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June 21, 2002 - Image 67

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2002-06-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

DISCUSS YOUR
FUTURES
OVER LUNCH!

WINONA RYDER's current legal
woes are the last thing she needs —
because her career is on a desperate
downward spiral, fear members of
Hollywood's movie industry.
The two-time Oscar nominee's latest
films, Lost Souls and Autumn in New
York, bombed, leaving sources question-
ing the future of Ryder's acting career.
And now the actress — born
Winona Horowitz — is set to stand
trial on four felony counts of shoplift-
ing. She is charged with stealing
$4,760 worth of merchandise from
the posh Beverly Hills, Calif., Saks
Fifth Avenue store last December.
But her Hollywood counterparts
believe that her ailing career is as much
to be worried about as her charges.
One female star tells
Newsweek, "She was supposed
to be Hollywood's darling, the
cute one who got all the rock-
ers." But "she lost that kind of
cool a long time ago and
watched the GWYNETH
PALTROWs and the J.LOs
take over."
The actress may also have
alienated the Hollywood play-
ers who determine what
movies get made and who
stars in what, the female
celebrity adds.
She explains, "She's nice. But I have
to say I always thought she was kind of
odd. I think that's what a lot of
Hollywood thinks."
Newsweek also reported that Ryder's
December arrest for alleged shoplifting
wasn't the first time she had been caught.
The publication claims the Los
Angeles district attorney's office has evi-
dence that the Little Women star was
discovered stealing before her December
arrest. Ryder pled not guilty in a June
14 court appearance.

The creative team behind Airplane
spoofs are lending their voices to an
appeal for a resolution to the conflict
in the Middle East.
DAVID and JERRY ZUCKER have
felt so passionate about the recent spate
of suicide bombings by Palestinian ter-
rorists in Israel that they have taken out
an advertisement in the Hollywood
trade papers to call for peace.
In a statement, the Zuckers join other
leading Jewish producers in Hollywood,
claiming, "In this hour of peril and
anguish, we call upon the continuing
support of America for our Israeli allies.

We affirm our love for the State of Israel
and the hope of the Jewish people."

Talk-show host JERRY SPRINGER is
becoming a movie star with a role in the
next STEVEN SODERBERGH film.
The former Cincinnati mayor will
play a role in Citizen Jury, set in a
New Orleans courtroom where the tri-
als are televised and the viewing public
plays the jury.
Springer, who has just signed a new
four-year contract for his talk show,
has no intention of slowing down.
He says, "There is no reason to stop. I
still enjoy it. I have fun. It's not too hard
work and it doesn't require a lot of me.
It's so popular because it's so stupid. No
one takes it seriously. It's just an escape."

Will Winona Ryder's
co-starring role with
Adam Sandler in the
upcoming "Mr.
Deeds" rejuvenate her
movie career, or will
shoplifting charges put
an end to a once
promising future?

Former White House intern MONI-
CA LEWINSKY has been relieved of
jury duty in New York after tearfully
admitting she couldn't cope with a
day in court.
The 28-year-old, who shocked
America with her affair with former
president BILL CLINTON, was
called for jury duty in Manhattan on
June 6 but asked to be excused.

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ADOLF HITLER is set to go prime-
time. The Nazi fiihrer will be the sub-
ject of a four-hour mini-series that has
been commissioned by CBS.
Hitler will be based on author IAN
KERSHAW's biography Hitler: 1889-
1936 Hubris and will focus on the
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Past projects have dealt more with the
world around the German dictator and
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bosses were worried about showcasing
an obviously unsympathetic character.
But CBS is now putting the project
on the fast track to air next year.

© 2002 WORLD ENTERTAINMENT NEWS NETWORK.
All global rights reserved. No unauthorized copying or
redistribution perm i Red.

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6/21

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67

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