Tag Archive | "Janet Donovan"

Hollywood on the Potomac: Sites and Sounds

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Sites and Sounds


The Daily Caller launches, Journopalooza’s ‘Suspicious Package,’ and a star-studded Kennedy Center Honors Brunch

By Janet Donovan

Tucker Carlson greets guest at his launch party as Juleanna Glover looks on.

Tucker Carlson greets guest at his launch party as Juleanna Glover looks on.

OUT TO LAUNCH

So many people came to Juleanna Glover’s house to help inaugurate the Daily Caller that partygoers looking to find the website’s founder, Tucker Carlson, had to call him on their cell phones.

The Daily Caller went live on Jan. 11, adding yet another must-read for news junkies – who should probably file a sleep deprivation class action suit against Matt Drudge. (After all, his Drudge Report pretty much started the phenomenon).

Has Tucker finally hit his stride? We hope so. He’s hosted or been a guest on all the major cable networks with multiple writing positions along the way. The consensus according to radio talk show host Bill Press: “If anybody can cut through, thrive, and survive, it’s Tucker. He’s always fresh and different.”

Guests included media stalwarts Ann Compton and Christopher Hitchens as well as hip young reporters Emily Heil of Roll Call and Kiki Ryan of Politico. The big surprise of the night: “Plamegate” scandal figure I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby circulating – mostly unrecognized – in the supposedly politically-savvy crowd.

Tucker’s take: “It hasn’t been a big month for sleeping. The launch has been an adventure.  Ten years from now, when virtually all news is delivered digitally online and there are hundreds of sites doing pretty much exactly what we do, I’m sure we’ll have competitors. As of today we have only friends.”

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Wars and Hoaxes

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Wars and Hoaxes


Films on recent conflicts draw critical attention and two wily rogues hoodwink the media while tweaking Sarah Palin.

By Janet Donovan

Woody Harrelson and Jonathan Capehert

Woody Harrelson and Jonathan Capehert. Photo by Tony Powell

DANGEROUS MAN VS THE MESSENGER

It was a Sophie’s Choice moment at the finale of the Impact Film Festival, a Washington, D.C.-based non-profit event created as a platform for documentary and narrative filmmaking. Having to choose between simultaneous screenings of The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers and The Messenger starring Woody Harrelson was a challenging call. The Messenger won.

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Hollywood on the Potomac: A Film and a Festa

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Hollywood on the Potomac: A Film and a Festa


Michael Moore excoriates Wall Street, Italians celebrate their unique heritage.

By Janet Donovan

Michael Moore with Kandy Stroud at the opening of “Capitalism: A Love Story.”

Michael Moore with Kandy Stroud at the opening of “Capitalism: A Love Story.”

MOORE THAN THEY BARGAINED FOR

You have to love someone who stands on Wall Street and screams into a megaphone demanding his money back while surrounded by New York’s finest. But that’s exactly what Michael Moore did in his latest flick: “Capitalism: A Love Story.” Hey, we all want our money back and you know New York’s Finest want theirs, too. Much of the controversy is due to the bailout of the big financial houses.

Long considered a weirdo in some circles, Moore may have finally come into the mainstream by exposing the greedy wonder boys of the financial world and the problems of unemployment, housing, and medical care in America. He wants President Obama to get tough, really tough, especially on health care reform. That played out on Saturday in the House of Representatives where the bill narrowly passed. It now heads to the Senate where it faces a filibuster by Democrat-turned-Independent Sen. Joe Lieberman.

Turhs out Moore is not so misguided; perhaps it was his megaphone that orchestrated the cry for help on universal health care. Someone must be listening.

He arrived at his Uptown Theatre premiere in his trademark cap and glasses and was affable and laid back as he strolled the red carpet to accommodate the reporters waiting patiently for his very late arrival.

After a brief Q&A he joined guests at the Irish pub next door where he graciously engaged in photo ops with Christina Sevilla, Terry Robinson, David Corn, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, among many others.

All were grateful that food and drinks were on the house – because somebody else is spending our money.

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Mamma Mia! That’s Italian

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Mamma Mia! That’s Italian


The National Italian American Foundation celebrate in style with their lavish annual gala

By Janet Donovan

Connie Britton with Carla Gugino. Photograph by Betsy Spruill Clarke

Connie Britton with Carla Gugino. Photograph by Betsy Spruill Clarke

 Where was Gina Lolobrigida? The longtime perennial star of the National Italian American Foundation’s annual gala was nowhere to be found this year. You can’t help loving someone who has been quoted saying, “I studied painting and sculpting at school and became an actress by mistake … I’ve had many lovers and still have romances.” (She is 82.) We missed her. Another favorite, Yogi Berra, was also MIA. That did not, however, stop Cafe Milano proprietor Franco Nuchese from hosting a lavish gala eve dinner where Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi starred as the nation’s most powerful Italian-American woman. Moving graciously between guests, she and her husband, Paul, enjoyed a bit of down time after most of the other guests were gone and after lots of hand shaking, chitchat, and photo ops.

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Bricks and Proverbs

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Hollywood on the Potomac: Bricks and Proverbs


“Twin City” mayors, global opportunities for women, and dinner with the “Nanny”

By Janet Donovan

Cory Booker, Adrian Fenty

Cory Booker, Adrian Fenty

Separated at Birth
The only thing separating Newark, N.J. Mayor Cory Booker and our own Mayor Adrian Fenty is 198 miles, “as the crow flies.” They share not only a passion for their respective cities, but bear an uncanny physical resemblance: tall, lean, and follicly challenged. It’s no surprise they are often mistaken for one another, and that was the case when they both appeared at a screening of Brick City, a five-part miniseries that premiered on the Sundance Channel on Sept. 21.
While the series is about the fight to eliminate crime, poverty, and corruption in Newark, Booker realizes such problems are endemic to all inner cities. “It is a kind of a sharing of spirit that helps us through difficult times,” he said, “especially in this economy when we have challenges and appreciate having other brothers and sisters that are in the process.”
Executive producer Forest Whitaker came to express his deep commitment to the project (as did directors Mark Benjamin and Marc Levin). The Oscar-winning actor is so far removed from Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, whom he portrayed in The Last King of Scotland, that some guests wondered if he had actually shown up. The confusion was caused by his having trimmed down to half the size he was when he played the role.

Chinese Proverbs
“I got a letter from Harvard the other day, something I’ve always wanted,” Tammy Haddad joked, adding that it was about her women’s rights work, not an invitation for a fellowship. That was before she introduced her guests of honor, dual-Pulitzer-Prize-winning New York Times columnist Nick Kristof and his wife, Sheryl WuDunn, at a party celebrating the couple’s recent book, Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide.
The title refers to a Chinese proverb roughly translated as, “Talking about a problem is half the solution; doing something about it is the other half.”
Love those Chinese proverbs. They link to everything in life. Take for example when Kristof said that basically we’re all messengers, but the messenger also has to get the message. Proverb: “To talk much and get nowhere is the same as climbing a tree to catch a fish.”
Women’s Global Issues Ambassador Melanne Verveer got into proverb mode as well when she noted the need for women to realize their potential. Proverb: “Raise your sail one foot and you get ten feet of wind.”
Enjoying the buffet, bar, and comfy settees on the lawn were Mike McCurry, Ann Dickerson, John Coale, Juleanna Glover, Anita McBride, Elsa Walsh. and Mike Allen. Proverb: “Enjoy yourself. It’s later than you think.”

The Real Anna Wintour …
She’s been called everything from merely ruthless to the anti-Christ – although Nostradamus would have challenged the latter. If you saw The Devil Wears Prada starring Meryl Streep, which was supposedly laced with nasty vignettes about Vogue’s legendary editor-in-chief, you might tend to agree with the portrayal. However, it would be worth the effort to reconsider by seeing the recently released September Issue, a compelling look into the everyday life of a talented, hardworking woman who drives the fashion industry and is, yes, also a piece of work.
If you made it to the Gilt Group’s after-party at the W Hotel, you saw enough Manolo, Prada, Dior, and Chanel to convice anyone that Washington is no longer “Hollywood for ugly people.”

The Goody Bag
Guests at a dinner in honor of Fran Drescher at Teatro Goldoni were the first to get a sample of one of her new FranBrand products. And no, it wasn’t a decongestant nasal spray. Coming out in November, the former “Nanny’s”organic skin care products will be sold on the Home Shopping Network with a portion of the proceeds going to her Cancer Schmancer charity. “We are good for the planet and good for the soul.”
In the bag: a lip balm that tasted so good, most of the guests passed on dessert.

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So Much to Celebrate

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So Much to Celebrate


The press gets a new home and kicks off the gala season

By Janet Donovan

Chris and Kathleen Matthews, Joe Scarborough, and Mitt Romney

Chris and Kathleen Matthews, Joe Scarborough, and Mitt Romney

Matters of Opinion

Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus, Atlanta-Journal Constitution’s editorial cartoonist Mike Luckovich, and Talking Points Memo blogger Josh Marshall had plenty of reasons to celebrate at The Week’s Fifth Annual Opinion Awards dinner at the Four Seasons on April 8th: they won.

The elegant and intimate evening raised eyebrows when panelists took center stage, and the discussion turned into a testosterone versus estrogen contest. This was led by Time.com’s Anna Marie Cox, who questioned why, when we have an African American and a woman running for President, the panel of experts were all white men? Fair question.

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Media Summer Sizzlers

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Media Summer Sizzlers


Luntz leaves, Dozier breathes fire and Press bumps liberal fists (and conservative heads)

By Janet Donovan

Kimberly Dozier

Kimberly Dozier

Gimme a break!

Colorful Republican pollster Frank Luntz is pulling up stakes and heading west. The announcement came as a surprise to guests attending his seventh annual Baseball All Star Party at his McLean home in July. The explanation was simple: He’s tired. This, of course, was a rather short answer for the noted wordsmith (he is the author of Words that Work: It’s Not What You Say But What People Hear). But that’s what we heard: he’s tired. Even thinking about how he’ll move his massive memorabilia collection – which includes a Big Boy, a Keystone Cop, and a Palm Beach voting machine signed by presidential decider Katherine Harris – is making everyone else tired.

Actor Richard Schiff and the Creative Coalition’s Robin Bronk lingered past midnight. Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman and Virginia Rep. Eric Cantor, said to be on McCain’s veep short list, chatted about Coleman’s senatorial race against progressive commentator Al Franken. There were enough CNN collectibles sighted: bureau chief David Bohrman, political director Sam Feist, and Pentagon correspondent Jamie McIntyre. Also seen: Rep. Darrell Issa, lobbyist Bob Livingstone, British Ambassador Sir Nigel Sheinwald, and David Bass. Surprise guest: former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, currently in the dog house with Barney for his new book What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington’s Culture of Deception.

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Bronx and ‘Camelot’ Tales

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Bronx and ‘Camelot’ Tales


Gloria Estefan, Chazz Palminteri and Gretchen Mol up the glitz factor at recent local events

By Janet Donovan

Ralph Nader and Gloria Estefan

Ralph Nader and Gloria Estefan

The Lebanon Connection

“When you mix Cuban water and Cuban sunshine with Lebanese water and Lebanese sunshine, families will thrive,” international superstar Gloria Estefan said while introducing her husband, Emilio, at the American Task Force for Lebanon Gala Awards Night. The hot Miami Sound Machine mainstays keep in touch with dual cultural roots (his father was Lebanese, his mother Cuban).

There to present the Lifetime Achievement Award to her “first and only boyfriend,” it was clear the singer shares both a successful professional and personal life with her spouse. Although married at 17, she thinks that’s nothing compared to his grandmother who was given away in an arranged marriage at the age of 12. “She told me that on her wedding night she stood by the window waiting for the stork to bring her a baby,” Gloria told the crowd. “Boy, was she in for a surprise.”

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Stars and Pundits

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Stars and Pundits


Local insiders celebrate the Academy Awards, the press honors Congress, and a hometown girl makes good

By Janet Donovan

 Actress Taraji P. Henson poses with Donna Brazile and a poster of her co-star Brad Pitt at a pre-pre Oscar party at Arcadia.

Actress Taraji P. Henson poses with Donna Brazile and a poster of her co-star Brad Pitt at a pre-pre Oscar party at Arcadia.

Bingo

“The dirty little secret of these Oscar parties,” said WJLA-ABC-7 film critic Arch Campbell, “is that nobody has seen the movies, nobody. You ask ten people here if they’ve seen any of the nominated pictures and they may have seen one, Slumdog Millionaire.” Such was no doubt the case at Washington’s only officially-sanctioned Oscar party benefiting the America Red Cross and hosted by Michael Saylor, Pamela Sorensen and David Marra at the Hard Rock Café. Campbell had seen them all and called them all. Best Actor: Sean Penn (Milk). “Everyone would like Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler) to get up and make a speech because you know it will be outrageous, but Sean Penn’s the one.” Best Actress: Kate Winslet (The Reader). “I love Meryl Streep but Kate Winslet is going to win.” Best Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger (Dark Knight). “He would have won anyway, posthumously or not.” Best Picture: (Slumdog Millionaire). “The movie resonates with our current national psyche.” Another winner, this one unexpected, was the “terrific” food. “This hamburger,” Arch noted, “is the best I’ve had since the Little Tavern was in business.”

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Stars Come Forth

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Stars Come Forth


A Look Back at this Year’s Kennedy Center Honors Gala

By Janet Donovan

Beyoncé Knowles on the red carpet at the Kennedy Center Honors. Photo by Kyle Samperton

Beyoncé Knowles on the red carpet at the Kennedy Center Honors. Photo by Kyle Samperton

Ribbons, Priceless

Guests attending the glamorous 31st annual Kennedy Center Honors on December 7th may have arrived camera-ready in emeralds and diamonds, but the best decorations were worn by honorees Morgan Freeman, George Jones, Barbra Streisand, Twyla Tharp, Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey. Bestowed upon them the previous evening at a lavish State Department dinner hosted by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the medals displayed by the six pack on the red carpet gratified the crowd of onlookers to say nothing of the celeb-starved photographers.

Four of the six honorees were sighted at George and Liz Stevens’ lavish brunch earlier that day (Streisand and Freeman passed) when a jubilant VIP crowd packed Café MoZU at the Mandarin Oriental. Ethel Kennedy, in a jovial mood, said she had every reason to be happy before pointing out that her niece, Caroline, who now emcees the Honors, would have been a good choice for the New York Senate seat once occupied by her late husband, Robert F. Kennedy, from 1965 to 1968.

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Roasts and Toasts

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Roasts and Toasts


Roastee Stephen Colbert  at the Spina Bifida benefit with tormentors Mark Shields, Sen. Orrin Hatch, and Rep. Rahm Emanuel. (Photo by Paul Morigi)

Roastee Stephen Colbert at the Spina Bifida benefit with tormentors Mark Shields, Sen. Orrin Hatch, and Rep. Rahm Emanuel. (Photo by Paul Morigi)

Remembering George Carlin, ribbing Steven Colbert, and honoring Gina Lollobrigida.

By Janet Donovan

Can we talk?

Political humor was succinct and scabrous as ever on the red carpet at the Kennedy Center’s Mark Twain Prize for American Humor event on Nov. 10 honoring the late George Carlin. Fresh after the presidential election, acid-tongued comedian Joan Rivers spared no one: Sarah Palin was an easy target: “She got some nice outfits. She can wear them in private for the next eight years. She should just go back to Alaska and look good.” (Moose reference not included).

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