonna
Hollywood actress Gwyneth Paltrow is "supporting" her friend Madonna as the singer divorces husband Guy Ritchie.
Published: Tue, 21 Oct 2008 10:24:18 GMT - Source: News.Bbc.Co.Uk - Read the article
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