As Owen Wilson and Eric Dane continue filming Marley & Me at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, the newspaper’s staff is offering their own insider’s view of being so close to the spotlight of Hollywood.

Columnist Ralph De La Cruz, who is working as an extra on the film – which is based on the best-selling book by former Sun-Sentinel columnist John Grogan – has found the experience less than glamorous.

“Once you’re on set, you can’t leave. Because you could be called at any moment,” he wrote Thursday. “It’s like being on jury duty. Except the people are friendlier. The pay is slightly better ($100). And food and drinks are free.”

In one scene, he and fellow staffer Kathy Laskowski, who was Marley’s former dog-sitter, were “pantomine talking” as Wilson and Dane walked past. “We fake-chatted and sat,” he wrote. “Fake-chatted and sat. I looked across the newsroom to the office of our editor and there was Alan Arkin, doing the same thing. Standing. Waiting.”

Laskowski, who is featured in the book, was more excited. “I’m totally into this,” Laskowski told Cruz. “It’s almost like this is my movie.”

‘McSteamy Was Checking My Butt Out’
Another staffer, Miami Beach fashion photographer Kristy Furgiuele, had even more fun. “McSteamy was checking my butt out,” Furgiuele told Cruz.

Wearing a snug gray skirt, she repeatedly had to walk past Wilson and Dane, who plays Dr. Mark Sloan, on Grey’s Anatomy. Each time, he checked her out. Twenty-one times to be exact. “It was awesome,” she said. “That’s all a girl can hope for, to have McSteamy checking you out.”

Not to worry: Dane’s wife, Rebecca Gayheart, visited the set earlier in the week, staying close to her guy.

By the end of Thursday, the stars were finished shooting at the Sentinel and were headed down the street to Big City Grill, a popular restaurant on Las Olas Boulevard, for more excitement.

(source)

 

THE show business adage that “there’s no such thing as bad publicity” is probably true about 99% of the time. But as the media — and its consumers — grow obsessively focused on the personal struggles of Hollywood stars, there are rare instances when even a little free exposure can be problematic.

On Friday, Paramount Pictures will release “Drillbit Taylor,” a new comedy starring Owen Wilson as a bodyguard hired by several high school students looking for bully protection. The film has been accompanied by most of the marketing efforts typically associated with a national theatrical release — including television promotions and coming attractions previews — but you can look far and wide and not find Wilson conducting the kind of interviews that stars of his caliber usually do when they have a big movie to promote.

The intentional choice not to sit Wilson down with television reporters, print journalists and talk show hosts is understandable. The studio worried that rather than let Wilson plug the movie and its comic pedigree (“Drillbit Taylor” was produced by “Knocked Up’s” Judd Apatow), his interviewers would steer the conversation toward the 39-year-old actor’s hospitalization last summer following an apparent suicide attempt. (The actor has yet to address the incident in the mainstream media.)

So rather than put Wilson together with television or print reporters, Paramount had the actor record “Drillbit”-themed introductions to Fox’s Sunday-night prime-time lineup, with Wilson appearing in front of ” The Simpsons,” “King of the Hill,” “Family Guy” and “Unhitched.” Paramount said Wilson has done all that the studio has asked of him, and his publicist said the actor’s availability was affected by “Marley & Me,” an upcoming movie Wilson is currently shooting in Florida.

In some ways, the film doesn’t really need Wilson’s publicity help. Although the actor has a following among older, well-read filmgoers (his credits include “Meet the Parents,” “The Royal Tenenbaums” and “Wedding Crashers”), “Drillbit Taylor” is aimed at pre-pubescent boys, many of whom aren’t setting their TiVos for “Late Show With David Letterman” and are not reading this or other newspapers. The interviews Wilson didn’t give, in other words, weren’t really missed.

But that hasn’t always been the case with Wilson or other actors who for personal reasons either weren’t able to publicize their films or faced uncomfortable inquiries when they fielded journalists’ questions.

Fox Searchlight was on the verge of releasing Wilson’s “The Darjeeling Limited” last fall when he was hospitalized. (In an unfortunate coincidence, Wilson’s character in the film had attempted suicide.) Within a few days, he had withdrawn from the DreamWorks film “Tropic Thunder” and was later replaced by Matthew McConaughey. Fox Searchlight initially considered postponing the opening of “Darjeeling Limited,” but felt the actor’s struggles would still be a topic of media conversation.

At the time, Wilson’s publicist issued a statement for the actor: “I respectfully ask that the media allow me to receive care and heal in private during this difficult time.”

Wilson, who appeared opposite Jason Schwartzman and Adrien Brody in the film, subsequently showed up for “The Darjeeling Limited’s” Los Angeles premiere, but he did not appear at its screenings at the New York Film Festival or the Venice Film Festival. When Wilson, who studio executives say has never been eager to do publicity, could not attend the film’s press junket, Searchlight canceled the media event, worried it would spend some $250,000 to have Schwartzman and Brody do little more than field queries about their costar.

During the late summer press tour for “The Darjeeling Limited,” Wilson’s condition was addressed sparingly. “I can tell you he has been doing very well; he has been making us laugh,” the film’s director and co-writer, Wes Anderson, said at a Venice, Italy, news conference about the film. “When he is ready, he’s going to speak for himself much better than any of us could.”

Unlike Paramount’s extensive marketing effort for “Drillbit,” Fox Searchlight depends on publicity to boost most of its theatrical release campaigns. With little free media (and good but not gushing reviews) for “The Darjeeling Limited,” the film came and went quickly, grossing just $11.9 million domestically and slightly more overseas.

Disney chose a different strategy with December 2006′s Mel Gibson movie “Apocalypto,” whose release came on the heels of the actor-filmmaker’s notorious anti-Semitic arrest rant. While some people inside Disney wanted to keep Gibson out of sight, others felt he had to go out and promote the movie — which, after all, wasn’t in English (it was in Yucatec, a Mayan dialect) and whose biggest star was Rudy Youngblood. Although Gibson and CNN’s Anderson Cooper famously didn’t quite hit it off, the filmmaker was able to talk about his movie more than might have been expected.

The studio went in another direction nearly a decade earlier. In 1998, Disney was releasing Eddie Murphy’s “Holy Man,” more than a year after the actor was stopped by police in West Hollywood in May 1997 with a known transsexual prostitute in his Toyota Land Cruiser. (Murphy’s publicist claimed his client was just acting as a “good Samaritan” by giving her a lift.) Marketing executives steered reporters away from Murphy, who rarely likes to do interviews anyway, and toward his costars, Jeff Goldblum and Kelly Preston.

The film ultimately flopped.

Just two weeks before the June 1995 release of 20th Century Fox’s romantic comedy “Nine Months,” Hugh Grant was arrested for lewd conduct with prostitute Divine Brown. Rather than hide, Grant tackled the incident head-on. The next morning, he issued a statement admitting he’d done something “completely insane.” Two weeks later, the night before the film’s premiere, he took to the talk show circuit as planned, hitting Jay Leno, Larry King, Letterman, “Today” and even “Live With Regis and Kathie Lee.”

It must have worked: “Nine Months” grossed nearly $70 million.

(source)

 

While the celebrity magazines scramble for photos of them holding hands, our spies down south have seen the duo two nights in a row. Monday, Hudson and Wilson “ate off each other’s plates” at Casa Tua. “They were dining with another couple, and she was in a bathing suit and cover-up even though it was 10 p.m.,” said our source. Tuesday night, the reuniting blondes dined at Michael’s Genuine.

(source)

 

Add Owen Wilson to the list of celebs who want all the perks of fame and none of the pesky problems. Last Friday, Wilson stumbled upon a Patrón Highcroft Racing party at the Shore Club in South Beach, where instead of having fun, he berated the event photographer. A witness at the party said, “There were 150 people who watched Wilson jump across the pool, making a complete a – - of himself.” His antics prompted photographer Manny Hernandez to snap a few pictures. Hernandez told us that after he took the shots, Wilson “charged at me and started screaming at me hysterically.” Hernandez said Wilson told him to “erase those photos right now,” and to avoid further problems, he complied. Hernandez added, “I’ve been shooting in Miami for 18 years and I have a good reputation. A lot of friends and clients were there, and that looked so bad for me.” A rep for Wilson told us, “He was invited to the event and was promised there would be no media there. He didn’t yell at anybody.”

(source)

 

After a suicide attempt last August, Owen Wilson has been given a second chance at life – and, it seems, love.

The actor was seen driving his silver Toyota Prius away from Kate Hudson’s Pacific Palisades home on Feb. 23.

Now that Wilson, 39, is healthy again – he presented an award at Sunday’s Academy Awards – he and Hudson may be rebuilding their romance, Us Weekly reports in its latest issue, on newsstands now.

“They are hooking up,” a Wilson insider told Us. Confirms a Hudson source, “They have definitely been talking, hanging out and, yes, hooking up.”

Hudson, 28, broke off her yearlong liaison with her You, Me and Dupree costar last spring after it became clear to her that his partying took priority over their relationship, several sources told Us.

The pair “are at a good place with each other,” a pal said.

Lurking on the side may be Justin Timberlake, who is currently dating Jessica Biel. Multiple sources told Us the 27-year-old singer and Hudson have been more than just friends at times.

“It’s not constant and very casual,” a Hudson insider said.

Reps for both Timberlake and Hudson deny they’re hooking up.

Wilson’s rep had no comment and a lawyer for Hudson said Us’ claims were “false.”

(source)

 

Owen Wilson is going back to work for the first time since his reported suicide attempt last summer.

Wilson, 39, and co-star Jennifer Aniston begin shooting March 10 on 20th Century Fox’s “Marley & Me,” the studio said. It tells the tale of a couple who adopt a dog to give parenthood a trial run, then find the mischievous pooch more than they bargained for.

After he was hospitalized last August, Wilson dropped out of this summer’s comedy “Tropic Thunder,” which already had been in production. He was replaced by Matthew McConaughey.

Due out Christmas Day, “Marley & Me” is directed by David Frankel and based on the book by John Grogan. Alan Arkin co-stars.

 

In her first chat since ex Owen Wilson’s August suicide attempt, Kate Hudson opens up about their relationship in the January issue of Vogue.

“Owen is such a lovely person, and I love him dearly,” she says. “And I wish him beautiful things — health and everything that he desires in life.”

The 28-year-old — who poses in matching plaids for the magazine with son Ryder, 3 — also comes clean about her 2006 split with husband of six years, Chris Robinson.

“We had Ryder, and we both sort of looked at each other and went, ‘Something’s off,’” she said.

She called the divorce “the most difficult thing I’ve ever done in my life. The process of discovering with somebody that you love that you don’t work is so painful.

“And thank goodness I did it with Chris. We helped each other through it. Now we’re both single and since the day we separated, we talk multiple times.”

Of her past year, Hudson said, “It was just an extremely giant sort of leap. I definitely feel like I’ve grown up a lot.”

(source)

Dec 112007
 

After being seen with two different women this weekend, Owen Wilson spent Monday afternoon rolling around with another mystery brunette at a Miami hotel with best bud Woody Harrelson. Clearly recovered from his August suicide attempt, the flirtatious funnyman made out with his latest squeeze while drinking bottled water.

Woody and Owen arrived in Florida on Friday after spending time at a spiritual retreat in Peru where the pair was seen having a male bonding moment in their boxer shorts. Owen was spotted getting close to an exotic long-limbed beauty at the Florida Room a few hours after his arrival, and was seen with a blonde on the beach the next day. An insider tells PageSix.com that Owen went out with the woman in these pictures on Sunday night, and then she swung by his hotel with a pal the next day to catch up again.

Even though Woody was seen having fun with a number of ladies, his rep insists it was just being a good sport and is still happily married.

“The trip wasn’t planned. They came to Miami when their trip to Peru was cut short. I hope Owen and Woody enjoyed themselves over the weekend but they’ve since left,” their rep said.

Despite the impromptu rescheduling, it’s still been a cathartic getaway for The Darjeeling Limited star. He split with his You, Me and Dupree costar Kate Hudson earlier this year only to attempt suicide in August.

(source)

Dec 062007
 

Owen Wilson and close friend Woody Harrelson have been doing some male bonding in the Peruvian jungle, as these exclusive pictures show. They have been spending time meditating, walking along the Amazon and … stripping down to their less-than-tighty not-so-whiteys for a quick dip. (Does anyone hear banjos?)

Woody has been a constant presence by the Butterscotch Stallion’s side since the troubled Wedding Crashers’ star tried to commit suicide in August. And judging by the smile on his face, Woody’s form of therapy appears to work wonders. The pair stayed in a teepee at the Hanaq Pacha Retreat Center, in the Sacred Valley of the Incas.

The back-to-basics resort, which Woody sponsors, is a yoga and spiritual retreat that has its own organic gardens that grow produce for the all-vegetarian menu. The wood and canvas malocas sleep up to four people (at a cost of $75 per person per day) and feature furnishings created by local artisans and the children of the nearby Casa de Milagros, a home for abandoned children that Woody also supports.

(source)

OnlinePayDayAssistance.com


© 2012 Celebrity Mound Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha